D-Day in the Ashes

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D-Day in the Ashes Page 2

by William W. Johnstone


  There was nothing left to say. Everything had been said the afternoon before this dawn. Every Rebel had said his goodbyes to family and friends. Many would not be coming back except in body bags—whenever that was possible—providing all the pieces could be found. Many others would be buried in lonely graves in faraway places—lonely but never forgotten by the men and women who served with them.

  Ben looked at Corrie. “Mount ’em up, Corrie.”

  Some of the Rebels went to trucks for the long ride north, others would be off-loaded at wailing planes at the airport. Thirteen thousand men and women heading north to join four thousand more at the staging area in Maine.

  “You want me to have communications radio Blanton that we’re moving?” Corrie asked.

  Ben shook his head. “He’ll know it soon enough. He may be a liberal, but he’s not a fool.”

  The team members exchanged glances, and Ben caught them and smiled but said nothing. It was highly unlikely that any resident of the SUSA would have anything good to say about President Homer Blanton—for they knew that even though Blanton had officially recognized the SUSA as a separate and sovereign nation, and had signed treaties, Blanton and those in his administration hated Ben Raines and anything, everything, and anybody associated with the Southern United States of America. They were also well aware that given the slightest opportunity, Blanton would destroy the SUSA if he thought he could.

  But as Ben had just said, Blanton was no fool. He knew that Ben Raines had nuclear weapons, and many of them were pointed directly at Charleston, West Virginia, the new capital of the United States. Blanton was also very much aware that another president a few years back had tried to destroy Ben and his Rebels. Ben had sent K-teams out after that president and his close associates and killed them all.

  Homer Blanton reckoned that General Raines was about the meanest son of a bitch he had ever encountered.

  Ben stopped by his house for a moment to play with his dogs and say goodbye to them . . . for he did not know if he would ever see any of them again. His husky, Smoot, would not be going on this trip.

  There was no woman in Ben’s life. Not lately. Ben was certainly not celibate, for there were women he visited from time to time to “take the edge off,” as Jersey put it. But since Jerre had died, Ben had been unable to sustain a relationship more than a few months.

  “They’ll be well taken of, General,” one of a group of Rebels standing in the yard told him as he was leaving.

  Ben nodded and kept on walking, trying to ignore the frantic and sorrow-filled barking coming from his pets. He got into his Hummer and told Coop, “Go!”

  Late that afternoon, Ben and his team stepped off the plane in Augusta, Maine, and were met by Colonel Dan Gray.

  “Everything quiet up here, Dan?”

  The Englishman smiled. “Except for our occasional forays across the border into Canada to harass Revere’s troops, yes.”

  “Buddy?”

  “He’s up there now with some of his special ops people. As a matter of fact, he’s rather deep into enemy territory. He just reported this morning.”

  Ben started to say that he hadn’t given any orders for any of his people to cross borders. Dan anticipated that and held up a hand.

  “Revere’s troops crossed over first and attacked us at our listening posts, Ben. They hit us five times at five different locations before I gave the orders to cross and pursue.”

  “Fair enough, Dan. The bridges still intact across the Saint John?”

  “Surprisingly, yes. Plans, Ben?”

  “We start our move into Quebec day after tomorrow. I want to give Buddy time to get into place. Let’s go to your CP, I want to look at some maps.”

  In the command post Ben shook hands with Georgi Striganov and Jackie Malone, then studied the maps of Revere’s strongest points for a time.

  “Georgi, you spearhead the western attack. Dan and Jackie will be right behind you. Take tanks and artillery and head out at first light. Go up here to 201 and take it straight up to the border.” He did not have to tell the old soldier to take all the supplies his people could stagger with, for the Rebels almost always outdistanced their supply lines.

