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Authors: Tom Kratman

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Hotel
Santo Hijo
, Santiago, Balboa, Terra Nova

Outside the fairly modern motel were parked four light trucks of the Sixth Mechanized Tercio. Inside, and under cover safe from prying satellites, some forty-two reservists watched television, ate the motel’s excellent sandwiches, or simply slept on the floor of the open air restaurant under the tin roof. The platoon leader waited by a telephone.

Herrera Airport,
Ciudad
Balboa, Balboa, Terra Nova

Balboa had relatively few combat aircraft, none of them truly modern. Two of those they did have sat unmoving but well attended on the tarmac strip. Another two were being readied for flight in one of the airport’s many hangars. Another two were already aloft.

Two Volgan-born pilots, both of them independently wondering what had ever possessed them to emigrate to Balboa, sat in the confining space of their Mosaic Ds. Having flown much more modern aircraft, the ex-Volgans knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that they were absolutely outclassed by even second-rate Tauran equipment. Why they chose to stick it out with Balboa neither could have said.

Shimmering Sea, sixty miles west of Cienfuegos, Terra Nova

Flying low to avoid radar, twenty-three Tauran aircraft—an attack package complete with all the specialized equipment needed for a modern aerial assault—closed on Herrera Airport. The pilots knew there would be jets on the other side. They were also certain that those enemy jets had less than an ice cube’s chance in hell of surviving to see the next sunset.

More than a hundred more planes were aimed at each of the wretched little airstrips to which Balboa had dispersed its air force. The Balboan aircraft themselves were not cost effective targets. But the airfields could be temporarily shut down. The Tauran Union Air Force had armed these planes for that mission, for runway cutting.

Cristobal, Balboa, Terra Nova

In a warehouse abutting the bay that faced Fort Tecumseh, over two dozen legionaries worked frantically in the dark to fill small rubber boats with air. As each boat was finished, four men moved it away from the air compressor and stacked it atop its brethren. There were enough boats stockpiled to move slightly over a battalion in one lift.

A Balboan cursed as it became apparent that one boat would not fill. “The son of a bitch has a hole, sure as shit,” he exclaimed.

“Can we patch it?” asked his centurion.

“In this light? I don’t think so. It just means that some squad will cross over on a later lift.” The legionary quoted something Carrera had once written. “‘No kingdom has ever
really
fallen for lack of a horseshoe nail.’”

East Slope,
Cerro Gaital,
east of
Ciudad
Balboa, Balboa, Terra Nova

Global Locating Systems satellites send a time signal to ground receivers. By comparing the time signal from different satellites, the receiver can know its location to a considerable degree of certainty. The receiver merely notes the time differences between the signals received from however many satellites are available to receive from, then calculates its position based on the differences in the time sent by each satellite.

Anyone can receive these signals. They will give a location to within ten to fifty meters. There was, however, a special encrypted signal sent by the satellites and useable only by military GLS. This signal gave a far more precise location. Modern high-tech weapons depended on this more accurate military signal to a great degree for their effectiveness.

Others can receive the military signal, in theory, but cannot make use of it because of the encryption.

The legion had no real capability to decode the encrypted military signal. But, they could receive the signals that were sent. They could record them. They could delay them. They could amplify and direct them. And they could retransmit those signals. By doing so they could spoof any GLS that was capable of receiving the military signal.

Electronic warfare sergeant Valdez stood over two of his subordinates as they carefully aligned a satellite dish with a known GLS satellite. It took a few minutes for them to adjust the dish to gain the strongest possible signal. As soon as they had that signal acquired, the team began to adjust the next of its eight dishes to another satellite.

Satisfied, Valdez walked away from the reception team of his section over to where another team was setting up a directional antenna, a half rhomboid. Valdez checked the set up;
especially
did he check that the direction was perfectly in line with the Tauran firebase at Imperial Base Camp, just east of the Transitway. With a grunt of approval, Valdez walked on to the amplification team.

The amplification team had the simplest job. All they had to do was insure that the system was wired to take the signals from the dishes, amplify them, then send them on the antennas that would direct them in a fairly narrow arc toward the Taurans.

The rest of Valdez’s platoon were deployed in other places, including the
Isla Real
, the Continental Divide, and a substantial hill north of the academy at
Puerto Lindo
. There were also some part of his cohort and tercio doing related and similar missions both on land and at sea, off of Balboa’s coasts.

Lumière, Gaul, Terra Nova

With just over two hours remaining until the invasion kicked off, the analysts of the Tauran Union Intelligence and Security Agency were even more frantic than the legionaries in that Cristobal warehouse. Every thirty seconds, it seemed, some minor functionary reporting to some member of the Tauran Union Security Council or one of the national authorities called with some new request for information.

