The Tank Lords by David Drake

By themselves, bent blades were a field repair job—but because the crew’d been knocked silly, nobody shut down the system before the fans skewed the shafts . . . which froze the bearings . . . which cooked the drive motors in showers of sparks that must’ve been real bloody impressive.

Not only did the entire fan nacelles have to be replaced now—a rear echelon job by anybody’s standards—but three of the cursed things had managed to weld their upper brackets to the hull, so the brackets had to be replaced also.

It was late. Ortnahme’d kept his assistant at it for fourteen hours, so he couldn’t rightly blame Simkins for being punchy . . . and the warrant leader knew his own skills and judgment weren’t maybe all they bloody oughta be, just at the moment. They should’ve quit an hour before; but when this last nacelle was set, they were done with the cursed job.

“I got it, kid,” he said calmly.

Simkins hesitated, then released the nacelle and watched nervously as his superior balanced the weight on his left palm. The upper bracket was bolted solidly, but there was enough play in the suspension to do real harm if the old bastard dropped—

A bell rang outside in the company area—rang and kept on ringing. Simkins straightened in terrified surmise and banged his head on the tank’s belly armor. He stared at Ortnahme through tear-blinded eyes.

The warrant leader didn’t move at all for a moment. Then his left biceps, covered with grit sticking to the sweat, bunched. The nacelle slid a centimeter and the drift punch shot through the realigned holes.

“Kid,” Ortnahme said in a voice made tight by the tension of holding the fan nacelle, “I want you to get into the driver’s seat and light her up, but don’t—”

White light like the flash of a fuse blowing flickered through the intakes. The blam! of the mortar shell detonating was almost lost in the echoing clang of shrapnel against the skirts of the tank. Two more rounds went off almost simultaneously, but neither was quite as close.

Ortnahme swallowed. “But don’t spin the fans till I tell you, right? I’ll finish up with this myself.”

“S—” Simkins began. Ortnahme had let the drift punch slide down and was groping for the multitool again. His arm muscles, rigid under their covering of fat, held the unit in place.

Simkins set the multitool in his superior’s palm, bolt dispenser forward, and scuttled for the open access plate. “Yessir,” he called back over his shoulder.

The multitool whirred, spinning the bolt home without a shade of difficulty.

Simkins’ boots banged on the skirts as the technician thrust through the access port in the steel wall. It was a tight enough fit even for a young kid like him, and as for Ortnahme—Ortnahme had half considered cutting a double-sized opening and welding the cover back in place when he was done with this cursed job.

Just as well he hadn’t done that. With a hole that big venting the plenum chamber, the tank woulda been anchored until it was fixed.

Tribarrels fired, the thump of expanding air preceded minutely by the hiss of the energy discharge that heated a track to the target. Another salvo of mortar shells landed, and an earthshock warned of something more substantial hitting in the near distance.

Not a time to be standing around outside, welding a patch on a tank’s skirts.

With the first bolt in place, the second was a snap. Or maybe Herman’s Whore had just decided to quit fighting him now that the shooting had started. The bitch was Slammers’ equipment, after all.

The tank shuddered. It was just Simkins hitting the main switch, firing up the containment/compression lasers in the fusion bottle that powered the vehicle, but for a moment Ortnahme thought the fan he held was live.

And about to slice the top half of his body into pastrami as it jiggled around in its mounting.

Shrapnel glanced from the thick iridium of the hull. It made a sharp sound that didn’t echo the way pieces did when they rang on the cavernous steel plenum chamber. Ortnahme found the last hole with the nose of a bolt and triggered the multitool. The fastener spun and stopped—too soon. Not home, not aligned.

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