The Landfall Campaign (The Nameless War) (20 page)

BOOK: The Landfall Campaign (The Nameless War)
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Chapter Six

Resumption of Hostilities

 

23
rd
December 2066

 


Let me guess. Mister Wyman again?

Eulenburg said in a tired voice.


I

m sorry sir, but yes,

Lieutenant Casta replied.

I

m afraid this time he seems to have drummed up more support.


How many?


Most of his own settlement, plus another thirty or forty from elsewhere who are also complaining.


They also want transport back to their settlements?


Some of them sir. Mostly though I think it boils down to a general unhappiness about the facilities here.


I see.

When the shelters under Douglas Base had been built, comfort had not been high on the list of priorities. Certainly, facilities such as sewers and wash rooms had to be put in to ensure the health of the population but there was no getting around the fact that people were being asked to live in caves. Most of the various settlements on Landfall were light, airy, comfortable places. The shelters were none of these things and the grumbling had soon started. As the weeks crawled by with no alien ships overhead people grew increasingly surly about their confinement. The Christmas period appeared to have finally brought things to a head for some.

Eulenburg had attempted to alleviate the situation by setting up a tent city on the surface, but then the heavens opened. The northern hemisphere of Landfall experienced the wettest autumn on record, the tent city became a sea of mud and the abandoned homes in colonies started to look very appealing. If the Nameless had approached that would have solved one set of problems, admittedly at the expense of turning them into a different set, but in nearly four months their ships hadn

t come within light minutes of the planet. At the start of October a few of the Spanish colonists, whose homes were only a couple of dozen kilometres outside the base, had left. Eulenburg had no authority to stop them and with the distance so short, withholding transport was no barrier. It had unfortunately spurred on the complaints from the malcontents.

New Lexington was a small settlement several hundred kilometres south of Douglas. Nominally part of the United States colony, in the past decade it had become home for people who

d managed to fall out with their own original settlements. In practical terms it was now virtually an independent colony and with a political outlook slightly to the right of Attila the Hun, the residents of New Lexington were invariably obstructionist and outspoken. Unfortunately, because they were closer to Douglas than the main American colony on Landfall, they

d ended up as Eulenburg

s responsibility, along with their community leader Mister Wyman.

Loud, overbearing and stupid, yet convinced of his own superiority, Wyman had been pestering Eulenburg

s office almost from the moment he got off the plane. It was no wonder that the rest of the Americans didn

t want them back. Weighed down by a thousand other concerns, Eulenburg was at the end of his tether.


Are the forms ready?


Yes sir, two hundred copies.


Alright, let him in.

Eulenburg settled himself behind his desk as Casta led Wyman in.


Mister Wyman,

Eulenburg said without getting up.


As I have told you,

Wyman replied in his reedy voice,

it is
Doctor
.


The only kind of doctors that currently concern me are the kind that can apply bandages.


You know why I am here. You cannot continue to hold us against our will.


You know as well as I do Mister Wyman, you were evacuated here for your own safety. Your settlement has no overhead protect…


It doesn

t need it!

Wyman snapped.

If the Nameless haven

t come by now then they aren

t going to come. Instead we

re risking our health sitting in this dank hole while you and the rest of your lackeys
…”

Eulenburg stopped listening. He

d heard it all before and this time was determined not to be drawn into a shouting match.


I

m prepared to provide transport,

he said eventually. It took a few seconds for his response to percolate through to Wyman.


About damn time and I can assure you that this matter will be taken up…

Wyman started up again.


Provided that you and anyone else who wishes to leave this base sign this,

Eulenburg continued sliding a sheet of paper across the desk.


What is it?

Wyman asked suspiciously.


It is a disclaimer confirming that you have voluntarily left the protection of Douglas Base against the advice of the military commander, namely myself. It also states that you accept the fleet may not be able to re-evacuate you should the military situation change.


Now hang on!


No Mister Wyman. This time you will listen!

Eulenburg snarled.

Re-evacuation means sending a transport plane and its crew beyond the protective perimeter of this base. Depending on how fast the Nameless come in, there might not be enough time for a transport to reach your settlement, embark you and whatever idiots have followed you and return, before they arrive. I will not risk the lives of those under my command to protect you from your own folly.