What could the TUISA report? Balboa was to all appearances sleeping. The were no unusual heat signatures, no remarkable new traffic. From high above, the Union’s most sophisticated spy satellites found absolutely nothing out of the ordinary.

The Tunnel,
Cerro Mina,
Transitway Area, Balboa, Terra Nova

While the Council was the primary user of the intelligence gathered and analyzed by the TUISA, the Tauran Union Security Force-Balboa headquarters had been a close second for the past few days. But the TUISA had had little to offer in the way of hard intelligence. They could, and did, report that “X” amount of equipment of “Y” type was present—or sometimes not—at “Z” location. The TUISA could, and did, mark the locations of Carrera’s miserable little fleet and air force, such as was known to exist.

Yet, even without useful input from the Agency, Janier’s staff assembled a remarkably complete—and remarkably wrong—picture of Balboa’s defensive posture. Literally hundreds of staff members marked maps, made inputs into computers, gave briefings, and filed reports. Several dozens, just in the headquarters alone, manned radios and field telephones.

The Taurans were not merely interested in the status of the legion however. The Tauran Union was engaged in a major military operation. Well over half of the staff’s efforts went to keeping track of every little squad and platoon engaged in the mission. From over in Gaul, Janier, himself, pestered the local staff mercilessly for information, as they in turn pestered him to grant dispensations and make the “hard” decisions.

Fully fifteen enlisted men in the headquarters had no other function than to ensure that tea and coffee were always ready in case a senior officer should show up demanding to be briefed.

Chapter Forty

Il nous faut de l’audace, et encore de l’audace, et toujours de l’audace.

(We need audacity, and yet more audacity, and always audacity.)

—Georges Jacques Danton

Ammunition Supply Point, Legionary Base
Lago Sombrero,
Balboa, Terra Nova

In comparison to the staff of the Tunnel and Building 59, to say nothing of Janier’s headquarters in Gaul, and less still of the TUISA, Carrera’s command post was simplicity itself. It consisted of Carrera, Soult, Siegel, and a mixed crew of nine, mostly operating radios and telephones. There were no huge map displays, no grandiose charts and graphs. Even Carrera’s coffee came from a thermos filled by Lourdes before she had had to abandon the
Casa
Linda.

Inside the bunker, Siegel received a message from a runner and checked a block on his clipboard. “The dragoons and Panzers at Fort Muddville are rolling out of Fort Muddville,” he announced softly. “With their past performance, that means they hit us at zero one hundred hours.”

He walked outside, gave the same word to Carrera, then returned to the bunker.

* * *

Carrera stole a quick glance at his watch.
Fifty-five minutes until midnight.
Impatiently he paced the small area defined by the door, the berm of concrete-revetted earth that was designed to protect the contents of the bunker from either an accidental explosion or a near miss from a deliberate attack, and the two angled projections from the door to the access road. In this little trapezoid, hands clenched behind his back, Carrera paced out his frustrations and anxieties.

All three moons were up, Bellona, Hecate, and Eris. They bathed the world beneath them in a bright and, because of their spacing, virtually shadowless light.

Under those moons, just outside the door of bunker number twenty-three, a huge meter-thick assemblage of old and very, very strong concrete,
Duque
Patricio Carrera gazed up into the night sky. Though trees blocked his view of the ground to the south, he knew he could see the airstrip if he wanted by just climbing to the earthen, treed roof of the bunker. He didn’t bother; he already knew exactly what it looked like.

A set of night vision goggles hung by their straps from Carrera’s neck. The goggles rested high on his chest, itself covered with the peculiar custom-made, slant-pocketed, pixilated tiger-striped camouflage that the
duque
had selected for his legion’s jungle wear. Between the two was the legion’s silk and liquid metal
lorica
.

Above goggles,
lorica
, uniform, and chest was a salt-and-pepper haired, deeply tanned face, with striking eyes, a narrow, aquiline nose, and more wrinkles than Carrera’s years should have accounted for.

The sky was clear, unusually for Balboa’s wet season. Mosquitoes droned in Carrera’s ears. From farther off the nighttime cries of the
antaniae
, Terra Nova’s winged, septic-mouthed reptiles, came softly, muffled by the surrounding jungle.
Mnnbt…mnnbt…mnnbt.
As with the mosquitoes, Carrera likewise ignored the moonbats. Besides, they were fairly harmless except to children, the physically disabled, and the feebleminded. Cowardly creatures, they were.

Carrera stole another quick glance at his watch.
Forty past midnight.
He remained inside the trapezoid defined by the bunker’s door.


