Authors: S.M. Stirling,David Drake
Something whirred through the air. They both ducked; behind them Francois stood for a few fatal seconds, still fumbling with the bolt of his rifle. The grenade thumped not far above the lip of the machine gun nest. There was a wet sound from behind them, and Francois’ body slumped down. Jeffrey didn’t bother to look; he knew what the spray of moisture across the back of his neck came from. Instead, he pushed himself back up while the dust was still stinging his eyes, drawing the automatic pistol at his waist.
An Errife was pointing his rifle at Jeffrey’s head from no more than three feet away. He froze for an instant, so close to the enemy trooper that he could hear the tiny
click
of the firing pin. The rifle did not fire.
Bad primer,
Jeffrey thought, while his hand brought up the pistol.
Crack.
The barbarian flopped backwards.
Crack.
A miss, and the next one was on him, long curved knife flashing upward at his belly. Jeffrey yelled and twisted aside, clubbing at the Errife’s head with his automatic. It thumped on bone, muffled by the headcloth twisted around the mercenary’s skull. Jeffrey grabbed for his knife wrist and struck twice more with frantic strength, until the robed man slumped back against the rear wall of the trench and Jeffrey jammed the muzzle of his pistol into his stomach and pulled the trigger twice.
Out of the corner of his eye, Jeffrey saw Henri’s entrenching tool flashing again and again, used like an ax. The impacts were soft blubbery sounds, underlain by crunching.
“
Cochon,
” the Unionaise wheezed. “
Morri, batard—
”
“He is dead,” Jeffrey said. Henri wheeled, shovel raised, then let it fall. “Now let’s get out of here.”
The volume of fire was slackening, but the ululating screech of the Errife rose over it—and other voices, screaming in simple agony. The islanders liked to collect souvenirs.
“You go get things in order,” Henri said. Til man this gun. You do your job and I’ll do—”
“Jesus Christ in a starship couldn’t get any order here,” Jeffrey said. “Let’s get moving. This isn’t going to be the last battle.”
Henri stared at him for an instant, his face unreadable in the dark. “
Bon,
” he said at last. “
Voyons.
”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
“Nothing to report, nothing to report, nothing to
fucking
report—you had me stuck there for three damned months.”
Gerta knocked back a shot of banana gin and followed it with a draught of beer, savoring the hot-cold
wham
contrast of flavors. The place had been a nobleman’s townhouse before the Chosen took Ciano and the Empire with it, and an officer’s transit station-cum-club since. Gerta and her husband were sitting on the outdoor terrace, separated from the street by a stretch of clipped grass and a low wall of whitewashed brick. It was hot with late summer, but nothing beside the sticky humidity of this time of year in the Land, and there was an awning overhead. She reached moodily for another chicken, lettuce, and tomato sandwich. At least it wasn’t rotten horsemeat, and she’d gotten rid of the body lice.
“And there wouldn’t have been anything but a bloody hole in the ground to report at Libert’s precious Academy, if I hadn’t been there,” she said. “The froggie imbecile supposedly in command didn’t even remember elementary tricks like putting out plates of water in the basement to detect the vibrations of sappers trying to dig under the walls.
And
I had to practically stick a knife in his buttocks to get him to listen.”
“Still, I hear that got exciting,” Heinrich said. “The counter-mining.”
“Too exciting,” Gerta said dryly, remembering.
—cold wet darkness, water seeping through the belly of her uniform. Squirming down like birth in reverse, and then the dirt crumbling away ahead of her, falling through into the enemy tunnel, slamming against a timber prop, the man’s mouth making an O in the dim light of the lanterns as she brought her automatic up . . .
“What took you so long?” she asked again.
“Well, you were the one who thought there was something to Libert’s ‘methodical’ approach,” Heinrich said reasonably. He lit his pipe and blew a smoke ring skyward, watching as the shapes of dirigibles heading for the landing field passed across it. “We took so long because every time we took a village we’d stop to shoot everyone suspicious, then everyone Libert’s police could winkle out, then waited while Libert appointed everyone from the mayor down to the sewer inspector and checked that things were working smoothly.”
“Got stopped butt-cold outside Unionvil, too,” Gerta said. “By
Imperials,
of all things.”
“By the Freedom Brigades,” Heinrich corrected. He closed the worked pewter lid of his S-shaped pipe and reached for a sandwich. “Imperial refugees, Santies, some Sierrans, Santy officers, damned good equipment and so-so training. But plenty of enthusiasm.”
“Well, what are we going to do about it?” Gerta demanded. “I’ve been working internal-security liaison since I got back.”
“Two can play at that game,” Heinrich said with satisfaction. “That’s why I’m back here. We’re going to ‘Volunteer’—”
Pop.
The small spiteful crack on the sidewalk outside was almost inaudible under the traffic noise. Gerta was out of her chair and halfway across the lawn with a single raking stride; Heinrich was too big a man to be quite as graceful, but he was less than two paces behind her at the start and they vaulted the wall in tandem, landing facing each way with their automatics out.
