Of course, there are good reasons to do so. According to the London International Institute for Strategic Studies’ Military Balance 1987, NATO’s 8,974 major artillery pieces face some 24,000 Soviet guns, while our 714 armed helicopters stare at 2,100 Soviet choppers, but the important imbalance is that they’ve deployed 46,600 Main Battle Tanks against NATO’s 20,314.
Tank popularity moves in waves. The U.S. Army Air Forces like to claim that “strategic” bombing was highly effective in World War II. Certainly the bombers managed wide destruction. If you visit Germany you will find that there have been two major sources of destruction of the ancient towns and cities: the French, who periodically invaded the Rhineland and beyond and burned or blew up everything they could (the ruins of Heidelberg Castle are among the more spectacular of the French achievements); and the allied air forces who, in a few months of 1944, managed to rival the French in sheer wanton destruction of civilian property, getting Mozart’s house in Salzburg, most of the downtown area of Karlsruhe, and a number of other totally unmilitary places. I don’t quarrel with the air war against railroads, and the attacks on ball-bearing plants were probably worth the cost; but if most of the money put into strategic bombers had gone to tanks and tactical air support planes, that war would probably have ended much sooner.
Then came nuclear weapons, and a number of theorists proclaimed the death of the tank. We may never know the effectiveness of tanks on a nuclear battlefield; but we do know that tanks, with tactical air support, dominated every one of the Israeli wars.
Even so, from time to time we see articles proclaiming that the Main Battle Tank is as dead as the dinosaur; that air power and artillery will dominate the battlefields of the future. As a one time artillerist and air power theorist, I find that comforting. After all, artillery has always been known as the last argument of kings. Emotions aside, though, the evidence is that tanks will be around for a long time; and any casual look at Military Technology will convince you that they’re getting larger, more efficient, and more powerful with each decade.
David Drake, a Vietnam veteran, tells of a time when tanks again dominate the battlefield; and reminds us that no matter how powerful the machines become, they are still vulnerable to the frailties of their human commanders.
The Tank Lords
David Drake
They were the tank lords.
The baron had drawn up his soldiers in the courtyard, the twenty men who were not detached to his estates on the border between the Kingdom of Ganz and the Kingdom of Marshall—keeping the uneasy truce and ready to break it if the baron so willed.
I think the king sent mercenaries in four tanks to our palace so that the baron’s will would be what the king wished it to be… though of course we were told they were protection against Ganz and the mercenaries of the Lightning Division whom Ganz employed.
The tanks and the eight men in them were from Hammer’s Slammers, and they were magnificent.
Lady Miriam and her entourage rushed back from the barred windows of the women’s apartments on the second floor, squealing for effect. The tanks were so huge that the mirror-helmeted men watching from the turret hatches were nearly on a level with the upper story of the palace.
I jumped clear, but Lady Miriam bumped the chair I had dragged closer to stand upon and watch the arrival over the heads of the women I served.
“Leesh!” cried the lady, false fear of the tanks replaced by real anger at me. She slapped with her fan of painted ox-horn, cutting me across the knuckles because I had thrown a hand over my eyes.
I ducked low over the chair, wrestling it out of the way and protecting myself with its cushioned bulk. Sarah, the chief maid, rapped my shoulder with the silver-mounted brush she carried for last-minute touches to the lady’s hair. “A monkey would make a better page than you, Elisha,” she said. “A gelded monkey.”
But the blow was a light one, a reflexive copy of her mistress’ act. Sarah was more interested in reclaiming her place among the others at the windows now that modesty and feminine sensibilities had been satisfied by the brief charade. I didn’t dare slide the chair back to where I had first placed it; but by balancing on tiptoes on the carven arms, I could look down into the courtyard again.
The baron’s soldiers were mostly off-worlders themselves. They had boasted that they were better men than the mercenaries if it ever came down to cases. The fear that the women had mimed from behind stone walls seemed real enough now to the soldiers whose bluster and assault rifles were insignificant against the iridium titans that entered the courtyard at a slow walk, barely clearing the posts of gates that would have passed six men marching abreast.
Even at idle speed, the tanks roared as their fans maintained the cushions of air that slid them over the ground. Three of the baron’s men dodged back through the palace doorway, their curses inaudible over the intake whine of the approaching vehicles.
The baron squared his powerful shoulders within his dress cloak of scarlet, purple, and gold. I could not see his face, but the back of his neck flushed red and his left hand tugged his drooping mustache in a gesture as meaningful as the angry curses that would have accompanied it another time.
Beside him stood Wolfitz, his chamberlain; the tallest man in the courtyard; the oldest; and, despite the weapons the others carried, the most dangerous.
When I was first gelded and sold to the baron as his lady’s page, Wolfitz had helped me continue the studies I began when I was training for the Church. Out of his kindness, I thought, or even for his amusement… but the chamberlain wanted a spy, or another spy, in the women’s apartments. Even when I was ten years old, I knew that death lay on that path—and life itself was all that remained to me.
I kept the secrets of all. If they thought me a fool and beat me for amusement, then that was better than the impalement that awaited a boy who was found meddling in the affairs of his betters.
