Anarchy in the Ashes ta-3

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Anarchy in the Ashes ta-3 Page 15

by William W. Johnstone


  It would have been much easier had Hartline simply

  given her a polygraph or PSE test; he could have used any of a number of truth serums at his disposal. But Hartline and the group of questioners-men and women-enjoyed seeing people tortured, enjoyed listening to them scream and beg and pray and promise anything and everything if only the pain would stop.

  Hartline became sexually aroused when that happened. Hartline and his group of interrogators shared a great deal in common with Hitler’s SS and Gestapo agents. Many SS and Gestapo agents used to enjoy slowly strangling young men to death. Just before the final death throes, the naked victims would usually gain an erection followed by their final climax. The SS or Gestapo agents so inclined could then take the penis in their mouths.

  So much for the master race.

  Sam Hartline would have been at his dubious glory as an SS or Gestapo officer.

  He would have experienced shivers of ecstasy had he been commandant of a concentration camp during Hitler’s reign of terror.

  Hartline would have been the perfect mate for the Bitch of Buchenwald, that lady (referring only to her anatomical gender) who made lamp shades out of human skin taken from her victims while they were still alive and conscious. Said she just loved tattoos.

  Hartline pulled the man away from the woman’s buttocks. Blood dripped to the floor from her mangled anus. He picked up a small whip from a rack and began beating her back and buttocks, smiling at her screams.

  He beat her for a few moments, dropping her almost to unconsciousness. He ordered a bucket of

  water to be thrown on her, reviving her.

  Smiling as he spoke, Hartline said, when he was certain the woman was conscious enough to understand, “If she hasn’t talked in twenty-four hours, take her down into Missouri where the mutants gather. Strip her and tie her to a tree. They’ll find her.”

  “No!” she screamed. She had seen the mutants before.

  Hartline tossed the short whip to the floor and turned his back to the woman. He walked out of the room. Her screaming intensified as the perversion gained new heights.

  Gen. Georgi Striganov knew of Hartline’s inclination toward torture. One of the reasons he wanted the man on his team. Striganov was not opposed to torture, he just did not personally want to be a party to it. He had found, years before, when he worked for the KGB, that drugs were much more effective and a great deal neater. And one did not have to listen to the shrieking and yelling or put up with the vomiting and all that other disagreeable mess that was associated with physical torture.

  Georgi had known many men and women who enjoyed administering torture. He had closely observed them during the act: the quickened breathing, the glazed eyes, the sexual aspects of the torture act itself. He did not want to become one of those perverted types of people.

  Besides, physical torture made him ill.

  The Russian compartmentalized the issues before him, and took from one section of the mind the matter

  of Ben Raines, placing the matter of Sam Hartline in another niche. A darker corner of the mind, where the mercenary could squat and pick at himself.

  Ben Raines worried the Russian. Georgi knew the man was going to make a military move against him. He had placed informants in the ranks of Raines’s civilians and Emil Hite’s idiot grouping months back-but their information was sketchy, at best. And nothing of any use had come out of the camp of Emil Hite. Which was, according to the Russian’s way of thinking, perfectly understandable. In his mind, Georgi had already written off Hite and his foolish band. They might be of some limited use at a future date, but the Russian could not possibly think of how that might come to pass.

  What kind of move was Ben Raines planning? When would it take place? And how would Raines go about it?

  He didn’t know.

  He did know his IPF personnel were much stronger in number than anything Raines or Solis or Maiden could put together, and they were better trained and equipped, for the most part. So Raines was probably contemplating some sort of guerrilla action. He knew Raines and the ex-Seal, McGowen, were both trained in guerrilla warfare and highly decorated during the Vietnam war. And Raines was an ex-mercenary to boot.

  Guerrilla warfare. That was what the Russian feared the most from Raines, for that would mean his IPF forces would have to be spread all over three or four states, and his selective breeding program would have to be placed on the back burner for the duration.

  Things had been coming along so very splendidly-especially that new program his doctors had suggested.

  “Goddamn it!” he cursed, slamming a fist on his desk top. “Goddamn Ben Raines.”

