by Mick Farren
"Shall we all relax?"
Rance looked slowly around at the faces of the occupants. Most of the field police in the nerve center were bunched around the central plot dais. None of them seemed inclined to make trouble. He spoke into his communicator.
"Area secure. How are things on top, Kalgol?"
"Everything's quiet. The headhunters are keeping their distance. It looks like it's going to start to rain any minute."
"Just hang in there."
The field police commandant pushed his way to the front of the knot of men by the plot dais. He was a portly individual clearly not recently accustomed to action. His head was shaved, and a livid scar ran down his right cheek. A tag on his tabard stated that his name was Mai-tov.
"What is the meaning of this?" he demanded.
"I'm Topman Rance from the Anah 5. I am one of a group of topmen who have assumed command of this e-vac area."
"On what authority?"
Rance was getting tired of telling the story.
"Simple chain of command. We're now the senior combat noncoms on this base and therefore in command. We have come here to see if we can count on your cooperation."
"You know damned well that in any withdrawal situation, the field police have jurisdiction. What you're doing is little more than armed insurrection."
"The most important thing is that we don't like the way this operation is being conducted." He motioned to the armed men behind him. "We do have the upper hand right now."
"I suppose you want to get e-vaced out."
"Not only that, but we also want to see the evacuation speeded up. We want to get off as many experienced fighting men as we can."
"Then you'd be better off guarding the perimeter. The enemy are bound to stage an attack before too long. Why don't you get out of here and let me get on with my job? Nothing's happened here yet that can't be forgotten."
"I could simply shoot all of you out of hand."
"You'd probably live to regret that."
"You seem to have grown fat on it."
"Suppose we could reach a compromise?"
"Keep talking."
"You might be surprised to learn that my job here is to slow down the withdrawal."
"What are you talking about?"
"You must realize that most of the ground troops on this planet have been written off. There simply aren't enough ships to take off even a fraction of the forces committed here before the cluster jumps."
"We already figured that out for ourselves."
Maltov looked at Rance coldly but carried on. "As more and more units come in here looking for a way out, this area and the others like it will turn into a bloody nightmare with men fighting each other for places onihe last ships out. I have to hold off that degeneration for as long as possible."
"By mass executions?"
"Terror is a most effective method. The rank and file might as well stay more afraid of my men than they are of the Yal for as long as possible."
Rance didn't like the way he used the term "rank and file." "So what's the compromise?"
"That I let you onto one of the next e-vacs out, you topmen and the longtimers that you brought with you. In return, you let me run things my way."
Rance had known that it would probably come to this kind of deal.
"We need to get out as many of our experienced men as we can."
"You already brought your longtimers. They're the ones you need. They'll be the foundations on which you'll build your new battle groups."
This last remark caused Hark to start paying attention. He'd been one of the men who had followed Rance and Dyrkin into the control room, but up to that point he'd been standing in the background, not altogether grasping what was going on. After Maltov's remark about foundations, it had all fallen into place. Rance's abrupt departure from the battlefield and the fact that he'd taken the four of them with him hadn't been a matter of either self-preservation or mutual respect. He hadn't been bucking the Therem. Quite the reverse, he'd been acting exactly according to his programming. He was getting out his best men. After the Therem had gar-baged one army, these survivors would be the seeds from which a new one would be created. If Hark was angry at anyone, it was at himself for believing that anything could happen at random. Everything was planned.
Rance and Maltov were still in confrontation. Despite the armed men all around him, Maltov seemed to be getting the edge.
"So, do we have our compromise?"
Rance slowly nodded. It was probably the best deal that he'd get. The longtimers would certainly hate him for selling out the bulk of the men, but they'd have to share the guilt. They were getting out, too-if Maltov didn't double-cross all of them. /
"Yeah. It's a deal. When do we get an e-vac?"
"We'll go to the command dome and find out."
"Together?"
Maltov reached for his helmet. "Right.'
Outside, Kalgol and the ten troopers were still holding the entrance to the bunker. A heavy tropical rain was falling, and the men were up to their knees in a mist of spray. Water was streaming from their suits. The hilltop landing area was rapidly turning into a desolate sea of mud.
"This ain't going to help matters any."
There was a brief conference between Rance and the other topmen, and then the whole party of troopers, plus Maltov and an escort of six field police, set off for the command dome. As they splashed their way through the mud, Rance kept everyone bunched up. If they were close to the commandant, they were probably safe from a sneak attack by the headhunters.
They were almost exactly halfway between the bunker and the dome when the alarms went off.
"Enemy in the wire, third quadrant!"
The command channel suddenly came alive with voices.
"They're throwing everything at this one point! We can't hold them; we're spread too thin." "What is it? Chibas?"
"I can't take no more! I can't take no more!" "Cut that out!"
"There's men in among them!" "It must be some of our boys making a break for it!" "They're in gray camouflage armor, and they're firing at us."
"What the hell is going on over there?"
"There's men! Men fighting with the enemy!"
There was the sound of an explosion, and the shouting stopped. The troopers had halted. Rance was looking at Maltov.
