The Mercenary

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The Mercenary Page 8

by Jerry Pournelle


  “Of course not,” Bradford said. “We’ve got to do some­thing!”

  “If we can. I suspect it will not be easy.” Falkenberg pursed his lips into a tight line. “I hadn’t counted on this. It means that if we tighten up control through food ration­ing and identity documents, we face armed rebellion. How well organized are these FP partisans, anyway?”

  “Well organized and well financed,” Hamner said. “And I’m not so sure about ration cards being the answer to the guerrilla problem anyway. The CoDominium was able to put up with a lot of sabotage because they weren’t inter­ested in anything but the mines, but we can’t live with the level of terror we have right now in this city. Some way or other we have to restore order-and justice, for that matter.”

  “Justice isn’t something soldiers ordinarily deal with,” Falkenberg said. “Order’s another matter. That I think we can supply.”

  “With a few hundred men?” Hamner’s voice was incredulous. “But I like your attitude. At least you don’t sit around and whine for somebody to help you. Or sit and think and never make up your mind.”

  “We will see what we can do,” Falkenberg said.

  “Yeah.” Hamner got up and went to the door. “Well, I wanted to meet you, Colonel. Now I have. I’vegot work to do. I’d think Ernie does too, but I don’t notice him doing much of it.” He didn’t look at them again, but went out, leaving the door open.

  “You see,” Bradford said. He closed the door gently. His smile was knowing. “He is useless. We’ll find some­one to deal with the technicians as soon as you’ve got everything else under control.”

  “He seemed to be right on some points,” Falkenberg said. “For example, he knows it won’t be easy to get proper police protection established. I saw an example of what goes on in Refuge on the way here, and if it’s that bad all over-“

  “You’ll find a way,” Bradford said. He seemed certain. “You can recruit quite a large force, you know. And a lot of the lawlessness is nothing more than teenage street gangs. They’re not loyal to anything, Freedom Party, us, the CD, or anything else. They merely want to control the block they live on.”

  “Sure. But they’re hardly the whole problem.”

  “No. But you’ll find a way. And forget Hamner. His whole group is rotten. They’re not real Progressives, that’s all.” His voice was emphatic, and his eyes seemed to shine. Bradford lowered his voice and leaned forward. “Hamner used to be in the Freedom Party, you know. He claims to have broken with them over technology policies, but you can never trust a man like that.”

  “I see. Fortunately, I don’t have to trust him.”

  Bradford beamed. “Precisely. Now let’s get you started. You have a lot of work, and don’t forget now, you’ve already agreed to train some party troops for me.”

  VII

  The estate was large, nearly five kilometers on a side, located in low hills a day’s march from the city of Refuge. There was a central house and barns, all made of local wood that resembled oak. The buildings nestled in a wooded bowl in the center of the estate.

  “You’re sure you won’t need anything more?” Lieu­tenant Banners asked.

  “No, thank you,” Falkenberg said. “The few men we have with us carry their own gear. We’ll have to arrange for food and fuel when the others come, but for now we’ll make do.”

  “All right, sir,” Banners said. “I’ll go back with Mowrer and leave you the car, then. And you’ve the animals....”

  “Yes. Thank you, Lieutenant.”

  Banners saluted and got into the car. He started to say something else, but Falkenberg had turned away and Banners drove off the estate.

  Calvin watched him leave. “That’s a curious one,” he said. “Reckon he’d like to know more about what we’re doing.”

  Falkenberg’s lips twitched into a thin smile. “I expect he would at that. You will see to it that he learns no more than we want him to.”

  “Aye aye, sir. Colonel, what was that Mr. Bradford was saying about Party troopers? We going to have many of them?”

  “I think so.” Falkenberg walked up the wide lawn to­ward the big ranch house. Captain Fast and several or the others were waiting on the porch, and there was a bottle of whiskey on the table.

  Falkenberg poured a drink and tossed it off. “I think we’ll have quite a few Progressive Party loyalists here once we start, Calvin. I’m not looking forward to it, but they were inevitable.”

  “Sir?” Captain Fast had been listening quietly.