  He picked up the phone on his desk and punched savagely at the buttons. He snarled, “Get me Colonel Fechnor-quickly.”

  The first intelligence reports back to Tri-States were grim and very much to the point:

  “Tell General Raines the IPF is mounting up, getting ready for what looks to be a big push-south.”

  Ben read the copied message. “Damn!” he said. He turned in his chair and looked at Ike. “Now we don’t have a choice in the matter, buddy. It’s been decided for us.”

  Ike nodded. “Well have to meet them head-on.” There was a grimness to his voice. “And they’ll have us outgunned and out-manned.”

  “But we can’t stay boxed in here,” Cecil said. Like Ike, the black man was spoiling for a good fight. An ex-Green Beret, he had earned his CIB in Vietnam. “They’d sit off our borders and lob heavy artillery in on us, and eventually kill us all.”

  “Give me your votes,” Ben said, looking at Colonel Gray, the only person present who had yet to speak.

  “Take the fight to them, General,” the Englishman said. “If we are going to die, then let us prepare to die for liberty.”

  Ben smiled. He knew without asking that would be the reply of all his people. He looked at Ike.

  “I’m with him,” Ike said, jerking his thumb toward

  Dan. “I just can’t say it as pretty.”

  “That line came, in part,” Dan said, “from a Rom-berg opera. When the street rabble were preparing to do battle for King Louis against the crown of Burgundy. They were ultimately successful in their efforts.”

  “Do tell,” Ike said.

  “Cretin,” Dan said with a smile.

  “Smart-ass,” Ike responded.

  Laughing, Ben glanced at Cecil.

  “Take the fight to them, Ben. Let’s kick their asses all the way back to Iceland.”

  “All right, that’s it. Pull back your people from Iowa. Those that were meeting with Lois Peters. I hate to leave what resistance there is up there defenseless, but I can’t risk losing anybody at this stage of the game,

  “Gear up. I want the people mobilized and moving within forty-eight hours. Contact Juan and Al and have them get their troops moving-en masse. Right now. Juan will take his people in from the west, Al from the east; we’ll go straight up and in.

  “Let’s do it people.”

  CHAPTER TEN

  “No!” Ben said. “And that is final, Gale. You are not going north with the column.”

  Out came the chin. “I’d by God like to know why the hell not?”

  “Because this is war, Gale. War. Full-scale warfare. You have no idea what war is like. It’s dirty, bloody, awful, dangerous. Can you get that through your head?”

  She glared at him. Rose to her full height. All five feet.

  “Can you, Gale?”

  He towered over her; she glowered up at him.

  “When do we pull out, Ben?” “Goddamn!”

  “I better get us packed.” “Jesus Christ!”

  “Do you want me to pack any long underwear for you?”

  Ben stalked from the house, muttering. He was still muttering as he walked up the street. Tina pulled in next to the curb, motioning him into the Jeep.

  Ben kissed his adopted daughter and smiled at her. He

  had not seen her in several months and had missed her. “W
hen’d you get in?”

  “Late last night. I stayed with friends.”

  Father and daughter looked at each other. Tina touched her father’s face with her finger tips.

  “I’ve missed you, kiddo,” Ben said.

  “How much?” She initiated the game they had played when she was young.

  “Oodles and gobs.”

  “Good. Well… I thought it was best if I stayed away for a time. Dad, I have something to tell you.”

  Ben knew what it was. And he thought Tina probably knew he did. Very little escaped Ben’s attention in Tri-States.

  “Oh?”

  “I met this real nice fellow.”

  “He better be a nice fellow,” Ben said jokingly. He knew the young man was. He knew all about the young man.

  “His name is Robert Graham. Bob. We’re farming down in Louisiana.” “We’re farming?”

  “Yes. I… Dad, I live with him.”

  Ben had never objected to that. With the world having taken such a beating, marriage was getting rare. Sometimes a few words were spoken, but oftentimes not, they were spoken by a friend of the couple, and not a minister.

