Authors: John Birmingham
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Politics, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Dystopia, #Apocalyptic
A can of pineapple rolled to a stop against Milosz’s boot. Through a hole it leaked a thick yellow syrup onto the floor, which mixed with the dark blood of a little girl who was missing the back of her head.
Two of the surviving militia men who had covered the assault from the upper level looked at each other.
“How many frags did we throw in here?” one of them asked.
The other shook his head. “I have no idea.”
“Too many,” Gardener said, wiping her brow. She was sweating profusely despite the cold rain, preversely reminding the Pole of a wheel of cheese. “Or not enough. It doesn’t really matter now, does it?”
“Are we going to get in trouble for this?” the one who had asked about the frags wondered.
“I doubt it,” Milosz said. “They will probably give you medals. And one hundred and forty new bucks this month. Probably.”
Kansas City, Missouri
The city never slept. The demands of reconstruction meant there was always something going on somewhere, and Kip took solace from that as he sat at his desk in the early morning, eyes burning with fatigue, struggling to write something original in each letter of condolence. Handwriting each letter, each comma, and restoring his rusty cursive script after decades of disuse helped provide a sort of penance for the men and women dying on his command. “Dear Mrs. Kohler,” he wrote, ignoring the cramp in his fingers, “I am terribly sorry to have to write you this letter …”
He had begun writing after a long night of briefings and video meetings with his military chiefs, and the brief, frustrating talk with Agent Monroe. It was nearly four-thirty before he finished the last of the letters, and his head swam with fatigue. He was sick of it and desperately wanted nothing more than to climb into bed next to Barbara back at home and fall asleep for twenty years, waking only when all this was history. Instead he spent the next hour inhaling coffee and reviewing reports from Manhattan. When the first silver bands of dawn softened the eastern horizon, he asked his security detail chief—Agent Shinoda was asleep—if she could organize a morning run for him with some troops.
Forty minutes later he was pounding down Highway 210, surrounded by a platoon of U.S. Army rangers, who seemed flattered to have been called on in such a fashion by their commander in chief even though he had signed orders yesterday sending them all to the slaughterhouse of New York.
Kipper would never understand the military mind.
The rangers took the president past a QuikTrip and a recreation center that were both open despite the early hour. The QuikTrip’s red facade had faded to pink after four years of weathering, but the doors opened frequently as men and women from the night shifts grabbed a meal or perhaps a nightcap and some early birds came around looking for an easy breakfast. As he jogged along, he watched others make their way into the rec center for a shower, a swim, or perhaps, strangest of all in an era of renewed physical labor, a workout. Through the windows of the center he could even see militia troops playing basketball as part of their physical training. He felt guilty at the sight of them. The militia was suffering by far the worst of the fighting in Manhattan.
The runners took a turn down past the Northtown’s city hall, where the
FBI
had set up shop along with the restored Metropolitan Kansas City Police Force. A couple of officers in green fatigues on the front steps noticed their commander in chief and snapped out salutes as he headed north toward the high school where newly arrived immigrants were processed and given rudimentary medical treatment and a meal in the cafeteria. To them he was nobody, and they ignored him. KC was crawling with small groups of military men and women pounding the bitumen. That was a strangely satisfying experience. The rangers continued past the red brick three-story building and the football stadium. A glance over the rock walls revealed the olive drab tops of army tents, where many of the refugees would spend their first night. The Missouri militia watched over the football stadium from plywood guard towers.
Kipper made an effort to keep up with the rangers, who were singing a song, or a cadence as they called it. There was a rhythm to it that was supposed to help one endure the double time, but Kipper kept tuning it out, lost in his own thoughts, mostly haunted by images of his trip to the hospital.
Her face!
Moving farther north, they passed a high school campus and turned east by a large park dominated by cracked tennis courts and weed-choked baseball diamonds. A few abandoned cars filled the parking lot, probably belonging to runners who’d been getting in a morning jog when the Wave took them. The rising sun silhouetted the bulk of North Kansas City Hospital from here, reminding him of yesterday’s visit. Running alongside the men who would be going into New York City on his say-so, he was haunted by visions of them reduced like that poor woman yesterday. Faceless, limbless, hobbled and broken for the rest of their lives.
