Even better, they had crews inspecting military equipment. Heavy tanks, APC’s, even BattleMechs were getting the once over.
No doubt looking for sabotage.
Yamashita could’ve laughed.
Until he heard the click of a round being chambered. He slowly lowered the binoculars and extended his hands so whoever was behind him could see them. Then he turned around.
This time his death was dressed up like Tai-sa Ikeda, pointing a weapon straight at his head.
So the old bastard had survived after all. Yamashita had to give the man points for that. “How’d you get out?”
“MacPhail suspected you all along. I read about it in the intercepts. I just had time to destroy them and get clear.”
Yamashita puffed a mouthful of air out past his lips.
“They found the cell through you,” said Ikeda. It wasn’t a question.
Yamashita glanced at the gun in Ikeda’s hand and then he nodded. He didn’t feel like begging for his life. He doubted it would do any good anyway.
“Yakuza scum,” Ikeda whispered. “I knew you were no good.”
Yamashita said nothing. What was there to say?
“I told you if you betrayed us, I’d give you to the Lyrans.”
Yamashita shook his head. “If you have to kill me then pull the trigger, but don’t undo my work.”
“Your work,” Ikeda sneered.
“Some men think war is a matter of honor and valor. Men like you think it’s the interplay of secrets. But what war is, the thing that’s truly at its heart, is logistics.”
“I know that,” Ikeda snapped.
“No you don’t. You just think you do.”
Ikeda scowled.
“Have you ever moved a thousand keys of heroin? A shipment of bootleg trivids? A container full of milgrade needlers?”
“Of course not,” Ikeda snarled.
Yamashita raised his left hand with its severed pinky. “The yakuza take a finger to teach a lesson, so that it’s never forgotten. Do you know what lesson I needed to learn, Tai-sa Ikeda?”
The colonel shook his head.
“I was late with a shipment.” He paused and glanced at the port. “Logistics is life, Tai-sa. If you live on the street you understand that more deeply than a man like you ever could.”
Ikeda glanced at the port. “What did you do?”
“MacPhail suspected I was a plant from the beginning. I had to give them Hanson to let me in.”
Yamashita saw Ikeda’s face tighten, saw the gun shake in his hand.
“Drescher looked the other way because I made him a lot of money, but I knew MacPhail wouldn’t let it go. I didn’t want him to. For my plan to work he had to catch me.”
“And everyone else, too.”
“Hai,” said Yamashita with real regret. “I’m sorry about that.”
“You betrayed us.”
“Not betrayed. Sacrificed. Traded their lives for victory. What DCMS commander wouldn’t do the same?”
Ikeda snorted. “Victory.”
“I told MacPhail I had committed sabotage. He believed me because he found a real resistance cell. And for another reason. Because unarmed and badly beaten I found a way to escape. He had to believe I couldn’t have done that without help.”
Ikeda’s eyes narrowed. “How did you do that?”
Yamashita remembered the mark of the tiger on the guard’s cheek. “I used a weapon only a yakuza could use,” he said softly.
“Or you’re still working with the Lyrans and all this is just an elaborate lie.”
“Look out there, Tai-sa,” Yamashita shouted, stabbing his binoculars in the port’s direction. “They are searching through every container, disassembling every weapon system, looking for sabotage that doesn’t exist. It will take them at least a week to figure it out. I, working by myself, have halted the entire FedCom advance from this world for a week, and all it cost was the lives of five operatives.”
“A week,” said Ikeda dismissively.
Yamashita said nothing. Yakuza heard many things that others did not hear and he had heard a word, a secret word.
OROCHI.
Yamashita did not know what it meant and he did not want to know. All that mattered was the Kanrei had found a way to save the Combine, if only his soldiers could buy him the time to execute his plan. The week by itself might not be enough.
But it was a start.
“So you are a hero, then.” Ikeda’s voice shook with fury. “I should let you go. You should get a medal.”
Yamashita met Ikeda’s angry gaze. “Do whatever you must,” he said calmly to his death. “I am yakuza and it is my honor to serve the Kanrei.”
