Read Legion Of The Damned - 06 - For Those Who Fell Online
Authors: William C. Dietz
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Space Opera, #Fiction, #Space Warfare, #Life on Other Planets, #Military, #War Stories
That was when the top hatch opened and a bug appeared behind the big ring-mounted machine gun. The Ramanthian pulled the arming lever back, and was just about to open fire, when Santana shot him in the head. Th
e dead body slumped into the compartment below as Dietrich fired a pair of grenades. The noncom swore as the first bounced off the edge of the hatch, but felt considerably better when the second dropped through and detonated within. The round cradled in the loader's arms exploded, the ammo stored in the main magazine went up, and there was a tremendous
boom!
as the tank flew apart.
But there was no time to celebrate, no time to gloat, as Santana rallied the platoon around him and urged them to catch up with the rest of the battalion. Okuma was running at about 50 mph by then, and raced by a scene that the company commander would never forget. Somehow, by a means that wasn't clear, one of the quads had managed to close with a tank and placed both forelegs on the behemoth's back. One of the enormous pods functioned to hold the tank in place while the other fell like a trip-hammer. Not just once, but over and over, until metal surrendered and finally gave way.
The legionnaire wanted to see what would happen next, but the mad charge continued, and the tableau was left behind. Santana scanned the area ahead, looking for what he thought might to be Haaby with Kuga-Ka mounted on her back. But the renegade and his prisoner were nowhere to be seen, and the cavalry officer had other matters to attend to.
Now, having dealt with most of the smaller tracked vehicles, more and more Trooper IIs moved to support the quads. Teams of Trooper IIs identified likely-looking targets, fired any missiles they had left, and opened up with their energy cannons. Thick though their armor was, the Ramanthian tank commanders couldn't afford to ignore
concentrated fire and were forced to respond. That took some of the pressure off the badly outnumbered quads, which continued to lumber forward even as the Trooper IIs used their superior maneuverability to run circles around the beetle-shaped fighting machines.
But there were fewer and fewer tanks, and those that remained were suddenly isolated as Force Commander Dontha was forced to make a terrible decision. No longer certain of victory, and fearful lest the Legion enter Hagala Nor via one of the tunnels that provided access to the desert floor, the officer gave orders to blow them, thereby cutting off the Pincer of Steel's only line of retreat.
So, even as the battalion washed up against the foot of Hagala Nor, they were soon reminded of the fact that the battle was only half-won, since they had yet to enter the fortress itself. Kobbi's bodyguards hurried to establish a protective cordon around the officer as the jacker dismounted and eyed the fortress ahead. He could see the track that zigzagged its way up the mountain's flank, knew it was the only way in, and knew the Ramanthians would be waiting. Major Matala arrived right about then and followed the jacker's gaze. “Damn . . . That looks bad.”
“Yes, it will be,” Kobbi predicted soberly. “You'd better send for Lieutenant Santana.”
Naval Commander Jos Satto slip-slid down the main corridor of the Ramanthian ship
Star Ravager.
He was proud of the fact that both it and the rest of the interior spaces were spotless in spite of the damage to the ship's bow. In fact, to the extent that such a thing was possible under the circumstances, Satto was happy for the first time in weeks. The newly arrived task force was under the command of Admiral
Hos Hikko, which meant that Satto no longer had to bear the burden of responsibility where naval matters were concerned, and that included dealing with the enemy ships that had entered the
system some nine units earlier. Hikko had taken all four of the warships under his command and gone after the intruders, leaving the
Ravager
to protect the transports until his return. Something that would be easy to do since there weren't any other ships in the system.
Or so Satto assumed until the ship's battle Klaxons sounded, and the destroyer's crew were forced to rush to their battle stations. A false alarm? Satto certainly hoped so as he made his way into the ship's control room and took up a position behind Olthobo and the rest of the command crew. The executive officer pointed up at one of the screens. His voice was concerned. “It looks like the Confederacy sent a
second
battle group to support the first.”
Satto eyed the symbols on the screen and saw that his executive officer was correct. While the warships under Hikko's command headed out to intercept one group of enemy ships, a second cluster of symbols had appeared, and they were very close to the planet itself. So close that they would be able to reach Savas
before
the admiral could even if he started immediately.
The officer felt something cold and clammy wrap itself around his stomach. The Ramanthian warships wouldn't stand a chance against
two
battle groups unless . . . “Contact the admiral,” Satto snapped. “Ask him if there's any chance that the force he's about to close with consists of decoys rather than actual ships.”
A full fifteen units passed before the reply came back. Rather than send word through the communications personnel, Admiral Hikko chose to deliver the message personally. The com screen shivered and locked up. The Ramanthian who appeared there was old, some said
too
old, and his chitin
had started to lose its luster. Though impeccably clean, Hikko's uniform appeared to be one size too large for him and hung in generous folds. His
eyes were bright, howeverâand looked like a pair of large-caliber gun barrels. “You are correct, Satto. They
are
decoys. It's up to the
Ravager
now. Do what you can to delay them. It would be a disaster if the Confederacy was allowed to capture the transports.”
Satto knew that the admiral was correct. More than 70 percent of the supersecret communications equipment that Hikko had been sent to remove from Savas had already been uploaded. His throat felt dry, and it required a conscious effort to swallow. “Yes sir.”
“I'm glad you understand,” Hikko said flatly. “We will return as quickly as possible, but if it looks like the transports are going to be captured, then destroy them.”
The entire command crew were shocked by the admiral's orders, including Satto himself. The entire notion of firing on their own transports was repugnant, but Hikko had already considered that, and made the necessary decision. The hypercom was important, vitally so, and could not be allowed to fall into enemy hands. Satto bowed his head. “Yes, Excellency, I understand.” The video snapped to black, Satto was left on his own, and the distance between the enemy and his ship continued to diminish.
