“Marie, report.”
“Acknowledged. Activity in the mosque, runners going out. Want me to knock it down?”
“Radio?”
“Nothing on the direction finder since I hit the room with the antennae.”
“Hold on the mosque, they’d just put their HQ somewhere else, and we’re going to need the 120 ammo later. Bring two of the heavies forward, I’ll take them over; keep the road north under observation. And send in the Ronsons and satchelmen—we’re going to have to burn and blast some of them out.” A different series of clicks. “Tom, close in. Tetrarchy commanders, report.”
“Einar here. Lisa’s hit, 3rd Tetrarchy’s senior decurion’s taken over. Working our way in southwest to southeast, then behind the mosque.”
Damn! He hoped she wasn’t dead; she’d been first in line if he “inherited the plantation.”
“John here. Same, northwest and hook.”
“John, pull in a little and go straight—Tom’s going to hit the northeast anyway. We’ll split them. I’ll be on your left flank. Everybody remember, this is three dimensional. Work your way down from the roofs as well as up; I’ll establish fire positions on commanding locations, move ’em forward as needed. Over.”
Eric raised his head over the crest of the rubble. The peculiar smell of fresh destruction was in the air, old dust and dirt and soiled laundry. Ruins needed time to achieve majesty, or even pathos; right after they had been fought over there was nothing but . . . seediness, and mess. Ahead was a narrow alleyway: nothing moved in it but a starved-looking mongrel, and an overturned basket of clothes that had barely stopped rocking. The locals were going to earth, the crust of posts in the orchard had been overrun, and the bulk of the Fritz were probably bivouacked around the town square: it was the only place in town with anything approaching a European standard of building. Therefore, they would be fanning out toward the noise of combat. Therefore . . .
“Follow me,” he said. McWhirter flicked out the bipod of his Holbars, settled it on the ridge and prepared for covering fire. Eric rose and leaped down the shifting slope, loose stone crunching and moving beneath his boots. They went forward, alleys and doors, every window a hole with the fear of death behind it, leapfrogging into support positions. Two waves of potential violence, expanding toward their meeting place like quantum electron shells, waiting for an observer to make them real.
They panted forward, bellies tightening for the expected hammer of a Fritz machine pistol that did not come. Then they were across the lane, slamming themselves into the rough wall, plastered flat. That put them out of the line of fire from the windows, but not from something explosive, tossed out. One of the troopers whirled out, slammed his boot into the door, passed on; another tossed a short-fuse grenade through as the rough planks jarred inward.
Blast and fragments vomited out; Eric and Sofie plunged through, fingers ready on the trigger, but not firing: nobody courted a ricochet without need. But the room beyond was bare, except for a few sticks of shattered furniture, a rough pole-ladder to the upper story . . . and a wooden trapdoor in the floor.
That raised a fraction of an inch; out poked a wooden stick with a rag that might once have been white. A face followed it, wrinkled, gray bearded, emaciated and looking as old as time. Somewhere below, a child whimpered and a woman’s voice hushed it, in a language he recognized.
“Nix Schiessen!” the ancient quavered in pidgin-German. “Stalino kaputt—Hitler kaputt una Drakanski!”
Despite himself, Eric almost grinned; he could hear a snuffle of laughter from Sofie. The locals seemed to have learned something about street fighting; also, their place in the scheme of things. The smile faded quickly. There was a bleak squalor to the room; it smelled sourly of privation, ancient poverty, fear. For a moment, his mind was daunted by the thought of a life lived in a place such as this—at best, endless struggle with a grudging earth wearing you down into an ox, with the fruits kept for others. Scuttling aside from the iron hooves of the armies as they went trampling and smashing through the shattered garden of their lives, incomprehensible giants, warriors from nowhere. The lesson being, he thought grimly, that this is defeat, so avoid it.
“Lochos upstairs,” he snapped. “Roof, then wait for me.” He motioned the graybeard up with the muzzle of his assault rifle, switching to fluent Circassian.
“You, old man, come here. The rest get down and stay down.”
The man came forward, shuffling and wavering, in fear and hunger both, to judge from the look of the hands and neck and the way his ragged kaftan hung on his bones. But he had been a tall man once and the sound of his own tongue straightened his back a little.
“Spare our children, honored sir,” he began. The honorific he used meant “Lord,” and could be used as an endearment in other circumstances. “In the name of Allah the Merciful, the Compassionate—”
The Draka cut him off with a chopping hand, ignoring memories that twisted under his lungs. “If you want mercy, old one, you must earn it. This is the Dar al Harb, the House of War. Where are the Germanski?”
The instructions were valuable—clear, concise, flawed only by a peasant’s assumption that every stone in his village was known from birth. Dismissed, he climbed back to his family, into the cellar of their hopes. McWhirter paused above the trapdoor, hefted a grenade and glanced a question. At the Centurion’s headshake, he turned to the ladder, disappointment obvious in the set of his shoulders.
“McWhirter doesn’t like ragheads much, does he, Centurion?” Sofie said as she ran antenna line out the window; the intelligence would have to be spread while it was fresh. Not that she was going to say much—the old bastard was always going on about how women were too soft for front-line formations.
With a grunt of relief, she turned and rested the weight of the radio on a lip of rock. The Centurion was facing her; that way they could cover each other’s backs. She looked at his face, thoughtful and relaxed now, and remembered the hot metal flying past them with a curious warm feeling low in her stomach. It would be . . . unbearable if that taut perfection were ruined into ugliness, and she had seen that happen to human bodies too often. And . . .
What if he was wounded? Not serious, just a leg wound, and I was the one to carry him out. Images flashed though her mind—gratitude in the cool gray eyes as she lifted his head to her canteen, and—
Oh, shut the fuck up, she told her mind, then started slightly; had she spoken aloud? Good, no. Almighty Thor, woman, are you still sixteen or what? The last time you had daydreams like that it was about pulling the captain of the field-hockey team out of a burning building. What you really wanted was bed. That was cheering, since she had gotten to bed with her.
Eric stood, lost in thought. His mind was translating raw information into tactics and possibilities, while another layer answered the comtech’s question about McWhirter: “Well, he was in Afghanistan,” he said. “Bad fighting. We had to hill three-quarters to get the rest to give up. McWhirter was there eight years, lost a lot of friends.”
Sofie shrugged. She was six months past her nineteenth birthday and that war had been over before her tenth. “How come you understand the local jabber, then?” And to the radio: “Testing, acknowledge.”