The Tank Lords by David Drake

“Don’t you know why we hire mercenaries, Governor?” said Dick Suilin in a voice trembling like a fuel fire. “Don’t you know?”

He stepped closer; felt the massive conference table against the front of his thighs, felt it slide away from his advance.

“Dick!” called Suzi, the word attenuated by the pounding walls of the tunnel.

“Because they fight, Governor!” Suilin shouted. “Because they win, while your rear-echelon pussies wait to be saved with their thumbs up their ass!”

Kung’s face vanished. Suilin could see nothing but a core of flame.

“They saved you, you worthless bastards!” he screamed into the blinding darkness. “They saved us all!”

The reporter floated without volition or sight. “Reaction to the Wide-awakes,” he heard someone, Cooter, murmur. “Had a pretty rough time. . . .”

A door closed, cutting off the babble of sounds. The air was cool, and someone was gently holding him upright.

“Suzi?” he said.

“You can’t let ’em get t’ you,” said Cooter. His right arm was around Suilin’s shoulders. His fingers carefully detached the grenade launcher from the reporter’s grip. “It’s okay.”

They were back in the hallway outside the conference room. The walls were veneered with zebra-patterned marble, clean and cool.

“It’s not okay!” screamed Dick Suilin. “You saved all their asses and they don’t care!”

“They don’t have t’ like us, snake,” said Lieutenant Cooter, meeting Suilin’s eyes. “They just have t’ make the payment schedule.”

Suilin turned and bunched his fist. Cooter caught his arm before he could smash his knuckles on the stone wall.

“Take it easy, snake,” said the mercenary. “It don’t mean nothin’.”

Night March

Panchin heard Sergeant-Commander Jonas swear softly as he tried to coax anything more than a splutter from the ionization-track communicator. The wind blew a hiss of sand against Hula Girl’s iridium armor.

On a map of any practical scale this swatch of desert would look as flat as a mirror, but brush and rocky knobs limited Reg Panchin’s view to a hundred meters in any direction from the combat car’s right wing gun. Night stripped the terrain of all color but grays and purple grays. Panchin could have added false color to the light-amplified view through the faceshield of his commo helmet, but that would have made the landscape even more alien—and Panchin more lonely.

“I’m curst if I know what they’re fighting over,” muttered the driver, Trooper Rita Cortezar, over Hula Girl’s intercom channel. “I sure don’t see anything here worth getting killed over.”

Frosty Ericssen chuckled from the left gun. “Did you ever see a stretch of country that looked much better than this does, Tits?” he asked. “At least after we got through blowing it inside out, I mean.”

Panchin was a Clerk/Specialist with G Company’s headquarters section. He rode Hula Girl during the change of base because the combat car was short a crewman and HQ’s command car was overloaded. You had to know Cortezar better than he did to call her “Tits” to her face.

Hula Girl carried three tribarreled powerguns—left wing, right wing, and the commander’s weapon mounted on the forward bulkhead to fire over the driver’s head. Space in the rear fighting compartment was always tight, but the change of base made the situation even worse than it would have been on a normal combat patrol.

A beryllium fishnet hung on steel stakes a meter above the bulkheads. It was meant to catch mortar bombs and similar low-velocity projectiles before they landed in the fighting compartment, but inevitably it swayed with the weight of the crew’s personal baggage. More gear was slung to the outside of the armor, and the deck of the compartment was covered with a layer of ammo cans.

“They’re fighting about power, not territory,” Panchin said. Spiky branches quivered as wind swept a hillock, then danced toward Hula Girl in a dust devil that quickly dispersed. “Everybody on Sulewesi’s a Malay, but they came in two waves—original colonists and the batch brought in three generations afterwards. The first lot claims to own everything, including the folks who came later. Eventually the other guys decided to do something about it.”

Reg Panchin wasn’t so much frightened as empty: he’d never expected to be out in the middle of a hostile nowhere like this. He supposed the line troopers were used to it. Talking about something he knew didn’t help Panchin a lot, but it helped.

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