Above and behind him, the bulkhead bent and ripped off its hinges with one final push from the invader. Ignoring gravity, the assassin literally poured into the control room and clung to the tilted floor like a blob of muddy water-a horrible thing of eyes and mouths and tendrils. A terrible rotting smell accompanied it and Farway-already forced to turn away from the sickening sight-felt his stomach knot further from the malicious odor.

It made a noise-a gurgling-crying noise as it filled the aft half of the compartment. Inside its rippling skin writhed forms that might be the faces and souls of those already consumed.

Farway reached to activate the rear ballast tanks but hesitated. The sight-the smell-too much for his mind to comprehend.

The monstrosity poured across the bridge leaving an acidic, slimy trail behind as it clung to the sloping floor. A dozen mouths worked open at the sight of fresh prey.

Captain Farway hung precariously with one hand still holding a rail and his feet propped under a console. He produced his side arm, put the barrel under his chin, and pulled the trigger a moment before enveloped by a worse fate.

The black hull of the Newport News sunk into the lightless depths of the Atlantic, making for the bottom at top speed.

12. March of the Grenadiers

“Boy Pullen: You afeared of the Zulus then, Quartermaster?

QSM Bloomfield: One Zulu is only one man-and I’m afeared of no one man-but the Zulu, they come in the thousands-like a black wave of death-in the thousands…”

— From the movie, Zulu Dawn

General Jerry Shepherd sighed a huff of frustration and leaned over and into the tank’s open hatch. He saw a cramped compartment with tiny stools, a computerized work station, and an array of pedals, periscopes, joysticks, and levers. In other words, a chaotic jumble of technology shoved together into a tiny hole made to fit a crew of four in a space that would be cramped for two.

A drop of sweat fell from his cheek and splashed on the metal floor below.

“What are you doing down there?”

Captain William Rheimmer-son of council member Eva Rheimmer-had himself twisted in an ungodly fashion as he accessed a maintenance panel in a corner of the crew cab.

“There’s a problem with hydraulics,” the young officer answered.

“Captain, you’ve got an entire column of some dozen tanks held up for one bum system and we are less than two miles from Highway 135,” as if to accentuate that point, a distant sound like thunder-but they knew it not to be thunder-rumbled across the fields of golden grain surrounding the halted tank column. “You see, we’re at what they call the stagin’ area, Captain and we’ve got about another hour until we got to hit them.”

Shepherd projected confidence but he kept a myriad of doubts to himself.

The first doubt had to do with General Rhodes’ ability to break free from the ring of encirclement. His’ 3 ^ rd Mechanized division remained trapped in Halstead after abandoning their transport train. The last communique indicated a dire shortage of ammunition but a surplus of wounded.

The second doubt worried Shepherd to an even greater extent. Three days had passed since The Order decapitated a fair number of high ranking Imperial officers. Before that strike, forging a relief force from a collection of widely dispersed units seemed a difficult task. Now it appeared impossible.

After the destruction wrought at Kansas City, Pittsburgh, and Harveys Lake, Shepherd managed to re-route elements of the 10 ^ th brigade from Rheimmer’s 3 ^ rd Armored Division of New Jersey to Kansas City as well as pieces of the re-named “Stonewall’s Calvary Brigade”, the centerpiece of what remained of the 2 ^ nd Mechanized Division of Virginia.

He knew it would not be enough. He needed that extra piece in place to the north, air support, and a hell of a lot of luck; all items The Empire appeared desperately short of in recent weeks.

One other concern loomed in the back of Shep’s mind where he hid it away so as to not face it. The Order had executed a rather effective decapitation strike against The Empire’s leadership. A reasonable man would assume they also tried to hit Trevor Stone on his way to Europe.

Point was-to Shep’s way of thinking-just hours after that strike, K9s all across The Empire deserted their posts, ignoring the call of handlers. The vast majority of the dogs-Trevor’s ‘Grenadiers’ as dubbed by Stonewall McAllister years before-no longer followed commands.

That had never happened before. Even when Trevor went to another universe-even when Trevor had been thought killed but was really imprisoned by The Order-even during those times the dogs remained loyal and in tune with their masters; better trained from birth than any dog had any right to be.

At the final meeting exactly one week ago, Trevor suggested his power over the K9s came from nature itself; a sort of built-in defense against the invaders. Shepherd did not know about that, but he trusted his eyes. The K9s helped save mankind from day one and even though the war grew into battles between planes and tanks, the grenadiers still served a valuable role in security, hunting, reconnaissance, and rescue.

To lose them-now…

“Sir, did you hear me?”

“What? Huh?”

“General Shepherd, take a look at this.”

Shep removed his cowboy hat, carefully lowered himself down the open hatch into the cramped quarters next to the very German-looking kid who had grown up working on Eva Rheimmer’s farm.

“Look at this,” and Rheimmer pointed toward a mess of liquid and tubes behind an open panel. “I think I need a whole new unit.”

Shepherd repeated a saying he had heard at one time or another from just about every old-world veteran serving in the post-Armageddon army: “Haven’t you heard, Captain, this is the new army.”

“Sir?”

“Abandon this bucket of bolts. There ain’t any replacement parts coming. We’re out here all alone with one job to do and we’ve got to do it fast then haul-ass away before we get stomped. We can’t hold up for one tank.”

Shep sounded convincing despite knowing how desperately they needed each and every piece of equipment, particularly armor.

A sound of galloping horses pulled the general’s attention away from the discussion of tank repair. He raised his head and shoulders out the hatch. To the west the amber fields continued on toward the horizon where the Interstate waited along with an entrenched enemy army. Artillery and small arms fire carried over the distance to his ears.

The fields also stretched to the east but the treads of a dozen tanks, several up-armored Humvees hauling short-range artillery, and a trio of APCs had torn scars across that otherwise serene landscape. Men sat in the shade of their vehicles eating protein bars, swigging canteens, and grabbing a few minutes of sleep.

Five riders approached with General Cassy Simms leading the way. Shep had sent her north to Newton City- County airport to make contact with one of the key elements of that haphazard relief force gathering to try and save Rhodes.

“General, sir,” Cassy pulled her mount to a stop alongside the injured tank.

“Cassy. What say you? Was the airport usable?”

She answered, “Yes, General, the airport is still in good shape,” but he could tell by how she refused to look directly at him that good news would not be the order of the day.

“And..?”

“And, well, the Chinooks ferried in the 12 ^ th Engineering Brigade.”

Shep-looking one part prairie dog with his head and shoulders poking from the open hatch-gaped at General

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