When Diplomacy Fails . . . (30 page)

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Authors: Michael Z. Williamson

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That was it concisely, and Alex saw no reason to offer additional comment.

She stared, though, and he saw her façade crumble. Her lips trembled, and while she didn’t cry, the fight went out of her.

She spoke, but it was inaudible. He could read her lips. “I can’t do this anymore.”

He said, “Our job is to keep you alive, ma’am. We can do it. Just stay with us.”

She shook her head, trembled more, and didn’t even protest when Shaman slipped over and slapped a patch on her neck.

There was uncomfortable silence for a moment. Principals had hesitated before, but Highland projected such bravado it was odd to see it shatter. JessieM looked stunned herself. Even she’d never seen this type of dissemblance.

“And now it’s time to make that call. Who am I calling? Ms. Highland?”

“Oh . . . call the Liaison switchboard,” she said.

He unshielded his phone, pulled the contact, waited for connection.

“Colonial Liaison Office, how may I help you?”

“Official request for Special Service protection for Candidate Highland, effective today, with a rating of thirty-two percent in three polls.”

“That’s . . . I’m not sure who handles that.”

“Chief of mission will work. Put him on, please.”

“Stand by.”

Alex pointed at JessieM. “Announce we’re doing it.”

She nodded and pulled her own phone.

Alex wondered if they were stalling to trace. They’d have to move again quickly, but they did have the vehicle.

A voice came on, “Consul Beaumont. To whom am I speaking?”

“This is District Agent in Charge Alex Marlow, Chief of security, contract, for Minister Highland. We are officially requesting Special Service escort and security for her, as of one hundred eighty days from caucus, with multiple polls showing her above the thirty-two percent level.”

“I see. I can relay that to the Executive Office.”

“Please do so quickly. We’re also publicly announcing the request from both her campaign and our official contacts. I need to disconnect. I will be in touch. Out.” He closed the connection and shielded the phone fast.

“Now we wait.”

Cady stepped in and said, “Well, we can’t wait here. They’re moving and closing as we speak, and we need to be at ground zero, not in a bombed-out ruin three hundred meters away.”

Elke and Bart stepped up, gently took Highland’s arms, and guided her. JessieM followed.

Cady said, “Marlin, get the door. Lionel drives, double up in all seats. It’s going to be a party. We brought you a couple of toys.”

They formed up and moved to the car, which had attracted some attention, and their movement attracted more. Highland went along, somewhat numb even before Shaman dosed her with whatever he’d dosed her with. She seemed lucid, but strangely compliant.

It was more than crowded in the car. The front section had driver and Helas and Edge crammed into one passenger seat, almost making out, with guns pointing across each other. That was nothing on the back, though.

Shaman had one side, with Jessie on his lap. Aramis had the middle, with Highland on his, and he did not look amused. Jason had the outside, with Cady on his lap. He looked a bit uncomfortable. Yeah, all of them found a transsexual a bit odd.

That left the open cargo hatch for Cady’s other three, Bart, Elke and Alex, and a large crate already in place. Elke hung back as others boarded, obviously reluctant to be that close to that many people. She really didn’t like people. It took surprisingly little time to get everyone crammed in, and Lionel drove off mildly, but brought speed up fast. Still, five seconds could seem like an eternity, and could be in an actual fight. The whipping air felt good to Alex as they drove in to what they hoped was an ugly melee all around them.

Wow, phrased like that, it sounded insane.

“Open the crate,” Cady ordered.

Alex and Cady’s man Marlin popped the catches and flipped the lid up.

A Medusa Weapons System, and ten kilos of Composition G for Elke.

“Merry Christmas!” he shouted. “Bart, can you possibly skin into this while moving?”

“If you get friendly together, yes.”

Elke leaned far over Alex, snatched the blocks of explosive in a bundle just like a kid with candy, and drew into a ball against Jason’s seat. Alex moved back against her. It wasn’t an ideal spot, but she’d be more comfortable with him than strangers. Cady’s troops scooted right to the hatch lip, leaving Bart an area about a meter cubical for his bulk and the Medusa. There was just no way that was going to work.

Lionel’s voice came from the cabin, “We have potential contacts left, closing.”

“Also right,” said one of the pair crammed into the passenger seat.

