Read Commandant (The United Federation Marine Corps Book 8) Online
Authors: Jonathan P. Brazee
This appointee will therefore well and diligently discharge the duties of the grade to which appointed by doing and performing all manner of things thereunto pertaining. And I do strictly charge and require all personnel of lesser grades to render obedience to appropriate orders. And this appointee is to observe and follow such orders and directions as may be given from time to time by seniors acting according to the rules and articles governing the discipline of the Armed Forces of the United Federation.
Given under my hand this fourteenth day of August, three hundred sixty-seven.
Ryck Lysander, General, Commandant of the Marine Corps.
As the adjutant finished with Ryck’s name, the depot sergeant major, Joab, and Ryck stepped forward to the first honor graduation.
“Private First Class Caster, congratulations,” Ryck said as he took the stripe from the sergeant major and pinned to the Marine’s left arm as Joab pinned the other to his right.
It was a very temporary fix, good enough for the Marine to march off, but not permanent. But with dress blues, it was about as good as they could get.
“Where are you from?”
“Daxby, sir!”
“Daxby? Good people there. I know they’re proud of you. I’m proud.”
Ryck thought PFC Caster was going to bust right out of his blues he was puffing up his chest so much as Ryck shook his hand.
The three senior Marines did a right face and moved to the next Marine.
“Private First Class Stevanivitch is the Class honor grad with a score of 99.2,” Joab said as Ryck faced the Marine.
Hell, I never came close to that!
“That’s simply outstanding, Marine. Really outstanding,” Ryck told the beaming Marine. “Your promotion is well deserved. How did you manage to do so well, if I can ask?”
“Just never gave up, sir. A Marine never quits!”
Ryck shook Stevanivitch’s hand and stepped off to stand in front of Ben.
“And’s what’s your name, Marine? Ryck asked, his voice almost catching.
“Private First Class Benjamin Hope-of-Life, General!”
Ryck nodded as he took the chevrons and attached them to Ben’s arm.
Some bicep he’s got building there
, he noted.
“And, uh. . .”
Ryck had rehearsed something say, to let Ben know how proud he was, how much he loved him, but his thoughts were jumbled. He wished Hannah was there to share the moment, and that choked him up.
“How did you find Mount Motherfucker?” he spit out.
What the hell am I saying?
Ben seemed to think about the same thing as he wrinkled up his brow and said, “Uh, it was tough, General. But as Recruit Stevan. . .I mean Private First Class Stevanivitch said, a Marine never gives up. My father taught me that.”
“Your father must be a remarkable man,” Joab said from beside Ryck.
“Yes, sir, the best!” Ben almost shouted.
Ryck couldn’t say anything. Nothing would come out. He shook his son’s hand, then stopped off to the last Marine to be promoted.
He didn’t quite remember what he said to PFC Lee, but he hoped it was memorable for the Marine’s sake. He didn’t quite remember getting back in front of the formation as the four marched back to their positions. He didn’t quite remember Joab Ling ordering the series commanders to dismiss their Marines.
What he did remember, and always would, was the cheer that erupted from the throats of 689 Marines, and the look of unadulterated joy on his son’s face as he flung his cover high into the air.
Chapter 19
Two days later, Ryck was in the MCCC, following Operation First Strike. First Battalion, Tenth Marines, under Lieutenant Colonel Case Twelvetrees, landed on Wrym, the terraformed moon of Demeter VII.
The moon had little strategic value. It had been an experiment some 200 years earlier as the first attempt to terraform a moon of a gas giant. Titan in the home system had been colonized and mined, but no gas giant’s moon had been completely terraformed to allow for humans to live unprotected on its surface. The attempt on Wyrm was a success—in theory. Demeter VII exerted such a huge gravitational pull on the moon that building there was problematic, however, so while the moon had an atmosphere and a somewhat diverse biology, any attempt to develop the moon was abandoned within a couple of decades. Now, the moon was both a scientific waystation and the closest outpost of the FCDC to the void.
Invading and taking Wrym was more of a statement than anything else. It shouted out to the rest of humanity that the provisional government was ready to assume its duties to defend humanity from the unknown, and it was a message to the Council that the provisional government was coming.
The FCDC garrison numbered more than 1,000, but with some 2,500 Marines landed and now advancing on their main post, it was only a matter of time before they fell. They were putting up somewhat a fight, though, which surprised Ryck, but was in line with Jorge’s predictions.
“Another WIA,” Sergeant Major Ito said as the display counter clicked up one.
