The Fall: Crimson Worlds IX (23 page)

BOOK: The Fall: Crimson Worlds IX
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Chapter 22

 

Paris
French Zone
Europa Federalis

 

Werner walked down the Champs-Elysees, or what was left of it at least.  His troops had not been gentle with Paris or its citizens, despite his orders to refrain from vandalism and looting.  The war had been hard, and everyone still in the ranks had lost friends and comrades.

Europa Federalis had started the war, at least if you believed the CEL claims of innocence in the destruction of Marseilles, and as far as the CEL soldiers were concerned, it was time for them to pay the price.  Much of the population had already fled by the time Werner’s lead elements pushed into the city, and from the looks of things, the mob and the remnants of the gendarmerie had engaged in quite a battle of their own.

The Europan army itself was nowhere to be seen, and the few units still holding the line after the nuclear assault were easily pushed aside.  Werner was cautious, still not sure if the enemy was truly prostrate or if they were pulling back to reorder themselves for a counter-attack.  He knew that’s what he would have done, using the capital to draw in his enemy and then hitting them with a massive assault around the flank.

He wanted to dig in, to fortify the city and consolidate his own meager supplies.  But that wasn’t an option.  The RIC had suffered heavily in the nuclear exchanges on the eastern front, but they hadn’t been as fully mobilized as the CEL.  Before long they would be marching fresh formations through the shattered and radioactive terrain, and the CEL had nothing to meet them.  General Heinsdorf had barely been able to put together two makeshift divisions from his scattered survivors.  When fresh Russian-Indian forces arrived, they’d push right through to Neu-Brandenburg, and into the industrial heartland of the CEL.  Unless Werner could finish off the Europans and rush his forces to the east.

“Potsdorf, I don’t want any of these formations stopping.”  He knew the men would want to stay in Paris, at least until they’d gotten some rest and worked their way through the most promising loot.  The government elites all had plush apartments in the city and expansive estates along the outskirts.  But Werner intended to keep his sword in the enemy’s back.  The coast wasn’t far, and pretty soon the enemy would run out of room to retreat.  He hoped the high command would offer reasonable terms to entice the Europans to capitulate, but he suspected they would demand a humiliating surrender, even as they faced defeat in the east.  And that meant he was going to have to crush every enemy formation remaining in the field, and do it quickly, before the RIC launched another offensive.

“Yes, sir.”

The aide’s voice broadcast his exhaustion.  Werner knew all his men needed rest, but there was no time.  He was planning to have two divisions on the road west by morning.  He knew that wouldn’t be popular with his soldiers, but there was no choice.

“General, we’re getting a high priority communication for you.”  Potsdorf walked over, carrying a headset.  “It’s General Fritzen at GHQ.”

Werner took the headset and put it on.  “Werner here, sir.”

“Werner, you are to stand firm in and around Paris.  You are not to advance west of the city limits.”  Fritzen’s voice was stilted, sour.  It was clear he didn’t agree with the orders.

“Sir, our best chance to defeat the enemy is now.  Every day we give them is more time to round up stragglers and reform their scattered units.”

“Save it, Werner.  You’re wasting your time trying to convince me.  I already agree with you.  But this is from the top.  Apparently, the Alliance is trying to work on some peace initiative to end all the fighting.”  Werner could tell his superior didn’t think there was a chance in hell anything would come of that.  “And we’re to stand firm and not make any provocative moves for 72 hours.”

“Sir…”  Werner sighed softly.  Three days was an eternity right now, but he knew there was no point arguing.  “Yes, sir.  Understood.  Werner out.”

He turned toward Potsdorf.  The aide was waiting with an expectant look on his face.  “Well, Major.  It looks like we’re holding up here for a while.  Issue recall orders for the lead divisions.  Have them take position in the western suburbs.”

Potsdorf looked confused, but one glimpse at Werner’s expression was all it took for him to keep it to himself.  “Yes, sir,” he said and turned to carry out the orders.

