HARM (3 page)

Read HARM Online

Authors: Peter Lok

BOOK: HARM
13.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He was nervous, his hands felt a little damp, but he remained steady.  The front of the first mech appeared and he waited until a third of it entered his line of sight.  He sighted on the center of mass in front and below it’s primary gun, the targeting programs automatically adjusting for range and other parameters.  A squeeze of the virtual trigger in his right hand caused the coil-gun to kick back.  One hypersonic, depleted uranium penetrator fired out of the coil-gun with a loud bang.  A moment later, the slug hit with devastating power.  The full power shot punched clean through the side of the spider-mech in a small explosion, with most of the kinetic energy from the projectile focused on a tiny surface of armour that was blasted apart.  Inside the mech, the penetrator and spalled pieces of armour ricocheted through machinery, interior walls, bodies, and the main power
plant
.  All the stored energy inside the power
plant
instantaneously burst out and the resulting explosion tore the mech in two. 


Target destroyed
,
” the AI called out.

The coil-gun was highly effective – a vast reversal from the early encounters where 120 mm sabot rounds from the M3A1 battle tanks had proven less than effective against the alien’s molecular armour.  Better weapons like the coil-gun had been developed since, but they required a great deal of power for their superconducting magnetic coils to propel their projectiles at 3 km/second. Because of this only heavy tanks and the new HARMS were equipped with them.

The second spider-mech’s sensors had noted the source of the shot and targeted the old silos.  The powerful beam weapon on the mech flashed and beams punched four holes clean through the steel silos.  However, Joshua wasn’t there anymore.  He had already rolled and was shifting to a new position.

Ready, flashed the coil-gun indicator.  Coil-gun in burst mode, he thought. 

Coil-gun in burst mode
,

responded the AI.  He ran his mecha in a crouch around the corner of the factory just as another burst of laser fire burned holes in the air behind him.   The alien mech had come straight in while firing.  Newts had never been observed to be cowardly.

Still crouched, Joshua leaned out and snapped off two rounds.  The first round left a deep gouge in the heavily sloped front armour of the mech but glanced off.  The second round hit the left front leg joint to the body, destroying it, and caused the mech to pitch down a bit.  Ducking back behind the corner, another burst of laser light blew molten chunks of brick away, peppering his HARM with small fragments.  The alien mech continued closing, firing as it went.  More corner vanished.

Damn, this was getting too close, Joshua thought to himself.  He needed to end this quick before he took some serious damage.  He backed his mecha up and thought coil-gun to single mode. 

Coil-gun to single mode. Gun charging
,
” spoke the AI. 

Gun ready
.

Readying himself, he thought, low jump, ten metres. 

Low Jump, ten metres
,
” verified the AI. Tensing his legs, Joshua mimicked the jump and his mech leapt into the air at a forty five degree angle.  He brought the coil gun up and aimed down.  As he cleared the top of the building, he lined up the flattened bug shaped of the alien mech in his sights and placed the cross-hairs right on the enemy’s main turret and squeezed the trigger.  He saw a flash of light as the alien fired at him, but it missed.  The alien turret exploded into the air along with the rest of the mech as his penetrator punched right through the thinner top armour.  The spider-mech was dead.

The AI automatically helped to cushion his jump landing by firing the jump rockets just before touchdown.  That was close, he thought.  The simulations had not completely prepared him for the sheer ferocity of the aliens mechs. 


Target destroyed.  Twenty six rounds remaining. No enemy activity nearby
,
” confirmed the AI.

Alien command and control nets were better than the human ones according to military intelligence.  After this little skirmish, the aliens certainly knew that he was out here and that humans had mechas.  Tactical on, Joshua thought.  He watched the refugee convoy veer clear of the battle zone. 

THX X-14

, messaged the lead APC. 
M
oment
s
later a very brief message appeared from General Garcia too.  “GOOD WORK.  BRAVO NEEDS BACKUP
ASAP
.”

Content with the result, he then refocused his attention on Waypoint Charlie where the
Bravo Company
was about to be seriously outmatched by t
he remaining ten spider-mechs.

 

***

 

Bravo Company
was well dug in along the most likely line of approach to Huntsville.  Captain
William
Ericson had his tanks dug in on a narrow front flanking both sides of a highway overpass.  His ready to eat meal pack was only half eaten, forgotten due to the rapid planning he had been doing with his platoon leaders.  His three platoons of main battle tanks (MBT), for nine tanks in total, were hull down, only showing their turrets behind tank sized firing pits dug for them by the combat engineers earlier in the day.  Each one utilized the natural cover of shrubbery and active camouflage netting to conceal their location from visual and thermal detection.

His M3A3 tanks were not a match for a spider-mech in a one on one fight even though they had been upgraded to the new 130 mm smoothbore guns.  Even their bulky ablative armour add-ons
would
only take a single hit from the alien beam cannon.  The extreme engagement range for the 130 mm gun was about 2500 metres, but he knew the chance of getting a kill on a
Black Widow
spider-mech were non-existent at that range.  They had to get the range down to 1500 metres
to
get good kills.  On the other hand, the alien beam cannon could kill a tank at 2000 metres with a far longer extreme engagement range that could even engage aircraft.