  Falkenberg gave him a half-smile. “Do you really think the governing authorities are going to hand over a monop­oly of military force to us?”

  “You think they don’t trust us.”

  “Amos, would you trust us?”

  “No sir,” Captain Fast said. “But we could hope.”

  “We will not accomplish our mission on hope, Captain. Sergeant Major.”

  “Sir.”

  “I have an errand for you later this evening. For the moment, find someone to take me to my quarters and then see about our dinner.”

  “Sir.”

  Falkenberg woke to a soft rapping on the door of his room. He opened his eyes and put his hand on the pistol under his pillow, but made no other movement.

  The rap came again. “Yes,” Falkenberg called softly.

  “I’m back, Colonel,” Calvin answered.

  “Right. Come in.” Falkenberg swung his feet out of his bunk and pulled on his boots. He was fully dressed otherwise.

  Sergeant Major Calvin came in. He was dressed in the light leather tunic and trousers of the CD Marine battle-dress. The total black of a night combat coverall protruded from the war bag slung over his shoulder. He wore a pistol on his belt, and a heavy trench knife was slung in a holster on his left breast.

  A short wiry man with a thin brown mustache came in with Calvin.

  “Glad to see you,” Falkenberg said. “Have any trouble?”

  “Gang of toughs tried to stir up something as we was coming through the city, Colonel,” Calvin replied. He grinned wolfishly. “Didn’t last long enough to set any records.”

  “Anyone hurt?”

  “None that couldn’t walk away.”

  “Good. Any problem at the relocation barracks?”

  “No, sir,” Calvin replied. “They don’t guard them places! Anybody wants to get away from BuRelock’s charity, they let ‘em go. Without ration cards, of course. This was just involuntary colonists, not convicts.”

  As he took Calvin’s report, Falkenberg was inspecting the man who had come in with him. Major Jeremy Savage looked tired and much older than his forty-five years. He was thinner than John remembered him.

  “Bad as I’ve heard?” Falkenberg asked him.

  “No picnic,” Savage replied in the clipped accents he’d learned when he grew up on Churchill. “Didn’t expect it to be. We’re here, John Christian.”

  “Yes, and thank God. Nobody spotted you? The men behave all right?”

  “Yes, sir. We were treated no differently from any other involuntary colonists. The men behaved splendidly, and a week or two of hard exercise should get us all back in shape. Sergeant Major tells me the battalion arrived in­tact.”

  “Yes. They’re still at Marine barracks. That’s our weak link, Jeremy. I want them out here where we control who they talk to, and as soon as possible.”

  “You’ve got the best ones. I think they’ll be all right.”

  Falkenberg nodded. “But keep your eyes open, Jerry, and be careful with the men until the CD pulls out. I’ve hired Dr. Whitlock to check things for us. He hasn’t reported in yet, but I assume he’s on Hadley.”

  Savage acknowledged Falkenberg’s wave and sat in the room’s single chair. He took a glass of whiskey from Calvin with a nod of thanks.

  “Going all out hiring experts, eh? He’s said to be the best available. . . . My, that’s good. They don’t have any­thing to drink on those BuRelock ships.”

  “When Whitlock r
eports in we’ll have a full staff meet­ing,” Falkenberg said. “Until then, stay with the plan. Bradford is supposed to send the battalion out tomorrow, and soon after that he’ll begin collecting volunteers from his party. We’re supposed to train them. Of course, they’ll all be loyal to Bradford. Not to the Party and certainly not to us.”

  Savage nodded and held out the glass to Calvin for a refill.

  “Now tell me a bit about those toughs you fought on the way here, Sergeant Major,” Falkenberg said.

  “Street gang, Colonel. Not bad at individual fightin’, but no organization. Hardly no match for near a hundred of us.”

  “Street gang.” John pulled his lower lip speculatively, then grinned. “How many of our battalion used to be punks just like them, Sergeant Major?”

  “Half anyway, sir. Includin’ me.”

  Falkenberg nodded. “I think it might be a good thing if the Marines got to meet some of those kids, Sergeant Major. Informally, you know.”