 

“Tank, Buck…”  Axe increased his pace as soon as he saw his people standing around the tunnel entrance.  The last day had been a difficult one, not only because of danger and hardship, but also because of the way he’d begun to think about things.  He’d been an opportunist all his life, willing to do whatever it took to live a life above the squalor of the people around him.

Not the people…his people, he reminded himself.  His parents had been Cogs, and he was a Cog too.  He was still a survivor, willing to go to extreme measures to ensure the safety of his small band, but he was finding it harder to rationalize some of the violence and brutality.  He kept seeing the face of the old man he’d killed, a human being who was now dead because Axe wanted his flashlight.  He couldn’t justify his action and, for the first time in a long time, he found that he deeply regretted what he had done.  He saw the old man’s face before his eyes, covered with blood and half submerged in the foul, black water.  Just as Axe had left him.

He glanced back at Ellie, who had slowed to a stop at the sight of the other gang members.  She eyed them fearfully, suspiciously.  Axe had rescued her, taken her from a place where she’d been terribly mistreated.  He’d been outraged about what had been done to her, but now he wondered if he was any different than the spoiled, deviant scum who had abused her.

He looked back at the girl.  “Ellie, it’s all right.  These are friends.”

She stayed where she was, an unconvinced expression on her face.  She looked like she might bolt and run at any second.  Axe knew she would die on her own, but he was afraid to be too insistent with her.  She’d been through a lot, and she was very skittish.  If he was too aggressive, she’d run for sure.

“Axe!”  Buck turned and ran over.  “We’d just about given up on you.  Where’d you come from?”  He glanced at the tunnel exit then back in the direction Axe had come from.

“Ended up in the wrong tunnel.  Came out about half a kilometer south.”  He trudged forward a few more meters, extending his arms and embracing his friend.  “I’m glad to be back.  I got some decent stuff, but there’s nothing left for us in New York.  The politicos are all gone, escaped or killed by the mobs.  And the food is running low.  Pretty soon the Cogs will start fighting over what is left.”  He paused, his head turning slightly to stare across the river at the great towers of Manhattan.  “Then they’ll probably start eating each other.”  He couldn’t imagine the nightmare developing in the Protected Zone, and he knew things were about to get much worse.

“What’d you find here, my friend?”  Buck’s voice was mocking, lecherous.  He leered at the girl standing tentatively behind Axe. “You brought back something worthwhile, alright.

Axe’s eyes darted back to Ellie, and he could see the girl was about to run.  He turned to Buck.  “That’s enough of that.”  His tone was rugged, threatening.  “She’s under my protection.  Anybody even looks at her funny, and I’ll cut him into quivering chunks of meat.”  He gave Buck a frigid stare.  “Understand me?”

Buck’s faced flushed red with anger, but it passed as quickly as it had come.  Axe had been his leader for years, and he was used to taking his orders.  “Yeah, boss.  I understand.”  There was a touch of bitterness in his voice, but he turned away from Ellie and stood next to the others.

“We’re going to head back east.  It’s too dangerous in Manhattan, and everything is running out there anyway.  Things are going to get a lot worse there and, eventually, some of the mob is going find its way out here.”  He glanced back across the river for a few seconds then turned away.  “And we don’t want to be anywhere near here when they do.”

He turned back to Ellie.  “We’re going east, a long way from the city, from all that violence and insanity.”  His voice was soft, gentle.  “Will you come with us?”

She stood silently, looking at the ground for a few seconds before she returned his gaze.  “I’ll come,” she said meekly, her eyes darting nervously toward Buck and the others for an instant.

“Come,” Axe said.  “No one will hurt you.  You have my word.”  He smiled and turned toward the shattered remnants of the road.  “Now let’s all get the hell out of here.”

 

Li An sat in her office, reviewing her preparations with the thoroughness that had made her one of the most effective intelligence operatives on Earth.  Long before she’d risen to command C1, she’d been a field agent with an unmatched record of success.  She’d been willing to do anything to get the job done.  Murder, bribery, blackmail, sex – with men or women – whatever it took.  Now, she felt as if those days had returned, and she was once again prepared to do whatever was necessary.  The stakes were higher than ever, perhaps even life or death, not just for her this time, but for the entire CAC.  For the world itself.