But
…”


A transport will be available at ten hundred hours tomorrow. It will fly to any settlement to which at least fifty people want to return to. Anyone wishing to leave must complete a copy of the statement before they will be allowed to embark. Now you will have to excuse me Mister Wyman, I have other, more important matters to attend to.

 


Not that I am disagreeing with you sir, but that may well cost you,

Chevalier said as the two of them stood in Four C. With so many people now in the shelters, the command centre was a comparative bastion of calm. The officers and ratings, in concert with personnel at Anshan and Endeavour bases, continued to monitor the space above them. But the main emphasis of Eulenburg

s attention had shifted. It was no longer on the stars above or even the caves below. It was now on the surface.


Without question Sebastian, there is no might about it. He is the kind of worm that can only be relied upon to cause trouble, whether dead or alive. If it gets him out of my hair for now, I will happily accept trouble in the future.


Sir, you

ll be leaving yourself very exposed.


Yes.


Sir…


Sebastian. The matter is closed!

Eulenburg snapped. Then shaking his head as if dislodging a bothersome fly he added:

we have too much else to do to worry about the fate of one fool. How is the work going?


About half the planned deep dugouts are now complete. We

d be going faster if you didn

t keep taking parts of my workforce away from me,

Chevalier replied accusingly.


At the rate you

re going, you

ll completely excavate the shelters. I have to slow you down a bit.

Chevalier smiled momentarily. Four months of solid work had produced a series of defensive lines unlike anything seen in at least a century. Three complete sets of fighting trenches now encircled the surface of Douglas Base, plus their attendant support and communication trenches. Now Chevalier

s combat engineers were busy constructing bunkers and deep dugouts to further protect the troops and their artillery.

As well as the three thousand men and women of the base

s marine contingent, soldiers from eight different nations manned these defences. Spain, Britain, France, Argentina, India, New Zealand, Japan, plus a very small contingent of Americans who were nominally there to protect the New Lexington colonists. That gave them a total fighting strength of a shade under eight thousand, defending a perimeter twenty kilometres long.

It was impressive on paper, but not so impressive if examined in detail. The frontline infantry were using four different kinds of assault rifle, none of whose ammunition was interchangeable. Added to that, most of the national forces were light formations, equipped with little in the way of armour or artillery. To top it all off was the question of communications. Three different kinds of communications equipment and five different languages made getting orders through quickly and accurately a potentially a dubious proposition.

The logistics were giving Eulenburg nightmares. More than once he

d found himself thinking of his pre-war workload with fond nostalgia. There was no help from outside either. The other shelters were busy with their own defences, while a single courier ship from Earth had arrived with a download that confirmed in detail what Eulenburg already suspected: there wasn

t going to be a relief force any time soon.


Besides we have to get whatever we can out of the colonies now,

Eulenburg added with a shrug as he shook himself out of his reverie.


It will be harder to complete the fieldworks if we have to do them while in contact,

Chevalier pointed out.

We need those bunkers, and all the rest of it.


I don

t argue the point with you Sebastian. You are better versed on such matters, but we can

t have it every way. We need those supplies. We may be able to strengthen the fieldworks if we come under siege but once we

re cut off, that

s it. We have to gather everything we can now.

Chevalier nodded and sighed.

I just don

t want you to overestimate those defences sir. We have done our best but the truth is there aren

t enough troops to man them.

He shook his head.

It

s little better than a piecrust. If an enemy ground forces gets a foothold on the plateau, we

ll never push them off. I just pray that we are not seriously tested.


Every night I have been asking God for that very same thing,

Eulenburg replied.

___________________________

 


Okay, I stand corrected, that

s definitely the real deal,

Rob said out loud.

Alice Peats looked at the marine, then at the planes. Neither provided any enlightenment. Three warplanes stood lined up, gleaming dully in the artificial light. They looked pretty much the same as any others and she

d seen dozens in the past few weeks. For the life of her Alice couldn

t understand what the marine was getting so excited about.


Told ya,

said the RAF sergeant who had come with them to unlock the hanger.


What are they even doing here?

Rob asked.


Standard Ministry of Defence balls up. They shipped them out here in crates. They

d just about got

em put back together when the Ministry decided it only wanted drop fighters out here. It was never worth shipping

em back,

the sergeant explained.

BOOK: The Landfall Campaign (The Nameless War)
13.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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