Good fieldcraft, Niles thought. Aloud: "Open fire!"
Muzzle-flashes lit the night, twinkling like malignant orange fireflies. Men flopped, screamed, were still; a stitch of tracers curved out toward the Helot positions, and the Royalist riflemen opened return fire as well. Bullets went by over Niles's head with an ugly flat whack sound, and bark fell on his helmet and the backs of his gloves. He raised his own rifle and settled the translucent pointer of the optical sight on a suspicious gray rock that jutted up out of the snow.
A head and arms snaked around it, a long finned oval on the muzzle of the weapon they carried; rifle grenade. Niles stroked the trigger gently. Crack. The recoil was a surprise, sign of a good shot. The head dropped back and the rifle slipped back into view and landed in the snow.
God, Niles thought as a surge of excitement flowed from throat to gut. He touched the side of his helmet.
"Status of element Icepick."
"Moving out," his adjutant said.
"Execute fire mission Alpha," Niles ordered. "I'll join Icepick with the Headquarters squad. Switch to local band relay." They were moving now. Communications weren't so good. So what? No commanding from the rear! Get out where the troops could know you weren't afraid.
"On your own, platoon leader," Niles continued, beginning to worm his way backward. Then the sky overhead glared a violet almost as bright as day.
"Incoming. Able Company position." Owensford watched the battle screen change again.
"Lysander's scouts," Captain Lahr said.
In the background Captain Sastri, the artillery chief, spoke in a monotone. "Multiple incoming.
Tracking." Light flickered across the northern horizon. "Computing positions. Preparing for counterbattery shoot… countermeasures. Chaff and broad-frequency jamming, decoys."
Peter nodded in satisfaction. "Andy, be sure we record all this for analysis."
"Roger," the adjutant said. "The bad guys are expending a hell of a lot of ordnance, Colonel."
"Yeah. Sort of makes you wonder who paid for it all. Andy, what do you make of this?"
"Well, they had a hell of a lot more gear than we expected. It hasn't been used all that effectively."
"Not too surprising. Most of their training had to be map exercises. Dry fire."
"Yes, sir. Just as well."
"They jumped the gun, too," Peter mused. "They should have waited until we got in deeper."
"Probably scared we'd find their base."
"Could be. I still think there's some kind of plan at work here. Something complicated. Main thing is, keep them using up their heavy stuff until they notice they're running short."
Behind him the 160mm mortars flashed as Sastri sent in anti-radar and counterbattery fire. Crump.
Crump. Crump. Twelve times repeated, and then the brief winking of rocket-assist at the high points of the shell's trajectories, thousands of meters overhead. The muzzles disappeared behind their raw-earth revetments, as the hydraulics in the recoil-system automatically lowered them to loading position; the bitter smell of burnt propellant settled across the hilltop. Inside the gunpits the two loaders would be dropping the forty-kilo bombs down the barrels… the tubes showed again, ten seconds to load and alter the aiming point both. Crump. Crump. Crump.
A rumble through the ground, and an edge of satisfaction in Sastri's voice:
"Secondary explosions. Scratch one rocket battery."
Rockets hissed skyward, arcing northward.
"Jamming antennae down. One. Two… Active jamming off. Chaff continuing."
"Sir, Second Platoon, we're under fire." A bit superfluous, Lysander thought, since they could all hear the crackling two thousand meters to their left.
"Where's Lieutenant Doorn, sergeant?"
"Dead, sir. Three dead, five wounded. Heavy automatic-weapons fire. Maybe a whole company come after us, we'd have been dead if we hadn't dug in."
Lysander could hear the relief, and more, in the sergeant's voice.
"Incoming!"
Lysander ducked lower into the hole. At least everyone is dug in. Explosions all along the line, but a lot fell into the minefield, setting off more mines. They thought we'd be in there…
"Alexi's hit, medic, medic!" somebody shouted.
Then the sky screamed, globes of violet light raking through the cloud towards them. The Collins prince dropped to the bottom of his spider pit and tucked his limbs in, standard drill to let the thicker torso armor protect you. A flicker of silence, and then the world came apart in a surf-roar of white noise. The rocket warheads burst apart thirty meters up, showering their rain of hundreds of grenade-sized bomblets to bounce and explode and fill the air with a rain of notched steel wire. The sound was distant as the helmet clamped down on audio input that would have damaged his ears, like a movie on Tri-V in another room of the house, and it seemed to go on forever. Something struck him below the right shoulderblade with sledgehammer force, driving a grunt out between clenched teeth.
Fragment, but the armor had stopped it. If a bomblet fell into the hole with him, well, Sparta would just need another heir to the Collins throne. He felt sick, a little lightheaded; part of him not believing this was real, a deeper part knowing it was and wanting to run away. Had it been this bad, swimming underwater to hijack the shuttle on Tanith? No, he decided. Then he had had one definite task to do, and Falkenberg waiting, and that had been very comforting. Peter's a good man, he told himself. Good soldier. And now there are people looking for you to be their rock.
A lot of the incoming barrage had fallen into the minefield. The enemy had expected to catch troops out in the open, not down in holes.
The rocket fire lifted, to be replaced almost instantly by the whistle of mortar shells; continuous bombardments were luxuries for rich worlds with abundant mechanical transport. Lysander raised his head, automatically sorting through the messages passing through the audio circuits of his helmet.
Casualties, more than he liked, but nothing like what there could have been if they'd been out there in the open.
"Shift the wounded to perimeter defense," he said on the company push. Schoop. A mortar firing, it might be up to a klick away. Whunk. A fountain of snow and vegetation and wet old earth bloomed ahead of him, in among the minefield. Well that's one way to clear a field. Let the enemy pound it.
Bloody good thing we stopped the advance.
Schoop. Schoop. Whunk. Whunk. The three eighty-two mm's of his own weapons platoon were back in action, firing to the direction of the Second's observers over to the left.
"Fire central," he said, switching to the interunit frequency. "I'm taking medium mortar fire. Counterfire needed."
Far above, points of light winked briefly; heavy mortar shells getting an extra kick at the top arch of their trajectory. Seconds later a heavy crump… crump echoed from the hills, mingling with the noise of explosions eight or ten thousand meters to the north, wherever the computers thought the rockets had come from.
"Sastri here." The battalion heavy-weapons company CO. "Can you observe the fall of shot?"
"That's negative, Fire Central."
"Not much point, then," the artillery officer said. "With passive sensors, there just isn't enough backtrack on mediums. If you can get drones over the target, let me know." A hint of impatience; the battalion heavy weapons were working hard to supress the enemy's area-bombardment weapons.