“Would you permit this humble servant to offer your Greatness an opportunity to do more?”

“If this would ease my heart, I would be indebted.”

“There is a small group of us, we assemble in private where there are no interruptions or distractions. Without those, we can concentrate our whole power into a chorus of adoration for The One Above Us All. Although it is tiny in comparison with His Great Power, perhaps it is of some little worth. You would be welcome to join us Most Noble One. If you would condescend to be seen with such lowly ones as us.”

“Your kindness shows the greatness of your heart. I would be pleased to join you for adoration of The Most High.”

“Then meet me here again, at the hour of Compline.”

War Room, White House, Washington DC.

“It’s not a weapon.” Admiral Gary Roughead spoke wearily, repeating himself again. “Look, I don’t think the crew on Normandy will be allowed to buy their own beer in San Diego for a long time to come, but they drove off Uriel with missiles, not some mystical death ray.”

“But the reports we have say that the radar hurt him.”

“It probably did, it’s a very powerful radar indeed and Uriel was, in its terms, very close to it. We have tight limitations on where the crew can be topside when the SPY-1 is operating. And we know from our experience with the Baldricks that they are sensitive to radar emissions. But it’s not a viable weapon. Normandy burned out a significant proportion of her SPY-1 antenna faces during that engagement. I know, it was worth it and she saved San Diego in the process but she’ll still be in dock for months and it’ll cost a lot of money to fix her. For all that, the radar was a minor contributor to the battle at most.”

“The ground crews found burned tissue at the point of impact.”

“Most likely from the missile hits. Uriel’s shot up and burned really bad, but we did it with missiles and that’s the real problem. He ducked missiles once by jumping through a portal, the only reason we got him this time is because the Standard missiles arc up and over, they came at him from above, not below. He was simply looking the wrong way. We can be sure he won’t make that mistake again. We have to get him with a weapon that doesn’t give him a chance to run through a portal. I’d guess that the radar irritated badly, probably caused him a lot of pain but it really didn’t do that much damage. What it did do was point us in the direction we should be looking.”

“How about the YAL-1A? If the targeting beams from an SPY-1 aren’t powerful enough to do the job, what about the laser on the YAL-1?” General Norton Schwartz posed the question.

“How many YAL-1s are available?” President Obama asked the question a little self-consciously

“We have two built, two more in pieces, they were on the line when funding for the program was cut. They’re still there. We can restart building them if the funding is restored.”

Obama sighed. He’d wanted to do so much, to restore the social programs funding that had been neglected during the years of Republican administration. Instead, he was pouring money into the military forces while those social programs continued to wither. It wasn’t the way he had wanted to go at all. “Very well, we’ll add funding in the next monthly supplemental. Can you divert funding from somewhere else to bridge the gap and get the aircraft started again?”

There was a quick consultation amongst the Chiefs of Staff. Eventually, Secretary Warner tapped his finger on the table. “We’ll divert the required resources from the Navy P-8 program. We don’t need ASW birds at this time so a slow-down there won’t hurt.

“Good. Next question. Munitions. How are we doing there.”

“We’re rebuilding stocks although not as fast as we would like. Problem is, a lot of our capacity is in things we don’t use any more, 5.56mm rifle ammunition for example. Retooling the lines for munitions we do use,. 50 Beowulf,. 457 Winchester Magnum for example, is taking time and production is only just picking up after the switch. Same across the board. We used to make a lot of 120mm sabot ammunition but our need for that is very low, what we do need is HE and HEAD. They’re still in critically short supply. Some areas we’re doing all right, we’re stocking up again on 155mm artillery ammunition, mostly thanks to the Chinese. Their factories are becoming the arsenal of humanity. This long delay between assaults is really working for us. If Heaven had come straight at us after we’d crushed Hell, we’d have been in a desperate position. Now it’s just disturbingly critical.”

“Aircraft?”

