The Heart of Valour (29 page)

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Authors: Tanya Huff

BOOK: The Heart of Valour
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The distinctive crack of KC-7s proved her point.

“One/two reporting target down. Moving in.”

“Three/one reporting target down. Moving in.”

“One/one reporting target down.”
Torin could hear the relief in Kichar’s voice and she grinned.
“Moving in.”

“All right people, let’s go.”

* * *

The first surviving drone nearly took off Sakur’s head. Would have had Hisht not knocked the di’Taykan to the snow as a round slammed into the building behind him, spraying them with smoking debris.

“Ablin gon savit!”

“Highly welcome,” Hisht yelled back, rolling clear.

Sakur scrambled up to his feet, heart pounding, hair stinging his cheeks as it whipped around under the edges of his helmet. “I thought they were programmed not to kill us,” he snarled, knocking the snow from his weapon.

“You have not died,” the Krai pointed out as Lirit caught the drone in a short, sharp burst and blew it to bits.

The second surviving drone came around the corner of one of the buildings they’d already searched and moved out onto the road behind them. It got off three fast shots before Kichar took it down with a single shot of the KC-9.

Sakur’s vest absorbed most of the impact of all three enemy rounds. “Why me again?” he demanded, wincing as his vest lost its defensive rigidity.

“Your sparkling personality?” Kichar offered, smacking him on the shoulder as she caught up. “Let’s move.”

“No sympathy?”

“For bruising?” she snorted. “Not likely. Now move, we have another eight buildings in this sector.”

“You can’t…”

“I can,” she growled, glad of the mittens that hid the way her fingers were trembling. “The gunny put me in charge of this team. Now move!”

* * *

The third, fourth, and fifth surviving drones were together in a building on the north side of Dunstan Mills not far from the sentry’s position. With one/two keeping up steady but random fire, Stevens crawled forward to toss both her grenades through one of the broken windows near where her scanner showed them as red circles behind the barrier of the wall. As she moved, the distance registered kept changing.

Just like we practiced on the range
, she told herself, hissing through her teeth as melting snow dribbled down the inside of her cuff.
These things can’t kill us.
Unless the Others had reprogrammed in the last few minutes. And they could have.
Shut up, brain!
The first grenade made a perfect arc through the broken window. As the second grenade left her hand, a three count after the first, she turned and raced back toward a low wall. Still counting, she dove for cover—she’d made the move a hundred times back on Ventris. Could almost hear Staff Sergeant Beyhn yelling at her to hustle.

Four of the five rounds fired from the building hit the wall.

The enemy killed the first grenade. But not the second.

“Textbook example of using an adrenaline rush against the enemy,” Ioeyn said smugly as the rest of the team dropped down beside her, kicking up a spray of snow.

“Hardly surprising,” Cho snapped at the di’Taykan. “This is a classroom.” Then he took a good look at Stevens’ position. “Are you all right?”

Stevens stared up at him with wide eyes, then twisted around, trying to examine her right cheek. “They shot me in the ass! When I went over the wall, they shot me in the ass!”

“No one ever died from getting shot in the ass,” Duarte observed, her heart pounding so loudly she could barely hear her voice over it. “And your med-alert didn’t even go off.”

“It fukking hurts!”

“It bounced off you. It didn’t even go through your combats.”

“I got shot in the ass!”

“Then you left your ass up where they could shoot it! This isn’t an exercise! Didn’t Oshyo teach you that?”

“Oshyo?” Stevens glared at Duarte. “Don’t even talk to me about her!”

“Not the time to be talking, period,” Cho growled, grabbing her arm. “We have to finish clearing this section. Can you walk?”

“It fukking hurts!”

He rolled his eyes. “Can you
walk
?”

“Yes, I can walk!” Sucking cold air past clenched teeth, she stood. “Still hurts.”

“Still not going to die,” Duarte murmured as she passed. Oshyo had died.

* * *

Torin could hear the entry teams taking fire, and prayed that the Others hadn’t reprogrammed.

Grenade!

One of theirs. And only one. Odds were good it meant that one of the teams had taken out a small enclave of drones.

