The Tank Lords by David Drake

“I make it four Brazilian launchers and a calliope,” Cortezar said. Her voice was an octave higher than normal, but she didn’t speak any faster than usual. “The rest of the hardware’s local or Zaporoskiye like the folks in the column. That what you’ve got too, sarge?”

“There ought to be a second calliope with a battery of artillery,” Jonas said. “Maybe it’s deadlined, but don’t count on that.”

The Slammers depended on the 2-cm tribarrels of their tanks and combat cars to sweep incoming shells and missiles from the sky. Most other high-end mercenary units used specialized equipment to protect themselves from artillery. Calliopes, eight- or nine-tube fixed powergun arrays, could blast incoming even if one or more of the individual guns jammed.

They could also shred a combat car the way a shark tears a man.

“Brigadier Vijanta’s going to be pleased to know where to find the rebel main body,” Ericssen said sourly. “If we get to Scepter Base to tell him, that is.”

Panchin was suddenly thankful for the dust. His sweaty hands wouldn’t slip from the grips of his tribarrel.

“Rita, when I give the word, break the tow lines,” Jonas said. “We won’t have time to do it any other way. Wing guns shoot at everything on your side. Try to get the launchers and any reload vehicles. Remember, we need to confuse them for long enough to get away.”

The Slammers’ own rocket howitzers fired individual rounds from a tube with a closed breech. The Brazilians launched from open troughs, a less efficient technique. In exchange for needing more fuel to reach a given range, the Brazilians were able to mount their artillery on much lighter chassis than the Slammers’ massive Hogs.

Ericssen turned his head. “You okay with this, Panchin?” he asked.

Panchin nodded. “I’m okay,” he said. His mouth was dry and his soul was already trying to squeeze free. He knew in a moment his body would be ripped and burned.

The rebels hadn’t raised a dirt berm around the encampment for protection, but the air-cushion artillery vehicles were dug in hull deep. Soldiers were filling sandbags under artificial light. The layout was at least as professional as that of a government firebase.

A pair of female soldiers lounged against a sandbag bunker near the entrance, drinking from a bottle they passed back and forth. They wore chameleon-weave uniforms whose fabric adjusted to match the background patterns.

One of the soldiers straightened and spoke to her companion. They both stared at Hula Girl, now only forty meters away.

“Hit it!” Sergeant Jonas shouted as his tribarrel lashed the night. His cyan bolts missed the Brazilian women, but he blew the side of the bunker in. The metal-plank roof buried the gun position.

Hula Girl lurched forward on the full thrust of her fans. The right tow cable parted. The combat car and the command vehicle whipsawed on the remaining cable. Hula Girl sideswiped the Zaporoskiye tank being towed by its fellow ahead of them. The impact helped Cortezar fight her controls straight. She continued to accelerate, pulling the command vehicle into the pair of tanks in a crash that finally broke the cable.

Panchin pressed his trigger with both thumbs, blinking reflexively. The barrel group spun at 500 rpm. Each stubby iridium tube fired with a hissCRACK when it rotated into the top position, then ejected the spent matrix from the port in a spurt of liquid nitrogen before loading a fresh round in the third station on the receiver.

He aimed at a parked APC but shot high, raking the roof of a tent in the center of the encampment. The sidewalls were heavily sandbagged, but the centerpole shattered and dropped blazing canvas into the interior.

Frosty Ericssen’s bolts glanced crazily from the turtle-backed hull of a Zaporoskiye tank. When the ceramic armor finally failed, the tank exploded in a mushroom of flame—fuel for the turbine and the main gun’s MHD generator.

Hula Girl drove into the crowded firebase at 40 kph and still accelerating. Panchin squeezed the butterfly trigger, remembering to fire short bursts. His faceshield blanked the bolts’ intense blue-green glare to save his vision. He didn’t hit what he aimed at—he was constantly behind his targets even though he tried to allow for the combat car’s acceleration. He’d lowered his muzzles, and there were too many targets to miss everything.

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