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Half Past Midnight

Page 26

by Jeff Brackett


  Halfway down the street, I heard Billy’s rifle go silent. He’s been hit! I thought, as I turned back to help, but I saw with relief that he was simply changing clips. Then my heart skipped a beat when I heard the unmistakable sound of the Abrams starting up. Billy heard it, too. I could tell by the stance of his kneeling silhouette as he looked up at the behemoth moving towards him.

  “Get out of there!” I yelled. “Pull back!”

  I saw him raise his rifle for one last shot before he bailed from his position, legs pistoning wildly as he ran.

  He was about thirty feet away from me when the corner where he had just been kneeling disintegrated in a deafening blast that knocked me off my feet and set my ears to ringing. Bricks, bits of sidewalk, and burning wood flew in a deadly whirlwind, and Billy was suddenly airborne, flying amidst the maelstrom, until he landed in a tangled heap, unmoving as the debris fell on him.

  “Billy!” Sprinting, I reached him just as the front of the building across the street where Sam and the others were hiding exploded in a similar, deafening fashion. I dove to cover Billy’s body with my own as the cloud of masonry and fiery lumber pummeled us.

  Wayne tugged on my arm and yelled. With my ringing ears, I couldn’t tell what he was saying, but he yanked the ring from his smoke bomb and dropped it in the street before helping me pull Billy from the rubble. We dragged him by his arms as we ran down the street to where I had stashed the detonator.

  Once inside, I saw Wayne trying to tell me something, but I still couldn’t hear a thing through the ringing in my ears. “I can’t hear you!”

  He looked concerned and turned my head from side to side, examining my ears. I felt him touch the skin beneath my left ear and watched as it came away dark and wet. Before that moment, it had never occurred to me just how black and forbidding blood looked by firelight.

  My stomach clinched at the sudden realization that I might be deaf for life, but there wasn’t time for the thought to scare me too much. If the next few minutes didn’t turn out better than the last few had, my life wouldn’t last long enough to worry about it.

  Wayne grabbed my shoulders and pointed me at the detonator setup, then turned me back to face him. His mouth moved, and he pantomimed and pointed. It looked like he wanted to get across the street to set up a crossfire.

  I nodded. “Okay, I got it. Go!”

  He reached into my belt pouch, pulled out the last smoke bomb, clapped me on the back, and poked his head out of the doorway. Then, he sprinted across the street. I saw him duck into a storefront on the opposite side and disappear into the shadows.

  Peering back down the street, I saw three of Larry’s men emerge from the dissipating smoke. They hugged the shadows and searched through windows, searching for us. It was eerie seeing them creep closer, yell at one another, and occasionally fire into one of the empty buildings, but unable to hear any of it. Out of the corner of my eye, I caught a flicker of movement, and the last smoker landed among them. Wayne.

  Some of them must have seen the direction it came from because they dropped to the ground and fired at the building where he had disappeared. I raised my rifle and fired into the group, but I hastily ducked back at the sudden appearance of several bullet holes in the wall beside me. I whirled to find Wayne pointing his rifle at me.

  Why was Wayne shooting at me? He saw me looking his way and dropped his rifle to pantomime touching the wires together.

  He must have seen the tank. It must be time.

  Then I saw him jerk once as a bullet spun him around. Two more found his back, and he dropped from sight just before the front of the building disintegrated in another blinding explosion.

  “Wayne!” I could feel the rawness of my throat as I screamed, but my ears were still useless. The only sound I heard was my voice echoing faintly in my skull.

  The ground still trembled from the explosion as I dropped my rifle and dove for the detonator. A silhouette in the doorway warned me that I wasn’t alone, and the muzzle of a rifle sought me out in the relative darkness of the building.

  My movement gave me away, but there wasn’t time to let whoever it was distract me. I had to connect those wires. Ours was a macabre, slow motion race-me fumbling to connect wires to battery terminals, and the thug in the doorway struggling to find me and shoot.

  It was a close thing, but he won the battle.