Torin tried not to think about the odds in combat. That way led to hard liquor and an early body bag.

Head down, staying close to the major’s left side, she pounded along the streets that gave them the fastest path to their chosen building.

“Definitely the anchor,” Major Svensson panted by her left shoulder as all three squads paused, pressed tight up against the buildings closest to their target. “Let’s hear it for the anal retentives in Parliament who insist every colony starts the same way, thereby ensuring that the anal retentives in the Corps drop an anchor into their training colonies.”

Two stories tall, set back from the river, it commanded a good view of the entire settlement—which was very likely why the scenario included at least one drone on the roof.

“Son of a bitch!” The Marine on point dove back toward safety as rounds from the roof kicked up a spray of snow.

Being able to see the drone as a red circle a meter in from the edge seemed a bit moot. They knew it was there.

“Any way to be certain they’re still targeting nonlethal areas, Gunny?”

“Only one I can think of, sir.”

“Not sure walking out there and letting him shoot you is a good idea, Gunny.”

“Hadn’t intended to let him shoot
me
, sir.” Although she had given it a moment’s consideration.

Safest decision was to act as if they could die at any moment and the anchor had to be reached anyway.

* * *

They crossed one at a time, broken pattern running, trusting to the night and to camouflage and to whatever gods they personally believed in. Unless the shooter was very good or very lucky, moving targets wearing combats designed to fool the eye were damned near impossible to hit with a personal weapon. Unless the Others were in control of the drones in which case the trainers worked remarkably like a targeting beacon.

Torin crossed first, only because she had the best odds of identifying and disarming any traps on the doors.
And being one of the only grown-ups is getting old fast
, she sighed as she sprinted across the open ground, twisting, turning, and adding about another fifteen meters to the run. Her boots seemed to have been gaining weight all day and now felt like dragging a full-grown Krai around on the end of each leg.

The outer doors were unlocked and open about six centimeters, snow drifted across the threshold and into the air lock entry. The inner doors were wide open. The scenario had left the explosive equivalent of a bucket of water propped on one of the outer doors, and Torin had it disarmed before the next Marine arrived. Annatahwee had sent two/two over with orders to take out the drone.

“Remember that if it’s on scenario, the Others don’t surrender. It’ll self-destruct. If it’s been reprogrammed, it’ll just try to kill you,” she told them as they passed. Because she hadn’t been intended to hear it, and because she hadn’t told them anything they didn’t already know, she ignored Ducote’s murmured, “Yes, Mother.” She had no idea how Staff Sergeant Beyhn had survived a career of taking new Marines to Crucible. After only three days, she had to constantly fight the urge to shove them out of the way and do things herself.

Of course, the staff sergeant’s recruits had never been in any real danger.

A spray of snow chased Kirassai to the building.

“Break the pattern up!” she yelled, grabbing the di’Taykan’s arm and hauling her up onto the step. “Keep it fresh and keep it moving!” Pushing Kirassai to the left edge of the door, she snapped, “Watch 90 to 180! Shoot anything you see that isn’t one of us.”

“Ducote!”
Sergeant Annatahwee on group channel as the last of the second squad started toward the anchor building.
“Is there a particular reason why that bastard drone is still shooting at us and not at you?”

“Yes, Sergeant! We can’t get onto the roof. We’d need a demo charge to get through the door.”

And the charges had been used.

Three/two was across. The drone still had a shot at Major Svensson, the sergeant, and three/three as well as the three squads working their way in from the sentry positions.

“One/one, one/two, three/one—we have a shooter on the roof of the anchor. Repeat a shooter on the roof of the anchor. Advance with extreme caution.”

During shipping, the access to the roof had been sealed between two pieces of spaceship hull. The colonists would cut out the inner piece, open the door, cut out the outer—the door opened in and couldn’t be locked from outside. If two/two couldn’t get through it, the drone had fused it somehow.

Another learning experience, as Dr. Sloan liked to say.

Major Svensson was across. Then Sergeant Annatahwee.

Then Meir slipped on ice under the snow and landed hard on his back. The drone had a clear shot at his face, the one uncovered part of his body. A guaranteed lethal shot. Meir jerked at the impact, then scrambled to his feet and raced for the doorway, blood seeping up from the crease across his left bicep.

