Read The Mammoth Book of SF Wars Online

Authors: Ian Watson [Ed],Ian Whates [Ed]

Tags: #Fiction, #Anthologies (Multiple Authors), #Science Fiction, #Military, #War & Military

The Mammoth Book of SF Wars (55 page)

BOOK: The Mammoth Book of SF Wars
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The sergeant gave her a sharp glance, his left hand spreading and closing where it rested on the black barrel-shroud of his weapon. “All right,” he said, “you give him a hand and we’ll see you under cover with us when the shooting starts. You’re smarter than I gave you credit.”

They had forgotten Leida was still standing beside them. Her hand struck like a spading fork. Margritte ducked away from the blow, but Leida caught her on the shoulder and gripped. When the mercenary’s reversed gun-butt cracked the older woman loose, a long strip of Margritte’s blue dress tore away with her. “Bitch,” Leida mumbled through bruised lips. “You’d help these beasts after they killed your own man?”

Margritte stepped back, tossing her head. For a moment she fumbled at the tear in her dress; then, defiantly, she let it fall open. Landschein turned in time to catch the look in Leida’s eyes. “Hey, you’ll give your friends more trouble,” he stated cheerfully, waggling his gun to indicate Delia and Myrie as they returned grey-faced from the forest fringe. “Go on, get out and pick some cotton.”

When Margritte moved, the white of her loose shift caught the sun and the small killer’s stare. “Landschein!” the black ordered sharply, and Margritte stepped very quickly towards the truck and the third man struggling there.

Helmuth turned and blinked at the girl as he felt her capable muscles take the windstrain off the panel he was shifting. His eyes were blue and set wide in a face too large-boned to be handsome, too frank to be other than attractive. He accepted the help without question, leading the way into the hall.

The dining tables were hoisted against the rafters. The windows, unshuttered in the warm autumn and unglazed, lined all four walls at chest height. The long wall nearest the road was otherwise unbroken; the one opposite it was pierced in the middle by the single door. In the centre of what should have been an empty room squatted the mercenaries’ construct. The metal-ceramic panels had been locked into three sides of a square, a pocket of armour open only towards the door. It was hidden beneath the lower sills of the windows; nothing would catch the eye of an oncoming tanker.

“We’ve got to nest three layers together,” the soldier explained as he swung the load, easily managed within the building, “or they’ll cut us apart if they get off a burst this direction.”

Margritte steadied a panel already in place as Helmuth mortised his into it. Each sheet was about five centimetres in thickness, a thin plate of grey metal on either side of a white porcelain sponge. The girl tapped it dubiously with a blunt finger. “This can stop bullets?”

The soldier – he was younger than his size suggested, no more than eighteen. Younger even than Georg, and he had a smile like Georg’s as he raised his eyes with a blush and said, “P-powerguns, yeah; three layers of it ought to … It’s light, we could carry it in the truck where iridium would have bogged us down. But look, there’s another panel and the rockets we still got to bring in.”

“You must be very brave to fight tanks with just – this,” Margritte prompted as she took one end of the remaining armour sheet.

“Oh, well, Sergeant Counsel says it’ll work,” the boy said enthusiastically. “They’ll come by, two combat cars, then three big trucks, and another combat car. Sarge and Landschein buzzbomb the lead cars before they know what’s happening. I reload them and they hit the third car when it swings wide to get a shot. Any shooting the blower jocks get off, they’ll spread because they won’t know – oh, cop I said it …”

“They’ll think the women in the fields may be firing, so they’ll kill us first,” Margritte reasoned aloud. The boy’s neck beneath his helmet turned brick red as he trudged into the building.

“Look,” he said, but he would not meet her eyes, “we got to do it. It’ll be fast – nobody much can get hurt. And your … the children, they’re all safe. Sarge said that with all the men gone, we wouldn’t have any trouble with the women if we kept the kids safe and under our thumbs.”

“We didn’t have time to have children,” Margritte said. Her eyes were briefly unfocused. “You didn’t give Georg enough time before you killed him.”

“He was …” Helmuth began. They were outside again and his hand flicked briefly towards the slight notch Delia and Myrie had chopped in the forest wall. “I’m sorry.”

“Oh, don’t be sorry,” she said. “He knew what he was doing.”

“He was – I suppose you’d call him a patriot?” Helmuth suggested, jumping easily to the truck’s deck to gather up an armload of cylindrical bundles. “He was really against the Cartel?”