A woman ran into Gerta, looking back over her shoulder. She bounced off the Chosen as if she had run into a wall; Gerta grabbed and struck twice, punching with clinical precision. Something tinkled metallically, and the Imperial Protégé collapsed to the brick sidewalk, her face turning scarlet as she struggled to suck breath through a paralyzed diaphragm. Behind her the dense crowd had scattered like mercury on dry ice, leaving a Chosen officer lying facedown. He was doggedly trying to crawl forward when Heinrich stooped over him.
“Lie still,” he said. The bark of command penetrated the fog of pain; Heinrich cut cloth and wadded it into a pressure bandage. “Bullet wound, left of the spine, just south of the ribs. Looks nasty.”
Gerta came up, nostrils flaring slightly at the iron scent of blood. There was no fecal smell, so the intestine hadn’t been perforated, but there were too many essential organs and big blood vessels in that part of the body for comfort. She was dragging the Protégé woman by one ankle, and holding something in the other.
Heinrich looked at it and almost laughed. It was like a child’s sketch of a pistol; a short tube, a wire outline for a grip and another piece of wire to act as a spring and drive a striker home on the single cartridge within.
“What sort of weapon is that?” he asked.
“It’s not a weapon, it’s an assassination tool. One shot and you throw it away; just the thing for killing a straw boss, or one of
us
on a crowded street.”
Heinrich’s features clamped down to a mask. After a moment he said: “Wouldn’t have thought the Santies would come up with that.”
“They’re nasty when they get going,” Gerta said. “We’ve been finding more and more of these. The problem is tracing back the chain of contacts. This animal will tell us something, perhaps.”
“Indeed.”
They looked up; a medic had arrived, with two Land-born Protégé assistants, and a man in civilian clothes. The long leather coat might as well have been a uniform: Fourth Bureau.
“That was quick,” Gerta said neutrally.
Not the time for another intercouncil pissing match,
she told herself. This
was
their turf.
“Not quick enough. We had some information, but clearly it was insufficient.”
The woman had recovered enough breath to recognize what was standing over her. She tried to crawl away, then screamed when he stamped on her hand.
It died away to a whimper when he knelt beside her and held up something: a jointed metal like a gynecologist’s speculum, but with a toothed clamp on the end. Gerta recognized it, an interrogation instrument designed to be inserted in the subject’s vagina, clamped on the uterus and tear it out with one strong pull.
“Now, my dear, I would like to ask you some questions,” the secret policeman said. “And you would like to avoid pain . . . and there is so
much
pain you can feel.” His hand clamped on her jaw. “No, no, you cannot bite off your tongue. Not yet.”
Heinrich stood as the specialists staunched the bleeding of the wounded man, set up a saline drip, and began to ease him onto the stretcher. An unmarked police car drew up as well; the woman was drugged with a swift injection and thrown into the wire cage at the back.
“My oath, but going back into combat down in the Union looks better and better,” he said.
Gerta looked morosely at the bloodstain on the deserted sidewalk. “Better and better, but where’s it leading?”
“We’ll win, of course.”
“We won here.”
Heinrich hesitated. “You know, you’ve got a point.” He shrugged. “It’s the Santies behind all this. If we finish them off, we can pacify successfully.”
“Come on baby, you can do it,” Jeffrey crooned.
The dogfight had swirled away into patchy cloud to the west; all he could see were two plumes of smoke rising from the ground where planes had augered in. The engine coughed again, a skip in its regular beat that produced a sympathetic lurch in his own heart. He banked gently over the zigzag trenches that scarred the land below, breaking into knots of strongpoints and bunkers in the ruined buildings of the university complex just south of Unionvil. Even now he shivered slightly at the sight of them; the winter fighting there had been ghastly, stopping the last Nationalist offensive in the very outskirts of the capital city.
“Come on,” he said again.
Bits of fabric were streaming back from the cowling and upper wing of his Liberty Hawk II, ripping off as the slipstream worried at the bullet holes. That wasn’t his main concern; the Mark I had sometimes had the whole wing cover peel off in circumstances like this, giving the remaining fuselage the aerodynamics of a brick in free-fall, but the new model was sturdier. He
really
didn’t like the sound the engine made, though. Slowly, carefully, he brought the little fighter around and began to descend towards the landing field. Only a mile or two now . . .
And the engine coughed again and died. “Shit,” he said with resignation, and yanked at the tab to cut the fuel supply. Then: “
Shit!
” as he looked down and saw a thickening film of gasoline in the bottom of the cockpit. “I
hate
it when things like that happen!”
Make a note to write to the design team,
Raj prompted. If it had been Center, he would have taken that literally. . . .