Then he turned his face away and raised his eyes to the summit of the great volcano, waiting without fear for whatever would happen next.
ISOLATION’S WEIGHT
by Randall N. Bills
Jacob’s Mountain
Tortinia, Kiamba
Benjamin Military District, Draconis Combine
15 April 3067
Lieutenant Cameron Baird watched as the odious-black smoke trail dissipated on the stiff mountain winds. Burning debris rained down across several kilometers. It looked as if the sky was bleeding.
“Can you believe that?” His comm system pounced to life as James broke the silence. “Wow. Too much.”
Wow? Watching a Clan Broadsword-class Drop-Ship falling through a cobalt sky had been sobering, true. Like a flaming thunderbolt tossed by Zeus’s own hand. But Cameron read deeper. What the hell was a Ghost Bear force doing raiding Kiamba? What could be of interest to a lone DropShip on Jacob’s Mountain? Surely they could care less about elements from MacLeod’s Regiment of the Northwind Highlanders.
He shivered, though he knew the cockpit didn’t hold a chill and would soon be anything but cold. He hated it here. Hated the snow and the isolation from anything living beyond the small force around him. Hell, he would’ve preferred Hecate’s Swamp to this eternal cold. But not James. Wherever the action was.
Had Cameron ever been that young? That naïve? He hoped not.
“Yes, James. Wonderful.” Did the boy hear the sarcasm? Probably not. The starch of his new cooling vest (handed to him, what, six months ago upon graduation from the NMA?) probably pushed up against his ears, making it hard for him to hear anything. Beyond his own voice, of course.
Cameron couldn’t help but let a quirky smile spread his slim lips, a sparkle flashing in hazel eyes. He knew a certain lieutenant colonel who shepherded a younger, stupider Cameron through his first year after the Academy. Who almost throttled him on at least ten different occasions. At least.
Cameron reached forward and toggled from the topographical map that displayed across the secondary screen, to radar, as the ghost of Geoff McFadden’s words seemed to rise up like holography, temporarily blotting out the forward view screen and the snowy terrain beyond.
When you’re a leader, you lead And protect. One comes with the other. If you can’t protect those under your command to the best of your ability, if you can’t lead them to be leaders themselves—well, then you’ve no business wearing The Bars.
Always the capitalizations in his voice.
Geoff’s words seemed to echo in the confines of the cockpit. The man had been the father he never knew; regardless of the weight, Cameron tried to carry the responsibilities he now held with the same dedication and honor his mentor did. How could he do anything less?
The radar began sweeping, pinpointing Caden’s lance, Geoff’s Old Guard lance and the lance on loan from the Third Proserpina Hussars. Twelve ’Mechs—several green warriors. What would they find over the hill? He checked his secondary monitor and radar screen once more, which showed a pair of Tatsu aerospace fighters whipping away at well over Mach two, vanishing over the mountain.
“Thanks for the fire, Hussars. Kind of cold up here.” Lieutenant-colonel McFadden’s voice broke over the commline.
Cameron smiled and checked the r
adar to see Geoff’s lance the next ridgeline over, but more importantly, several hundred meters closer to the crash sight. He shook his head, feeling the comforting weight of his neurohelmet. “Going to get yourself in trouble, boss,” he said, but softly enough not to activate his own mic. With that flight actually attached to the Hussars’ Third battalion, and O’Riley’s touchiness over having to do combat exercises—regardless of how few were involved—with mere mercenaries in this northern, frozen wasteland, Cameron just knew ol’ Harrison would make his voice known. Later of course. Always later. And much worse than the original offense.
You’d think the Third Proserpina were a Sword of Light regiment for all their prickliness.
“No problem, Old Guard. Glad to bring a match to the barbecue. Just make sure what we tossed onto your grill is crispy black when you’re done. Hai?” The unknown pilot’s voice boomed laughter, lively and good natured. Cameron felt shock. No way could he be part of the Hussars.
“Okay Highlanders,” Geoff’s strong voice began, “they’ve downed some bad guys. Time for us to put them away. Move forward at best speed and engage at will,” with the unspoken tag line before the Hussars lance has all the fun. A series of affirmatives echoed across the commline.