“It’s still a scenario,” Torin declared as the sergeant nearly dragged Meir off his feet getting him up and into the building. “That means somewhere inside is the way to get through that door!”

“On it!” Handing Meir off to Leford, the sergeant ran inside, yelling for Ducote and crew to leave the door and start searching the upper level for a cutting tool.

“Hope it wasn’t in the power station,” the major murmured quietly enough so only Torin heard.

When the last two Marines made it across, Torin followed them into the anchor, leaving Kirassai at the door on watch.

Straight ahead, a wide hall led to another set of doors. Almost directly to the left, through a wide break in the interior wall, was a large rectangular room with long, narrow windows taking up nearly the entire far side. It had probably started as storage for construction supplies and become the community hall when it emptied out after the other buildings were built.

“Three bennies in a weapons locker, rear of this floor, near what looked like holding cells,” the sergeant announced, grinning broadly as she rejoined Torin and the major. “Ducote’s team are cutting the door out now.”

“Good work.” Major Svensson pushed himself up off the wall and walked past Torin into the community hall. “Let’s get the rest of the building secured.”

Torin answered Annatahwee’s worried frown with a noncommittal shrug and followed. The major might be reaching the end of his reserves, but until he fell over, she could do nothing about it.

Her light picked out a pile of objects in the middle of the room just as her nose recognized the familiar smell of rot. The hair lifted off the back of her neck. She could hear the major’s breathing hitch and then speed up.

“Meat bags,” Sergeant Annatahwee said quietly. “They set them out under a stasis field when they set up the scenario. When it’s activated, the stasis field is turned off. It’s to get the recruits used to…”

“I know.” Torin cut her off. “Get them used to what you find because the Others don’t take prisoners.”

“Yeah. I’ll have the di’Taykan put their nose filters in,” the sergeant added. “We’ll move these out once we know…”

Three quick shots.

“Gunny…”

For one long moment Torin thought the next words out of the major’s mouth were going to be
with me
, and she had a vision of him charging forward and falling flat on his face.

His expression suggested he was having the same vision.

“…take care of that!”

“Yes, sir!” She pounded the length of the room and through a small door in the middle left of the building’s center wall. A quick turn, and she was in the lower level toilets. As she ran past the open stalls, the Marine by the sinks whirled around, weapon up, just as the rest of her fireteam piled through the door in the other end of the room.

“What the hell is going on…” Two more long steps and Torin could see the Marine’s face. “…Vaughn?”

“Sir! I saw something, sir!”

“Don’t call me sir, Vaughn.”

“Yes, Gunnery Sergeant.”

The shattered mirror made it fairly obvious what she’d seen.

When the major grinned, the rest of Vaughn’s team took that as permission to ride their teammate mercilessly. Torin let it go on for about thirty seconds.

“All right, people, that’s enough. Is the building secure?”

Vaughn looked relieved to have the teasing interrupted. “No, Gunnery Sergeant!”

“Then unless you were planning to take a dump on company time, what the hell are you doing in here?”

“We were drawn by…” Iful frowned, tangerine eyes darkening. “That was a rhetorical question, wasn’t it, Gunny?”

“Yes, it was. Now, move!”

* * *

The anchor held nothing of note but the bennies—still in use at the roof access—the meat bags, and a supply cache holding both food and ammo.

“Makes sense,” Major Svensson observed, tossing a H’san Style Chicken short of the pile. As Torin bent to retrieve the package, she used the new angle to watch him work the fingers of his left hand against his thigh. “If this scenario was a full exercise, the training platoon would probably be running short right about the time they took the anchor. With this lot, we can settle in for a long winter’s nap.” He shone his light around the communal kitchen, squinting in the reflected flare of the stainless steel. “Map’s got the CPN in the anchor, so where the hell is it?”

“I doubt it’s in the kitchen, sir.” Torin said as she straightened. “Since the training platoon using this scenario is supposed to end up inside, it’s probably very well hidden.”

“Sergeant, we’re through to the roof.”

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