“You’ll get your fill of revenge, Aethelbert,” I assured him. “But wait until I give the order. This will be a planned operation, not a berserk charge.”
“No man orders me, save the king, my cousin . . . yet well I know the need for discipline. Aye, Jones! I’ll fight under your standard until the necromancers are dead, root and branch!”
“Jones!” Joel cut in. “Here’s another one! He’s talking American; all bout Very lights and Huns.”
I tuned to the new man, broke into his excited shouts.
“Take it easy, soldier! You’re back inside the Allied lines now. I know everything feels strange, but you’ll be all right in a minute—”
“Who’s that? Boy, I knew I shouldn’t of drunk that stuff—apple brandy, she said—”
I gave him a capsule briefing, then went on to another—a calm, cool mind speaking strangely accented Arabic. He blamed all his troubles on an evil djinn of the sorcerer Salomon, in league with the Infidels. I let him talk, getting it all straight in his mind—then cued him to bring his conditioned battle-experience into his conscious awareness. He switched to Command code without a break in the stream of his thoughts.
“By the virtue of the One God, such a gathering of units was never seen! Praise Allah, that I should be granted such a wealth of enemies to kill before I die!”
I managed to hold him from a headlong charge, then picked up a new voice, this one crying out in antique Spanish to his Compeador, Saint Diego, God, and the Bishop of Seville. I assured him that all was well, and went on to the next man—a former artilleryman whose last recollection was of a charge by French cavalry, the flash of a saber—then night, and lying alone among the dead, until the dogs came . . .
“Jones, we’re doing real good; that’s six now. But down on the plain they’re starting to move around. The Over-mind is reorganizing, and they’ll be attacking right soon now. We’re gonna run out of time.”
“Suppose our new men each start in to release others? Can you brief them—show them how? They can work in pairs, with one freeing a man and the other holding him down until he understands what’s happening.”
“Hey, that’s a good idea! It’s easy, once you know how. Let’s start with Aethelbert.”
I watched as Joel transmitted the technique to the rough-and-ready warrior, saw him grasp the gestalt with the marvelous quickness of a conditioned mind. He was paired with Stan Lakowski, the American doughboy. Moments later I caught the familiar astonished outburst of another newly-freed mind. I worked with Joel, stirring long-dormant personalities into life, calling on their earthly memories and their demon-trained battle-skills, mobilizing them to meet the coming enemy attack.
* * *
Time was a term without meaning. To speak a sentence in the measured phrases of a human language required as long, subjectively, as to deliver a lengthy harangue in the compact Command code—and yet the latter seemed, while I spoke, to consume as much time as ordinary speech. My circuitry, designed for instantaneous response, accommodated to the mode of communication—just as, on low alert, a waiting period that might measure weeks by terrestrial standards could pass in a brief hour.
While Joel and I worked, calming, reassuring, instructing, the besieging legions formed up into squadrons on the dusty plain of white light and black shadow below, arraying themselves for the assault. In the sky, the planet hung, apparently unmoving. It might have been minutes, or hours, before the last of our two hundred and ten Combat units had been freed.
Three had raved, lapsed into incoherence—minds broken by the shock; two more had opened fire in the initial panic—and had been instantly blasted by the return fire of a dozen units. Five more had resisted all efforts at contact—catatonics, permanently withdrawn from reality. And seven had gibbered in the alien symbolism of the demons—condemned criminals, sentenced to the Brigades for the crimes of inferiority, nonconformity, or illogic. These we snuffed out, left their mighty carapaces as mindless slaves to be used as we had been used. It was ruthless—but this was a war of no quarter, species against species.
There was a sudden call from the sentries posted at the top of the pass.
“Activity among the enemy!” It was the Spaniard, Pero Bermuez. “I see a stirring of dust on the horizon to the east. Heavy war engines, I have no doubt—”
“If the blighters have their wits about them, they’ll be bringing up a heavy siege unit,” drawled a voice. That was Major Doubtsby, late of Her Majesty’s Indian army, fallen at Inkerman after taking part in the charge of the heavy cavalry brigade at Balaclava.
As I moved up to the pass, the dust cloud parted long enough to reveal the distant, towering silhouette of a lumbering monster. The dreadnaughts of the line beside it resembled mice flocking around a rhinoceros.
“Looks like they don’t want to hit us head-on again,” Joel said. “They’ll set back and blast us. Maybe if we take cover in the depot, we can ride it out.”
“We’d be trapped for sure. We have to get away.”
“How are we going to do that, Jones? They got us outnumbered a hundred to one—maybe more.”
“Easy,” I said. “When in doubt, attack!”
* * *
“We’ll operate independently,” I said over a conference hookup to the hundred and ninety-three seasoned warriors stationed around the crater. “Our one advantage is initiative. We’re outnumbered, but unit for unit and gun for gun, we can handle anything they throw at us. Our immediate objective is to cut our way through the aliens and gain mobility on open ground. We’ll hit them hard, and scatter, then meet later at the big rock spire to the southwest. We’ll work in pairs, attack individual units, knock them out, and keep going. Use your heads, fight and run, and make it to the rendezvous—with any prisoners you can pick up on the way.”
“Why not set right where we’re at and recruit more boys?” a former Confederate soldier asked. “Give us time, and we can take over their whole durn army.”
“That continental siege unit will open up any minute now; we’ve got to get out from under.”
“Quite right, sir,” Major Doubtsby said. “Give the beggars a taste of cold steel before they know what we’re about!”
“Sorely I miss mighty Hrothgar,” Aethelbert said. “But in truth, my new limbs of iron give promise of battle-joy! Never did Hero flex mightier sinews in war! Why tarry we here while the foe lies ready before us?”
“Don’t worry—there’ll be plenty of action, but we’ll avoid contact whenever possible. Humanity has enough dead heroes. Our job is to get through and survive.
“We’ll move out now—and good luck!”
* * *
The rock trembled under me as the immense machines roared up through the pass, two by two, then plunged down the steep slope toward the army waiting below. I watched six, eight, ten of my rebels careen out into the open, before the first alien gun blared white light.
An instant later, each of the racing units became the focus of a converging network of fire that sparkled and glared against near-invulnerable defensive screens. Missiles flashed into view, winked out in blinding bursts as automatic detector-eliminator circuits acted.
A hostile unit moved out on an interception course, deadly energy beams flickering from its disrupter grid. The fire of two speeding units converged on it, sent it charging blindly back toward its fellows. More loyal units were in motion now, as the aliens began to realize that our tiny force had taken the offensive. The last of our rebel Brigades were moving into the pass now; I wheeled into line beside a lone unit, touched his mind: “I see a weak spot to the left of the fault-line. Let’s take it!”
“Saint George and Merry England!” came the reply.
Then we were moving out through the defile, hurtling down toward the guns below. Scattered loyal units directly below the pass opened fire. We drove on at assault speed, smashing through multiton obstructions of fallen rock, then raced out on level ground. Ahead, the Brigades were scattered all across the plain, with ragged loyalist detachments in pursuit. I held my fire, tracking each incoming blast, but countering only those on collision course.
Suddenly there was a target under my guns, veering in on a curving course from the right, his batteries a firefly twinkling through my radiation screens.
“Take him!” I called.
“Aye, we’ll o’ertop and trash the mooncalf!”
I aimed for the treads, slammed a fine-focused beam into the armored suspension, then locked my aim to the resultant point of red-heat. The oncoming battle-wagon slewed off to the left, ground to a halt; an instant later, it jumped ten yards backward, smoke billowing from every port, as my partner zeroed in on target.