  Varying religions were now almost non-existent, especially in Tri-States. Baptist, Christian, Methodist, Catholic, Lutheran, Jew, all the others, now were, at least in Tri-States, combined. No longer was there the arrogance of one church maintaining that if one did not belong to

  that particular church, one was doomed to suffer the fires of the pits of hell.

  It had taken a worldwide nuclear and germ holocaust to bring the factions together.

  Ben smiled. “Thinking about getting married, maybe?”

  “Could be. Just as soon as this mission is concluded.”

  Ben stiffened beside her. He had lost his wife, Salina, and their son, Jack, back in the battle for the old Tri-States. He did not want to lose Tina. For a few seconds, he was flung back in time.

  Just seconds after Salina had kissed him and told him goodbye, she had been bayoneted in the stomach by a paratrooper. Ben had killed the young soldier and then knelt down beside Salina’s side. She had smiled up at him, then died.

  Moments later, Jack had been killed by a machine gun burst. Tina had lobbed a hand grenade into the machine gun emplacement, killing the gunners.

  “What are you thinking, Dad?” Tina brought him

  back to the moment. “Salina. Your brother, Jack.” “That’s what I thought. Did you love her, Dad?” “No. No, I didn’t. But I cared a great deal for her and

  was always faithful to her.” “Have you ever truly been in love, Dad?” “I don’t believe I have, honey. Maybe someday.” He

  did not feel any guilt about having said that, for Gale

  knew that thought there was a closeness between them,

  physical as well as emotional, Ben did not love her.

  She touched his hand, this man she loved as her own father.

  “Anyway,” Ben said, “who said you were going on the mission?”

  She squeezed his hand. “I’m a Rebel, Dad. You taught me to be a soldier. You taught me to love liberty and freedom, to know the difference between right and wrong without having courts to tell you the difference. Everything I value, I learned from you. This is as much my fight as it is yours. Now you want to make something out of that?”

  Ben laughed at her stubbornness. “Don’t get uppity with the old man, kid,” he said jokingly.

  “The way you were stalking about a few minutes ago, you looked like you had your back up about something. Want to talk about it?”

  Ben shrugged. “I’ll never understand women.”

  “What a sexist remark.”

  Ben’s smile was wry. “You and Gale will get along fine, I’m thinking. And that spelling is G-A-L-E.”

  Tina laughed aloud. “Does she live up to it?”

  “Damn well better believe it.”

  “I’d very much like to meet her.”

  “Well, so what are you waiting for? Welcome home, honey.”

  “Well split up into three columns,” Ben told his senior officers. “Ike, your brigade will take Highway 79 out of here to Memphis, then get on Interstate 55 and head north. Angle slightly west and stop at Warrenton. We’ll be in radio contact at all times-everything on scramble.

  “Colonel Ramos, you’ll move up Highway 65 all the way to Interstate 70. Wait there for me. I’m going to connect with Highway 63 in North Arkansas and stay with it all the way to Columbia. Well bivouac and wait until Al and Juan get their people in position, then well hit the IPF with everything we’ve got. I don’t like to think about slugging it out nose to nose, but we don’t have a choice this time around, boys. All right, we move out at dawn.”

  The scene resembled a miniature replay of the staging areas of D-day, back in 1944. Hundreds of vehicles of all types: Jeeps, trucks, APC’S, cargo carriers. Just over three thousand men and women, a thousand to a brigade, milling about, creating what would look to the untrained eyes to be mass total confusion. It was anything but. The men and women of Ben Raines’s Rebels had been trained well; each person knew his job and would give it one hundred percent. But any staging area sounds chaotic.

  Whistles and shouted commands and the sounds of hundreds of boots on gravel and concrete filled the early morning air. Quiet conversations between husbands and wives and kids softened the din as men and women told each other goodbye-perhaps for the last time. One more stolen kiss, a touch, a caress, an embrace.

  “Keep your head down, Sid, and we’ll be thinking of you.”

  ““You remember to pack extra socks?”

  “This one will be the last one, Mary. Well kick the ass off the Russians and then we can all settle down to live out our lives in peace.”

  “I’ll be back in plenty of time for the harvest. Crops are sure lookin” good.”