Ericson wasn’t in the best defensive position, but it would do as the flanking copses of woods and gullies would work for him.  At the same time, it wasn’t a likely ambush position, and he was banking the aliens wouldn’t think so either.  The tanks were going to be the hammer for the attack, but he would need to guarantee the spider-mechs would enter the anvil. To bait the spider-mechs in he would use one of his two platoons of robot combat walkers.  When the tanks engaged the aliens they would be the opening hammer.  The other walker platoon, concealed in the northerly copse of woods, would to hit the Newts from the side.  From the southern side, a platoon of battlesuit infantry would strike at the same time to complete the
ambush

The plan looked great, he just hoped it would survive contact with the enemy.  Originally, X-14’s long range coil-gun was supposed to begin the engagement, but things hadn’t worked out.  Still, it was good news that X-14 had knocked
out two spider-mechs as there were
two less to worry about.  He knew X-14 was coming in, but he also knew it wouldn’t  make it for the opening of the battle in time.  Its primary weapons would have been a great asset.  As it was, the battle ahead was going to be bloody.

Specialist Sam Winston called up to Ericson at his commander’s position from his gunner’s seat.  “Think the plan’s gonna work?” 

Ericson looked down at Sam.  “I think we got a good chance,” but Sam could tell he was putting the best spin on it.  After all the LT couldn’t be a defeatist or it would be game over already.

“We’ll get ‘em.  I’m going to put a sabot round up their
butt
,” Sam replied with bravado.
“They must have butts, right?”

Ericson, gave a slight laugh at the half-hearted humour.  He pulled out a rumpled picture of his wife and his two daughters from his pocket.  I’ll be back to see you, he promised himself.

 

***

 

The Blue Newts had sent a trio of moth-like reconnaissance drones ahead of their advance to observe for enemy activity.  As the drones approached they managed to see a half dozen combat walkers on the highway scrambling to cover, but that was all they saw. Shoulder launched anti-aircraft missiles from the advance pickets of battlesuit infantry shot them
down
before further observations could be made.  The infantry then
bounded in powered hops to their
n
ew concealed firing locations from their old positions.

The trap was set and a little luck would not hurt, Ericson thought.  He suddenly realized his throat was quite dry and took out his canteen for a quick swig.  Yes, he thought again, a little luck wouldn’t hurt at all.  “All units.  Prepare to engage according to the plan.  Let’s get these guys.”

Now that enemy units had been spotted, the spider-mechs slowed and spread out into a skirmish line that was almost a kilometre wide with seventy metres between each mech.  Their turrets  panned from side to side.  They had seen the robot combat walkers.  The walkers were normally no match for them, but there could be other enemy units nearby.

The command data net had gone passive so units wouldn’t give themselves away via radio emissions.  A few furtive reconnaissance RPVs flying low at extreme range provided partial data feeds that his whole command observed.   His own units with good positions could visually observe the advancing alien units to supplement the feeds but kept radio silence.  Looking through his tank’s periscope Ericson could see that the spider-mechs at the ends of the advancing line were very close to some of the concealed units.  He prayed that they would remain unspotted and that his men kept their cool.  Half of his unit was made up of green recruits, as casualty rates had been
horrendously high
, but the newbies had been spread out with the veterans to stiffen them up.

A great deal of his plan depended on the combat walkers, a military innovation introduced in the 2030s.  The walkers were autonomous, quadrupedal robots with a weapons mount on the back of their thick stubby bodies.  They were
approximately the shape and size of a horse
with a sensor array where the horse’s neck would be
, and stood on narrow
legs that allowed them to traverse most rough terrain.  While a tank company had only 10 tanks, including the command tank, they had a swarm of
18
combat walkers to support them.  Two special transporter vehicles would both remotely control and transport the walkers. The walkers acted in the hybrid role of a light fighting vehicle and infantry support for the tanks.  Every walker was armed with a machinegun that could be supplemented by either anti-tank missiles or a chain gun.

Sweat was beginning to form on Ericson’s brow and he was sure everyone else was just as tense.  Watching the tactical display count down the distance between the Newts and the camouflaged tanks was nerve wracking.  While he couldn’t see Lieutenant Nguyen, who commanded the robo-jockeys, he had fought with him before and knew he’d do his job.  When the Newts had advanced within 2000 metres of the tanks the six combat walkers rose up on their legs from their prone positions and each fired an improved anti-tank missile on the same central walker.  They then ducked back down, popped smoke and fell back towards the overpass directly behind them.  The missiles were self-homing and contrails of smoke showed them closing the distance as supersonic speed. 

The air was suddenly full of laser flashes.  The Newts had data-linked fire control that multiplied the lethality of their machines by synchronizing their weapons to act as a whole.  Their beam weapons now worked together in an anti-air capacity.  Four of the missiles exploded in mid-air.  The last two missiles struck the targeted spider-mech dead on.  Great balls of flame erupted on its upper, frontal armour where the shaped charges detonated, trying to burn through the molecular armour.  Both warheads left great blast marks on the surface, but black smoke only boiled out of one of them, where one warhead had penetrated.  However, the mech looked like it was still quite functional as it and a number of the other walkers returned fire through the smoke.  Their shots hit the empty ground that the walkers had vacated.  The advance of the spider-mechs picked up as they tried to close the range on the walkers. 

Other books

Secrets of a Charmed Life by Susan Meissner
A Time for Change by Marquaylla Lorette
The Hand of the Devil by Carter, Dean Vincent
Baker Towers by Jennifer Haigh
Justice at Risk by Wilson, John Morgan
Pug Hill by Alison Pace
The Rogue's Reluctant Rose by du Bois, Daphne
Void's Psionics by H. Lee Morgan, Jr