Duque
?”

Carrera turned to his driver, just emerging from the shelter of the bunker. Without another word Warrant Officer Jamey Soult handed his commander a cup of coffee, black and bitter. It was an old routine. “Sir, how do you
know
they’re coming?” Soult asked.

Soult, tall, slender, and rather large-nosed, had been with Carrera in two armies, over as many decades. He was more a son or a younger brother than a subordinate. Even so, the term that best described the relationship was probably “friend.”

The corners of Carrera’s mouth twitched in something that vaguely resembled a smile. “Jamey, I know they’re coming,” he said, “even if I don’t know which units or in what precise strength, because they think they’ve no choice. I
made
them think they have no choice.”

In point of fact, Carrera actually did have a pretty good idea of who was coming, the units and the strength. After all, his enemies in the Tauran Union only
had
so many airborne units of the requisite quality.

Anglian Paras or Gallic
, he thought.
Sachsen, just possibly. But I don’t think so. Probably Gauls.

* * *

Around the airfield proper, four Volgan-built self-propelled air defense guns stood; one at each end of the strip and two to the sides where the InterColombian Highway bisected the strip. Sandbagged in on three sides, the guns were unmanned. Still their radar was turned on. Other, simpler, air defense guns stood manned by solitary Balboan soldiers. These were in the open; they had to be manned to be credible. More bait.

Within a radius of fifty or sixty miles of the base more than twelve thousand reservists and militia of the First Legion (Mechanized) waited in their homes or clubs with pounding hearts and with their issue rifles at hand for the call to report to their units at
Lago Sombrero
. Some of the legion’s wheeled vehicles had already been dispersed to pick-up points to bring the reservists in a hurry when called. Still others had their private vehicles and pick-up rosters. Some would go to pre-planned pickup zones to await helicopters, assuming any survived the initial Tauran onslaught. Buses from what Carrera liked to think of, and hoped was the case, as the “hidden reserve” would take still more.

All this was known to both the Taurans and the UEPF. Indeed, it was knowable, in broad terms, to anyone who cared to study. Without the threat of those reservists, and hundreds of thousands more like them, waiting for the trumpet’s call, the Taurans would probably never have jumped.

Not everything was known though. Carrera would have bet—in fact
was
betting—that six secrets had been kept. Inside the ammunition bunkers was one of those six real secrets. Hidden away, as they had been for the last three days, roughly eleven hundred young Balboan troops waited, unknown to anyone outside of a very small circle. They were little more than boys, most of them; the average age was just under sixteen.

The boys had been painstakingly smuggled in from their military academy just after the most recent outbreak of tension between the Tauran Union and Balboa. They had found in the bunkers a complete set of all the equipment needed for them to form a mechanized cohort, a very
big
cohort.

* * *

“But it’s as perfect as I can make it.” Carrera turned and left his post outside the bunker, going inside to speak with the commander of the hidden force.

Once out of possible observation, Carrera lit a cigarette. The smoke drifted up and hovered about the ceiling of the bunker. “Rogachev, are you ready?”

Unseen by the light-blinded Carrera, former Volgan Army major, and current legionary tribune III, Constantine Rogachev nodded in the affirmative. Rogachev was a typical, even a stereotypical Volgan: a short, stocky, hairy bear. Above his round head and light blue eyes was a thatch of blond hair bright enough to gleam in the flash from Carrera’s lighter.

“We’re as ready as we’re going to be, sir,” the Volgan answered. “All of the vehicles that are going to start are topped off with full fuel tanks. The ammo is loaded. My cadre knows its mission…well, the mission is simple enough. Let the Taurans land. Pop out of these shitty bunkers. Get in formation. Drive off their close air support, and crush them with armor.

“The only thing that has me worried is the traffic jam we’ll have trying to get out of this place and into formation.” Rogachev shrugged ruefully. “Couldn’t really rehearse
that
. If the Taurans notice us, or the UEPF does, and a couple of thousand tons of steel moving is very noticeable, sir, they could destroy us before we’re properly deployed.”

“I know the risk, Tribune. There is nothing to be done about it, except get your air defense systems out first, before anyone really notices.”

Rogachev nodded briskly. “Yes, sir. We know that’s the plan.” He chuckled, apparently at himself. “Maybe I’m nervous about it because that’s all that could go wrong. A soldier has to worry about something after all.”

Carrera laughed a little. “Indeed we do. Fine. I’m going back out. I suggest you get your boys into their tracks now. It can’t be too much longer.” Carrera threw his cigarette to the ground and stepped on the glowing ash.

