Louis Shalako
The
battle was in its final phases.
There
were three more really big hills to be taken before the town of Ryanville sort
of began, although there were a few homes and businesses along that stretch of
Highway 17. Those people had all been evacuated.
There
were continuous obstacles. There were numerous trees down across the road, and
wire barriers made up of fencing, baling wire, spools of cable requisitioned
from local building suppliers, and anything else that could be scrounged.
There
were anti-tank and anti-personnel mines, all along the road. Every small bridge
and culvert had been blown. The largest bridge, spanning another switchback of
the Ryan River, had been left intact due to the time and expense of rebuilding
it. This was for the sake of the inhabitants, who would be left holding the
bag, long after this pissy little war was over.
There
was little doubt that it would soon be over.
The
bulk of the enemy was just six kilometres from the edge of town although their
scouts and reconnaissance units were probing ahead.
Each
ridge was defended, a mix of warm-bodied troops and automated systems. Her
howitzers had been withdrawn to the extremities of the lakeshore road, with
eastern and western detachments now working at their maximum effective range in
this terrain. With all the cameras and sensors out there, they were still
finding, and hitting, plenty of targets. The enemy had no such luxury.
The
hilltop passive defenses relied heavily on glue-mines, anti-personnel explosive
mines, light machine guns, all monitored by cameras. Her people had their
holes, their weapons and their escape drills. There was the occasional
anti-tank mine, buried in the road.
To
prevent outflanking maneuvers, these defenses extended along favourable ground,
to left and right of the road, a kilometre in the case of the first hill, a
kilometre and a half on the second hill, and a good two kilometres running
along the top of the third ridge. Any side-roads, connected or not, had been
mined and booby-trapped. Bunkers and foxholes, any place a curious Unfriendly
soldier might enter looking for plunder, food, booze, souvenirs, had been
thoughtfully boobied. It had to be
borne in mind that the civilians would eventually be coming home, and so their
homes and businesses had been left alone. Every booby had been carefully mapped
by the Confederation troops and this would be turned over to civil authorities.
What that also meant, was that there
was stuff there in private homes and businesses to find, and having had a good meal or a few drinks at some civilian’s
expense, the enemy troopers would be sure to go looking for more.
Bait,
always more bait.
They
would find the juiciest bait in positions prepared by her troops, places where
the civvies would hopefully avoid, assuming they were capable of listening to a
simple instruction.
Stay the fuck out
of our abandoned holes…
Stay away from our
abandoned vehicles, weapons, or any other thing that strikes you as new or unusual in your environment.
Anything that
wasn’t there when you left.
The
last few kilometres were going to cost the Unfriendlies dearly, and in the end,
all to no avail.
***
“Battery
A.” This was located at extreme range at the eastern end of Lake Ryan.
“Go
ahead, Command Centre.”
“Your
orders are to use up all ammunition stocks, assuming hard targets can be
found.” As of this moment, the stars were out and the satellite feed was good,
but there was a big block of heavy cloud on the horizon.
You
could pull back the curtains and see it out the window, by this point.
“Roger
that.” This was all in the written plan and no argument there.
“If
you can hold out until dark, abandon your positions. Use the boats. Rendezvous
at the position of Command Four. Make sure you have tow-ropes and plenty of
fuel. All troops will wear flotation devices, emergency beacons, and survival
suits. Boats go in convoy. Acknowledge.”
“Roger
that, Colonel. We’ll be fine, thank you.”
“Thank
you, over and out.”
Battery
B, out at the other end of town, already had their instructions. Their boats
were anchored in small coves, heavily camouflaged against drone detection and
with the civilian crews standing patiently by.
Now
within three kilometres of Ryanville and Command Centre Three, the Unfriendlies
would undoubtedly be taking the town within the next few hours and it was time
to get her people out.
Every
vehicle, every weapon, every weapons-pit and foxhole were to be mined and
booby-trapped.
The
enemy was bleeding, and they would continue to bleed.
As
for Command Centre Three, the mother of all booby-traps, fifty kilos of the
finest military-grade explosive that money could buy, wonderfully concealed.
Three metres below her feet in other words. It would be timed to go off a few
hours after occupation. Much of the more sensitive equipment had already been
removed and she was working with a skeleton staff. Still, enemy intelligence
officers would be combing through the place, searching for any scrap of
information they could get regarding her plans. Her strength in weapons,
vehicles and personnel, her state of mind. All of the remaining equipment would
just be sitting there…
Irresistible.
For
this phase of the battle, heavier vehicles and weapons were expendable,
although a number of Pumas, Panthers and Hellions, of which there were still a
few left, had been carefully hidden.
It
wasn’t the most imaginative dispersal, with a Panther under a mound of straw in
a horse-barn here, and a Hellion in a
three-metre deep hole dug in the ground and with a big steel plate and some
dirt overhead there.
Statistically,
at least some of them would evade
detection.
Then
there was the whole question of bugs—miniature, robotic, and autonomous.
Programmed to observe, to report, and ultimately, to kill.
A
measly two grams of the proper explosive in the right place would kill a man.
Or
a general.
This
would be something the Unfriendlies hadn’t ever seen before.
(End of part forty-one.)
Previous
Episodes.
Images.
Image One. Confederation Public Communications Office.
Image Two. CPCO.
Image Three. CPCO.
Image Four. Captured image.
Image Five. The cover of the completed novel.
Louis Shalako’s full novel, Tactics of Delay, is now available
from Amazon and other fine retailers. Please take a moment to rate or
review this book.
Thank you for reading.
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