“Think we’ll go to war?” I ask the kid.
He looks over at me for a second, then back at the vista.
“Maybe. Lonnie Wayne’s on it. He’ll let us know.”
“You trust him?”
“He’s the reason I’m alive.”
“Oh.”
A flock of birds flaps across the sky, sunlight glinting from their wings like the rainbow on a pool of oil.
“Y’all look pretty rough,” says Lark, motioning to the rest of my squad with his stick. “What are you, like, soldiers?”
I look at my squad mates. Leonardo. Cherrah. Tiberius. Carl. They stand around talking, waiting for Jack to return. Their movements are familiar, relaxed. The last few months have forged us into more than just a unit—we’re a family now.
“Nah. We’re not soldiers, just survivors. My brother, Jack, he’s the soldier. I’m just tagging along for the sheer fun of it.”
“Oh,” says Lark.
I can’t tell if he just took me seriously or not.
“Where’s your brother at?” Lark asks.
“In the war council. With Lonnie and them.”
“So he’s one of those.”
“One of what?”
“Responsible kind.”
“People say that. You’re not?”
“I do my thing. The old-timers do theirs.”
Lark gestures behind us with the walking stick. There, waiting patiently in a row, are dozens of what these people call spider tanks. The walking tanks each stand about eight feet tall. The four sturdy legs are Rob created, made of ropy synthetic muscles. The rest of the tanks have been modified by human beings. Most vehicles have tank turrets and heavy-machine-gun mounts on top, but I see that one has the cab and blade off a bulldozer.
What can I say? It’s just an anything goes kind of war.
Rob didn’t come at Gray Horse all at once; it had to evolve to get up here. That meant sending walking scouts. And some of those scouts got caught. Some of those got taken apart and put back together again. Gray Horse Army prefers to fight with captured robots.
“You’re the one who figured out how to liberate the spider tanks? To lobotomize them?” I ask.
“Yep,” he says.
“Jesus. Are you a scientist or something?”
Lark chuckles. “A mechanic is just an engineer in blue jeans.”
“Damn,” I say.
“Yep.”
I look out over the prairie and see something odd.
“Hey, Lark?” I ask.
“Yeah?” he says.
“You live around here. So maybe you can tell me something.”
“Sure.”
“Just what in the fuck is that?” I ask, pointing.
He looks out over the plain. Sees the sinuous, glinting metal writhing through the grass like a hidden river. Lark spits tobacco on the ground, turns, and motions to his squad with the walking stick.
“That’s our war, brother.”
Confusion and death. The grass is too tall. The smoke is too thick.
Gray Horse Army is made up of every able-bodied adult in the city—men and women, young and old. A thousand soldiers and some change. They’ve been drilling together for months and they’ve almost all got guns, but nobody knows anything once those killing machines are slicing through the grass and latching onto people.
“Stay with the tanks,” Lonnie said. “Stay with old Houdini and you’ll be fine.”
Custom-made spider tanks plod across the prairie in a ragged line, one measured step after another. Their massive feet sink into the damp earth and their chest hulls trample the grass down, leaving a wake behind them. A few soldiers cling to the top of each tank, weapons out, scanning the fields.
We’re marching out to face what’s in the grass. Whatever it is, we’ve got to stop it before it reaches Gray Horse.
I stay with my squad, following the tank called Houdini on foot. Jack’s up on top with Lark. I’ve got Tiberius lumbering on one side of me and Cherrah on the other. Her profile is sharp in the morning light. She looks feline, quick, and ferocious. And, I can’t help thinking, beautiful. Carl and Leo are buddying up a few meters away. We all focus on staying with the tanks—they’re our only frame of reference in this never-ending maze of tall grass.
For twenty minutes we clomp across the plains, trying our best to look through the grass and see whatever’s waiting for us out here. Our primary goal is to stop the machines from advancing on Gray Horse. Secondary goal is to protect the herds of cattle that live out here on the prairie—the lifeblood of the city.
We don’t even know what kind of Rob we’re facing. Only that it’s new varieties. Always something new with our friend Rob.
“Hey, Lark,” calls Carl. “Why they call ’em spider tanks if they only have four legs?”
Lark calls down from the tank, “’Cause it beats calling it a large, quadruped walker.”
“Well, I don’t think it does,” mutters Carl.
The first concussion throws dirt and shredded plants into the air, and the screams start coming from the tall grass. A herd of buffalo stampedes, and the world rings with vibration and noise. Instant chaos.
“What’s out there, Jack?” I shout. He’s crouched on top of the spider tank, heavy mounted gun swiveling from one side to the other. Lark steers the tank. His gloved hand is wrapped tight in a rope wrapped around the hull, rodeo style.
“Nothing yet, little brother,” calls Jack.
For a few minutes there are no targets, only faceless screams.
Then something comes crashing through the yellow stalks of grass. We all pivot and aim our weapons at it—a huge Osage man. He’s huffing and puffing and dragging an unconscious body by its blood-slicked arms. The unconscious guy looks like he got hit by a meteorite. There’s a deep, bleeding crater in his upper thigh.
More explosions rip through the soldiers out in front of the tanks. Lark yanks his hand, and Houdini transitions to a trot gait, motors grinding as it moves full speed ahead to provide support. Jack turns and watches me, shrugging as the tank lumbers away into the grass.
“Help,” bawls the big Osage.
Fuck. I signal a stop to the squad and watch our spider tank over the Osage man’s shoulder as it takes another plodding step away from our position, leaving behind a half-crushed swath of grass. Every step it takes leaves us more exposed to whatever is out here.
Cherrah drops to her knee and tourniquets the unconscious man’s damaged leg. I grab the blubbering Osage by the shoulders and give him a little shake.
“What did this?” I ask.
“Bugs, man. They’re like bugs. They get on you and then blow up,” says the Osage, wiping tears off his face with a meaty forearm. “I gotta get Jay out of here. He’s gonna die.”
The concussions and the screams are coming thicker now. We crouch as gunshots ring out and stray bullets tear through the grass. It sounds like a massacre. A fine rain of dirt particles have started to float down from the clear blue sky.
Cherrah looks up from her tourniquet job and we make grim eye contact. It’s a silent agreement: You watch my back and I’ll watch yours. Then I flinch as a shower of dirt cascades through the grass and rattles against my helmet.
Our spider tank is long gone, and Jack with it.
“Okay,” I say, slapping the Osage man on the shoulder. “That should stop the bleeding. Take your friend back. We’re moving forward, so you’re on your own. Keep your eyes open.”
The Osage man throws his friend over his shoulder and hustles away. It sounds like whatever happened to old Jay has already torn through the front ranks and is coming for us, too.
I hear Lark start screaming from somewhere ahead of us.