Paying the Piper by David Drake

“Not my girlfriend,” Huber said as he lifted himself out of the fighting compartment to stand on the plenum chamber. And probably not even a friend, to Arne Huber or to any member of the Slammers. Orichos had other priorities, and Huber had only the vaguest notion of what they might be.

As the aircar hovered beside them, the Gendarmery captain tossed Huber a satchel no larger than the personal kit of a trooper on active deployment. “I hope you don’t mind, Lieutenant . . .” she called over the thrum of the aircar and the whine of Fencing Master’s idled fans. “But I’m going to join you again.”

Huber thrust the satchel behind him for Deseau to take. He extended his right hand while his left anchored him to the fighting compartment’s coaming.

“Welcome aboard, Captain,” he said, swinging Orichos across to the combat car. She was surprisingly light; his subconscious expected the weight of a figure wearing body armor, of course.

Mauricia Orichos wasn’t welcome, but she was part of Huber’s job so he’d make the best of it. And he really had more important things on his mind just now. . . .

* * *

Huber heard a coarse ripping as three more rounds from batteries far to the south streaked overhead. To give the shells sufficient range from the Slammers’ gun positions in the UC, a considerable part of what would normally be payload was given over to the booster rockets.

“What’s that?” asked Mauricia Orichos, pointing upward. The shells’ boron fluoride exhaust unrolled broad, poisonous ribbons at high altitude, spreading as she watched. “Are we under attack?”

“No, that’s outgoing,” Huber explained, mildly surprised that their passenger had picked up the sound of artillery over Fencing Master’s intake howl. Orichos noticed quite a lot, he realized, and she had the knack for absorbing what was normal in a new situation so that she could quickly identify change. “They’re prepping the route for us.”

He wasn’t sure how much Orichos knew about the plan, and he wasn’t going to be the one to tell her anything Base Alpha hadn’t already explained. If it’d been up to Arne Huber, he’d have told the Point authorities an amount precisely equal to the part Point forces were taking in the reduction of Fort Freedom: zip.

He glanced up at the path the shells had taken northward. For this use, the reduced payloads didn’t matter. The shells would spill their incendiary bomblets at very high altitude to get maximum dispersion. The target wasn’t a single facility but rather a fifty-kilometer swathe of forest, and there was plenty of time for the widely-spread ignition points to grow together into a massive firestorm.

Which wasn’t the sort of thing a local from Plattner’s World, where the forest was preserved with almost religious fervor, could be expected to like. Colonel Hammer put his troopers’ lives first, though, and Colonel Hammer was calling the shots on this one.

The vehicles ahead of Fencing Master had mown and gouged the riverbank into a muddy wasteland. Wherever possible the lead car had chosen a route that kept its skirts on solid ground, but occasionally an outcrop or a deep inlet forced the column partly into the water. Each thrum! as plenum-chamber pressure beat the river echoed for kilometers up and down the channel.

Huber grinned. Orichos misread his expression, for she smiled back ruefully and said, “I suppose I do sound like a Nervous Nellie. Sorry.”

“What?” said Huber. “Oh, not at all. I was just thinking that there’s never been an armored column in human history that sneaked up on anybody, and this time isn’t going to be the exception.”

“El-Tee?” said Learoyd, staring dutifully into the holographic display. “Take a look at this, will you?”

Huber’d put his right wing gunner on the first sensor watch of the run because he hadn’t expected anything to show up so early. He’d manually notched out Fencing Master and the other vehicles in the column during the run from Northern Star, so that they wouldn’t hide the more distant, hostile, signals. Unlike a quicker mind, Learoyd’s wouldn’t be lulled into daydreams by the minute changes in pearly emptiness that was probably all that he’d see in the display, but Huber feared that Learoyd might not notice subtleties that really had meaning.

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