Of course Cameron would’ve loved to be taking command of this by himself, but with the Old Guard command lance on hand to help smooth the training issues between elements of MacLeod’s Third Battalion and the Hussars’ Third…well, he couldn’t be happier to have the old man along for the ride.
Cameron reached over and pushed his own throttle forward a half, sending his Wolverine into a smart step forward—difficult through the deep snow. One of these days he really did mean to send a surprise gift to the quartermaster who’d managed to acquire several of the new WVR-8K from the DCMS. He’d been in it less than a year, but knew already he never wanted to pilot another machine. He could’ve probably gotten one of the Clan machines taken off of Huntress due to his credentials at the Academy, but he felt confident nothing would’ve felt this good. This right.
“Okay, boys,” he spoke up to his own lance, “you heard the boss. Bad guys over the ridge and we get to clean up the mess. Provided the fly boys left us any scraps.”
The responding laughter felt good. Although he was serious. With the way the DropShip had come down, he wouldn’t be surprised if they found nothing but a black smear against pristine white.
Ten minutes passed way too slowly. Manipulating pedals and joysticks to maneuver through the thick powder and heavy woods, he kept an eye on the radar, which showed almost a dozen green darts moving forward to the guesstimated position of the downed craft. With the high iron-content of the mountain, good readings of what they would face were simply not coming in. He knew the DropShip held a capacity to carry five Clan ’Mechs. But how many of them could possible have survived?
The Old Guard made contact first; the heavy boom of autocannon fire echoed across jagged rocks and lonely copses of trees as McFadden drew first blood with his Hatchetman. Cameron’s own lance simply could not move quickly enough and McFadden wanted a taste of action before the Hussars. Typical.
“Okay boys. Let’s show ‘em young bloods can keep up with geriatrics.”
He stomped down on his pedals and vented plasma lifted his fifty-five ton machine into the air, sublimated snow blasting around him in a send-off halo. He landed smoothly and launched again, just about cresting the ridge where the battle unfolded. Then remembered only Karli’s Starslayer mounted jump jets. Ben’s Hollander and James’ Wolfhound didn’t have the benefit and he couldn’t leave them over the ridge.
Had to lead. Had to protect.
“Come on boys. I know the Academy gives you better pilot training than that. Let’s get a move on, eh?” He tried to infuse as much good natured humor into his voice as he could, tried to hide his worry. Regardless of the strides to narrow the technology gap between the Clan and Inner Sphere, Clan ’Mechs still outclassed Inner Sphere pound for pound.
Geoff could pilot circles around almost anyone he knew, but depending on what lay over the ridge…Cameron’s own lance could make all the difference.
Flashes of sapphire and ruby lit the sky over the ridge, along with the detonations of multiple heavy explosions. Cameron gripped joysticks in sweat slicked hands. Willed his lance to move faster.
“They’ve got some serious life left in them,” Geoff’s voice startled him with its immediate urgency. “If we don’t take down that Mad Cat, and I mean now, we’re going to be in a world of hurt. Lance, target the Mad Cat. I’ll deal with the Rifleman.” The commline descended into a low babble once more.
A Mad Cat! Damn. A Rifleman? His mind swirled. What the hell. Did he mean a Rifleman IIC? Why would the Clans be fielding an Inner Sphere design?
He had to wait. A single ’Mech might not make the difference, but a lance would. Beside, he couldn’t leave them. Had to lead.
He stared at his radar, demanding it provide more information. Suddenly he realized at least one of the Hussars had been able to move around their own ridge onto the plateau and appeared to have engaged as well; the tag read Tai-i Matsu. His assault BattleMaster would lend considerable weight to their side.
His own lance finally pulled even. “Okay boys, over the ridge and give ‘em everything you got,” he said. Cameron prepared his weapons to follow his own advice and ignited plasma once more, sending his Wolverine up and over the ridge…to hell.
