Something would go wrong, if he rushed the drill.
"Engine B start. Engine B positive, null thrust. Clock check; timing positive. Annular pressure fifty percent, thrust positive. Scan positive. Weapon check; outboard cannon check."
There were soldiers, on the ground far below. They were running toward him. He looked up and there was a soldier there, too, at the top of the ladder, looking down at him through the dome.
"Remove fuse sixteen. Cap fuse sixteen. Pull pin seven."
There was a truck headed his way, he saw the cannon in its bed and hurtled through the last of the drill.
"Drag brake off, mech brake off, inlets open, full power, on."
He was moving, as the drill said he should, scattering soldiers as he gained speed. He looked up, saw the soldier still clinging to the dome, then forgot him as the speed built and off to the right a building exploded, brilliant orange smoke spreading rapidly in the whipping wind.
The speed was building quickly and the pressure felt good against him, except his leg . . . and it took him a moment to find the dial that told him the plane was going fast enough so he pulled back hard on the stick, and didn't notice when the soldier finally slid off the dome.
Climbing, he saw another plane circling, but it didn't fire, so he banked to the right, setting up for his run over the field, like they'd planned.
He saw another building blow up as he came in low-incandescence, then heavy black smoke, rapidly thinning. He triggered the cannons, saw planes and men die under him, then he was climbing again, and the other fighter was banking, heading east and he remembered that was the plan, too. Shan would go east. Nelirikk would go south. He would go west.
Accordingly, he banked to the right—"
Ah
!"
He held onto consciousness, the agony receded. Stretching for the dial, he upped the oxygen content in cabin, enough, he hoped, to keep him from getting sleepy. Not enough, quite, to make him drunk.
Filling his lungs with richer air, he stretched again to the board, and increased the cabin pressure, which would help reduce the bleeding.
This craft was a beauty, wonderfully stable. He took advantage of that to remove both hands from the controls and cut the rest of the leather away from the wound. Then he bandaged it as well as he could, taking care to make the wrappings tight.
"You will forgive me if I seem discourteous," Miri told the guy with the hatchet. "We are in train to engage the enemy and timing is vital. I suggest that you continue to the rear and remove your folk from active danger."
"Your concern does you credit," he replied, but not like he meant it. He gestured, showing her the rabble and the rakes, spears, pistols, pipes, knives and rocks that was the most of their gear.
"As you see, we are armed. We are prepared to fight. Forgive me if I notice that your troop is thin. We will bolster your numbers and increase the opportunity of success." His face was bleak, and not quite sane.
"We are before you now because we did fight, Captain, and we prevailed. All of us have dead in the city."
Last thing she needed, Miri thought. Buncha crazy civilians with no idea of discipline, half of them out on their feet and a short handful holding anything like useful weaponry.
She glared at the guy and he didn't flinch, there being something in the set of his mouth that reminded her, forcefully, of Val Con in his hell-or-high-water mode. She could move on without taking them, sure. But she couldn't stop them from following and making a mob scene on the field that would send discipline straight to hell and get needless numbers killed.
Damn it.
"Very well," she agreed, inclining her head at the angle that said she knew he had her over a barrel and she was letting him have his way, but not to push it.
"The sergeants will assign your people to existing squads. Understand me: you
will
follow the orders of the sergeants, from this moment until the enemy is defeated. In the meantime, I do not take children onto a battlefield."
She pointed at the nursery contingent—two dozen kids, none of them over eight or nine, guarded by three adults armed with hunting rifles, which were the closest thing to real weapons in the whole mob.
"Those will proceed, with their protectors, to the rear and beg grace of Erob."
"Captain, they will." He bowed then, deep and courtly, like she was doing him some kind of major favor, instead of inviting him to get massacred, and turned to relay her orders to the rabble.
"Meteor shield?" Emrith Tiazan looked at her kinsman, saw neither madness nor levity in his face, and asked, steadily, "What meteor shield?"
"The one that our instruments assure us is even now in place, covering an area with Korval's Tree as its center."