“Good news Mister President.” General Schwartz spoke proudly. “The first B-1C left the re-established production line yesterday and was delivered to the 40th Bombardment Group. They’ve been training using the B-1A we found after they gave up their B-29s. Next group to re-equip will be the 509th, they’re stood down at the moment. They lost all their B-2s at Whitman. Anyway, we’ve also stood up Air Force Dimensional Strike Command to control all our strategic assets.”

“SAC rides again?” Admiral Roughead spoke with studied neutrality.

“It does indeed. Modernized of course. Curt LeMay can stop spinning in his grave. Has anybody found him yet by the way?” There was a general shaking of heads. “Pity, he was the best operator the Air Force ever had, We could use him now.”

“Ships? How are we doing there.”

“It’s our lowest priority area Sir. But, we’ve cut First Metal on two new CVNs, the USS Millard Fillmore and USS James Garfield. Newport News are working triple shifts on the Lyndon Johnson and Herbert Hoover and they plan to have them out the drydocks in time to start module assembly on the second pair. That will bring us up to 14 CVNs, assuming we pull Enterprise as per plans. Otherwise, we’re just concentrating on DDG-51s, additional LHDs and the LHA-6 class. And subs of course, we’re ordering three Virginias a year. With luck, we can start pulling the museum pieces out of service again soon.”

“Doctor Surlethe, any advance on the scientific front?”

“Yes and no sir. We’re making impressive gains in cosmology and a few things are starting to fit together. But, we still can’t find a way to get at Heaven. We know it’s out there and we know where it is, in a cosmological sense, but we can’t find the place. Until we do, of course, we can’t attack them. We can make random stabs into Universe-Two, that’s the name we’re using for the Hell-Dimension now, but we could end up anywhere. One thing we have learned, it behooves us to be careful. We have no idea what we might run into up there.

“There’s one thing that is confusing us, we got hammered by the first three Bowls of Wrath and we’re only just recovering from them. But, why the long delay on the Fourth? All we’ve had is the Leopard Beast attack on Fort Bragg that did relatively little damage. The Fourth is supposed to be fire from above, well, we’ve had that already from Belial so why aren’t we seeing it again. There’s something going on here we don’t understand. The bad news is the weather attacks have restarted. You all heard about Taiwan? That cyclone made three passes over the island. No way that’s a natural occurrence.”

“Is aid on its way there? Hillary, international scene?”

“There is Sir, we’re sending amphibious and naval forces, other countries are sending food and medicines. Otherwise, not much to report, Mister President. The Pope has stated that the Roman Catholic Church is forming a division of ‘ardent volunteers’ to join the fight and ‘restore the True God to his throne’.

He’s offering it to the HEA.”

“If they’re so ardent, why aren’t they already in the Army?”

“Good question John. But this does point to a problem. The Human Expeditionary Army is all armored units, pretty much every division-sized armored unit on Earth. That’s the way it has to be, our troops are pretty much safe behind armor. But a lot of countries don’t have armored units anything like that size and they’re being left out. Worse, from their point of view, the countries forming the HEA and, in particular, the 15 members of the War Council at Yamantau, have all the political power as well. The UN is pretty much isolated and marginalized. Those countries that aren’t represented feel the same has happened to them.

“Sucks to be them.” General Casey’s spoke levelly.

“It does indeed, but we have to recognize this causes problems. The fighting in Myanmar and the threatening war in North Korea are manifestations of this problem…”

“I’d dispute that, those countries were going to blow up sooner or later anyway.”

“Perhaps, but the division that’s forming between the countries that are at the center of things and those that are not is exacerbating the situation. We don’t want a split in our ranks at the moment, at least not before we have Yahweh’s head on a stake in front of Capitol Hill. Also, some of those countries are helping the war effort, either supplying munitions or picking up the slack from efforts that have been diverted to the Salvation War. That’s why I think we should encourage the Pope’s initiative. It’s a way of getting smaller countries together and making them

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