* * *

Outside again in Balboa’s thick, even stifling, air, Carrera did climb to the top of the earth-covered bunker. He lifted his night vision goggles to his face before turning them on, lest their green glow betray him to a possible sniper. He then scanned the sky through the grainy, green image.

Was that a flash?
he wondered, looking toward the west.
Maybe.

From this position he could even see part of the airstrip itself, one spot where an air defense gun’s radar dish spun on its axis. Even if its radar picked up something, there was no one on board to see and report it.

Carrera’s question of a moment before was answered. He saw the first impact of a homing missile—
Radar homing? Contrast imaging? Terminally guided? Who knows?
—as the SP air defense gun disappeared in a great flash. The echoes of other explosions told of similar bombs hitting elsewhere around the field. Each concussive blast was felt in the form of rippling internal organs at least as far away as the bunker.

Carrera hated that feeling. Even so, he looked up and smiled.
If you were planning a long war,
he mused,
these bunkers would be the better target. But you’re not; you’re planning for a very short one. Amazing how often such plans fail to quite work out.

Overhead the screech and sonic crack of the jets was nearly loud enough to drown out rational thought. In Carrera’s view, one of the barracks expanded and crumpled from a direct hit by an aerially delivered bomb. Vainly, a lone and very brave Balboan gunner fired his air defense gun into the sky. Carrera could see his tracers rising in the black night and then more as another gun joined him. He made a mental note to check the boys’ names for later—Carrera assumed they would be posthumous—awards.

The Balboans’ tracers didn’t rise for long. What Carrera had almost seen a few moments before was the shadow of a Federated States of Columbia-built aerial side-firing gunship. This now poured down a stream of fire.

Like something from a science fiction movie,
thought Carrera. The defenders’ guns went silent, both of them.
And gunships. Hmmm. So it’ll be the Anglian Paras, not the Gauls’. They’re the only ones outside of the FSC that have gunships. That’s a pity,
he thought, and meant it.
I’d hoped they’d stay out of this.

The air shook as more fighter-bombers raked over the legionary base. Down came regular unguided—dumb—bombs, twenty millimeter cannon shells, rockets, cluster bombs. Had there been any serious opposition on the ground around the airstrip these might well have broken it, even though well dug-in troops were not terribly vulnerable to air attack.

Joining the air armada now came a flight of half a dozen helicopter gunships, presumably flying out of the Tauran-held Transitway Area, or perhaps even from something at sea.

Hmmm…more proof of Anglians
.

The helicopter gunships didn’t carry anything like the airplanes’ firepower. They made up for that lack, however, in the attention to detail they could apply to a mission. By the glow of the burning buildings, Carrera could make out the gunships’ track as they shot down legionaries attempting to flee from them.

Holding a fist in front of his chest, Carrera spoke out loud to himself. “Now,” he commanded to no one who could hear. “Now! Report that the area is clear enough to jump.”

Carrera’s order, or prayer, or wish, was quickly rewarded. Under the bright moonlight, he saw the outlines of the first of twenty-four medium and fourteen large cargo transports and troop carriers, approaching the
Lago Sombrero
airfield. Coming in low, Carrera thought maybe just over one hundred and twenty meters, these planes began disgorging their loads—over fifteen hundred Paras of the Royal Anglian Airborne Regiment. At that altitude the Paras didn’t even bother with reserve chutes. If their main parachutes failed there wouldn’t be time to open the reserves anyway.

I wonder what friends I have up there, jumping to their deaths.

The first of the medium transports made its pass over the airfield and surrounding cleared area in about forty seconds. Then, duty discharged, it turned to head for home. Others, in a long double trail behind it, were still dropping troops. Hundreds of these were already on the ground struggling to free themselves from their parachutes and harnesses. When Carrera was sure that enough had landed to guarantee the others would also land despite any danger, he shouted down to Soult, “Jamey, radio silence off. Get on the horn to fire the caltrops. Tell Rogachev to roll.”

Outside, on both sides of the airfield, plastic drums began blowing up. The explosions were mostly low, though linear shaped demolition charges to cut the tops off the drums were high explosive. The tops being cut off, the lower explosive charges lifted the drums’ cargo, tens and hundreds of thousands of stiff plastic antipersonnel caltrops, up and out, scattering them across the open area. It was confidently expected that the
average
landing paratrooper would be stabbed at least twice, about two inches deep, in the course of landing.

The boys must have felt the shuddering bombs and rumble from the caltrop projectors, even deep down in their concrete hides. If it frightened them, there was little evidence of it. Carrera heard song, boyish voices supplemented by older ones, coming from the now opening vault doors:

“A young tribe stands up, ready to fight.

Raise the eagles higher,
mis compadres
.

We feel inside the time is right,

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