“As long as we’re still moving, we’re good,” he said.

Cady leaned back past Jason’s head and said, “If or when the crowd stops us, you work perimeter.”

“Yeah, switch. Until we’re in cover. Do we have cover? Aramis?”

Aramis said, “That corner has a rebuilt booth arrangement.”

“Good. Everyone understand we are not taking a squat hole. Once pinned down, anyone could hit us with a charge and blame others. Movement is our friend.” He turned. “Elke, do you have your special loads and some jubilee fireworks?”

“Not enough for this crowd, but I can make a hole.”

It all gelled.

“That’s the plan. Once blocked, we make a large hole very fast and move into opposite territory, play the escaping victim card, then repeat, then find a dodge while they’re all killing each other.”

Aramis asked, “And the Paramils?”

“Kill them on sight if you can. That’s my interpretation of Ms. Highland’s orders. If they target her, they are enemies of the state.”

It was disturbing to come to that. Certainly, that was a crime. It wasn’t one he approved of. It was too easy to declare someone outlaw and go after them, but in this case, it did seem to fit. Assassination and power struggles from the administration level to bypass elections and courts were certainly not legitimate.

Bart said, “Here they come, the crowd.” Somehow he was half into the gear. The new generation was lighter and smaller than the predecessor, but still a thirty-kilo load. His other gear was stuffed under the seats.

Elke seemed to have distributed the explosive, including giving blocks to Jason and Aramis. She handed one to Alex, then twisted and bent to retrieve Bart’s abandoned gear.

Alex turned back to the street. Yes, it was getting packed, and there were thumps as Lionel hit a few, then bumps as he rolled over a few more, and stopped steering. He was going straight forward to use car mass against crowd mass.

That crowd also had taken to running to catch up with them. They were armed with everything from bricks to machine guns, though only two of those so far. He scrunched tighter inside the vehicle’s frame, as the mob started striking the body. A club came close by his foot, but missed.

Across from him, Elke asked, “Now?”

The car jolted over what turned out to be two bodies, the men crippled and dying but thrashing in agony from crushed limbs and torsos.

“Not yet. As soon as we’re slow enough we’re at risk of boarding, take point.”

She nodded calmly. Good. Bad for anyone else of course, but good for them.

A gruesome red smear appeared on the road and grew in proportion. Someone had been hit, stuck underneath and was being dragged and ground away. The volume reached enough the blood started bubbling and trickling.

Bart muttered, “
Scheisse
,” and adjusted his weapon grip. Elke fingered something and nodded. Cady’s two men thumbed up and tensed.

Alex judged the speed and the crowd. Clutching hands brushed him as they rolled, and one caught the fabric on his shoulder enough to be noticed.

“It’s now,” he said.

Elke shouted, “FIREINTHEHOLE!” she raised her carbine, dropped her hand to the launcher underneath, snapped the trigger, and the world exploded. Alex’s earbuds attenuated the blast, but did nothing for the shockwave. It seemed to blow through him, punching his guts.

What the hell did she just fire?
His head rang, his eyes blurred and refocused, and he twisted out to the street. He caught a glimpse of her unloading an expended . . . something.

To his left, what had been behind him was a pile of mangled bodies with gaping wounds. Then his brain put it all together. Inside the launcher, she’d fired a block of large bore hunting rounds simultaneously. It was like a machine gun burst, in one concentrated rush.
Shit, that had to hurt. Her I mean.

The crowd around the hamburger were in various stages of terror, and so in fact were all those in quite a radius. They’d thought it was a bomb.

“Smoke, distractions,” Elke said in his ringing ears, and huge clouds of thick yellow puked out from several small scattered capsules. That was followed by a string of reports that sounded exactly like a small-caliber automatic weapon.

He came around the side to find the door open, Jason and Cady out, dragging out Highland.

“Proceed now,” he ordered, and Jason grabbed Highland’s hand, put it on his ruck and said, “Hold on, ma’am.”

She nodded and followed, clenching one of the straps. She was well-practiced with the procedure and went along as she should. Jason looked back, half-nodded and accelerated to a brisk pace. Cady took right, the others filled in in a large block, and they walked.

The mob didn’t seem sure what to do, but as always, some brave started the infall, and they closed.