  And then it was time.

  “Second platoon, Able Company, first battalion-over here! Group around me.”

  “Goddamnit, Lewis, if you can’t keep that steel pot on your pinhead, tie the son of a bitch to your pack.”

  “Fuck you, Sergeant.”

  “Where in the hell is Sergeant Ward?”

  “Right here.”

  “Your wife just called. You forgot to take your allergy pills.”

  “Shit!”

  “Harrison, what in the hell are you doing with that goddamn chicken?”

  “It’s our mascot, Captain.” “A chicken?”

  “First platoon, Dog Company, third battalion-get over here, damnit!”

  Since many of the roads throughout the nation were in sad condition-with many of them having had no maintenance in almost fifteen years-the battle tanks would not be transported on trucks. The heavy tanks would have to be driven as is, overland. The harsh rumble of the big engines firing into life added to the din. Ben was throwing everything under his command at the IPF, and he knew if he failed (and that was a distinct possibility) General Striganov and his forces would then have much more than just a toe hold in America.

  81mm mortar carriers were made ready to roll. 155mm howitzers, M60A2 tanks, M48A3 main battle tanks, and M60A1 main battle tanks, each weighing between fifty-two and fifty-seven tons were cranked up, the huge V-12 diesel engines rumbling and snorting to

  life in the cool predawn darkness.

  Tactical and support vehicles, Jeeps and deuce-and-a-halves, pickup trucks and APC’S roared into life. M548 cargo carriers wheeled on their tracks, pointing their stubby bulldog noses to the north, preparing to move out at Ben’s signal.

  On the tarmac of the airport, Jim Slater and Paul Green and a dozen other pilots checked out their planes one final time, once more went over flight plans and looked over their personal arms and equipment. They knew this was not to be an air war. Although their prop-driven planes were armed, they were not fighter planes. They were cargo and spotter planes.

  Ben did have three old PU!‘S, of the Vietnam era, each plane filled with electronically fired modern-day Gat
lin guns. Each PUFF was capable of killing anything and everything in an area the size of a football field. But they were slow planes, and very susceptible to attack from ground-to-air missiles. One infantryman, armed with a Dragon, an XMBLEDG guided missile, could bring down a PUFF.

  Suddenly, as if on silent cue, the area quieted down. Engines idled quietly, conversation ceased as dawn began gently touching the east, gray fingers slowly opening from a dark fist to cast silver pockets of new light over the land, bringing another day to this part of the ravaged world.

  Ben spoke into a walkie-talkie. “Spotter planes up. Go, boys.”

  Moments later, the planes were airborne, their running lights blinking in the silver gray of early dawn.

  “Dan?” Ben spoke into the walkie-talkie.

  “Here, sir,” Colonel Gray called in from miles up the road.

  “Scouts out,” Ben said quietly.

  Miles north, with Col. Dan Gray in the lead Jeep, the scouts moved out.

  “Are we in contact with the teams of LETTERRP’S?” Ben asked.

  “Yes, sir,” a young woman replied. “They are on the south side of Interstate 70, in place, waiting for your order to cross.”

  “Send them across,” Ben ordered. “Have them link up with Gray’s scouts already in the area.”

  “Yes, sir.” She spoke to a radio operator and a state and a half straight north, teams of Long Range Recon Patrol moved out on their lonely, dangerous and dirty job. They would be the eyes and the ears of Gen. Ben Raines.

  Ben was handed a steaming mug of coffee. He sipped the hot, strong brew, mostly chicory, and walked the long lines of men and women and machines of war. He knew them all, faces if not names.

  “How you doing this morning, Hector?” he asked Colonel Ramos, the CO. of the third brigade of Raines’s Rebels.

  “Ready, sir,” came the reply from the swarthy Hector.

  “Viv raise much hell about being left behind?” “A “sangrey fuego.”

  “And that means?”

  “Fire and sword, Ben.”

  “But wasn’t making up fun?” Ben grinned.

  The Spaniard rolled his dark eyes and said, “Si-por cierto!”

  Ben laughed and punched his friend lightly on the shoulder.

 

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