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“FIRE!”

“ ’Cause it’s gotta get BETTER!”

* * *

The round entered through the lower quadrant, but was travelling upwards at a sharp angle and missed the fuel bunker. However, it, too, exited through the rear of the ship and exploded above it. This time, though, the smaller Lamprey was effectively killed by the kinetic energy of the depleted uranium warhead passing through its engine-room. With the loss of lift and drive it dropped like a rock onto the ridge, toppling sideways and began to roll. Straight towards the stuck SheVa.

* * *

“NO!” Pruitt screamed, aiming the gun down as the SheVa rocked in blast-wave.

“DON’T!” Major Mitchell screamed, but it was too late; the gunner had already fired.

The DU penetrator had barely had time to shed its boot when it entered the soil of the mountain. Pruitt had been aiming at the Lamprey, but he had fired low and the ten kiloton round penetrated almost two hundred meters into the gneiss and schist of the mountain before detonating.

* * *

Major Ryan was still blinking spots out of his eyes when he saw the top of the mountain erupt skyward; with a Lamprey mixed into it. “GET OUT AND UNDER THE HUMVEE!” he yelled, putting words into action as he grabbed the detonator kit, kicked open the door and piled out.

* * *

The explosion was almost graceful. The round had penetrated to near the center of the hilltop and it scooped out a section of soil and rock that was a near perfect circle; eventually it would be a very nice lake. However, it was tons of overburden that tended to tamp and reduce the energy of the relatively small nuclear explosion at its core. The material closest to the antimatter detonation was simply vaporized, becoming plasma that added to the energy transfer and would eventually dissipate as gaseous silica and the other constituent elements of the rocks.

Outward from the plasma zone the rock was finely pulverized and then the condition graded outwards until in the outer layer there were rather large boulders…

…That the explosion in their center tossed thousands of feet into the air.

* * *?

“For what we are about to receive,” Major Mitchell said as the side of the mountain started to slip their way. “May we truly be thankful.”

“Oh damn,” Pruitt said. “Bad things are supposed to happen to other people when Bun-Bun is around.”

“I’ve got traction!” Reeves shouted.

“Go!” the major replied, watching the landslide building up.

“I’m going!” the driver shouted, as the SheVa lumbered up out of the suddenly widened hole. “I think the shots loosened us up!” Then he swore as the ground gave way again and the SheVa stopped abruptly. “NOOO!”

But the mountains they were traversing were old; the hillsides worn by millions of years. The slope-ripping slides of the Rockies were virtually unknown in the Appalachians; even when started by a nuclear explosion. The crumbling mountainside continued about halfway down the hill and then came to an abrupt, tree-crunching halt in a cloud of dust.

At which point, everyone started to notice the bonging sound on the top of the turret.

“I think you’re about to get your wish, Pruitt,” Indy said sourly.

“What?” the gunner said, looking up as if in disbelief that they were alive.

“Bad things are about to happen to other people.”

* * *

“I don’t like this!” Kitteket shouted as the boulders continued to rain on the bouncing, jolting Humvee over their heads.

“Neither do I,” Ryan replied equanimably. “It could be worse, though!”

“How?!”

“You want a list?” he asked. “We could be stuck in a basement, surrounded by a Posleen force that has already overrun everything in its path and with them pounding on the last door!”

“We’re about to get crushed by a rain of boulders!” she shouted. “That counts as really bad in my book!” But even as she said it the worst of the shower had passed.

“Everybody okay?” Ryan asked, rolling out from under the vehicle despite the continuing rain of small debris. “And ready to walk?”

“Oh, man, it’s trashed,” Kitteket said, getting to her feet and looking around. “What a mess!”

Rocks ranging from pebbles to boulders large enough to have crushed the Humvee were scattered in every direction and most of the trees had been swept off the mountainside. From their perch at the edge of Betty Gap they could clearly see the SheVa gun down in the holler, apparently wedged into a ravine. A unit of MetalStorms was picking its way down the slope towards the gun. And a Lamprey, crumpled like so much foil, was well down the holler.

“It’s a mess, all right,” Ryan replied, keying his code module. “Dig around in the gear and find anything salvageable. A radio for choice.”

* * *

“Well, this is another fine mess you’ve gotten us into, Ollie,” Pruitt said.

He was standing on one of the boulders, looking down at the SheVa stuck like a cork in the gully.

Gully was something of a misnomer; the small valley could have easily have contained a few single-family homes if the area was a subdivision. But the SheVa was still stuck.

“Look,” Reeves said defensively. “I did my best.” The edges of the gully were barely above the treads and didn’t, quite, intersect the turret. But some of the boulders that had tumbled down the slope were piled on the sides of the machine. “At least I didn’t blow a mountain down on us.”

“I prefer to think of it as blowing a Lamprey off of us,” Pruitt said. “And here’s our Greek chorus…”

“Damn, sir,” said Captain Chan, walking over to the group peering at the SheVa. “I’ve seen some tanks get stuck in my time but… Damn, sir.”

“Yeah,” Mitchell said, walking back and forth and looking at the gun. “I think that the big problem is the lip in front of it; it can’t get any traction to pull itself out.”

“We could hook some of your tracks up to it, ma’am, and try to pull it out,” Reeves said.

She looked at him in amazement. “Did you actually think before you said that, Private?”

“Uh…”

“A Meemie weighs just over sixty tons; how much does one of these things weigh?”

“Errr, just over seven thousand,” the driver admitted. “I hadn’t realized there was that much difference.”

She looked over at her track then up and up at the SheVa towering nearly two hundred feet in the air. Tanks made her feel small; SheVas made her feel like an ant.

“I don’t think that will help, son,” she said. “It would be like trying to move one of my tracks with a tricycle.”

“You know, they’re talking about making one of these as a close combat support vehicle,” Mitchell said. “Think about how much one of those will weigh; especially covered in armor.”

“Ouch.”

“And, golly gee,” Pruitt said with a grin. “We’ve proven that they can be used in mountain warfare.”

CHAPTER 35

Betty Gap, NC, United States, Sol III

0829 EDT Sunday September 27, 2009 ad

“I think they’re stuck, Major,” Kitteket said.

“I do believe you’re right, Specialist,” the major replied with a chuckle.

It had taken the group nearly a half hour to travel down the hillside, during which the group around the giant weapon had performed a thorough study of the area. Along the way Ryan’s small group had obviously been spotted.