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The track that zigzagged its way up Hagala Nor's steep southern flank ended on the broad ledge that had been carved out of the mountainside. It had been a hard climb, especially for Haaby, since she had done all of the work. But Kuga-Ka insisted on inspecting the entire length of the path before taking up a position behind the barricade at the top. Force Commander Dontha's plan was quite simple. Nearly all of the Legion's fly-forms had been destroyed during the first assault. That meant that Ramanthian shuttles
could still come and go with relative impunity. Yes, there were missiles to dodge, b
ut chaff and ECM would probably be sufficient to deal with them.
That meant the bugs could continue to upload the hypercom even as the Legion tried to find a way into Hagala Nor. So, with the ground-level tunnels blown and no capability to attack by air, Kobbi was bound to send troops up the track in hopes of accessing the passageway that led to the mountain's core. Not that they would get very far. The Hudathan would see to that.
Here, after all the disappointments of the past few weeks, was the opportunity to get even with Kobbi, Matala, and Santana. A chance to stop them, piss on their dead bodies, and secure a place with the bugs. The renegade's dream of going into business for himself, of building a private empire on Savas, had been a casualty of the disastrous battle in the desert. Srebo Riff was sworn to kill
him now, which meant that it would not only be a good idea to leave the planet, but to do so quickly.
That's why the ex-legionnaire had volunteered to fight a delaying action, and by doing so to win a seat on the last shuttle out. It was a good plan, and the renegade was in an ebullient mood when he opened the intercom to Haaby. “Hey, freak, are you awake?”
The answer was obvious, but the cyborg knew better than to say so. “Yes, gunny, I'm awake.”
“That's good, real good,” the Hudathan said conversationally, “because the Legion is going to attack, and it's our job to stop them. Now, I know you haven't been very happy, but if you take good care of me, I'll take good care of you. Hell, I'll even turn you loose! How does that strike you?”
“Don't trust him,” Missy cautioned from her hideout deep within the cyborg's tortured mind. “It's a trick.”
“I'd like that,” Haaby replied, knowing full well that Missy was probably right but hoping to humor him. “What
about Oko?” she asked, referring to the borg that had originally been assigned to that particular war from. “What happens to him?”
“I'll leave him here with you,” Kuga-Ka lied. “The two of you can fight over who gets the war form. But remember, if you try anything funny, I'll zap you. Understood?”
“Understood,” Haaby confirmed.
“Good,” the Hudathan said, as a missile hit a weapons emplacement two thousand yards away. “This should be fun.”
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Night had finally fallen, throwing a black cloak over the corpse-strewn battlefield, thereby creating the illusion of peace. There was an audible
pop
as a Ramanthian flare went off high over Hagala Nor. It bathed the mountain's flanks in a gruesome green light, swung back and forth, and drifted down toward the ground below.
As Santana waited for the light to fade he looked straight up the sheer mountainside and wondered if the plan would work. But it was too late to have doubts, too late to throw up, and too late to run. “Okay,” Santana whispered to the support crew clustered around him, “send the RAVs.”
Oblivious to the dangers that would face them, the first of twelve Robotic All-terrain Vehicles began to plod up the trail some one thousand yards to the north. Each unit consisted of two eight-foot-long sections linked together by a single pleated, accordion-style joint located at the center of their long, ovoid-shaped bodies. Four articulated legs enabled the robots to negotiate even the most difficult terrain. Though not intended for offensive purposes, each RAV was equipped with two forward-facing machine guns and a grenade launcher.
Everything looked phosphorescent green through Santana's night-vision goggles. The officer waited for the robots to get fifty feet up the trail before opening the com. “All right, Poltero, are you ready?”
The technician
wasn't
ready, not for something like climbing the side of an extinct volcano in near-total darkness, but couldn't say that. “Yes sir.”
“Good,” Santana replied. “And remember to give us a holler when it's time to set those bolts. We'll make some noise.”
Poltero nodded wordlessly, checked to make sure that the pack was securely strapped to his skeletal torso, and started up the wall. A T-2 could never have accomplished it, not given the awkward hands or graspers that they had, but the spider form was equipped with tool hands. Not only that, but the volcanic rock was coarse and lumpy, which made it easy to find hand- and toeholds. As a result, the cyborg discovered that he could climb at twice the rate of speed that Santana had estimated in spite of the pack and the steadily increasing weight of the steel cable that dangled below him.
Meanwhile, as the technician-cum-commando scaled the mountain, Santana and his support team waited for the inevitable explosion. It came when the lead RAV stepped on a mine. The resulting
boom!
rolled across the land and let everyone know that an attack was under way.
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“Here they come!” Kuga-Ka announced via the translator strapped to his chest. “Look sharp now, it will take them a while to reach the top, but they'll be here soon enough.”
The Ramanthians were ready by that time and had been for quite a while. Most of the troops resented the fact that Dontha had placed the barbaric alien over them, but there were a few who respected the Hudathan's prowess as warrior, and they nodded agreeably as the first of the renegade's predictions came true. There was only one way up, and they had it blocked, so it seemed logical to assume that the rest would be easy.
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Poltero had been told to expect a series of such explosions and knew that they were intended as a diversion. So long as the bugs believed that the Legion was coming up the trail, they wouldn't be looking for
him,
and the technician was grateful.
Then, just when it seemed that the cyborg would be able to complete the climb without running into any obstacles, Poltero was forced to stop just below a substantial overhang. If the legionnaire was to proceed, he'd have to do so upside down, and the legionnaire doubted his ability to hang on. Swearing silently, the borg spidered sideways, causing the cable that hung below him to do likewise. Santana followed the line toward the south and opened the com. “Pol? What are you doing?”