Korval's Tree sat in the front garden and well for them that it did, Erob thought, sighing sharply.
"It appears that the Planetary Defense Unit is concerned that the Tree may come under attack from space." She eyed tel'Vosti. "I must assume that its concern has at least one leg in reality?"
"I think we have no option, Emrith."
"So." She moved behind the desk, accessed the delm's archive and keyed in a search for "Planetary Defense Unit." The answer came quickly enough, and when she had read it she sighed again. Gift of Korval. Gods protect them all from Korval's gifts.
"Here is something to amuse, Win Den," she said, scrolling to the end of the file. "In times when its attention is not diverted by the possibility of meteor strike, Planetary Defense Unit is none other than Dragon's Tooth, Korval's contract suite." She sat back, suddenly very tired indeed.
"The blood thins, Win Den. We should not have forgotten this."
"Peace dulls the senses," he said softly. "Give praise, Emrith, that Korval's Tooth has remained alive. Let us hope that it is also sharp."
Troops were moving, up from the south. Nelirikk identified the supply line, dropped the nose and used the cannon rather than squander the precious bombs nestled in the fighter's belly.
There was return fire on his second pass, and he spent a bomb to take out the anti-aircraft turret at the head of the column, then used the cannon again, killing a command vehicle before he was past it all and banking to the left, setting up for his final pass.
Two more bombs away from his hoard, and a foursome of land-armor destroyed. Nelirikk climbed and swung back to the course, well satisfied with his work thus far.
A storm was brewing and the rising wind was unexpectedly troublesome when the plane slowed in the aftermath of cannon fire. Shan held his altitude with brute force and swept back again, his cannon-fire concentrated on a line of slow-moving trucks.
The plane shuddered and lost forward speed rapidly. Shan gunned the engines and below him saw blossoms of flame as the ammo trucks exploded.
Pod 77's instruction to
Dutiful Passage
's guns seven and nine was to fire a broad, low-level magnetic beam directly into the Yxtrang shield, intensity to remain constant for five Standard minutes, increasing to maximum for one-half minute and cutting out.
Priscilla shook her head, fingers building the equation in screen two while Ren Zel fed data to Maincomp for simulation. A mag beam that low would deliver little more than a nudge to even the lightest of the shield boats. What possible defensive gain might accrue to such a—
Beside her, Ren Zel hissed, for all the worlds like an offended house cat. She gasped, startled out of her concentration, looked to the sim, and wondered at his restraint, that he had neither howled nor roared.
The mag beam fired, low and steady, off of gun seven for five Standard minutes into the mass of light craft, encountered in the third layer an extremely light pallet-skid. The beam pulsed, the skid-moved. In the fifth layer, the skid encountered a workboat and the pressure of its shielding coupled with the steady push of the beam started that craft moving as well.
The sim for gun nine showed a similar phenomenon, each beam finally pushing a cluster of ten small ships, toward the center of the Eye.
When the first of the defenseless boats hit the edge of the Eye, the power simultaneously pulsed to full. The boats, impelled by the beams, skittered into the firing zone, and—
"They won't stop the beam," Priscilla whispered. "They don't have enough shielding. It will go right through them."
"Not entirely," Ren Zel said. "The beam will lose energy as it passes through the obstacles and will strike the on-world target with somewhat less intensity."
She felt ill, even as she approved the Pod 77's tactics. A defense logic, indeed. Once the battleship's weakened beam struck through atmosphere, the ancient weapon would have a clear return shot.
"How many," Ren Zel asked quietly. "How many of those things are at large?" He inclined his head, acknowledging her place in the line direct of a clan not his own. "If it may be told."
"Two," Priscilla told him, and felt his relief as sharply as her own. "Only two. This one, and one other."
They'd been lucky. For one thing, Yxtrang hadn't been expecting them—not quite yet, anyhow. For another, they'd hadn't exactly been over-manned.
For a third thing, Miri thought as she waited for the last of the situation reports to come in, Yxtrang had thought they'd be going up against a professional fighting force.