  “Ike and Rebet will come with me into New Brunswick. We’ll clear that and cross over into Quebec. By that time the rest of our people will be in place and ready to smash through at these locations.” Ben X’ed them out on the map and smiled. “I’ve sent small contingents of Rebels into Manitoba and Ontario with enough things that go bang to confuse the hell out of Revere’s scouts. If it all works, he won’t know where in the hell to shift his people. They’ll start diversionary tactics at my signal.” Ben tossed the grease pencil on the map table. “Let’s get something to eat. I’m starved.”

  Several hundred miles to the north, General Revere sat in a lovely old chateau, meeting with his officers. The overall mood was not good. Revere broke the glum silence after his intelligence people read aloud their assessment of meeting the Rebels head-on.

  “There is no point in us sitting around here looking like Chicken Little waiting for the sky to fall,” Revere said. “We’ve got the Rebels to fight, and that is that. We know that Raines asked Blanton’s armed forces—such as they are—to form up a line behind his own, but to stay in the States. Even if our people did manage to break through the Rebels, we’d have the American army to deal with, and we’d be in such weakened condition, plus outrunning our supply lines, that we wouldn’t stand a chance. So we have no choice, gentlemen: We have to stand and slug it out with Raines.”

  “General—”

  Revere waved him silent. “I know, Karl, I know. Our losses are going to be unacceptable. But let me tell you all something—if we were to attempt to fight Raines’s Rebels in an unconventional type of war, we wouldn’t stand a chance. I know Ben Raines. I’ve known him for years. I’ve personally watched him fight guerrilla wars and know how he thinks. Believe this: The Rebels are the finest guerrilla fighters in the world. Raines would just love that. No way, people. No way. It might come to that for us to save our own asses, but only as a last resort.”

  “Paul,” a senior officer said, “is it true that he’s got factories down in the SUSA cranking out models of the old P-51?”

  Revere nodded his head. “Incredible as it may seem, yes. It’s a version of the old Mustang. This new one is called the P-51E. Has a top speed of around five hundred miles an hour and carries an enormous payload of rockets and bombs, plus it has six .50-caliber machine guns. Bear in mind that during the Korean War, the P-51D shot down Russian MIG jets!”

  “But we have SAMs,” another officer protested.

  “We have reason to believe our SAMs will be of very little use against the P-51E,” Revere’s intelligence officer said.

  “Why?” Revere asked.

  “They come in right on the deck,” the intelligence officer said. “Far too low for our SAMs to be of use. They stay low until they’ve done their work—and that will be very fast—and then they’re gone, staying at treetop level until they’re out of range of anything we can throw at them in the way of missiles.”

  “Wonderful,” Revere said sarcastically. “That goddamn Ben Raines has brought the art of warfare back to World War Two levels.” He shook his head. “P-51’s for Christ’s sake!”

  Rebels continued coming in all that night, off-loading at the airport and quickly forming up. The Rebels started moving out at dawn, and Revere’s troops along the border tensed as they got the word from recon. So far, in Canada, these men had faced only small groups of civilian resistance fighters. Although many of the men in Revere’s army were professional soldiers, mercenaries, and combat tested, they all knew they had never faced anything like what was now coming at them. For the Rebels were known all over the world as the toughest, meanest, hardest soldiers to be found anywhere. And they weren’t known for taking many prisoners.

  For two days and two nights, all along the western border, Revere’s troops waited and waited. But
nothing happened. What they did not know was that Striganov had halted his people many miles from the border and was sending them across on foot in tiny groups. Those crossing the border on foot were carrying, in addition to their regular equipment, blocks of C-4, silenced pistols, and some were equipped with Haskins long-range .50-caliber sniper rifles. In the hands of a skilled marksman, the Haskins rifle is accurate up to a mile and a half. The 1.5-ounce bullet leaves the muzzle with more than five times the energy of a 7.62-mm round. Depending on the type of round used, the rifle is also capable of penetrating four-inch-thick armor. The tip of the bullet, loaded with incendiary material, detonates high explosives right behind the tip, shattering the steel body into shrapnel. The Rebels were flitting into tiny villages—most of which were deserted except for contingents of Revere’s troops—and taking up position. A few unsuspecting throats had already been cut.