  I won the war, though, as his shot went wide hitting the wall nearly three feet in front of me just a split second before I made the connection. The world shook, and my attacker flew forward-within reach.

  My fear and rage at losing my squad, the people who had trusted and depended on me, now had a target and was unleashed in a moment’s insane fury. My next actions involved a gouged eye and crushed esophagus, but everything else was lost in madness.

  At some point, I realized that the man was dead, and my throat was raw. Must have been screaming was my confused thought, but for the life of me, I couldn’t remember doing so.

  Stumbling over masonry and dirt, I made my way to the door and peeked around the corner into the street, into carnage, into the aftermath of an explosion powerful enough to blow a hole in the bottom of the tank and mangle the tracks. It had been enough to shred every exposed person within a city block with asphalt and nails.

  No one moved on the street as I staggered outside. Dust drifted, and flames danced in small scattered groups, but there wasn’t a hint of life. A slight popping in my right ear hinted that at least some of my hearing was returning, but it took a moment for me to realize I was hearing the sounds of gunfire.

  I decided that Ken’s group must be moving.

  Four weary minutes and two long blocks later, I found myself approaching the outskirts of another battle.

  Sarah led a massive wave of people who had made it halfway across Stadium Drive before a few of Larry’s men had caught on to what was happening. When those men turned their guns on the emerging crowd, the folks still inside the stadium had no idea what was going on in the darkness ahead, only that freedom waited beyond the gates. They pushed forward, while those in front pulled back, seeking shelter from the deadly crossfire. The great press of escaping Rejans stalled-and died.

  By the light of trashcan fires, I saw our people stumbling over their own dead and wounded, surging to and fro like some panicked horde of lemmings, shoving one another into the waiting crossfire of Larry’s men. One silhouette stood out from the others, its appearance inhuman in the firelight. It was Sarah, wearing the goggles she had worn into the stadium the previous night. She frantically directed a small knot of people armed with rifles and handguns by pointing and gesticulating to help them pinpoint Larry’s guards, but the darkness worked against her. Although the targets were plainly visible through her goggles, Larry’s men were nothing more than shadows to those she was directing.

  My right ear was working at about half capacity, and I could hear the screams of people over the gunfire. Where was Ken? There should be more support.

  Seeing Sarah reminded me that I had my own goggles on my belt, and I slipped them on, praying they still worked. They did.

  Scrambling closer, I could see that there were actually only two groups of snipers shooting at the crowd. The first group consisted of two men with their backs to me ducked behind a rusted-out abandoned Dodge. Suddenly, I realized I had left my carbine lying between Billy and the nameless soldier I had killed.

  I drew my machete and Bowie and, once more, I attacked from behind and killed before my victims knew I was upon them. So much for honor in combat.

  Grabbing one of the dead men’s rifles, I looked up to see the muzzle flashes of two rifles from the ground floor window of a building across the street. The angle was wrong, and I couldn’t get a clear shot at the owners, but I figured I could at least keep their heads down while some of our people got clear. Glancing down at the unfamiliar weapon, I found a lever over my right thumb. Select fire.

  Taking aim at the window, I quickly discovered that a fully a
utomatic M-16 was much harder to hold on target than the movies portrayed. Still, the sudden shower of bullets proved enough to cause them to duck for cover, giving two of Sarah’s armed partners time to rush the building and get to either side of the window. Working together, they whirled and fired several rounds inside. One of them fell, but the other waved the crowd on. Sarah and the escapees began scattering through the streets.

  I stepped out from behind the car and waved to get Sarah’s attention. “Sarah!” I winced again at the pain in my throat and hoped she would recognize my voice. With my impaired hearing, I couldn’t even tell if my voice carried over the background noises, but I saw her turn toward me and give a thumbs up as I wove my way toward her through the racing crowd.

  “Good timing, Sensei. That was getting hairy.”

  I looked at the bodies on the ground. Friends and neighbors. Ken had warned us that we would lose people, but I had never imagined it being this bad. There must have been thirty bodies and even more wounded.

  I shook my head. “Not good enough. Too many of us are dead.”