Spread out before him, a small, but terrifyingly urgent battle unfolded on the under-sized plateau. The downed DropShip still burned, sending up a huge bloom of smoke; a fallen Thor next to the massive rent in the Broadsword’s flank told him not all the ’Mechs survived. Yet a thousand meters in front of him held a Mad Cat and Rifleman, with an Arcas off to the side, all weapons blazing and hammering the Highlander forces and the Proserpina BattleMaster.
He saw the Rasalhague logo inside a bear’s head outline on the machine: First Rasalhague Bears. The Rifleman addition to a Clan force made sense now
As Cameron brought his own machine down to earth once more with a last gush of flame and stretch of myomer, he watched as fire lit underneath Geoff’s Hatchetman. Time seemed to dial down until he could perceive individual autocannon shells and PPC beams hung suspended in mid-air. The Hatchetman flew forward, on a collision course with the Rifleman. The pilot simply squared its feet, lined up both rotary autocannons and let loose a barrage that practically obscured its outline. Twin, horrific streams of vomiting death slashed into the Hatchetman, eating and tearing away at armor like a bear savaging its meal, mortally wounding the metal giant.
“No!” Cameron managed to scream, as time swooped back to normal.
With an expertise few might have managed under such circumstances, Geoff kept the Hatchetman on course as limbs began to tear away under the murderous fire.
Like a metal rockslide, the Hatchetman crunched into the Rifleman with a sound that could be heard even above the din of battle. Both toppled down in a mangled heap of metal limbs.
Cameron would never be able to remember the next ten minutes. A haze—formed of tears and rage—seemed to blanket out his perception. One moment he watched his idol (his father) die and the next he stood over a fallen Ghost Bear machine, firing endless kilojoules of energy into the blasted scraps—all that remained of the Mad Cat.
As silence descended, shame replaced his rage. Geoff would be rolling over in his metal grave at such a loss of control. He had done what needed to be done. Had lead.
Had sacrificed himself to protect his command.
Though Cameron tried initially to do the same, he too easily fell off. Too easily besmirched the bars (The Bars) he wore. Too easily forgot his heritage.
He blinked away the tears and the last shreds of his incapacitating haze. His command needed him. They needed to mop up and find out what might be here that would tempt the Bears; the rest of the raiding force to deal with elsewhere.
He swallowed several times. Tried
to set aside his shame for another day and opened up a general frequency commline.
Time to lead.
DESTINY’S CALL
by Loren L. Coleman
Tharkad, 2721
Alek heard Michael Steiner arguing with the nurse, swung his legs over the side of the cot and steadied himself against the nearby wall. The room tilted back and forth, sickeningly. He fought his rising gorge and held himself upright. He didn’t want his friend to see him laid out like an invalid. Pity was one thing he had never seen in Michael’s eyes, and never wanted to.
The university infirmary smelled of disinfectant and blood. The disinfectant was normal. The blood was his. Nurse Dragon had cleaned it up pretty well except for some dried stains on the front of his chambray button-up and the blood-clotted gauze packed up inside each nostril. A wonder he could smell anything at all, really.
Footsteps in the outer hallway as they came toward the door of his room. Michael’s pensive voice drifted in. “If he won’t point a finger, there isn’t much any of us can do.”
“Scared?” the nurse asked.
A gentle laugh. “You don’t know Alek. I wish we could scare him. Next time those boys might do permanent damage.”
It was the work of a few seconds to pull back the white curtain that screened his cot from the rest of the room. Carefully he pushed up onto unsteady legs, drawing in a sharp breath as his bruised ribs protested. Rolling his right sleeve down over the bandage wrap, he fastened the button at his cuff. It took three tries. Alek brushed down some of his blond hair, covering the livid bruise swelling at his temple. There wasn’t much he could do about his limp, or his face.
“So, what have we got in here?” Michael asked, stepping through the doorway. One hand smoothed his well-trimmed fringe of beard. A few gray hairs peaked through, but not many for a man of forty-five. Steiners aged well when they weren’t sitting on the throne of the Lyran Commonwealth. With luck, Michael Steiner II would never bear that kind of weight. His older brother Jonathan was Archon, which allowed Michael to return to Tharkad University as a research assistant and, soon, the eccentric life of a celebrity professor.
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