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A single carrier shell held a load of between three and several scores of bomblets, each with its own target-seeking head. When the carrier round opened to release them, the difficulties of defense went up by an order of magnitude.

Sergeant Tranter had traded jobs with Deseau. He turned from the forward tribarrel and asked, “Whatcha got, El-Tee?”

“Watch your sector!” Huber snapped in a blaze of frustration.

He’d apologize later. Tranter was a good driver and a great man to have on your team, but he was a technician and not—till this run—a combat crewman. He didn’t know by reflex that Huber was busy with something that likely meant all their lives if he did it wrong. Had Tranter realized that, he’d have kept his mouth shut.

The display showed what Huber expected but didn’t like to see: there were very few places along Sierra’s planned route that would let the tribarrels range out ten klicks, and even those were points. The combat cars wouldn’t be able to protect the column on the fly. They’d have to set up on the few patches where the ground was higher and relatively clear of vegetation.

Huber straightened. Learoyd scanned the car’s starboard flank with the bored certainty of a machine; Sergeant Tranter was as rigid as a statue at the forward gun—Via! I didn’t mean to bite his head off—and Captain Orichos was trying to watch all directions like a bird who’s heard a cat she can’t see.

“Sierra, this is Fox Three-six,” Huber said. “When Central gives us an alert, the C&C box’ll choose the best overwatch position and direct the nearest car to it. The rest of Sierra’ll bypass that car, which’ll leapfrog forward when it comes out of air defense mode. It may be that there’ll be more than one car at a time out of the column. Three-six out.”

There was a series of Rogers from the other officers. Huber hadn’t bothered to run the plan by Sierra Six before delivering it to the whole unit. Sangrela’d tasked him with the solution of the problem, and it was something that an infantry officer didn’t have much experience with anyway.

“What happens if the bad guys’re waiting out in the woods, El-Tee?” Deseau asked over the intercom from the driver’s compartment. He had the hatch open so that he could drive with his head out in the breeze. “With the guns locked on air defense, a lone car’s pretty much dead meat, right?”

“The same thing that happens if you fall out a window drunk, Frenchie,” Huber said with a quiver of irritation. Did Deseau think that hadn’t occurred to him? But there wasn’t any choice. With only four cars, he couldn’t detach a second unit to guard the one on air defense. “Either you get up and go on, or you don’t.”

“Yeah, that’s about what I figured,” Deseau said. He sighed. “You don’t suppose me ’n Tranter could trade off again, do you?”

“Negative,” said Huber. “We’ve got to keep moving.”

He too would like to have Frenchie in the fighting compartment, watching their surroundings with his shoulder weapon while the gunnery computer aimed the tribarrels skyward. Huber’d like a lot of things, but he was a veteran. He’d make do with what he had.

The alert from Central overrode F-3’s helmet AIs, filling ninety percent of each faceshield with fire control data and relegating previous tasks to a box in the center. Huber flicked his helmet back to Sierra status in a thirty percent mask over the forest around him and ordered, “Fox Three-three, execute.”

Not that Sergeant Jellicoe needed his okay. Her car, Floosie, had already steered to the right of the column’s track and was pulling up a rise. Flame Farter would be alone in the drag position until Floosie rejoined, and Floosie would be very much alone.

“A Rangemaster battery’s sent us a salvo of 200-mm shells,” Huber explained over the intercom. “The battery’s sited at one-thirty degrees from us, so Jellicoe’s breaking out of line for a moment to take care of the incoming. The Rangemasters’re a good enough outfit, but there’s next to no chance that anything’ll get past Floosie.”

He was speaking mostly for Orichos’ benefit; Fencing Master’s crew probably understood the situation as well as their lieutenant did. Well, Deseau and Tranter understood; Learoyd understood the little he needed to understand.

Mauricia Orichos nodded appreciatively, then quirked Huber a smile. “It’s like being a baby again,” she said. “I know there’s a lot going on, but I don’t understand any of it.”

Her smile grew marginally harder; she no longer looked haggard. She added, “We’ll be back in my element soon.”

Huber switched his helmet to remote, importing fire control imagery from Floosie. As an afterthought, he restored the link to Orichos’ helmet also.

The display was blank until Huber stuttered up three orders of magnitude. At such high gain there was a tiny quiver that even the Slammers’ electronics couldn’t fully damp.

The shell, twenty centimeters in diameter and almost two meters long, was a blurred dash in the four-bar reticle to which Jellicoe had set her sights. The image jumped minusculely as a tribarrel’s recoil jiggled the platform. Several cyan dots, vivid even at that range, intersected the shell.

The target ruptured in a red flash and a puff of dirty black smoke. Two more shells exploded into black rags in the sky around it; a fourth followed an instant later as one of the car’s tribarrels made a double. Bomblets from the last shell detonated around the initial burst in a white sparkle.

Huber thought he heard the distance-delayed thumping of Floosie’s guns, but he was probably wrong. Loud though they were up close, the sound of 2-cm discharges several klicks away would’ve been lost in Fencing Master’s intake roar. As for the shellbursts, they wouldn’t have been visible to unaided eyes even if the column had a clear view of the sky to the southeast.

Huber cleared his and Orichos’ faceshield. “They’ll keep on firing for a while,” he said, speaking through the intercom but keeping eye contact with the local, the only person in the car who’d be interested. “The thing is, cargo shells’re expensive to make and they have to be brought in from off-planet. If Solace Command wants to waste them like this, they can be our guests. There could be a time the tribarrels’d have their usual work to do, and we wouldn’t want to worry then about firecracker rounds going off overhead.”

“Fox Three-three rejoining column,” Jellicoe said in a tone of mild satisfaction. Sure it was shooting fish in a barrel; and true, neither she nor her crew had touched their triggers while the gunnery computer took care of business …but it was still a nice bag of fish. “Out.”

“Three indig batteries have opened fire,” Central announced. “Seventeen tubes. None of the rounds are going to come close enough to worry about, so proceed on course as planned. Over.”

Tranter straightened, stretched, and then turned enough to meet Huber’s eyes. He ventured a weak grin; Huber clasped Tranter’s arm, closing the file on their previous short exchange.

From the driver’s compartment Deseau called, “Hey El-Tee? See if you can find us something t’ shoot at, will you? I don’t want my tribarrel growing shut like an old maid’s cunt.”

He laughed.

Before Huber could speak, Central broke in with, “Six rounds incoming from vector oh-nine-three. Fox Three-six respond. Over.”

A terrain display appeared on the upper left quadrant of his faceshield with a short, crooked red line reaching left toward the spot Central had picked for Fencing Master’s firing position.

“Roger, Central,” Huber said, swaying as Deseau pulled into a ravine. It was filled with feathery bushes that crumpled beneath Fencing Master’s bow skirts. The car rocked violently on the rough climb.

“Well, it’s a start,” said Frenchie. He kept his voice bright, but Huber could hear the strain; this wasn’t easy driving, not for anybody. “But you know, it’s been a bitch of a run. I’m looking forward to getting back behind my gun where I can maybe kill some of the bastards who put us through it.”