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The President looked at the papers on her desk for a moment and shook her head. “Will it work? Not just putting the ACS in place; I thought the Posleen shot down anything that was above the horizon. Will the missiles even be able to get to Georgia?”

“I don’t know,” Horner answered. “The remaining silos are all well north of the Posleen lines and there’s a strong storm across the Midwest. The combination should permit most of the missiles to fly. They’re most vulnerable in boost-phase, of course, but they’re going to loft very fast. The Posleen lose some of their efficiency when the targets get into orbital phase. We’ll just have to see if they make it.”

“And if they don’t?” the President asked.

“There’s… at least one other option,” Horner said with a smile that for him indicated extreme unhappiness. “The University of Tennessee has both a SheVa gun enhancement testbed program and a nuclear, antimatter rather, rounds program.”

“So… they can fire?” the President asked. “Antimatter is better than nukes, right? I mean, their fire can reach the Gap? And it’s a better, a cleaner, system?”

“Possibly,” Horner answered. “I’d… Both of the systems are experimental, ma’am. And their… area denial round has never been field-tested. It’s also… rather large, a very heavy warhead; you really would prefer not to know the megatonnage. The first time I fire something, I don’t want the price of failure being the loss of the entire Cumberland Valley.”

“Oh.”

Horner shrugged at her expression. “I suppose this is what I get for letting rednecks play with antimatter; they just don’t know when to say ‘Okay, that’s ’nough!’ Instead, it’s always ‘Hey, y’all! Watch this!’ I only became… apprised of the size of the round when we went looking for something to open up the Gap. I’ve since ordered a ‘reevaluation’ of the program.

“As for the ACS, the Triple Nickle will be caught in a vise. There will be well over a million Posleen passed through before they land. And there are the airmobile forces. And there are now an estimated twelve million gathered to the south. The battalion, what is left of it, will have to hold on to the Gap until we reduce the forces that have passed through and fight our way forward. Whether they survive… ? I don’t know. I do know that there is no other choice.”

The President continued to look down at the papers on her desk and then nodded.

“General Horner, you are permitted to fire into Rabun Gap. But Rabun Gap only, understood? All other uses will require my okay.”

“Understood,” Horner said with a nod. “Rabun Gap only. There may be a need at other times, however. That terrain favors defense; unfortunately we can’t stay on the defense anymore.”

“I understand that, General,” she said tartly. “But I approve each use. Understood? I want these things used precisely, not at the behest of some… officer… at the front.”

Horner took a calming breath before he replied. “Ma’am, I get the feeling you almost said something along the lines of ‘myrmidon’ there. The… officers at the front are trying to keep us from losing more ground, losing more passes. The targets that need to be struck will often change; they come and go as fast as the Posleen can manage it. At some point we’ll need to reduce the level of authority, Madame President.”

“We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it,” she said, staring the general in the eye. “In the meantime… I’m the authority. Only I hold nuclear release.” She looked down again and shook her head. “And may the Lord have mercy.”

Horner took pity on her.

“Ma’am,” he said quietly. “I will say this. The only person I could imagine holding that pass, surviving it for long enough, is Michael O’Neal. It will be worth the clearing.”

“I’m glad you feel that way, General,” the President said, looking up angrily. “I was just thinking that I didn’t care much for the major. I don’t care much for someone who is willing to callously slaughter American civilians.”

“Excuse me?” Horner asked.

“There are always survivors,” the president snapped. “There are probably thousands of people in and around the Gap, hiding out. If we drop untold numbers of nuclear weapons on that area, there will be no survivors. I guess the vaunted Michael O’Neal doesn’t care about those poor civilians. The only thing he cares about is his precious battalion!”

Horner’s face was as frozen as a glacier and he waited a full fifteen seconds before answering.

“Madame President,” he said in a voice as cold as liquid helium, “Michael O’Neal’s daughter lives in Rabun Gap.”

CHAPTER 28

Rabun Gap, GA, United States, Sol III

1519 EDT Saturday September 26, 2009 ad

Cally rolled over and coughed at the dust in her throat. After a few moments choking she sat up and looked around muzzily.

“Shit.”

The main shelter was still intact and the lights were on, but that was the only good news. The tunnels to the bunker and the house were both collapsed. The main tunnel was clear, though, and it looked like both exit tunnels were clear. That left the question of how long she had been in here. She felt her head and there was a pretty good goose egg already started on her forehead. Her watch had stopped from either EMP or impact and she hadn’t been too sure what time it was when they went in the bunker anyway.

She thought about Papa O’Neal’s briefing on nuclear weapons and what to do. They didn’t get used much, but Gramps had been thorough. Unfortunately the lecture had been a few years previous and she wasn’t sure where to begin looking for a geiger counter or how to use one.

She did recall that people could survive better than structures — something about pressure waves — and that meant that Gramps might still be alive. If the bunker falling in didn’t kill him.

So the next job was to get out of the main tunnel and try to find Gramps — dig him out if she had to — then head for the hills.

She stood up then sat down as the ground rumbled to another nuclear detonation.

“Maybe in a while.”

* * *

“Ooooh, that’s gotta hurt!” Pruitt shouted.

Reeves already had the SheVa in reverse so the return fire from the landers, with the exception of one plasma round, tore up the ridgeline. That one plasma bolt, though, ripped into the SheVa’s power room.

“Reactors two and three just went offline,” Indy called. She unstrapped and headed for the hatch. “I doubt this is going to be a one-woman job.”

“We’re way down on speed, sir!” Reeves called. He had the throttle all the way open, but the SheVa was barely moving. “Under ten miles an hour!”

“Indy,” the commander called over the intercom. “Tell me we can do better than this! Those landers are going to overrun us in about fifteen minutes at this rate.”

“Not until I find out what went, sir,” the warrant officer called. She slid down the third ladder and grabbed a geiger counter as she sprinted, occasionally being knocked from side to side, towards the reactor room. “We just lost half our power; this is as fast as this thing will go.”

“Damn, damn, damn,” he muttered. “Pruitt, you have the con.”