“There was never a soul in this village who cared who won the war,” Margritte said. “We have our own war with the forest.”

“They joined the siege!” the boy retorted. “They cared that m-much, to fight us!”

“They got in the vans when men with guns told them to get in,” the girl said. She took the gear Helmuth was forgetting to hand to her and shook a lock of hair out of her eyes. “Should they have run? Like Georg? No, they went off to be soldiers; praying like we did that the war might end before the forest had eaten up the village again. Maybe if we were really lucky, it’d end before this crop had spoiled in the fields because there weren’t enough hands left here to pick it in time.”

Helmuth cleared the back of the truck with his own load and stepped down. “Well, just the same, your husband tried to hide and warn the convoy,” he argued. “Otherwise why did he run?”

“Oh, he loved me – you know?” said Margritte. “Your sergeant said all of us should be out picking as usual. Georg knew, he
told
you, that the crossfire would kill everybody in the fields as sure as if you shot us deliberately. And when you wouldn’t change your plan … well, if he’d gotten away you would have had to give up your ambush, wouldn’t you? You’d have known it was suicide if the tanks learned that you were waiting for them. So Georg ran.”

The dark-haired woman stared out at the forest for a moment. “He didn’t have a prayer, did he? You could have killed him a hundred times before he got to cover.”

“Here, give me those,” the soldier said, taking the bundles from her instead of replying. He began to unwrap the cylinders one by one on the wooden floor. “We couldn’t let him get away,” he said at last. He added, his eyes still down on his work, “Flechettes when they hit … I mean, sh-shooting at his legs wouldn’t, wouldn’t have been a kindness, you see?”

Margritte laughed again. “Oh, I saw what they dragged into the forest, yes.” She paused, sucking at her lower lip. “That’s how we always deal with our dead, give them to the forest. Oh, we have a service; but we wouldn’t have buried Georg in the dirt, if … if he’d died. But you didn’t care, did you? A corpse looks bad, maybe your precious ambush, your own lives. Get it out of the way, toss it in the woods.”

“We’d have buried him afterwards,” the soldier mumbled as he laid a fourth thigh-thick projectile beside those he had already unwrapped.

“Oh, of
course
,” Margritte said. “And me, and all the rest of us murdered out there in the cotton. Oh, you’re gentlemen, you are.”

“Via!” Helmuth shouted, his flush mottling as at last he lifted his gaze to the girl’s. “We’d have b-buried him. I’d have buried him. You’ll be safe in here with us until it’s all over, and by the Lord, then you can come back with us, too! You don’t have to stay here with these hard-faced bitches.”

A bitter smile tweaked the left edge of the girl’s mouth. “Sure, you’re a good boy.”

The young mercenary blinked between protest and pleasure, settled on the latter. He had readied all six of the tinned, grey missiles; now he lifted one of the pair of launchers. “It’ll be really quick,” he said shyly, changing the subject. The launcher was an arm-length tube with double handgrips and an optical sight. Helmuth’s big hands easily inserted one of the buzzbombs to lock with a faint snick.

“Very simple,” Margritte murmured.

“Cheap and easy,” the boy agreed with a smile. “You can buy a thousand of these for what a combat car runs – Hell, maybe more than a thousand. And it’s one for one today, one bomb to one car. Landschein says the crews are just a little extra, like weevils in your biscuit.”

He saw her grimace, the angry tensing of a woman who had just seen her husband blasted into a spray of offal. Helmuth grunted with his own pain, his mouth dropping open as his hand stretched to touch her bare shoulder. “Oh, Lord – didn’t mean to say …”

She gently detached his fingers. His breath caught and he turned away. Unseen, her look of hatred seared his back. His hand was still stretched toward her and hers towards him, when the door scraped to admit Landschein behind them.

“Cute, oh bloody cute,” the little mercenary said. He carried his helmet by its strap. Uncovered, his cropped grey hair made him an older man. “Well, get on with it, boy – don’t keep me ’n’ Sarge waiting. He’ll be mad enough about getting sloppy thirds.”

Helmuth jumped to his feet. Landschein ignored him, clicking across to a window in three quick strides. “Sarge,” he called, “we’re all set. Come on, we can watch the women from here.”

“I’ll run the truck into the woods,” Counsel’s voice burred in reply. “Anyhow, I can hear better from out here.”

That was true. Despite the open windows, the wails of the children were inaudible in the hall. Outside, they formed a thin backdrop to every other sound.