  “Sir!” Calvin’s square face beamed with anticipation.

  “Now,” Falkenberg continued. “Recruits will be our real problem. You can bet some of them will try to get chummy with the troops. They’ll want to pump the men about their backgrounds and outfits. And the men will drink, and when they drink they talk. How will you handle that, Top Soldier?”

  Calvin looked thoughtful. “Won’t be no trick for a while. We’ll keep the recruits away from the men except drill instructors, and DI’s don’t talk to recruits. Once they’ve passed basic it’ll get a bit stickier, but hell, Colonel, troops like to lie about their campaigns. We’ll just en­courage ‘em to fluff it up a bit. The stories’ll be so tall nobody’ll believe ‘em.”

  “Right. I don’t have to tell both of you we’re skating on pretty thin ice for a while.”

  “We’ll manage, Colonel.” Calvin was positive. He’d been with Falkenberg a long time, and although any man can make mistakes, it was Calvin’s experience that Fal­kenberg would find a way out of any hole they dropped into.

  And if they didn’t-well, over every CD orderly room door was a sign. It said, “You are Marines in order to die, and the Fleet will send you where you can die.” Calvin had walked under that sign to enlist, and thousands of times since.

  “That’s it, then, Jeremy,” Falkenberg said.

  “Yes, sir,” Savage said crisply. He stood and saluted. “Damned if it doesn’t feel good to be doing this again, sir.” Years fell away from his face.

  “Good to have you back aboard,” Falkenberg replied. He stood to return the salute. “And thanks, Jerry. For everything....”

  The Marine battalion arrived the next day. They were marched to the camp by regular CD Marine officers, who turned them over to Falkenberg. The captain in charge of the detail wanted to stay around and watch, but Falkenberg found an errand for him and sent Major Savage along to keep him company. An hour later there was no one in the camp but Falkenberg’s people.

  Two hours later the troops were at work constructing their own base camp.

  Falkenberg watched from the porch of the ranch house. “Any problems, Sergeant Major?” he asked.

  Calvin fingered the stubble on his square jaw. He shaved twice a day on garrison duty, and at the moment he was wondering if he needed his second. “Nothing a trooper’s blast won’t cure, Colonel. With your permission I’ll draw a few barrels of whiskey tonight and let ‘em tie one on before the recruits come in.”

  “Granted.”

  “They won’t be fit for much before noon tomorrow, but we’re on schedule now. The extra work’ll be good for ‘em.”

  “How many will run?”

  Calvin shrugged. “Maybe none, Colonel. We got enough to keep ‘em busy, and they don’t know this place very well. Recruits’ll be a different story, and once they get in we may have a couple take off.”

  “Yes. Well, see what you can do. We’re going to need every man. You heard President Budreau’s assessment of the situation.”

  “Yes, sir. That’ll make the troops happy. Sounds like a good fight comin’ up.”

  “I think you can safely promise the men some hard fighting, Sergeant Major. They’d also better understand that there’s no place to go if we don’t win this one. No pickups on this tour.”

  “No pickups on half the missions we’ve been on, Colonel. I better see Cap’n Fast about the brandy. Join us about midnight, sir? The men would like that.”

  “I’ll be along, Sergeant Major.”

  Calvin’s prediction was wrong: the troops were useless throughout the entire next day. The recruits arrived the day after.

  The camp was a flurry of activity. The Marines relearned lessons of basic training. Each maniple of five men cooked for itself, did its own laundry, made its own shelters from woven synthetics and rope, and contributed men for work on the encampment revetments and palisades.

  The recruits did the same kind of work under the supervision of Falkenberg’s mercenary officers and NCO’s as well.

  [?]”Your training is too hard. Those are loyal men, and loyalty is important here!”

  Falkenberg smiled softly. “Agreed. But I’d rather have one battalion of good men I can trust than a regiment of troops who might break under fire. After I’ve a bare minimum of first-class troops, I’ll consider taking on others, for garrison duties. Right now the need is for men who can fight.”

  “And you don’t have them yet-those Marines seemed well disciplined.”

