'They are headed our way,' Brewer spoke with a hint of excitement in his voice.
'Good. They’ll pass by our ships then come here.'
'Sir, have you thought about what we'll do if they discover Major Forest and her team?'
Trevor nodded, 'Yes.'
'You have? And what is it we’ll do then?'
'Die…'
…Nina heard the sound of her own breath, and sound of the Reverend’s breath, and the distant hum of the parked Battleship as its engines droned in some type of neutral setting.
Then she heard the approaching mass.
A purr and hiss of hydraulic gears accompanied each step of a Golem's leg.
She knew these robots to be a dangerous lot because the pilots controlling each Golem sat isolated from the battlefield in the floating fortress overhead, facing no more danger than a child playing a video game.
By the same token, that lack of fear could translate into a lack of caution.
'Dare I ask, Major,' Johnny’s normally loud voice sounded out of place in a whisper. 'Have your people ever tried to interrupt the signal between the operators and their automatons?'
'Of course we did. But this is how they fight, you know? They’ve spent a lot of time getting it right. Scrambled frequencies, encoding, all that.'
The Rev appeared ready to ask another question but changed his mind when he felt a soft vibration as the first wave of Golems walked into the field…
…'So it’s going sit up there and let its ground troops do the dirty work,' Trevor said.
'I sure hope so,' Corporal Brewer replied in a voice that suggested the idea of bolting entered his mind. 'They could wipe us out in about thirty seconds if they decide to.'
'Jon, I mean, Corporal, to win this war you have to take chances.'
Brewer wiped sweat from his brow and remarked, 'Well, this is a big chance.'
Trevor examined his defenses yet again from the broken window on the top floor of the large home. Again, the primary building material consisted of stone but this particular structure was one of the few 'homes' that stood alone as opposed to sprouting from the mountainside.
On his right flank, further up the soft slope of the lower mountain and beyond the main house’s back yard, was a kind of guest cottage, a single-story structure with a tall roof. A squad of human soldiers hid there armed with their assault rifles as well as a handful of fragmentation-style grenades and a heavy machine gun.
To his left flank stretched a front yard then the lake perimeter road. On the far side of that road was a big boat house built on a pier over icy waters. Inside waited another squad equipped with the only surface-to-surface anti-armor weapon in their possession. The weapon could be fired multiple times, but they possessed only a handful of projectiles.
The last squad joined Trevor and Brewer in the main house, a dilapidated structure lacking any furnishings; just empty rooms most showing signs of battle damage.
In addition to their standard bullpup rifles, the men in the house brandished a pair of heavy machine guns and several high-yield explosive charges with remote detonators. Trevor had them rig some of those explosives around the perimeter while a they anchored a few more of those charges to rocks to add weight and allow them to be thrown like grenades if necessary.
'They should be at the Skippers by now,' Trevor cocked his ear toward the east as he spoke. 'I don't hear anything. That's a good sign. If they had spotted Nina, we'd hear gunfire.'
Brewer did not appear to listen. He pointed to the east and nearly shouted, 'Look!'
The line of Golems and their supporting infantry appeared, moving among the barren winter trees. The eyes of the machines glowed fiercely.
The closest Golem raised its arm and a volley of explosive shells slammed into the main house…
…Nina and Johnny had sat quiet while the enemy searched the parked Skippers. The garbled transmissions of the infantry and the bleeps and buzzes of the robots had reverberated all around their hiding spot for several minutes.
When the Geryons found nothing, their small army continued on its way. Or at least that is how it sounded to the stowaways’ ears.
A few minutes later, the first sounds of battle sounded: the hollow thoot-thoot of the Golem’s main guns; the recognizable rat-tat-tat of human assault rifles.
'Well, I say we may-'
Nina held a finger to Johnny’s lips. She then produced a softball-sized object from her utility belt. Johnny saw tiny circles along its surface.
She tossed it out from their hiding spot in the starboard landing gear hatch. It thumped to the ground, rolled, and then came to a halt.
From a pouch on her utility belt, Nina pulled a small monitor which, when she switched it on, displayed a collage of images. She enhanced each and cycled through those images: a close-up shot of a landing gear wheel, a meaningless shot of the blue sky, a rock, and then a picture just outside their hiding spot showing one of the Golem machines and two Geryon infantrymen standing guard among the parked skippers…
…As the Steel Guard approached the human positions, the attackers split into three distinct sub-groups to deal with each of the three anchors of the line.
Brewer saw bullets bounce off the Golem armor and shouted, 'We can't put a dent in them!'
'We don't need to,' Trevor replied. 'This is about slowing them down. Do that and the rest of the plan will come together.'
Of course, Trevor thought, the entire plan is based on an assumption. A likely assumption but an assumption nonetheless.
Brewer warned, 'In coming!'
Stone, the Corporal, and the two other soldiers in the room scattered. A small missile-not much larger than a firecracker-smashed through the window and exploded in the ceiling with a shower of sparks. Trevor felt hot splinters pepper his battle suit as he dove for cover behind the remains of a large pot, perhaps a planter.
Smoke spread through the room causing gasps and coughs, but it quickly dispersed as fissures and cracks in the walls and roof brought in a flow of air from outside.
'Incendiary charge!' Corporal Brewer spoke the obvious; the missile had erupted in heat and smoke instead of shrapnel.
Trevor found his feet again and observed the battle once more. He saw three Golems and a couple of Geryon infantry men march toward the boat house.
A trail of gray and white smoke shot out from the boat house to meet them. At the head of that contrail, an anti-armor rocket. It slammed into the lead Golem with a solid clang, like a hammer striking an anvil. The impact caused the upper half of the remote-guided robot to twist and it stumbled back a step…then righted itself.
'Damn,' Trevor muttered as the Guard raised its arms and fired exploding shells into the boat house. Big splinters of wood fell off and part of the outer wall sagged, threatening to collapse and take his left flank with it.
Trevor raised his radio. 'Third squad! Status report!'
One of the Geryon infantrymen raised his crossbow and let a shot fly. A red bolt arrowed into the besieged boathouse.
At last a radio response from third squad in the form of a panicked voice, 'Two men down! Shit, the missile didn’t stop it! Shit!'
'Relax, Pickering. Trust me, that bad boy is hurting; just take another poke at him. Stay focused on the mission.'
The portable rocket launcher fired again from the boat house and scored another hit on the exact same Golem. This time the warhead found a critical system. The war machine went limp and then tumbled over, its eyes glowed no more.
'Whooeey! That did it, soldier! Keep up your fire!'
An excited trooper radioed back, 'Shit yeah! That did the trick!'
The enemy force moving to engage the boat house paused, no doubt having second thoughts about storming the dock. Instead of moving forward, they stood off and traded pot shots with the defenders.