The Tank Lords by David Drake

“Bring us—” Wager ordered as he rotated his tribarrel to bear on the Consies behind them, some squirming in their death throes but others rising again to point weapons.

—around, he meant to say, but Holman reversed her fans and sucked the tank squarely down where she’d just hit. The unexpected impact rammed Wager’s spine against his seat. His tribarrel was aimed upward.

“You dickheaded fool!” he screamed over the intercom as he lowered his weapon and the tank started to lift in place.

A Consie threw a grenade. It bounced off the hull and exploded in the air. Wager felt the hot flick of shrapnel beneath the cheekpiece of his helmet, but the grenadier himself flopped backward with most of his chest gone.

The tribarrel splattered the air, then walked its long burst across several of the guerrillas still moving.

Holman slammed the tank down again. They hit with a crunch, followed by a second shudder as the ground collapsed over the Consie bunker.

Holman rocked her fans. Dust and quartz pebbles flew back, covering the corpses in the gully like dirt spurned by a cat over its dung.

“Sergeant?” called the voice in Wager’s intercom. “Sergeant? Want to make another pass?”

Wager was trying to catch his breath. “Negative, Holman,” he managed to say. “Just bring us level with Deathdealer again.

“Holman,” he added a moment later. “You did just fine.”

Their position in line was second from the left, but Dick Suilin glimpsed the remaining combat car on his side only at intersections—and that rarely.

Its powerguns lit the parallel street in a constant reminder of its lethal presence. A burst quivering like a single blue flash showed Suilin a hump on what should have been the straight slope of a barracks roofline across the next intersection.

The reporter fired; the empty clip ejected with the choonk of his weapon.

Before Suilin’s grenade had completed its low-velocity arc toward its target, the figure fired back with a stream of tracers that looked the size of bright orange baseballs. They sailed lazily out of the flickering muzzle flashes, then snapped past the reporter with dazzling speed.

The splinter shield above Suilin rang, and impacts sparkled on the iridium side armor. How could the Consie have missed— the reporter thought.

A tremendous blow knocked him backward.

His grenade detonated on the end wall of the building, a meter below the machinegunner. Cooter, screaming curses or orders to their driver, squeezed his trigger button. Cyan fire ripped from both the weapon he gripped and the left wing gun, slaved to follow the point gun’s controls.

Suilin didn’t hurt, but he couldn’t feel anything between his neck and his waistband. He tried to say, “I’m all right,” to reassure himself, but he found there was no air in his lungs and he couldn’t breathe. There were glowing dimples in the splinter shield where the machinegun had hammered it.

I’m dead, he thought. It should have bothered him more than it did.

His grenade had missed the Consie. Tracers sprayed harmlessly skyward as the fellow jumped back while keeping a deathgrip on his trigger.

Cooter’s powerguns lit and shattered rooftiles as they sawed toward, then through, their target. The machinegun’s ammunition drum blew up with a yellow flash.

Suilin’s hands hurt like Hell. “Via!” he screamed. A flash of flaming agony wrapped his chest and released it as suddenly, leaving behind an ache many times worse than what he remembered from the time he broke his arm.

Both the mercenaries, faceless in their visored helmets, were bending over him. “Where you hit?” Cooter demanded as Otski lifted the reporter’s right forearm and said, “Via! But it’s just fragments, it’s okay.”

Cooter’s big index finger prodded Suilin in the chest. “Yeah,” he said. “No penetration.” He tugged at something.

Suilin felt a cold, prickling sensation over his left nipple. “What’re you—” he said, but the Slammers had turned back to their guns.

The car must have paused while they checked him. Now it surged forward faster than before.

They swept by the barracks. Cooter’s long double burst had turned it into a torch.

Suilin lay on his back. He looked down at himself. There was a charred circle as big as a soup dish in the fabric cover of his clamshell. In the center of that was a thumb-sized crater in the armor itself.

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