  Sarah grabbed my shoulder. “It would’ve been worse if you hadn’t come along when you did. We’d have lost a lot more.”

  “But you were supposed to have more support! Where’s Ken? We had over forty people waiting to help you! Where are they?”

  She looked at me incredulously. “Are you kidding? Can’t you hear the fighting?”

  “What?”

  “The tanks. Jeez, Sensei! There were two more tanks. Ken’s people went to draw the other tanks off! They sound like they’re about a mile away now.”

  “What?” I shook my head, dumbfounded. “My ears are a little messed up, Sarah. I can’t hear too well.”

  “What happened?” She looked at me with sudden concern.

  “That first tank happened,” I said bitterly. “There’s no way they can last long against two of them!” I reached for the radio at my belt and turned it on. “Ken! It’s Leeland! Ken! Can you hear me? Everyone is out of the stadium, pull back! Pull back, Ken!”

  No response. I handed the radio to Sarah. “My ears must not be working well enough. Can you hear anything?”

  Sarah lifted it and tried the same thing for a few seconds before shaking her head. “Either it’s not working, or they just can’t hear us.”

  “Okay, then can you take me to where they’re fighting?”

  She watched the flood of people scurrying past us into the darkness. “Yeah, I can take you. Everyone here knows where to meet up. Come on.”

  She led me through the darkened streets to the east side of town. The closer we got, the more I could hear. And the more I could hear, the worse things sounded. By the time we reached the fighting, I could easily hear the chatter of rifles and machine guns firing, the chaos of the battle. With both of us wearing goggles, we were able to avoid scattered groups of Larry’s men, and we soon found our way to a group of our own people.

  Rene busily shouted orders to a squad of several men as Sarah and I first approached them in the narrow lane between two buildings. Further up the street, I saw a white flash that nearly blinded me, and I ripped the goggles from my face. The flash was followed a second later by the sound and vibration of an explosion. The tanks were up there somewhere.

  I turned to see Sarah watching me through the insectoid goggles. “Try infrared,” was her only comment.

  I nodded. Knowing Rene as I did, I wasn’t about to get closer until I knew she was expecting me. “Rene!”

  Her rifle whipped around at the sound of my voice. “?Quien esta?”

  Spanish? She must be scared to death. “Leeland and Sarah, coming in from the rear!”

  Squinting toward me, she finally decided not to shoot. “Vaya con sus manos. Chinga! Come een weeth your hands where we can see them!”

  Raising our rifles above our heads, Sarah and I joined Rene’s group. As we walked up, I saw four men trying to staunch the flow of blood from two others. Neither of the wounded looked to be in very good shape. Still more men and women leaned panting against the wall.

  Incongruously, for the first time ever, I actually saw Rene Herrera smile. It was a frightening thing. Completely feral. “Glad to see you made it, Jefe. Where the others?”

  “Dead.”

  She turned away. “Sorry.”

  “Not your fault.” It’s me they trusted. My fault. “Where’s Ken?”

  She pointed several blocks up the road to an old Sears store. “In there.”

  There had dozens of Larry’s men hidden behind a barricade of abandoned cars that had been pushed completely across the street to form a solid wall of metal from which they could indiscriminately fill the walls of the department store with holes. With my goggles, I could see about a dozen people firing back from inside the building.

  I pulled out the radio. “Ken? Leeland here.” After a short pause, I tried again. “Ken?” Still no response. I sighed. “I guess the radio’s dead after all. Rene, do you know how many other groups of our people are around here? We’re going to hit those guys from behind and break Ken and the others out of there.”

  “Three more.”

  “Are they as big as your group?”

  She shook her head. “Not three groups. Three more people. Ken send us out to try to stop the tank. We get out the back just before they surround the building.”

  I counted the rest of her group. Ten people, two of them wounded, plus Sarah and me, and the three others that she mentioned.