"I suppose you expect us to go charging over there and plug the hole."
"If we're overrun, nobody will get off."
"Are you sending in your men?"
Maltov spoke into his communicator. "All available men! Go immediately to hold that breach in the third quadrant perimeter!"
He actually smiled at Rance. "Your move."
"You're right, goddamm it!"
Rance turned and faced the men. "Okay, you heard it. Let's shag it! Let's secure their forsaken perimeter for them. I want to see these men that have gone over to the enemy."
There was a good deal of cursing, but no one disobeyed the order.
"Come on! At the double! Fan out and don't bunch up. You all know the routine."
The men struggled through the quagmire, heading for the smoke and steam that were already billowing up from the firelight on the perimeter. They came under sporadic fire but kept on going. A man was hit and went down. Rance was glad that it wasn't one of his. He didn't want to lose any of his longtimers in these last minutes.
"They're hitting on a very narrow front. Maybe there ain't too many of them!"
"Don't count on it."
Rance didn't push his men too hard. There were a number of other squads converging on the same point. He didn't see why they should be the first to get there. The odds were that the first to arrive would be slaughtered.
"Easy now! Don't get crazy."
There were figures coming toward them out of the rain. Visibility was so poor that it was hard to make out exactly who or what they were, but they seemed roughly human in shape. Then they started firing. The flashes were those of Yal weapons. So these w
ere the renegades. Another man went down. It was Dacker. Rance cursed. The troopers were returning fire. The human figures were halted in their tracks. One by one, they were cut down. At least Rance had the satisfaction of knowing that his longtimers were better than whatever these things were. A voice from the wire came over their communicators.
"They're pulling back! The chibas are pulling back!"
Just then the rain stopped. The troopers walked slowly forward. The mud sucked at their feet and ankles, and moisture hung like a hot shroud. Rance stopped beside Dacker. The trooper was quite dead. Half his chest was missing, and his suit was slowly curling away from his lifeless flesh. As Rance watched, the suit stopped moving. It, too, had died. There were bodies all over, but everyone was making for the ones in the now mangled, fungus-gray armor. Everyone wanted to know who they were. Men bent over and pulled helmets from these strange corpses.
Renchett was the first of the squad to reach a body. "Hey, Rance, get a load of this."
They were not renegades. There were marked differences between the men who fought for the Therem and these creatures. Their skins were close to orange, and their eyes had a strange slitted configuration. Either they used some sort of depilatory or they had never grown hair on their heads. They were obviously human, but equally obviously they were a different race.
"Where the hell did they come from?"
"The Yal must have bred them."
"Yeah, but why?"
"Why do the Therem use us?"
Renchett was silently shaking his head. "Maybe they captured one of the home worlds and used its inhabitants."
"Surely they'd look more like us." Hark had a thought. "Maybe the Yal took them from the Earth when they were first forced to leave it." "The Earth?"
"The original world. Our original world."
Rance walked slowly over to where Hark was standing. "What do you know about the Earth?"
Hark gave a slight shrug. "A woman told me."
"You shouldn't believe everything women tell you."
It was the worn-out topman response, and the moment Rance had said it, he felt a little stupid.
Hark just looked away. "I believe this."
Renchett was bending over one of the bodies. "You know what I think?"
"What?"
"It was probably these assholes that skinned those corpses back in the jungle."
Renchett had his knife out. He was about to carve off an ear. Rance stopped him.
"There'll be no more mutilation."
Hark was still deep in thought.
"You all know what else this means," he said slowly. "It means that we've started fighting our own kind. There are men on both sides in this damned war. Men are fighting each other for aliens that most of them will never even see."
"It sucks."
Hark was suddenly deeply angry. "Goddamn right it sucks. It makes it all totally meaningless."
The thought was still sinking in when the sky was lit by a blinding flash on the horizon.
"Nuke!"
"They don't have no nukes left!" "That's a fucking nuke."
They all threw themselves flat. The fireball was climbing into the air like a fast-rising sun.
"They must have had some stashed."
"Maybe the men were stashed, too."
"That was probably another e-vac area."
A voice from the command dome came into their helmets. "It was in the right direction for the Fourteen River base, the one that the dynes were shipping out from."
"How soon will the shock wave hit?"
The minutes passed agonizingly as the base waited for the shock. When it arrived, it came with the force of multiple hurricanes. Eddies of debris, dust, and smoke sped across the cleared ground like twisters. Men clung to the earth as the wind threatened to lift them clear off the hilltop. The shriek of static in their helmets threatened to deafen them. The ones who had remained on their feet either were whirled into the air or rolled through the mud. A gunsaucer was turned over, and panels were torn from the control dome. There was panic inside as the pressurization was lost and the men grabbed for their masks. The fury passed as swiftly as it had come, leaving behind a strange battered calm. The white mushroom cloud stood on the horizon like a terrible epitaph to the whole doomed, fruitless campaign. Nuclear weapons, although crude and ancient, were still viewed with fear and awe. Their destructiveness was so all-encompassing that their use remained a matter of desperate last resort. Touching off what amounted to a small sun on the surface of a planet was a frightening gamble.