The Marines had landed over five hours ago, and the supply depot had been secured at the cost of two Marines KIA and one WIA. As with most PICS operations, KIAs outnumbered WIAs. Now, two more Marines had joined the WIA count and two to the KIA. These were small numbers compared to the scope of the operation, but each one hit Ryck in the gut.
Ryck knew that he was a good warrior, able to think on his feet and improvise. He knew he had a knack for outmaneuvering his foe. But he’d never learned to slough off casualties, something the great leaders had to be able to do. Leaders had to fight with big arrows on the battleplans, not down to the individual Marines.
Twelvetrees was moving his battalion methodically, too slow for Ryck’s mind. He kept looking at his comms, set up with a direct link to both Twelvetrees as well as Colonel Warner, the overall operational commander. But he restrained himself. Too many cooks spoiled the soup, and too many commanders just got people killed.
“Top? Do you have anything to drink?” Ryck asked Marten Ekema, his throat dry.
“Right here, sir,” the top said, handing Ryck some frothy, citrusy concoction.
Ryck didn’t know what it was, but it cut through the dryness of this throat while calming him down.
“This is so much harder than leading men into battle,” he remarked quietly to Jorge.
“True, but don’t worry. Twelvetrees and Warner have this in hand. It’s only a matter of time. And this is just the first salvo, the slapping of the glove across the Council’s face. They’ll probably be a lot more fights, and we don’t need you tied up in knots during each engagement. Look, they’ve breached the outer walls of the fort.”
Ryck had been facing Jorge, and now he swung around to the command display. Marines in PICS were pouring into the fort to minimal resistance. Within two minutes, the FCDC commander surrendered.
“
Acta est fibula, plaudit
,” Jorge said.
Ryck just looked at his chief of staff expectantly.
“The drama has been acted out. Applaud.”
As is on cue, the MCCC broke into applause. Marines and sailors stood up and congratulated each other.
It wasn’t us
, Ryck thought.
It was them out there
.
But he accepted Admiral Mendez’ congratulations.
This was just a dress rehearsal, though, against an overwhelmed FCDC force. When they faced fellow Marines, as Ryck was sure would happen, it wouldn’t be such a cakewalk.
Chapter 20
“Look, I don’t care if you have to shit them, just take care of it,” Ryck almost snarled at Lieutenant General Marv Oppenheimer, his chief of logistics.
God I’m beginning to hate him,
Ryck thought as the general wearily sat back down in his seat.
He wasn’t being fair, he knew. The general was working 20 hours a day trying to make sure Marines had what they needed when they needed. And with Ryck’s plan of light engagements, the Marines were very dispersed. Ryck’s wasn’t too concerned about any ground forces, but he didn’t want to be concentrated enough to tempt the loyalist Navy into a strike against him.
Besides, the issue with the PICS coldpacks was not Marv’s fault. The manufacturer and the main depot for the coldpacks, which were vital to the operation of a PICS, were on First Step, which was firmly in loyalist control. And when General Nottingham had led the defectors to Alexander, he’d managed to raid several of the remaining depots, right under the Marines’ noses, of a number of vital components, the coldpacks being one of them. Now, Marv had just informed him that they had only enough of them for six days of total combat. It pissed Ryck off to no end that his mighty force of PICS Marines could be sidelined for want of a 128 credit part. What hit doubly hard was that the theft was done under his watch. He’d already been sworn in as commandant.
Ryck had already canceled one operation by Fourth Division, and he’d delayed another because of the shortage. That galled him bitterly. But better to use the PICS where and when they could do the most good.
Ryck was fed up to his neck in the seemingly innocuous problems that seemed to be able to bring the government to a halt. Ryck wanted to focus on the fight, to bring others to his cause, and crush the old regime. But he couldn’t. Life went on. Couples were getting married. Babies were being born. Kids were going to school. People were aging and dying. Nothing stopped just because a full-out war was just waiting to break out. And all those people, all those babies, all those in ill health demanded attention. Ryck tried to push as much of that off to the CAC, but some things just had to be done by him, it seemed. This morning, before his staff brief, he’d spent almost 45 minutes with two different heads of state who demanded Ryck’s attention. It just never ended.
“What’s next,” he sourly asked Jorge.
“This one,” his chief of staff said, punching up an Immediate Action Issue on everyone’s PA. “Weyerhaeuser is demanding that they receive transport for their wheat crop.”
“But Weyerhaeuser declared for the loyalists,” Ryck protested.