The tanks sighed and lowered themselves the last finger’s breadth to the ground. The courtyard, clay and gravel compacted over generations to the density of stone, crunched as the plenum-chamber skirts settled visibly into it.
The man in the turret of the nearest tank ignored the baron and his soldiers. Instead, the reflective face-shield of the tanker’s helmet turned and made a slow, arrogant survey of the barred windows and the women behind them. Maids tittered; but the Lady Miriam did not, and when the tanker’s face-shield suddenly lifted, the mercenary’s eyes and broad smile were toward the baron’s wife.
The tanks whispered and pinged as they came into balance with the surroundings they dominated. Over those muted sounds, the man in the turret of the second tank to enter the courtyard called, “Baron Hetziman, I’m Lieutenant Kiley and this is my number two—Sergeant-Commander Grant. Our tanks have been assigned to you as a protective reaction force until the peace treaty’s signed.”
“You do us honor,” said the baron curtly. “We trust your stay with us will be pleasant as well as short. A banquet–”
The baron paused, and his head turned to find the object of the other tanker’s attention.
The lieutenant snapped something in a language that was not ours, but the name Grant was distinctive in the sharp phrase.
The man in the nearest turret lifted himself out gracefully by resting his palms on the hatch coaming and swinging up his long, powerful legs without pausing for footholds until he stood atop the iridium turret. The hatch slid shut between his booted feet. His crisp mustache was sandy blond, and the eyes which he finally turned on the baron and the formal welcoming committee were blue. “Rudy Grant at your service, Baron,” he said, with even less respect in his tone than in his words.
They did not need to respect us. They were the tank lords.
“We will go down and greet our guests,” said the Lady Miriam, suiting her actions to her words. Even as she turned, I was off the chair, dragging it toward the inner wall of imported polychrome plastic.
“But, Lady…” Sarah said nervously. She
let her voice trail off, either through lack of a firm objection or unwillingness to oppose a course on which her mistress was determined.
With coos and fluttering skirts, the women swept out the door from which the usual guard had been removed for the sake of the show in the courtyard. Lady Miriam’s voice carried back: “We were to meet them at the banquet tonight. We’ll just do so a little earlier.”
If I had followed the women, one of them would have ordered me to stay and watch the suite—though everyone, even the tenants who farmed the plots of the home estate here, was outside watching the arrival of the tanks. Instead, I waited for the sounds to die away down the stair tower—and I slipped out the window.
Because I was in a hurry, I lost one of the brass buttons from my jacket—my everyday livery of buff; I’d be wearing the black plush jacket when I waited in attendance at the banquet tonight, so the loss didn’t matter. The vertical bars were set close enough to prohibit most adults, and few of the children who could slip between them would have had enough strength to then climb the bracing strut of the roof antenna, the only safe path since the base of the west wing was a thicket of spikes and razor ribbon.
I was on the roof coping in a matter of seconds, three quick hand-over-hand surges. The women were only beginning to file out through the doorway. Lady Miriam led them, and her hauteur and lifted chin showed she would brook no interference with her plans.
Most of the tankers had, like Grant, stepped out of their hatches, but they did not wander far. Lieutenant Kiley stood on the sloping bow of his vehicle, offering a hand which the baron angrily refused as he mounted the steps recessed into the tank’s armor.
“Do you think I’m a child?” rumbled the baron, but only his pride forced him to touch the tank when the mercenary made a hospitable offer. None of the baron’s soldiers showed signs of wanting to look into the other vehicles. Even the chamberlain, aloof if not afraid, stood at arm’s length from the huge tank, which even now trembled enough to make the setting sun quiver across the iridium hull.
Because of the chamberlain’s studied unconcern about the vehicle beside him, he was the first of the welcoming party to notice Lady Miriam striding toward Grant’s tank, holding her skirts clear of the ground with dainty, bejeweled hands. Wolfitz turned to the baron, now leaning gingerly against the curve of the turret so that he could look through the hatch while the lieutenant gestured from the other side. The chamberlain’s mouth opened to speak, then closed again deliberately.
There were matters in which he too knew better than to become involved.
One of the soldiers yelped when Lady Miriam began to mount the nearer tank. She loosed her dress in order to take the hand Grant extended to her. The baron glanced around and snarled an inarticulate syllable. His wife gave him a look as composed as his was suffused with rage. “After all, my dear,” said the Lady Miriam coolly, “our lives are in the hands of these brave men and their amazing vehicles. Of course I must see how they are arranged.”
She was the king’s third daughter, and she spoke now as if she were herself the monarch.
“That’s right, milady,” said Sergeant Grant. Instead of pointing through the hatch, he slid back into the interior of his vehicle with a murmur to the lady.
She began to follow.
I think Lady Miriam and I, alone of those on the estate, were not nervous about the tanks for their size and power. I loved them as shimmering beasts, whom no one could strike in safety. The lady’s love was saved for other subjects.
“Grant, that won’t be necessary,” the lieutenant called sharply—but he spoke in our language, not his own, so he must have known the words would have little effect on his subordinate.
The baron bellowed, “Mir–” before his voice caught. He was not an ungovernable man, only one whose usual companions were men and women who lived or died as the baron willed. The lady squeezed flat the flounces of her skirt and swung her legs within the hatch ring.