She had her agents in place.  Everything was prepared, waiting for her to give the word.  She’d put the operation off for as long as she could, but now she realized there was no choice.  She’d made her judgment on Ryan Warren.  He seemed reasonable, far preferable to Gavin Stark.  She didn’t trust him, certainly.  Li An didn’t trust anyone.  But Ryan seemed to understand as she did that there was no chance for victory in this war, only survival or death.  She thought she could work with him, and if they controlled the CAC and the Alliance, they just may be able to pull mankind back from the brink.

She went over the status of her various teams in her head, reviewing each aspect of the operation one last time.  In her younger days, she hadn’t been terribly bothered by how much blood got spilled as long as the objective was accomplished.  The older Li An still put success first, but in recent years she had tried to keep the brutality down to the minimum required.  She didn’t know if she was just too tired for so much blood or if her own impending mortality had affected her in some way.

There was no room for restraint now.  She had one chance, and only one, to eliminate all potential resistance.  Anyone who might oppose her grab for power had to die in the initial onslaught, along with all of their guards and retainers.  When she gave the final word to go, thousands of people would be killed, the entire head of the CAC lopped off in one clean stroke.  There would be no one left to strike back.  No one to challenge her total power.

She leaned back and closed her eyes for a few seconds.  She was tired, more fatigued than she had ever been.  Was it possible, she wondered, to live too long?

She’d dueled with Jack Dutton for decades.  Stark’s mentor had been one of her main adversaries for most of her life.  She’d gotten the better of him sometimes, as he had of her.  They’d even worked together a long time back, when the CAC and the Alliance had found themselves with common cause for a brief period.  The two made a good, if short-lived team, and they’d taken the opportunity to have a torrid affair as well, one she still recalled with a degree of fondness, despite the fact that they’d been enemies for three-quarters of a century afterward.  But Dutton was dead now.  He’d had the good sense to let go of life before the world fell completely apart around him.  She’d shed a rare tear when she’d been told of his death, and she drank to his memory – and wondered if he’d still had the scar from those bite marks she’d given him 75 years before.

“Were you the smart one, Jack?”  She spoke silently to herself, as she sat in the dark, featureless office.  “Are you better off dead, out of the game?  Or am I, to still be here, with one chance to keep everything from falling apart?”  She turned for the thousandth time, but the view still wasn’t there.  Her office in Wan Chai had a breathtaking vista of the Hong Kong skyline, but now she was in the Combine’s command bunker, deep beneath the South China Sea.

Well, she thought to herself.  There is no point in sitting here and wishing for different times.  Li An had always been a woman of action, not one prone to sitting and hoping for things to get better on their own.  She punched a few keys, bringing up a login screen.  She entered her password, 12 keystrokes followed by a second 8-digit code.  She was about to give the command word when her screen went dark.

She reached over and tapped the edge of her monitor.  Nothing.  She leaned down and checked the connections.  Everything looked fine.  What the hell, she thought, as the door slid open, and her assistant stepped in.

“Daiyu, my workstation is malfunctioning.”

“No, Minister Li, it is not.”  Daiyu stood just inside the doorway, wearing a form fitting silk dress.  She was beautiful, even by the standards of Li’s young protégés.  There was a gun in her hand.  “I have disconnected you from the net.”

“You did what?”  There was a rush of anger in Li’s voice, and she pulled her head up from under the desk, freezing when she saw the gun.

“Please, Minister Li, put your hands on the desk.  I believe I have removed most of your hidden weapons, but I do not wish to take the chance that there is one of which I am not aware.”  Her tone was silky smooth, just a touch of self-satisfaction slipping through her otherwise firm control.

“Why, Daiyu?  Why betray me?  And your country?”  There was resignation in Li’s voice.  She’d escaped from 100 close calls in her long career, but she knew this time she was cornered.  For the first time in her long life, she felt herself surrendering, giving in to failure.

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