“That was their headquarters in Seattle. This is Weyerhaeuser 4, and their wheat is needed by our own people.”
“So Weyerhaeuser 4 is with us?” Ryck asked.
“And more than a few others,” Sams said. “It sort of depends on where they’re located. Can’t rightly up and move their superfarms.”
“And why can’t they ship their own crops?”
“Because WSC, the Weyerhaeuser shipping company, is with the loyalists,” Jorge said.
“So let me get this straight. Our Weyerhaeuser, the good guys, their headquarters are with the bad guys, but the company’s ships, which go where they want, can’t take their grain because they’re with the bad guys.”
“Yes, that’s about right, sir,” Jorge said.
Ryck shook his head and simply looked up at the ceiling.
Un-grubbing believable. I’ve got Marines about to go into battle in five hours, and I have to deal with this?
“Admiral Mendez,” he said as he sat back up. “Does the Navy have that kind of lift?”
“Well, technically, yes, but the CNO
[11]
won’t release them for that. It would tie them up.”
Ryck as tempted to call up the admiral and make a demand, but he knew his liaison was right. They couldn’t tie up warships because some company’s wheat would spoil. Let them stick it in stasis until the war was over, and screw the cost.
“General Simone, I want you to get a hold of Major Pohlmeyer when we’re done here. Offer him licensing concessions, whatever, but convince him that some this would be a windfall for some Confed shipping firm. See if he’ll bite.”
“Roger that, sir,” Jorge said.
“Look, gentlemen, I’ve got to get to an operational brief, so let’s wrap up this mundane garbage in record time. What’s next?”
God save us from ourselves,
he thought, his eyes glazing over as Jorge brought up the next issue.
Chapter 21
“Fourteen ships lost,” Vice Admiral Jeremy Mendez said, his voice low and in shock.
The two men were alone in Ryck’s office as his Navy liaison broke the news.
“My old ship, the
Marseilles
, was one of them,” the admiral continued.
The Marines were on a clean sweep. Five operations with unqualified success. The Navy had not been so fortunate. First, there was their lack of ability to protect the GT-3 hub. Now, fourteen ships had been lost in a devastating ambush.
This is one fucked up war
, Ryck thought, putting a hand on the admiral’s shoulder.
With the UAM, spearheaded by the Brotherhood, demanding that neither Navy use weapons of mass destruction on any planet, the loyalist and evolutionary Navies were somewhat hamstrung. With all their massive power, they couldn’t do much, and that had relegated this “war” to a handful of small Marine raids that while successful, did nothing to swing the tides between the two governments. The Navy was left more in a protective mode.
Navies are led by fighting men, though, men who don’t shirk from battle and even seek it out. And when a 20-ship task force from Third Fleet started aggressively patrolling near the Corinthia, a loyalist planet in an otherwise evolutionary sector of space, the task force was ambushed, losing 14 ships. The loyalists lost five ships in one of the fiercest naval battles in recent years. Twenty-five thousand men lost. All for what was simple posturing.
Ryck wasn’t sure how a naval force of equal capabilities could ambush another in open space, but now wasn’t the time to ask. Mendez was not in any shape to answer.
The newsies would be all over this, Ryck knew, and that could be devastating. There were still planets and nations that had not declared, and others could be swayed from one side to the other as the tides of war turned. This was more than a naval victory for the loyalists; it was a political one.
Ryck knew he had to act before the damage became entrenched.
“Vivian, get me my staff, and ask General Yarrow to come over with his Three. Tell them it’s going to be a long one.
Twelve hours later, he looked out over the cluttered conference table to where his and the division staff and looked back expectantly at him.
“So are you men up to it, Javontee?” he asked First Division Commanding General.
“Yes, sir. Just give us the mission,” Major General Yarrow said eagerly.
They all want to hit back,
he realized.
But are we acting or reacting?
Ryck walked back to his comms station.
“Get me Admiral Chandanasiri,” he said.
“But sir, it’s 3:20 in the morning on
Prometheus Station
,” the voice on the other side said uncertainly.
“I didn’t ask you the time. I simply gave you an order.”
“Uh, yes, sir. Right away sir.”
Less than 20 seconds later, a sleepy-sounding voice picked up the other side, the visuals off, “Yes?”
“Admiral, we’re hitting First Step. We’re going to pay those bastards back.”
Cheers erupted in the conference room, perhaps none louder than that of Vice Admiral Jeremy Mendez’.