Why risk their lives for a dead city or country?
He couldn’t help wondering. If you took away the uniforms, they were just regular people, young and fit, for sure, but not supermen. Not giants or comic book heroes. They were average guys with the same problems as any other average guys: overdue bills, relationships, family problems. The usual.
Why do this when he couldn’t even guarantee they’d be paid this week? Why not hire themselves out to private contractors who valued their skills and would pay well for them? Why did they do it? Because, as Barbara kept telling him, somebody had to.
Kipper increased his pace a fraction until he was running alongside the rangers’ squad leader, or platoon leader, or whatever. That made him a … lieutenant … he was pretty sure. There was no way of telling from the man’s running gear.
“Son,” he puffed, “I reckon I’ve had enough of this sweaty bullshit. How about we head back and win us a war.”
“Hooah, Mister President!”
“Yeah,” said Kip. “Plenty of that today.”
Having made the call to throw everything into the maw, Kipper found himself strangely calm as he examined the results a few hours later from almost exactly one thousand miles away. It was possible, if the satellites and the stars were aligned at the precise moment, to watch the unfolding battle for New York City on the screens in the ad hoc command center the army had quickly established once he’d decided to stay in the Midwest hub settlement. Kip wasn’t sure where all the extra personnel had come from, whether they’d been here when he arrived or had flown in over the week, but the Cerner Campus was suddenly overrun with uniforms, and the rather quiet building in which he had his local office was swarming like a busted ants’ nest.
It reminded him of the first week after the Wave, when Seattle’s city council tower had been all but invaded by Mad Jack Blackstone’s people from Fort Lewis. Dozens, perhaps hundreds of phones rang constantly. The corridors were crowded, sometimes getting on for impassable, as hundreds of men and women scurried about, carrying sheets of paper, folders, ring binders, phones, files, maps … all the mountains of paper generated when the United States committed itself to battle. The small conference room where he and Jed had often met to run the country was now crowded with communications gear, computers, and dozens of wide screens. He had relocated to a boardroom up on the top floor, similarly overrun and stocked with electronics but at least not as hopelessly crowded as downstairs, with only a handful of military officers able to cram themselves in around him.
Kipper sat between Jed and Colonel Mike Ralls, who had changed out of his dress greens and into the standard fatigues of the U.S. Army. He looked a lot more comfortable than Kipper felt as the aide used a smartboard to provide a running commentary on the engagement.
“The Second Marine Expeditionary Brigade has established their blocking positions to east of Rockefeller,” Ralls said. “The One hundred first is inbound.”
Kipper rubbed his forehead, which was aching a little. He was dreading what the day would bring. There was no ignoring the fact that he’d ordered the destruction of a huge part of the city, something he’d once promised himself he would not do. Homes, businesses, streets, churches, memories. All would be gone. He built such things, helped provide water, power, and other service to homes just like that. New York City wasn’t his town by any means, but the destruction still offended him.
The shattered, faceless female soldier in the hospital offended him more, however.
“Mister President?” Another aide stepped through the door. Their numbers had suddenly metastasized like the dancing brooms in that old Mickey Mouse film.
“Yes?”
“Colonel Kinninmore reports that the last of the resistance at the old library has been neutralized and he’s transferred the bulk of his forces there to reinforce the cordon around Rockefeller Center. G2 is estimating the bulk of the enemy have dug themselves in there now.”
“Good,” Kip said.
“Copy that,” Lieutenant Colonel Alois Kinninmore replied, handing the phone back to an aide. It had been a long time since anything had surprised the cavalry commander, but his new orders did.
Finally
, he thought.
The end is coming.
He walked over to the map of Manhattan that covered half a wall inside 1/7 Cav’s latest tactical operations center in the small, ravaged wasteland of the park behind the New York Public Library. Thick columns of smoke poured from the upper floor of the building, and the last time he’d stepped outside his command Bradley, he could even see flames through one or two windows. A small and miserable-looking band of prisoners from that fight were still sitting on the muddy ground in the rain at the rear of the library, being guarded by a squad of resentful militia.
