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Major Ryan stood on the slope of Rocky Knob and watched the bridge below. He could see Posleen passing east of Franklin in the dying light, but they weren’t to the bridge yet. And there were still refugees on it.

“When do you blow it?” the specialist asked, picking at her hands. Rigging a bridge for demolition had turned out to be hard work.

“There’s MPs still on it controlling traffic flow,” Ryan answered, lowering his binoculars. “I don’t know if they’re like us, just doing what seems right, or under orders. But if they’re still on it when the Posleen get to it, they’re going sky high.”

“That will be a bit tough on the MPs,” she pointed out.

“It will be tougher on everyone else if the Posleen capture an intact bridge,” he said. “But I have to wonder what they’ll pull.”

“What do you mean?”

He sat down on the verge of the road and dangled his feet over the side. They were stopped on a curve on a side road near Cook Creek and the other troopers were taking a break, eating their MREs, soaking their hands in the cold mountain water and wondering what the eccentric engineer in charge of them would have them doing next.

They had slowly picked up the group he was looking for, soldiers who had kept their equipment and were ready to follow a person who stated up front that he was part of a rearguard. He’d gathered eight instead of the four intended, and the bridge over the Tennessee was his first objective. Once it was down they would move on to the next and the next until they either ran out of explosives or luck. He was more worried about the latter than the former.

“These guys are acting smart so they have to know that we’ll try to delay them, right?”

“Right,” Kitteket said.

“So they’ve got to have a way over the river,” he continued. “I can’t imagine these guys just stopping and giving up. Can you?”

“No, sir,” the specialist replied. “I can’t.”

“Well, looks like we’re about to find out,” he commented as the stream of Posleen, with four Lampreys and a C-Dec hovering overhead, turned in the direction of the bridge. Off in the distance he could see other landers turning towards the west. “I think they’re dividing their forces,” he mused.

“Well, that’s not very smart,” the specialist said. “At least if it’s not a feint.”

“Possibly,” Ryan said, turning to look at the specialist again. “Another manual?”

“Sort of,” Kitteket answered. “How many troops do you think they can push through the pass in an hour?”

“I dunno,” Ryan said, then did some mental calculation. “Probably sixty to a hundred and twenty thousand. Say ninety to a hundred.”

“So they’re going to push those in two different directions,” Kitteket said. “That reduces the forces necessary to stop them on both paths.”

“Hmm,” Ryan said. “On the other hand, each of the routes will have its own problems; I don’t know, for example, if they could push as many on the whole route to Asheville as they can through the gap. Also, by breaking up they’re making the task of cutting them off more complex; each individual defense point may last longer and be more effective with the lower numbers, but you’ll need more routes covered. All in all I think it’s a net positive for them, a negative for us.”

“Possibly, sir,” Kitteket said. “It depends, I suppose, on whether there are defenders on the other routes.”

“I think you just made my point for me,” Ryan said with a smile. “And we are now going to find out how effective we are going to be,” he continued as the MP platoon on the bridge hurriedly boarded their Humvees and retreated, drawing fire from the lead oolt as they did so. Fortunately for Ryan’s stomach, there were no stragglers between the MPs and the Posleen; he’d blown up bridges with stragglers on them before and it wasn’t his favorite pastime by any stretch of the imagination.

“Are you going to wait until they’re on the bridge?” Kitteket asked.

“No,” Ryan answered. “And if I did, Sergeant Campbell would blow it up instead. The SOP is…”

“Five hundred meters,” Kitteket interjected. “Just checking.”

“Clerk typist?” he muttered.

“Four years, sir. Right here. Well, down there,” she said, gesturing towards the Gap. “I type nearly eighty words a minute.”

“If I need any forms filled out, I’ll let you know,” Ryan said, throwing a hand switch as the first Posleen passed by a street sign he had measured off as just under five hundred meters.

The explosion was the antithesis of spectacular. There were a few puffs of smoke and the concrete and steel bridges dropped into the stream.

“That’s it?” Kitteket asked.

“That’s it,” Ryan answered, packing up the detonation circuit.

“I just expected lots of smoke and fire and the bridge going sky high,” she said with a sigh. “We did a hell of a lot of work for a few puffs of smoke.”

“I am a master,” he said haughtily. “The essence of mastery in blowing things up is minimal force and I have blown up a lot of bridges in the last few years. Since we also have minimal explosives, I consider it to be a good idea all around.”

“Sure, sir.” The specialist laughed. “What next, O Great Master?”

“Next we are going to blow up a road,” he answered. “Right after we see what these Posleen are going to do about the bridge.”

The first wave of Posleen milled around aimlessly as the lead God Kings lifted up on their saucers and flew over the river. They quickly came back, though, and as new forces joined them the units were spread along the riverbank and the individual oolt’os spaced out.

“Jesus Christ,” Ryan said, shaking his head.

“What?”

“They’re spreading them out to reduce the damage from artillery. It would be better to start digging in, but I guess they haven’t quite gotten that far.”

“That’s bad,” Kitteket said. “Right?”

“Oh, yeah,” the major mused as the first Lamprey crossed the river and disgorged its troops. It quickly lifted off and took on a new contingent, beginning a continuous shuttle back and forth. Once on the far side most of the units took up the chase after the fleeing humans, but a few spread out as on the near side, in this case fanning out widely and ensuring that there were no humans in the immediate vicinity.

“And now they’re establishing a perimeter,” Ryan said. “Why are they establishing a perimeter around the bridge? The former bridge.”

“They’re going to hold a cookout on the remains?” the specialist asked. “Uh, Major, it’s getting dark and those Posleen that aren’t establishing a bridgehead are headed up the road. Towards us.”

“But the landers aren’t moving,” Ryan said as if he hadn’t heard. One of the other Lampreys had joined the first in shuttling troops, but the other two Lampreys and the C-Dec were on the ground, spread out, as if waiting for something. “What are they doing?”

“Sir, maybe we should wonder someplace else?”

“Ah,” the major answered with a grunt. “There’s some movement.”

The Posleen forces had been backing up into the valley, spreading out in a disciplined manner that Ryan still found disturbing, and now the centauroids were moving off the road to let another group through to the front. He focused the binoculars on the formation in the last light and shook his head.

“Tell me those aren’t what they look like,” he muttered.

“I dunno,” Kitteket grumped. “You’re the one with the binoculars.”

He handed them over and shook his head. “Where in the hell did they get them?”