  “In ranks, certainly. But do you really think the CD would let go of reliable troops?”

  “Maybe not,” Bradford conceded. “O.K. You’re the expert. But where the hell are you getting the other recruits? Jailbirds, kids with police records. You keep them while you let my Progressives run!”

  “Yes, sir.” Falkenberg signaled for another round ofdrinks. “Mr. Vice President-“

  “Since when have we become that formal?” Bradford asked. His smile was back.

  “Sorry. I thought you were here to read me out.”

  “No, of course not. But I’ve got to answer to President Budreau, you know. And Hamner. I’ve managed to get your activities assigned to my department, but it doesn’t mean I can tell the Cabinet to blow it.”

  “Right,” Falkenberg said. “Well, about the recruits. We take what we can get. It takes time to train green men, and if the street warriors stand up better than you party toughs, I can’t help it. You can tell the Cabinet that when we’ve a cadre we can trust, we’ll be easier on volunteers. We can even form some kind of part-time militia. But right now the need is for men tough enough to win this fight coming up, and I don’t know any better way to do it.”

  After that Falkenberg found himself summoned report to the Palace every week. Usually he met only Bradford and Hamner; President Budreau had made it clear that he considered the military force as an evil whose necessity was not established, and only Bradford’s insistence kept the regiment supplied.

  At one conference Falkenberg met Chief Horgan of Refuge police.

  “The Chief’s got a complaint, Colonel,” President Budreau said.

  “Yes sir?” Falkenberg asked.

  “It’s those damned Marines,” Horgan said. He rubbed the point of his chin. “They’re raising hell in the city at night. We’ve never hauled any of them in because Mr. Bradford wants us to go easy, but it’s getting rough.”

  “What are they doing?” Falkenberg asked.

  “You name it. They’ve taken over a couple of taverns and won’t let anybody in without their permission, for one thing. And they have fights with street gangs every night.

  “We could live with all that, but they go to other parts of town, too. Lots of them. They go into taverns and drink all night, then say they can’t pay. If the owner gets sticky, they wreck the place....”

  “And they’re gone before your patrols get there,” Falkenberg finished for him. “It’s an old tradition. They call it System D, and more planning effort goes into that operation than I can ever get t
hem to put out in combat. I’ll try to put a stop to System D, anyway.”

  “It would help. Another thing. Your guys go into the toughest parts of town and start fights whenever they can find anyone to mix with.”

  “How are they doing?” Falkenberg asked interestedly.

  Horgan grinned, then caught himself after a stern look from Budreau. “Pretty well. I understand they’ve never been beaten. But it raises hell with the citizens, Colonel. And another trick of theirs is driving people crazy! They march through the streets fifty strong at all hours of the night playing bagpipes! Bagpipes in the wee hours, Colonel, can be a frightening thing.”

  Falkenberg thought he saw a tiny flutter in Horgan’s left eye, and the police chief was holding back a wry smile.

  “I wanted to ask you about that, Colonel,” Second Vice President Hamner said. “This is hardly a Scots outfit, why do they have bagpipes anyway?”

  Falkenberg shrugged. “Pipes are standard with many Marine regiments. Since the Russki CD outfits started taking up Cossack customs, the Western bloc regiments adopted their own. After all, the Marines were formed out of a number of old military units. Foreign Legion, Highlanders-a lot of men like the pipes. I’ll confess I do myself.”

  “Sure, but not in my city in the middle of the night,” Horgan said.

  John grinned openly at the chief of police. “I’ll try to keep the pipers off the streets at night. I can imagine they’re not good for civilian morale. But as to keeping the Marines in camp, how do I do it? We need every one of them, and they’re volunteers. They can get on the CD carrier and ship out when the rest go, and there’s not one damned thing we can do about it.”

  ‘There’s less than a month until they haul down that CoDominium flag,” Bradford added with satisfaction. He glanced at the CD banner on its staff outside. Eagle with red shield and black sickle and hammer on its breast; red stars and blue stars around it. Bradford nodded in satisfaction. It wouldn’t be long.

 

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