Kinninmore was flanked right and left by liaison officers from the 101st and the Marine RCTs who were tasked with backstopping his push toward the enemy.
“Gentlemen,” he said. “That was General Murphy at Fort Lewis. The president has authorized us to proceed.”
“About goddamn time,” the marine growled.
Major Holt, Kinninmore’s XO, pulled a printout from the fax. “Do you want me to execute this fire mission Colonel?”
“Affirmative,” Kinninmore said. “Forward that to fire support for immediate action.”
“
All
the bridges, sir?” Major Holt asked. “Won’t we need them to press into Brooklyn and Queens?”
“Rules have changed, Major. We’re fighting to win now. That’s the extent of our new rules of engagement.”
Realization dawned on Holt’s face. “Sergeant Cathey, send this fire mission
ASAP
.”
Kinninmore picked up his helmet and retrieved his personal weapon. He turned to his colleagues from the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Airborne Division. “Gentlemen, I’m going forward. Care to join me?”
Governors Island had reverted to a natural prehuman state in the four years since the Wave had swept over it. After the pollution storms, only the hardiest trees had flourished, their roots and trunks shrouded by the rapid growth of underbrush and weeds—until the U.S. Army arrived and began returning the island to its earlier role: a fort. The gun bunnies of 1/5 Field Artillery and the Sixth Field Artillery dug themselves into the fields around Fort Jay, establishing Firebase Euler, home to the long guns, heavy mortars, and rocket batteries that had chopped down wave after wave of pirates, insurgents, and freebooters inside the city. The island also housed the core of the local civilian administration, run by the appointed governor, Elliott Schimmel, and protected by a battalion of troops from Schimmel’s irregulars—now reduced to a mere company by the need to reinforce the army on the main island.
Governor Schimmel was a New York native, an historian who had been guest lecturing in Japan back in March 2003. From the battlements of Fort Jay he watched the skyline of his city shrouded in dark oily smoke, an ungovernable rage churning in his innards.
“Governor Schimmel?” one of his officers called over to him. “I just got word from the firebase commander.”
“Any news of resupply?”
“Yes, sir,” the officer replied. “It is coming now.
ETA
twenty minutes. But what I wanted to tell you, sir, is that they’re going to blow the bridges.”
“What?” Schimmel roared, turning on his underling.
Before he could say another word, the 155-mm howitzers barked into the dawn. The metal-on-metal crash of the guns spit their ordnance out toward Long Island. Metal boxes on tank tracks swiveled until they, too, were facing Brooklyn and Queens. Stacks of fresh ammunition for the multiple rocket launch system sat a safe distance away, ready for use.
No
, Schimmel thought.
Not the bridges.
The president had promised him they would not do this. Not to his city.
He jumped a few inches when the first missile shrieked into the sky, ripping at the very fabric of the morning. Others followed immediately, filling the firebase with white acrid smoke.
In the distance he heard the first rumble of thunder as the high-explosive shells began to pound his precious bridges into scrap.
Manhattan was being cut off, and all who stood on it without the say-so of the American people would soon have no choice but to surrender their liberty or their lives.
Having gathered another thirty troops along the way, Colonel Alois Kinninmore arrived at Fifth Avenue and West 48th Street, where the sharp end of the U.S. Army’s Seventh Cavalry Regimental Combat Team was located. To say the cavalry was assembled at the intersection would be to gloss over the reality. The wounded streamed south down Fifth Avenue toward aid stations set up in the shells of once-fashionable shops. A murderous stream of tracers poured into the cross streets from the 1930s Depression era concrete skyscrapers that made up Rockefeller Center. Kinninmore and his scratch team of marines, militia, and soldiers kept their heads down and their weapons up and edged along the walls, mindful that there was no safe place to be found.
“Colonel!” someone shouted from a cluster of troops right at the edge of the fighting. “Have you lost your fucking mind?”