A few black puffs of antiaircraft fire blossomed around him. Friendly fire, which was just as dangerous as the opposition’s. It petered out; someone must have noticed the red-white-and-blue rondels on his wings, the mark of the Freedom Brigades’ Air Service. Then the X shape of the field came into view over a low ridge, a ridge uncomfortably close to the fixed undercarriage. He concentrated on the white line of lime down the center of the graded dirt runway, ignoring the crash-truck that was speeding out to meet him with men clinging to its sides and standing on the running boards. A pom-pom in a circular pit near the edge of the runway tracked him, its twin six-foot barrels looking bloated in their water jackets, but at least that bunch seemed to keep their eyes open—a single fighter of Santander design with its prop stationary was hard to mistake for a Chosen or Nationalist raiding group, but every now and then a gun crew with active imaginations managed it.
Lower. Lower. Wind whistling through the wires and struts, flapping his scarf behind him. Lower . . .
touch.
The hard rims of the wheels ticked at the ground in a scurf of dry dirt and gravel, ticked again, settled with a rattling thud. The unpowered aircraft slowed rapidly to a halt. Jeffrey snapped open his belts and swung out to the lower wing, then to the ground, and lumbered away as fast as the weight of the parachute and the fleece-lined leather flight suit would let him.
“Motherfucking son of a
bitch
!” he shouted, throwing the leather helmet and goggles to the ground, followed by the parachute.
“You all right?”
That was one of the Wong brothers. Jeffery rounded on him. “The interrupter gear still isn’t working right,” he said as the crew from the crash truck swarmed over the Hawk, fire extinguishers at the ready.
“My guns
both
jammed. Which left me a sitting duck. And the fuel lines are still leaking into the pilot’s compartment when the integral tank gets cut—do you have any fucking
idea
how good that is for pilot morale?”
Wong made soothing motions with his hands. “As soon as we can get more rubber, we can make the tanks self-sealing,” he said.
Jeffrey snorted. The Land had all the natural rubber on Visager—the only places that could grow it were the Land
itself
and the northernmost peninsula of what had once been the Empire. John’s factories were just beginning to produce a trickle of synthetic rubber from oil, but it was fiendishly expensive and the Land would cut off the natural type the minute their extremely efficient spies caught Santander using it for military purposes.
Crazy war, he thought. We’re fighting here in the Union, but it’s all “volunteers” and normal trade goes on.
“And the latest Land fighter is still better than ours.”
“The triplane?” Wong said with interest.
“Yes, the Skyshark. It’s almost as fast as our Mark II and it’s got a better turning radius in starboard turns.”
Wong took out a notepad and began to scribble as they walked back towards the squadron HQ; behind them the crew hitched up the plane and pulled it away towards the hangar and revetments, half a dozen walking behind with a grip on its wings to steady it. A group was waiting for Jeffrey.
“You should not risk yourself so, General Farr,” General Pierre Gerard said.
“You must be really pissed, Pierre; you never call me that otherwise.”
The loyalist officer shrugged, a very Unionaise gesture. “Still, it is true. And someone must tell you.”
You, John, my wife, and my two invisible friends, Jeffrey thought. And I can never get away from those two.
“I have to have hands-on experience to work effectively with the designers,” he said, looking over his shoulder for Wong. The little engineer and ex-bicycle manufacturer was trotting off to take a look at the shot-up Mark II. “Also to help refine our tactics for the pilot schools. We’re sending them up with less than thirty hours’ flight time, so at least we should be teaching them the
right
things.”
They walked into the HQ, a spare temporary structure of boards and two-by-fours. John stripped out of the flight suit, shivering slightly as the chill spring air of the central plateau hit the sweat-damp fabric of his summer-weight uniform.
“What is your appraisal?” Gerard said.
“The enemy have more and better planes than we do,” Jeffrey said, sitting down and accepting the coffee an orderly brought. Coffee was another thing they were going to miss if—when—all trade with the Land was cut off. “And better pilots, more experienced. If it’s any consolation, we’re improving faster than they are, but we’re starting from a lower base.”
Gerard frowned, looking down at his hands on the rough table. “My friend, this is bad news. Although perhaps the government will listen now when I tell them the offensive on the eastern front is a bad idea.”
Jeffrey halted the coffee cup halfway to his mouth. “They’re still going ahead with that?” he asked incredulously.
“And they will strip men, guns, aircraft from every other front for it,” he said. “The Committee talks of recapturing Marsai and splitting the rebel zone in half.”
“The Committee has its head up its collective butt,” Jeffrey said.
Gerard’s head swiveled around.
Unfair,
Jeffrey chided himself.
He
could say that; the Committee of Public Safety had no jurisdiction over Brigade members, they’d insisted on that from the beginning. Gerard was in high favor after helping to stop Libert’s thrust for the capital in the opening months of the war, but even so the Committee’s name was nothing to take in vain. Chairman Vincen seemed to think that if he made himself into a worse mad bastard than Libert and the Chosen, he could
beat
Libert and the Chosen. It didn’t necessarily work that way, but desperate men weren’t the best logicians.