Elke tossed another string of squibs, switched from carbine to shotgun with a fling of the slings, and fired low overhead. The bird bomb banged loudly and that part of the wave broke and scattered.

They walked around a couple of bodies. Fighting had been ongoing here for some time, or it might never have really stopped, just shifted from place to place.

They came past the front of the car as Elke fired again. This was some kind of incendiary that slammed into a guy’s chest, erupted in white flame, and filled the air with the fried bologna stink of burning flesh.

Aramis fired left, a short burst. That cleared space for Lionel to slip into formation. Alex heard one burst to the rear, probably from Bart, and one more to right from one of Cady’s men, and he needed to remember their names. Also, everyone was showing fantastic fire discipline, but that wasn’t what they needed.

“Aramis, what’s the route and rendezvous?”

“We hit a wall two blocks ahead. It’s partially finished. We can work around to the east.”

“Straight for the wall then, and left. Don’t run out of ammo, but don’t be frugal if we get crushed.”

For now, though, this crowd wanted distance. They had respectable clear space, but there was a mostly hidden rifle, poking from between two kids, held by the man behind them. That was disgusting.

“Jason, fix that,” he said and pointed.

Jason swung his weapon as if at some sport shoot, came into line, fired one shot, and the man’s head split. He collapsed dead. The kids jumped back, stared wide-eyed, then ran. Good. Some of these savages trusted in God to keep them dead or alive. It was a convenient excuse to be violent shitbags. Did God tell you to stop? Then he must approve.

A large eruption behind them was the car exploding. Metal, plastic and body parts of looters tumbled and fluttered through the air. It was company policy, military policy and good tactics not to leave assets for the enemy. Elke really enjoyed asset denial.

There was sporadic fire here and there, though little seemed aimed their way. Occasional cracks indicated someone in one of those buildings was shooting at them, but not actually shooting them. Still, sooner or later he’d get lucky, though.

There were abandoned construction tools here, from both the wall and a new block of ugly being built to the west. If the troops wanted to complain about overpaid contractors, they could start with these, who were apparently owned by the SecGen’s brother, and building all kinds of stuff that wouldn’t be needed, appreciated, or allowed to stand long. Generators, a mix truck, several extruders, brace erectors, pumps. The breakage was awful, and the government’s response was to send more.

Eh. Less interesting than the approaching wall.

Aramis spoke over net. “Hit the wall, turn east, we’ll have right side hard cover, sporadic on the left. About a kilometer.”

Alex said, “Cady, I want someone to drop those repeater phones as we go. Flank out about two hundred meters, toss one in a gutter or other convenient place. If they wind up wandering around due to local action, so much the better.”

“Got it. Give five each to Roger and Adam.”

Jason handed the sack over to Roger Edge, who dug in, handed some over to Adam Helas, then dodged out of the loose formation and headed west.

The rest kept running. Alex was in decent shape, and not that much older than the others, he told himself, but dodging through debris, obstacles and potential threats had him well-winded. A rest was in order, but firefights tended to interfere.

They reached the wall, found an unfinished ditch from construction, and piled in, Bart reaching up to handle Highland and Jessie down. The Medusa wasn’t powered, so he was carrying its weight plus theirs. Once they were down he went back to function checks.

“Take a brief break,” he gasped. “Water, breathe, check ammo and gear. Jason and Lionel keep watch. Rotate. Reports?”

Cady said, “All accounted for. I’m getting some tingles of scans.”

Jason said, “So am I. We won’t be hidden for long. Ma’am, are you still wearing your vest?”

Highland, bent with hands on knees, twitched and said, “That? Yes . . . and the body . . . armor. God, I itch.” She belched, not quite a dry heave. The day was getting hot, too. Add in the haze around the construction, normal city dust and propellant gases, and everyone was going to have trouble breathing.

Alex said, “Catch your breath, ma’am; we’ll be moving again in moments. It’s going to be intense and hectic, but we’ll have everyone tied up shortly.”

She sounded a bit better as she said, “Tell me again . . . what we’re doing.”

“We’re going to tie as many hostiles as possible up fighting each other. Then we only have to deal with ones who make a concerted effort to come for you. We’re going to kill them.”

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