What they got was the remaining Irregulars, whose ranks had been doubled and doubled again by the time they hit the airfield, by bands of desperate and vengeful civilians.
Miri wondered if the guy with the hatchet had managed to stay alive. Seemed like she owed the man an apology.
His
crew hadn't been rabble. She'd seen rabble, now.
The Irregulars launched the attack, hitting the Yxtrang mess tent with three rounds of mortar fire at half-through dinner. They'd followed up with an occupation of the ammo dump and turned the two captured field pieces against the disoriented Yxtrang.
It was the mob that attacked the remaining entrenched field piece in a wave. The soldiers there had faced knives, spears, rocks, and raw hatred. None had died easy, and there were an astonishing number of Yxtrang among the mass of corpses.
The last report came through and Miri sighed. Eleven Irregulars dead or missing. Hundreds of civilians, ditto. Yxtrang had spiked the fuel tanks with sand, damn their black hearts. She'd've done the same.
But, the airfield was theirs, theoretically, and a couple hundred meters in all directions, with a tenuous western connection.
Theory came in to it because the Yxtrang weren't being good losers. They hadn't thrown their guns away and run screaming from the field. They had retreated in as good order as possible, those who were left, and now they waited in the woods, maybe for dark, maybe for a dawn attack, but probably for reinforcements. Now and then, a couple would dance out onto the floor and throw a party favor, probing for weakness.
Miri, drawing on a stockpile of weaponry Yxtrang had forgotten to take with them when they vacated, called for occasional mortar fire to the south and east. To the west were the fringes of Kritoulkas' crew, and a couple pieces of modest merc armor.
She'd ordered the captured field artillery used for on-the-spot training—so far a quarter of the troop had been part of the drill. They were firing randomly on the valley trails most likely able to support incoming Yxtrang armor or supplies.
The civilians, with nothing nearby to murder, were in the way, milling around on the runway. That was no good. She called to one of her lieutenants to clear the field and a few minutes later a sergeant and a squad marched over to move the mob along.
Miri drank some water from her canteen and checked the time. Ought to be seeing planes, real soon. The wind was rising, and she could see heavy clouds on the horizon. Great. The piloting tapes Val Con had her learning weren't coy about the difficulties of flying in storms. The sooner she saw planes, the happier she'd be.
In fact . . . She tipped her head, frowning after the sound which might have been engine noise—but wasn't.
She listened with care.
Armor
, she decided.
Kritoulkas must've decided to advance herself a little while things're quie
—
She felt the rumble then, shouted, "Incoming!" and saw the Irregulars go for cover, and some of the brighter civilians.
Armor.
And it wasn't theirs.
He had used all his bombs, to the glory of the Troop and the mortification of the enemy. The 14th Conquest Corps had lost heavily this day, in arms, ammunition, equipment, and status.
They had lost pilots, too. Three of rank who rose against him had gone gloriously to duty's reward.
Nelirikk checked the fuel gauge, made one last mid-level pass over the wreckage and confusion that had been the 14th's southern stronghold, and set his course for Erob's airfield, where his captain and his arms-mates awaited him.
It was possible, Shan thought, that he had done lasting damage. Certainly, he'd played merry havoc with the heavy artillery, the armor, and the ammo.
And the planes.
Despite holding
Soldier Lore
deep in his bones, he was far too much Korval to kill ships without pain. Reason said that the ships of the enemy must be nullified.
But a pilot's heart wept for the pretties left dead or dying, never to know the sweet thrill of lift again.
The building storm was at his back as he came in toward the agreed-upon airfield and saw, with a gasp of relief, that the Irregulars' flag was flying.
In the woods, as he passed over, half-a-dozen armored vehicles, closing rapidly toward the field.
He banked sharply and saw the storm straight-on, a wall of boiling black cloud, lanced with lightning and topped with miles of blazing white thunderheads; then he dropped the nose, caught a tank in the cross hairs and pushed the firing stud.
First, there were no planes. Then, there were two, from opposite directions.
Miri watched the first come in ahead of the racing storm, saw it slow, drop, then swing back over the woods, and the noises it was making promised enemy.