  I started to rise. “It might be enough if we hit them from behind. I gotta-”

  Rene grabbed my arm and yanked me back down. “You gotta get you self killed? ’Dat what you gonna say? ’Cause if you planning to move into dis street, dat’s what gonna happen!” She indicated several bodies in the middle of the road. “They think they can walk out there, too.” She pointed up the street. “Machine gun somewhere ahead. We don’ know for sure where it is.”

  She pointed to two other storefronts. “Banditos there, an’ there. Don’ know how many.” Then she pointed to the top of a four-story office building. “Tha’s where the other three from our group are.” Finally, she pointed to the deep patch of darkness next to the office building. “But look close, en de side street.”

  I flipped the goggles back down over my eyes, and my heart skipped a beat. The muzzle of a tank cannon pointed down the street. The rest of the thing remained hidden behind the building, but there was no mistaking the cannon protruding into the street. For the moment, the tank sat motionless, but I had little doubt that eyes watched from within, alert for any sign of movement. Ken had warned us that the tanks were equipped with a full sensor array. There was little chance that anyone would be able to approach an Abrams unseen.

  “They just got here a couple seconds before you,” she added. “We think they’re trying to figure out what happened to the other tank.”

  I took the goggles back off. “Other tank? There’s another one?”

  “Sort of.” Once more, she treated me to that frightening grin. “The other tank, she don’ work so good no more.”

  “What?”

  “Look all de way aroun’ de corner. Up on de sidewalk on dis side.” I started forward.

  “?Cuidado!” she hissed. “Don’ move fast, or they see you!”

  Following her directions, I slipped on my goggles, hugged the wall, and eased forward to the corner; I peered cautiously up the street to find the second tank sitting as motionless as the first. The only difference was that the cannon on this one was completely destroyed, looking much like the remains of Elmer Fudd’s shotgun after Bugs had plugged the end with his finger.

  “What the hell happened?”

  She indicated one of the wounded men lying back in the shadows. “Frankie there, he say he know how to stop the tanks. He say el cannon must be clean. Very clean. He pour a bucket of concrete inside, and they shoot him with the little machine guns on the top, but the next thing we know, the whole thing explode! She don’ move since
then. We figure the explosion also get the people in the tank.”

  I thought back to the flash that Sarah and I had seen just before we spotted Rene’s group. That must have been the explosion of the cannon, which meant that all this happened just a few minutes ago.

  “Rene! This just happened?”

  “Si. A couple minutes ago. Why?”

  I looked across the street to the tank peeking out from between the buildings, then to the office building where Rene had said our people were hidden. Inspiration struck. “I think I might have a way to pull our butts out of the fire if we move fast enough.”

  I looked down through my goggles as I descended from the top of the office building. Hanging from a makeshift rope of cut and tied extension cords, I shook my head. “Leeland, what the hell have you gotten yourself into?”

  The little voice in my head ignored the question, instead concentrating on trying to make me see just how foolish I was being. “Get someone else to play hero!” the voice screamed. “Go back home to your wife and kids while you still can!”

  “If I don’t do this,” I answered, “there won’t be any home to go to, and I might not get the chance to ever see them again.”

  I looked down once more. Almost there. In my head, a jumble of prayers and curses swirled-mostly prayers. For an avowed agnostic, I seemed to be praying an awful lot lately. Dropping closer to the tank, I prayed it would stay in place for just a few minutes more, that none of the extension cords would come untied, that none of the enemy noticed a man dropping down the side of the building like a spider clinging to a strand of silk, that none of the millions of things that could go wrong, would go wrong. The more I thought about what I was doing, the more foolish it seemed.

  Tightening my grip, I yanked hard on the cord twice to signal a stop. Three feet below, the top hatch of the tank waited. Larry’s men evidently hadn’t seen the show Ivory had mentioned earlier that evening. Or perhaps they simply never expected anyone to get close enough to try the hatch, and so hadn’t bothered to put a padlock on it. Why should they worry? They had one-hundred-eighty-degree coverage from the two small M-240 machine guns on front and three-hundred-sixty-degree coverage from the more powerful top mounted fifty caliber. Combine that with the sensor package on the tanks, and a person would have to be crazy to try getting to that hatch.

 

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