Men readied their weapons, fully expecting an enemy ground attack. When none came, there was a distinct feeling of unease. It wasn't like the Yal to pass up any opportunity.
"If they can nuke that base, they can nuke this one."
An e-vac came down with is retros screaming. It looked as if it, too, had taken a beating from the nuclear shock wave. As soon as its landing legs touched, Rance sprang to his feet.
"Everybody up! Let's go! We're getting on that crate, and nobody's going to stop us."
Fifteen
The Anah 5 felt as if it were being torn apart, and maybe the whole universe along with it. The shields had already failed on two of the ships in the cluster, and those two were being battered to pieces by the guns of the Yal. The coordination that made the cluster a single entity had been lost. They were now thirteen solitary ships fighting for their individual survival. The Yal battleships had arrived ahead of schedule and before the cluster could jump to safety. The Anah 12 was slowly and majestically being turned into a shapeless cloud of gas and debris by a chain reaction of explosions. The shocks were felt on all the other ships. It was unlikely that there were survivors of any kind, but even if a few unfortunates remained drifting in space, nothing could be done for them. The green clouds of Yal fire came on relentlessly, and only three of the cluster ships had sufficient power to fire back.
None of the surviving troopers had thought much about what would happen when they actually arrived back on board. As they'd stormed onto the e-vac, gunning down three field police in the process, simply getting off the planet in one piece had been the all-consuming goal. It had remained so during the go-for-broke takeoff that had them running the gauntlet of a sudden storm of enemy ground fire. It was only when they were in space and could see the dozens of tiny craft shuttling in between the thirteen big ships that they started to remember that they might well have jetted from frying pan to fire. Collectively, the shuttles seemed to be moving with such a desperate frenzy that it was obvious that the cluster was in the throes of a major alert.
The bombardment began while Rance's troopers were just emerging from the blue room decontamination process. The ship shuddered, and the floor tilted. A number of men fell on their faces. There were muffled explosions in another part of the ship. Farther down the corridor, a duct burst and superheated steam roared from the breach. This in turn caused a short in a power transfer, and a shower of blue sparks cascaded through the clouds of swirling vapor. The ship lurched again, and there were more explosions. Smoke billowed down the corridor. Fire alarms were ringing. Rance clung to a doorjamb and tried to organize the men under his command. Their equipment was still on the conveyer, coming out of decontamination. Without a helmet, it was hard to make himself heard.
"Everyone suit up!"
The ship now seemed to be tilting steeply toward the bow. Rance knew that this was probably a localized illusion. The floor grav control in this sector had probably been jarred off line, and no one had yet managed to reset it. The knowledge didn't make the experience any easier to stand.
Dyrkin crawled up the sloping floor, dragging himself with one hand. His suit and helmet were tucked under his other arm. "So what are we supposed to do?"
"Get into your suit. The ship's going to jump before too long, and we've got to get back to our coffins. If we don't, we're going to be pulp."
Most of the survivors were at the bottom of the angled corridor, piled against an emerge
ncy bulkhead that had closed immediately after the first series of shocks. They were grazed and bruised, and a couple had been scalded by the steam, but otherwise the men seemed to be more or less intact. Rance clawed his way to the conveyer offload. He grabbed the first suit to emerge, slapped it against his chest, and let it crawl over his body. He fitted his helmet and then started sliding the rest of the suits and helmets down to the men.
"Dyrkin, get up here and help me!"
The floor righted itself, but the lights went out. A half dozen helmet lights came on in the gloom.
"Get that bulkhead open."
"Controls don't respond. It must have shorted out." "Somebody rig a bypass."
Hark's voice came over the communicator. "I got it."
The bulkhead rolled back. There were still lights in the next section of corridor. A public address was trilling urgently in nohan. The ship slammed sideways as if it had received a blow from a giant hammer. The men were thrown up against the left-hand wall. Those who were still struggling into their suits were thrown down on the deck.
"That's got to be a direct hit."
"You wouldn't know about a direct hit."
"The screens got to be buckling, though."
Rance hurried them along. "We've got to get back to the coffins if we don't want to make the jump on bare floor."
The men reached the next safety bulkhead. "This one's fused, too." "Hark…" "I got it."
The bulkhead opened on a sheet of flame that billowed out at them. It engulfed the trooper next to Hark. His suit was only half on, and he staggered back screaming with his underclothes on fire. Benset grabbed him and rolled him on the deck. Rance was yelling.
"Back! Back!"
The fleeing troopers ran headlong into a nohan fire-fighting crew in red ceramic armor. They were whistling in what sounded like the alien equivalent of panic, but at least they were headed for the fire.
"This way!"
They ran in single file down a narrow companionway. All around them, sirens were blaring, signifying widespread damage. There was a confused babble in their helmets. They came up against a third closed safety bulkhead. This time, the manual bypass refused to work, and Hark and Renchett had to crawl into the mechanism before they could get it to open. The others waited tensely.