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The two Apaches had been flown under cover of darkness to a location where they’d been hidden under camouflage netting, awaiting their chance to take the offensive. It seemed that they were about to get their chance; the aliens were shipping in more ground forces as they attempted to push their occupied zone further to the west. They were also shipping in armour — the direct feed from the orbiting UAV reported that there were at least fifty hover-tanks heading west — but the pilots had been given clear orders. Their principle targets were the alien troop carriers. If they were really lucky, they would kill a great many aliens who hadn’t realised that the safety offered by their vehicles was really nothing more than an illusion.

He took control of his aircraft and pulled her into the sky. There were no illusions about their chances of surviving the battle, but they were going to be operating right on top of the enemy forces. Surely, the aliens wouldn’t call in orbital strikes that would be dangerously close to their own forces. Or perhaps they would. Humans had done all kinds of horrible things to other humans in their long history and why shouldn’t the aliens do the same? What cause did humanity have to complain?

Because they’re not human, he thought, wryly. And because we didn’t pick a fight with them.

They flew low and fast, only coming up above the treetops when the alien troops came into view. Danny didn’t give them any time to recover from their surprise; he took the Apache in a firing run right over the alien position, allowing his gunner to unleash hell on the aliens. There was no time to aim properly, but it hardly mattered — the only targets on the ground were hostile. Hellfire missiles slammed into alien troop carriers, while the chain gun raked down entire columns of alien soldiers. He yanked the helicopter upwards as an alien-launched missile lanced by them with bare meters to spare. Part of his mind noted that the aliens hadn’t keyed their missiles for proximity detonation, an odd oversight. Human missiles were capable of detonating close to their targets and taking them out with shrapnel.

An alien helicopter came into view, looking rather like a larger version of the Apache. It opened fire on the two British craft, launching a spread of missiles towards them. Danny retaliated by launching a Sidewinder — the only one they had — and deploying flares in the hope of decoying the alien missiles. The alien missiles were fooled long enough for him to take them low and fast away from the ambush sight, hopefully heading for a place where they could set down. They might not be able to rearm and resume the attack — if there were any more Hellfire missiles in Britain, they were probably misplaced — but they might escape with their lives…

He cursed as his threat receiver lit up. An alien missile crew had fired a missile from directly below them and it was climbing right up their tailpipe. There was no time to escape; the alien missile struck the Apache’s armour and blasted through into the compartment beyond. And the world went away in a blast of red-hot fire.

Chapter Thirteen

London/Near Salisbury Plain

United Kingdom, Day 2

“What in the name of the seven hells is happening?”

Ju’tro Oheghizh stared down at his updating display. The damned humans simply didn’t know when they were beaten. Any sensible race would have sought to come to terms with its new masters by now, but the humans kept fighting — even threatening to kill their fellows who did have a modicum of sense in their heads. The advancing Land Force spearheads, convinced that they were mopping up the remains of the human military force, were being ambushed and forced back with chilling regularity. And the humans didn’t even stick around long enough for his starships to pound their positions into dust.

“They don’t have many resources left to throw at us,” J’tra Mak’kat pointed out. He’d served with Oheghizh in previous campaigns and didn’t bother to mince his words. The State didn’t approve of officers being too familiar with their subordinates, but Oheghizh found it hard to care. “They’re burning up what they have left rather than abandon it. And many of our troopers haven’t been in combat before. They’re making mistakes through simple unfamiliarity with the alien landscape.”

Oheghizh couldn’t disagree. In hindsight, it was clear that the humans — who hadn’t started uniting themselves, unlike almost every other race in their stage of development — had plenty of experience fighting each other. The sociologists were still trying to discover exactly why the humans hadn’t advanced into space, but it was clear that space-based forces hadn’t played a significant role in their internal struggling. They’d have had a much better appreciation of how badly they were outmatched if they had, he told himself, although it was a case of not being grateful enough for what they had. A space-faring race would have been a far tougher morsel to digest.

“Order our forces to take extra care,” he said, slowly. “And pass me the figures on their advanced weapons. Let me see what they have left.”

The planners were right about one thing, he thought, as he studied the figures and compared them to their projections. It was clear that the humans were running out of advanced weaponry. Their tanks were holding their ground rather than falling back — as their own tactical doctrine ordered — and the advancing spearheads were reporting fewer and fewer contacts with human armour. The aircraft backing up the ground forces, after a handful of embarrassing losses, reported that the humans had been reduced to deploying portable antiaircraft weapons rather than the sophisticated weapons they’d deployed in the opening hours of the invasion. And soon enough they’d run out of those too.

He watched through a set of advancing sensors as yet another human habitation was carefully explored. The humans had a whole series of unpleasant surprises for the troopers that first entered their dwellings — and a nasty sense of humour. He didn’t want to think about the hundreds of injured or dead troopers that would have to be reported to the Command Triad. They would look down from high overhead, see the amount of casualties he’d suffered taking a relatively small area, and draw unpleasant comparisons with the Land Forces in the region the humans called the Middle East. It was hardly his fault that the terrain in the desert was far better suited for land warfare — and that the humans there seemed to have no idea of how to fight properly.

It could be worse, he told himself, dryly. The Chinese humans, after what looked like a successful opening strike to the invasion, had fired nuclear rockets at their own cities to destroy as many Land Force units as possible. Most of their primitive missiles had been knocked down by point defence units, but a handful had got through the network — and several more tactical nuclear weapons had been deployed by enemy ground forces. They didn’t seem to care about the suffering they were inflicting on their own people, or the fact that they just couldn’t win. At least the humans in Europe and America seemed smart enough to refrain from using nuclear weapons. The Conquest Fleet had gone to considerable trouble to decapitate the enemy command and control systems to prevent one or all of them authorising a nuclear strike.