  Meanwhile Ben was moving his people toward New Brunswick. Ben had ordered Buddy and his special operations group into the Gaspé Peninsula to prevent Revere’s men from escaping that way.

  “They’re scared,” Corrie said, after receiving word from communications. The Rebels had tapped into Revere’s frequencies and were monitoring everything. “Revere has only two or three battalions here in New Brunswick, and they’re all running north on Highway 2, heading straight for Edmundston.”

  “North?” Ben questioned, looking at a map.

  “Yes. Stupid move if you ask me.”

  Ben was silent for a moment. “They don’t know about Buddy and his people. They’re scared to come into northeastern Maine because of the terrain . . . and us. How big a town was Edmundston?”

  “About thirteen thousand.”

  “They’ll have some sort of airport. Revere might have transports there; probably does. That’s why they’re running. Order the 51’s up and tell them to go to work.”

  It was a scene right out of World War Two as the newly built and highly modified P-51E’s roared through the skies at almost 500 miles per hour. Coming in right behind them, although much slower at about 180 miles per hour, were the Rebels’ attack helicopters, Cobras and Apaches. The Apache packed a heavier, more devastating load of firepower than many World War Two attack bombers. What the P-51’s didn’t kill or destroy, the Cobras and Apaches would.

  The souped-up and highly modified P-51’s caught Revere’s old transport planes on the ground and cut them to smoking shards of twisted metal. The Apaches and Cobras found the retreated troops of Revere’s army and chopped them to bloody bits. The 51’s circled back and came in right after the attack helicopters and finished the job.

  Revere lost three battalions of men, about a fourth of his planes, and the Rebels suffered not one scratch.

  Revere sat in his chateau and stoically took the news from communications. He turned to one of his senior officers. “Raines might well take Montreal, but he’ll pay in blood for every inch of it.”

  “Orders, sir?”

  “Dig in.”

  TWO

  Before the Great War Canada had even harsher and more restrictive gun laws than the United States, so takeover was easily accomplished. And after the war, just like what happened in the Lower Forty-Eight, gangs of street slime and punks and others of that particular odious and utterly worthless ilk surfaced and formed their own mini-armies, making life miserable for the heretofore long-suffering, tax-paying, law-abiding citizens, who found it hard to defend themselves against large heavily armed gangs when the only things they had to fight with were bolt-action rifles and duck guns.

  But it made the liberals on both sides of the border happy. Bless their little pointy heads.

  It also made the lawless very happy, once the thin blue line of authority was no longer there.

  As the Rebels had done in every state in the Lower Forty-Eight and in Hawaii and Alaska, they moved into the smoking wreckage caused by the P-51’s and the attack choppers and gathered up all the ammo and every serviceable weapon. Then they began passing them out to the citizens who had endured years of abuse at the hands of the lawless.

  In Edmundston Ben told a small group of survivors, “You have both rights and obligations when it comes to firearms. You have the right to possess arms to defend yourself, and you have the obligation to keep these weapons from the hands of the lawless, and you can do the latter any damn way you see fit. Personally we shoot them and have done with it.”

  The citizens of the town, and many citizens from outlying areas, who had come into the battered town after Revere’s people were destroyed, sought an audience with Ben. Among the people were the lieutenant generals of New Brunswick, Newfoundland, and Nova Scotia. They came right to the point.

  “We would like to be a part of your government, General. If you’ll have us.”

  “You mean you want to join the United States?”

  “No, sir. We want to join the Southern United States of America.”

  Ben gave that a few moments of thought. Personally he was delighted at the prospect of finding another way of sticking it to Homer Blanton. “I have an idea,” he finally said.

  The three men leaned forward.

  “He did what?” Homer Blanton screamed at the aide who stood nervously before him.

  The aide repeated the news.

  “That son of a bitch!” President Blanton said. Then he cut loose with a long string of cuss words.

