The Tank Lords by David Drake

“Bullet kills you just as dead,” Worzer grunted. “Jake, think you can climb that wall?”

“Sure. She’ll buck a mite in the loose stuff.” The gully side was a gentle declivity, now, where the grenades had blown it in. “Wanna unhitch the trailer first?”

“Negative, nobody gets off the blower till we cleaned this up.”

“Umm, don’t want to let somebody else in on the fun, maybe?” the driver queried. If he was tense, his voice did not indicate it. Rob’s palms were sweaty. His glands had understood before his mind had that his companions were considering smashing up, unaided, a guerrilla stronghold.

“Cop,” Leon objected determinedly. “We found it, didn’t we?”

“Let’s go,” Worzer ordered. “Kid, watch your side. They sure got another entrance, maybe a couple.”

The car nosed gently toward the subsided bank, wallowed briefly as the driver fed more power to the forward fans to lift the bow. With a surge and a roar, the big vehicle climbed. Its fans caught a few pebbles and whanged them around inside the plenum chamber like a rattle of sudden gunfire. At half speed, the car glided toward another fenced grainplot, leaving behind it a rising pall of dust.

“Straight as a plumb line,” Worzer commented, his eyes flicking his sensor screen. “Bastards’ll be waiting for us.”

Rob glanced at him—a mistake. The slam-spang! of shot and ricochet were nearly simultaneous. The recruit whirled back, bawling in surprise. The rifle pit had opened within five meters of him, and only the haste of the dark-featured guerrilla had saved Rob from his first shot. Rob pivoted his powergun like a hammer, both thumbs mashing down the trigger. Nothing happened. The guerrilla ducked anyway, the black circle of his foxhole shaped into a thick crescent by the lid lying askew.

Safety, safety! Rob’s mind screamed and he punched the button fat-fingered. The rifleman raised his head just in time to meet the hose of fire that darted from the recruit’s gun. The guerrilla’s head exploded. His brains, flash-cooked by the first shot, changed instantly from a colloid to a blast of steam that scattered itself over a three-meter circle. The smoldering fragments of the rifle followed the torso as it slid downward.

The combat car roared into the field of waist-high grain, ripping down twenty meters of woven fencing to make its passage. Rob, vaguely aware of other shots and cries forward, vomited onto the floor of the compartment. A colossal explosion nearby slewed the car sideways. As Rob raised his eyes, he noticed three more swarthy riflemen darting through the grain from the right rear of the vehicle.

“Here!” he cried. He swiveled the weapon blindly, his hips colliding with Worzer in the cramped space. A rifle bullet cracked past his helmet. He screamed something again but his own fire was too high, blue-green droplets against the clear sky, and the guerrillas had grabbed the bars while the flirts jumped and blatted.

The rifles were slamming but the flirts were in the way of Rob’s gun. “Down! Down!” he shouted uselessly, and the red-haired flirt pitched across the cage with one synthetic breast torn away by the bullet she had leaped in front of. Leon cursed and slumped across Rob’s feet, and then it was Chero Worzer shouting, “Hard left, Jake,” and leaning across the fallen gunner to rotate his weapon. The combat car tilted left as the bow came around, pinching the trailer against the left rear of the vehicle—in the path of Worzer’s powergun. The cage’s light alloy bloomed in superheated fireballs as the cyan bolts ripped through it. Both tires exploded together, and there was a red mist of blood in the air. The one guerrilla who had ducked under the burst dropped his rifle and ran.

Worzer cut him in half as he took his third step.

The sergeant gave the wreckage only a glance, then knelt beside Leon. “Cop, he’s gone,” he said. The bullet had struck the big man in the neck between helmet and body armor, and there was almost a gallon of blood on the floor of the compartment.

“Leon?” Jake asked.

“Yeah. Lord, there musta been twenty kilos of explosive in that satchel charge. If he hadn’t hit it in the air . . .” Worzer looked back at the wreck of the trailer, then at Rob. “Kid, can you unhitch that yourself?”

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