Landschein set down his helmet. He snapped the safety on his gun’s sideplate and leaned the weapon carefully against the nest of armour. Then he took up the loaded launcher and ran his hands over its tube and grips. Without changing expression, he reached out to caress Margritte through the tear in her dress.

Margritte screamed and clawed her left hand as she tried to rise. The launcher slipped into Landschein’s lap, and his arm, far swifter, locked hers and drew her down against him. Then the little mercenary himself was jerked upward. Helmuth’s hand on his collar first broke Landschein’s grip on Margritte, then flung him against the closed door.

Landschein rolled despite the shock and his glance flicked towards his weapon, but between gun and gunman crouched Helmuth, no longer a red-faced boy but the strongest man in the room. Grinning, Helmuth spread fingers that had crushed ribs in past rough and tumbles. “Try it, little man,” he said. “Try it and I’ll rip your head off your shoulders.”

“You’ll do wonders!” Landschein spat, but his eyes lost their glaze and his muscles relaxed. He bent his mouth into a smile. “Hey, kid, there’s plenty of slots around. We’ll work out something afterwards; no need to fight.”

Helmuth rocked his head back in a nod of acceptance with nothing of friendship in it. “You lay another hand on her,” he said in a normal voice, “and you’d best have killed me first.” He turned his back deliberately on the older man and the nearby weapons. Landschein clenched his left fist once, twice, but then he began to load the remaining launcher.

Margritte slipped the patching kit from her belt pouch. Her hands trembled, but the steel needle was already threaded. Her whipstitches tacked the torn piece top and sides to the remaining material, close enough for decency. Pins were a luxury that a cotton settlement could well do without. Landschein glanced back at her once, but at the same time the floor creaked as Helmuth’s weight shifted to his other leg. Neither man spoke.

Sergeant Counsel opened the door. His right arm cradled a pair of flechette guns and he handed one to Helmuth. “Best not to leave it in the dust,” he said. “You’ll be needing it soon.”

“They coming, Sarge?” Landschein asked. He touched his tongue to thin, pale lips.

“Not yet.” Counsel looked from one man to the other. “You boys get things sorted out?”

“All green here,” Landschein muttered, smiling again but lowering his eyes.

“That’s good,” the big black said, “because we got a job to do and we’re not going to let anything stop us. Anything.”

Margritte was putting away her needle. The sergeant looked at her hard. “You keep your head down, hear?”

“It won’t matter,” the girl said calmly, tucking the kit away. “The tanks, they won’t be surprised to see a woman in here.”

“Sure, but they’ll shoot your bleeding head off,” Landschein snorted.

“Do you think I care?” she blazed back. Helmuth winced at the tone; Sergeant Counsel’s eyes took on an undesirable shade of interest.

“But you’re helping us,” the big noncom mused. He tapped his fingertips on the gun in the crook of his arm. “Because you like us so much?” There was no amusement in his words, only a careful mind picking over the idea, all ideas.

She stood and walked to the door, her face as composed as a priest’s at the gravesite. “Have your ambush,” she said. “Would it help us if the convoy came through before you were ready for it?”

“The smoother it goes, the faster,” Counsel agreed quietly, “then the better for all of you.”

Margritte swung the door open and stood looking out. Eight women were picking among the rows east of the hall. They would be relatively safe there, not caught between the ambushers’ rockets and the raking powerguns of their quarry. Eight of them safe and fourteen sure victims on the other side. Most of them could have been out of the crossfire if they had only let themselves think, only considered the truth that Georg had died to underscore.

“I keep thinking of Georg,” Margritte said aloud. “I guess my friends are just thinking about their children; they keep looking at the storage room. But the children, they’ll be all right; it’s just that most of them are going to be orphans in a few minutes.”

“It won’t be that bad,” Helmuth said. He did not sound as though he believed it either.

The older children had by now ceased the screaming begun when the door shut and darkness closed in on them. The youngest still wailed and the sound drifted through the open door.

“I told her we’d take her back with us, Sarge,” Helmuth said.

Landschein chortled, a flash of instinctive humour he covered with a raised palm. Counsel shook his head in amazement. “You were wrong, boy. Now, keep watching those women or we may not be going back ourselves.”

The younger man reddened again in frustration. “Look, we’ve got women in the outfit now, and I don’t mean the rec troops. Captain Denzil told me there’s six in Bravo Company alone—”

BOOK: The Mammoth Book of SF Wars
11.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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