“Murphy,” called the baron to his chief of soldiers. “Get up there with her.” The baron roared more often than he spoke quietly. This time his voice was not loud, but he would have shot Murphy where he stood if the soldier had hesitated before clambering up the bow of the tank.
“Vision blocks in both the turret and the driver’s compartment,” said Lieutenant Kiley, pointing within his tank, “give a three-sixty-degree view at any wavelength you want to punch in.”
Murphy, a grizzled man who had been with the baron a dozen years, leaned against the turret and looked down into the hatch. Past him, I could see the combs and lace of Lady Miriam’s elaborate coiffure. I would have given everything I owned to be there within the tank myself—and I owned nothing but my life.
The hatch slid shut. Murphy yelped and snatched his fingers clear.
Atop the second tank, the baron froze and his flushed cheeks turned slatey. The mercenary lieutenant touched a switch on his helmet and spoke too softly for anything but the integral microphone to hear the words.
The order must have been effective, because the hatch opened as abruptly as it had closed—startling Murphy again.
Lady Miriam rose from the turret on what must have been a power lift. Her posture was in awkward contrast to the smooth ascent, but her face was composed. The tank and its apparatus were new to the lady, but anything that could have gone on within the shelter of the turret was a familiar experience to her.
“We have seen enough of your equipment,” said the baron to Lieutenant Kiley in the same controlled voice with which he had directed Murphy. “Rooms have been prepared for you—the guest apartments alongside mine in the east wing, not the barracks below. Dinner will be announced”—he glanced at the sky. The sun was low enough that only the height of the tank’s deck permitted the baron to see the orb above the courtyard wall—“in two hours. Make yourselves welcome.”
Lady Miriam turned and backed her way to the ground again. Only then did Sergeant Grant follow her out of the turret. The two of them were as powerful as they were arrogant—but neither a king’s daughter nor a tank lord is immortal.
“Baron Hetziman,” said the mercenary lieutenant, “sir—” The modest honorific for the tension, for the rage which the baron might be unable to control even at risk of his estates and his life. “That building, the gatehouse, appears disused. We’ll doss down there, if you don’t mind.”
The baron’s face clouded, but that was his normal reaction to disagreement. The squat tower to the left of the gate had been used only for storage for a generation. A rusted harrow, upended to fit farther within the doorway, almost blocked access now.
The baron squinted for a moment at the structure, craning his short neck to look past the tank from which he had just climbed down. Then he snorted and said, “Sleep in a hog byre if you choose, Lieutenant. It might be cleaner at that.”
“I realize,” explained Lieutenant Kiley as he slid to the ground instead of using the steps, “that the request sounds odd, but Colonel Hammer is concerned that commandos from Ganz or the Lightning Division might launch an attack. The gatehouse is separated from everything but the outer wall—so if we have to defend it, we can do so without endangering any of your people.”
The lie was a transparent one; but the mercenaries did not have to lie at all if they wished to keep us away from their sleeping quarters. So considered, the statement was almost generous, and the baron chose to take it that way. “Wolfitz,” he said off-handedly as he stamped toward the entrance. “Organize a party of tenants”—he gestured sharply toward the pattern of drab garments and drab faces lining the walls of the courtyard—“and clear the place, will you?”
The chamberlain nodded obsequiously, but he continued to stride along at his master’s heel.
The baron turned, paused, and snarled, “Now,” in a voice as grim as the fist he clenched by his side.
“My lord,” said Wolfitz with a bow that danced the line between brusque and dilatory. He stepped hastily toward the soldiers who had broken their
rank in lieu of orders—a few of them toward the tanks and their haughty crews but most back to the stone shelter of the palace.
“You men,” the chamberlain said, making circling motions with his hands. “Fifty of the peasants, quickly. Everything is to be turned out of the gatehouse, thrown beyond the wall for the time being. Now. Move them.”
The women followed the baron into the palace. Several of the maids glanced over their shoulders, at the tanks—at the tankers. Some of the women would have drifted closer to meet the men in khaki uniforms, but Lady Miriam strode head high and without hesitation.
She had accomplished her purposes; the purposes of her entourage could wait.
I leaned from the room ledge for almost a minute further, staring at the vehicles which were so smooth-skinned that I could see my amorphous reflection in the nearest. When the sound of women’s voices echoed through the window, I squirmed back, only instants before the lady reentered her apartment.
They would have beaten me for my own excitement had they not themselves been agog with the banquet to come—and the night which would follow it.
The high-arched banquet hall was so rarely used that it was almost as unfamiliar to the baron and his household as it was to his guests. Strings of small lights had been led up the cast-concrete beams, but nothing could really illuminate the vaulting waste of groins and coffers that formed the ceiling.
The shadows and lights trembling on flexible fastenings had the look of the night sky on the edge of an electrical storm. I gazed up at the ceiling occasionally while I waited at the wall behind Lady Miriam. I had no duties at the banquet—that was for house servants, not body servants like myself—but my presence was required for show and against the chance that the lady would send me off with a message.
There Will Be War Volume VII Page 2