“GIVE ME THAT!” he bellowed, chasing after her.
“You’ve got a lot of stamina for an old guy!” she yelled, darting around the woodshed.
“COME BACK HERE WITH THAT, YOU LITTLE VIXEN! IF YOU WATCHED…”
“Where in the hell did you learn that thing with the legs in the air?” she yelled back.
“AAAAH.”
They both stopped at the sound of a large crack from the direction of the Wall. The afternoon was bright, but there was still a visible amount of light thrown off by whatever had caused the sound.
“What in the hell was that?” Cally asked.
“I don’t know,” Papa O’Neal answered. “But it was from the Wall. I think maybe we’d better get ready to lock the farm down.”
A second series of sharp cracks, like a string of very high explosives, came from the direction of the artillery park and a very loud boom indicated a secondary explosion. Papa O’Neal caught a flicker at the valley entrance of something smooth, silver and very fast moving. “What in the hell was that?”
“I dunno, Granpa,” Cally said nervously. “But I agree; time to lock and cock.” She tossed him the tape. “For your collection. May there be many more.”
It took only a few minutes to get all the livestock under cover and the minefields armed, but they barely had finished closing the last gate when the sky lit with a white flash brighter than the sun.
“Granpa?!” Cally called, running towards the house.
“DOWN, DOWN, DOWN!” O’Neal screamed, hitting the ground himself.
The shockwave, when it hit, was hardly noticeable, but there was a distinct change in air pressure and the trees on the heights swayed as if in a high wind. Then the ground wave hit like a minor earthquake.
“What in the hell is happening?” Cally called. She was about fifteen feet from the front door on her stomach.
“All clear!” Papa O’Neal called, standing up and sprinting for the house. “Inside!”
“Was that what I think it was?” Cally asked when they got inside the door.
“It was a nuke,” Papa O’Neal answered. “I think it was probably the Corps SheVa going; the direction and size was about right if I remember correctly.”
Cally beat him through the house connection to the bunker by a hair and started throwing on her Kevlar. “We’re not set up for nukes, Grandpa.”
“I know,” he said, turning on the minefields and electronics before donning his own gear. “What bugs me is not knowing what is going on.” He flipped from one camera to the next, but most of them were dead. “Damned EMP.”
“So what do we do?” Cally asked.
O’Neal thought about that. If it was just one nuke, specifically the SheVa going off, it might not be that bad. It depended, of course, on where the gun was when it went off. But the Wall shouldn’t be affected. There was some fighting from there still; or at least those heavy weapons. Those could be Posleen, but think positive.
There were basically two choices. Plan A was hunker in the bunker, fight anything that came up the notch and wait for the Posleen to get wiped out by the Army. Plan B was run like hell. Since the farm had been in the family for generations, Plan B was not their favorite choice.
Without knowing the condition of the corps he had no idea which plan to go with. He picked up the phone installed in the bunker, but there wasn’t even a dial tone. He could hike up the ridge to where he could see the corps, but that would mean either both of them going or leaving Cally alone. And with a potentially nuclear environment, getting out of the bunker didn’t make a whole hell of a lot of sense. Finally he decided to just try to ride it out.
“We’ll stay here,” he said, pulling an MRE out of a cabinet. “We’ll have grilled ham and cheese tomorrow.”
“Yup,” Cally said with a grin. “For tomorrow is another day.” She looked at her MRE and grimaced. “Trade ya.”
“Pruitt, get the gun up, NOW!” Major Robert Mitchell slid into the command seat and started buckling in, flipping all his switches to “On” as fast as he could.
“But, sir!” the gunner called, looking up from his Visor. “It’s the one where Bun-Bun has lost his memory and he’s being held by these kids who think…”
There was a reason that SheVa Nine, now unofficially referred to as “Bun-Bun,” had a two-story picture of a giant, brown-and-white, floppy-eared rabbit holding a switchblade painted on the front carapace. It, and the “Let’s Rock, Posleen-boy!” caption, had taken a few hours to explain to the new commander. After reading the comic, and getting hooked, the commander had reluctantly acceded to the painting; some corps permitted them and some didn’t and they would just have to see what the local corps commander was like. As it turned out, they hadn’t had time to even check in with the corps before the fecal matter hit the rotary impeller.
“NOW, Pruitt!” the major yelled. “Load! Fourteen is under attack! I don’t know what they are…”
“Major!” Warrant Officer Indy called, popping up out of the repair hatch. “Don’t move the track!”
“Why not?” the commander called. “Schmoo, are we hot?”
“Coming online now, sir,” Private Reeves called back. The private was large, pale, doughy looking and somewhat slow, thus the nickname. But he was a good SheVa driver. From deep in the belly of the tank the sound of massive breakers engaging thundered through the structure.
“I don’t have signal!” Pruitt called. “Sensors are offline. I’d guess camo. Whoa! Big EMP spike! It was worse out there than Bun-Bun denied his Baywatch!”
“Crack the camo!” Major Mitchell called. “Manual rotate the lidar.”
“Sir!” the warrant said desperately. “That’s what I’m trying to tell you; the camo-foam isn’t set yet. Until it cures it’s… malleable. Heat it up and it sets hard; if it seals the sensors we’ll never have an acquisition system. They’ll be frozen solid until we can get a CONTAC team out here. With a lot of solvent. I shut them down manually as a safety measure.”
“Oh, shit,” Mitchell said. His schematic was being picked up from a corps intelligence section still well to the rear. They, in turn, were still getting information from forward deployed sensors and surviving personnel and he could see the first wave of the Posleen pouring into the Gap, with the Lampreys and C-Decs backstopping them. “We have a serious problem here. Suggestions would be helpful, Miss Indy.”
“We can probably move the tracks,” the warrant officer answered with a desperate grimace. “If they freeze up they’re strong enough to break the plastic. Same on rotating the turret. But until the stuff sets, we can’t use the automatics to engage. And it could lock up barrel elevation. So we can’t elevate or depress.”
“So what do we do, Miss Indy?” Mitchell asked patiently.
“We need to avoid moving the sensors or the gun for about another twenty minutes, sir,” the engineer said. “We’ve got a control run problem with the gun anyway; I’m working on it.”
“Do we have any solvent?” Mitchell asked.
“I have a couple of five-gallon buckets,” Indy admitted. “But it would mean climbing up on top and pouring it on the antennas. And I don’t think I could clear all the goop; we’re either going to have to let it set or find a POL point that can dump gasoline all over us!”
“Pruitt, help the warrant,” Mitchell said. “After you put a round up the tube. Schmoo, get us the hell out of here.”