  New Brunswick, Newfoundland, and Nova Scotia had formally broken away from the Crown and signed an alliance with the Southern United States of America. They would hereafter and forever be known as the Northern United States of America—the NUSA—and their constitution would be patterned after the constitution of the SUSA.

  “Goddamn him!” Blanton screamed.

  “That’s not all,” the aide said. “It gets worse.”

  Blanton glared at the young man.

  “Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Alaska, and Nevada have officially broken with the United States and formed what they call the WUSA.”

  “Let me guess,” Blanton spat out the words. “The Western United States of America—aligned with Ben Raines and the SUSA.”

  “Yes, sir.” The aide laid a folder on the president’s desk and got the hell out of the new Oval Office.

  Blanton opened the folder and read the papers. He closed the folder and sat for a moment, quietly cursing. His liberal empire was rapidly crumbling all around him. Thanks to Ben Raines. God, how he hated that man. He could not find the words to fully describe his hatred. The United States of America was being torn apart . . . and it was all the fault of that damned Raines.

  VP Harriet Hooter came rushing into the room at full gallop, followed by Rita Rivers and several other representatives and senators. “Is it true?” Harriet bellowed, rattling the coffee cup and saucer on Homer’s desk. “Parts of Canada and five more states have broken away and joined Ben Raines?”

  Homer nodded his head.

  “That goddamn filthy racist honky Republican pig!” Rita Rivers squalled.

  “We have an eroding tax base,” Representative Dumkowski said. “We can’t fund our wonderful marvelous everything-for-everybody programs if we lose another state.”

  “We’ll have to cut,” I. M. Holey said somberly.

  “Cut the budgets of the military and the cops,” Immaculate Crapums suggested.

  “Put a ten dollar tax on a pack of cigarettes, a gallon of gasoline, and a fifth of whiskey,” Wiley Ferret said. “That’ll do it.”

  “Raise the income tax on the rich,” Zipporah Washington suggested. “It’s only seventy-five percent now. Soak ’em some more. Make ’em pay.”

  Homer lost it. “Goddamnit!” he yelled, slamming both hands on the desk top. “We don’t have any rich in this nation. Unemployment is running about ninety percent. Our currency is worthless. There’s nothing to back it except faith.” They certainly couldn’t use gold, because Raines and the Rebels stole all the gold in the United States several years back, in addition to everything else they could g
et their hands on. They couldn’t use silver, because Raines and the Rebels stole that, too. The Rebels controlled all the gold and silver mines and most of the nation’s oil.

  Blanton stared at the others, who were staring back at him in shock after his outburst. The words of Ben Raines came back to him. He remembered them clearly, although their last face-to-face meeting had been several months back. Ben’s words kept haunting him. Blanton had a good mind and nearly total recall. Ben’s words again filled his head.

  “President Blanton, much of what you and all the other liberals in government tried to do before the Great War was admirable. Only a very callous or shortsighted fool would deny that. It was very impractical, but admirable. You were trying, and will probably in all likelihood, continue to try to buck human nature.

  “There will always be poor people, Mr. Blanton. That’s the way life is—in any land, on any continent. It has been that way since the beginning of time, and will remain that way until God fulfills His promise to destroy the earth and all on it.

  “There will be those who will work brutally hard all their lives and never have anything to show for it. There will be hopelessness and despair, tragedy and misfortune, needless suffering of good decent people, and in your society, many terrible and heinous crimes committed against the weak.” Ben smiled, adding, “But not in our society.

  “There will always be winners, Mr. Blanton, and there will always be losers.

  “We as leaders can only point people in the right direction, perhaps provide them with some incentive and material, and then turn them loose and hope for the best. We cannot be all things to all people all the time. Not at the expense of others who can ill afford to foot the bills.

  “When people take away from society more than they give, in the form of criminal acts, and do it time and time again, I see no point in keeping those people alive. Not at taxpayer expense. This time around we didn’t kill them. I just ran them out and handed them to you.”

 

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