“Button up, everyone. Close those slits.”
“Looks like they must have a carrier group out there, sir,” said Robinson, watching the incoming planes. “They are coming from the same area and there aren’t any bases on my map in that zone.”
“I agree, Major,” I said, watching as the contacts multiplied. I counted a dozen aircraft. Seconds later, there were more than twenty. “And I doubt I’ll be able to talk them into turning back this time.”
— 18-
I ordered my exposed marines to take cover and scatter, then watched the planes come in for several long seconds. How was I going to handle this? Tension filled my belly. Slaughtering Earth’s best pilots had never been my desire. These were the very men I wanted to recruit to fly my new fleet of spacecraft, should I ever manage to build them.
Crow contacted me on a private channel. “I get it!” he said. He cackled.
“Get what?”
“You’re going to let them come in fast and take them out when they are too close to get away, aren’t you? That will make the brass notice. A full fighter wing, gone.”
I blinked. The result he described was the furthest thing from my goal-but he was right, that was the direction in which things were headed. Crow’s words goaded me into action.
“Patton, target the lead aircraft. Reduce wattage output to five percent and fire in bursts, separated by one second.”
I opened the general channel, “hold your fire, everyone.”
I could hear Crow’s harsh, unpleasant laughter, which continued unabated. He still believed I was luring them in for the kill. I watched for one second, then two. Suddenly, the lead aircraft fell out of formation. It twisted and lost speed.
“Patton, target the second nearest aircraft and repeat previous firing orders.”
Quickly, the second jet broke off. The plane twisted and spiraled this time. I watched with grim determination. “Cease fire on second aircraft, target third aircraft.”
“What the hell are you doing?” asked Crow.
“I’m blinding them,” I said.
“What?”
“Low-output laser strikes over long range and obscured by the atmosphere. Enough to disable them, but not kill them.”
“What if they have heavy autoshades?”
I watched the third craft go down, slanting to toward the sea. “It appears that they don’t,” I said.
“Dammit, if you don’t kill them, they will hit us later.”
“Jack, these are the sort of men we need as pilots for our future forces. We don’t want to destroy our own people, we want them to see reason, and respect us.”
“Big dogs only respect a hard blow to the snout, Riggs.”
“I’m in command here, Jack. Riggs out.”
After the fourth plane went down, they got the message and turned around. They did fire a storm of missiles at us, however, before they broke off. We shot the missiles down easily, then turned our hovertanks around and drove the final miles to the main camp.
We found the place deserted. They must have gotten the message down here on the ground, too. I climbed out of the
There were only two men in the command bunker. One was General Kerr, the other was Major Barrera. The Major was in restraints, and he appeared to have been abused. He bent forward, his face cut-up, his head slumped.
“Is he dead?” I asked the General.
“No, just napping.”
“Why are you still here?”
“I wanted to talk to you, Riggs.”
“Then talk,” I said.
“No,” said Crow, shouldering through my marines. “You’ll talk to
Kerr and I looked at him. Kerr turned back to me. “I’m surprised you haven’t ditched this two-bit pirate yet, Riggs.”
“You are under arrest,” Crow said importantly.
The marines flicked their eyes to me. I gave them a small nod.
“I’m unarmed,” Kerr said as my men approached him. They surrounded him with their beamers ready. He eyed the weapons warily, knowing that any one of them had the firepower to kill a Bradley.
“What are you doing here, Kerr?” I asked.
“Surrendering to you,” he said in a mild voice.
“You didn’t put up much of a fight.”
Kerr shrugged. “I never had much to fight with. Just a few misguided followers and dupes.”
“What?”
Kerr fished in his pockets, making my men flinch. He took out his pipe. They looked mildly amused as he lit up and began to smoke it. The room quickly filled with blue, aromatic fumes. Ignoring my men and their beamers, he walked over crunching, broken glass to the big bay window overlooking the ocean.
“Nice view,” he said. “You should get this window fixed.”
I thought of Sokolov’s face as he went out that very window just a few days earlier. “Thanks for your concern,” I said. “Now tell us what’s going on.”
“I’m a rogue. This mission was never authorized by anyone,” he said with certainty. He took his pipe out of his mouth and waved it around, using it as a pointer. “All of this was unauthorized. A phenomenon of inter- departmental confusion. Operational-level control gone awry. I went off the tracks, you see. Now I’ve lost my gambit for personal glory, and you’ve captured me. My crazy adventure has come to a sad finish.”
We stared at him. I nodded slowly. “I imagine this story about you having an adventure is all over the news by now?”
“Looks that way. Turn on the television. Read the blogs online. Everyone is regretting the unfortunate misunderstanding. Everyone wants to heal these regrettable wounds I’ve caused the heroes of Star Force.”
“Wounds that you’ve caused-single-handedly?” I asked.
“Yes, I did it all. The President himself will make an apologetic statement tonight, I believe. He’ll explain the terrible stresses upon military personnel, caused by the recent anti-alien campaign. He’ll reach out to you. He’ll talk about-talking-points.”
“That’s what we get? An apology?” roared Crow, his rage finally boiling over.
“A
“That has to be the biggest stack of shit I’ve ever heard,” said Crow, marveling. The other marines in the room nodded their heads in agreement. Kerr looked slightly proud.
“Let me see if I have this straight, General,” I said, trying to control the anger creeping into my voice. “The administration wanted to attack us, but now they’ve failed, and they want to maintain the fiction that you were the sole perpetrator. The cover-story proposes you went a little funny in the head. I gather you led an unauthorized mission down here to plunder our island?”
“It’s no cover-story, it’s fact,” said Kerr.
“They left you behind to tell us this?” I asked. “To shut us up?”