Friday, November 3, 2017

Tactics of Delay, Pt. 40. Louis Shalako.


Louis Shalako




With the Unfriendly artillery in their new position, the Confederation drone base had been pulled back. They were now operating from a paved street in a new subdivision, one that had never really taken off and there were only about a dozen houses on what had to be a hundred hectares.
There were light standards, but none of the old-fashioned overhead wires that were sometimes a feature of less-developed worlds. Most of the trees had been taken out to make way for construction.
The biggest hazard would be for a drone to go off the road in a crosswind, in which case they would hit utility service-boxes, a light pole or even just a big stake sticking up out of the ground.
There were weeds, mounds of earth, even abandoned vehicles.
Further back, there were the occasional foundations, the ground floor topped off with plywood sheathing and yet the house it was meant for had never been completed.
Some kind of story there no doubt, but with the hills sloping steeply down to Lake Ryan, and a fairly busy little town strung out along one main road, there weren’t too many other places to put it. All the empty streets meant dispersal was at least possible, and with good separation of elements, including their small operations centre. This had ended up in someone’s two-car garage, the home’s occupants having been compensated and moved, along with a half a dozen cats, to a basement apartment in the middle of town.
There was a municipal airport, a grass strip no less. But that seemed a little too obvious a target, and in fact it was time to do something with their little rag-bag of helos and private aircraft.
Most of them were capable of automatic flight. They still had a few satchel-charges left. Hang a few cameras on there and they would be effective enough.
There were all kinds of Unfriendlies just up the road.
Then there was the question of the weather. It was getting colder, and the breeze was picking up, which it normally didn’t do at night around here. That’s what the local meteorologist, more of a serious hobbyist than any real paid position, was telling them. She had no reason to doubt her, it was basically what her own people were saying as well.
Her spoiling attack had done its job, and the Unfriendlies had taken a good hour, an hour and a half to regroup. 
While they probably couldn’t be stopped with the weapons and forces available, all of her assault troops had withdrawn successfully, with only a couple of minor wounds to show for it. They had a couple of prisoners for interrogation, practically a formality at this point. The enemy would be operating in daylight very soon, as morning was just an hour off.
The storm-front was seventy kilometres away and closing.
The way the thermometer was dropping, there might even be snow.

***

Operation Dynamic had been in full swing for a week.
Having commandeered the entire local fishing fleet, large yachts and all of the available tugs and work barges, a small cruise boat, tonnes of grain, tinned foods, even refrigerated truckloads of frozen meat had been ferried a hundred and thirty kilometres down the lake. Two of the drones had been taken aboard as well, leaving just one for intermittent cover over Ryanville. Lake Ryan had an outlet via the Deneb River to the southwest. Her few engineering troops had found a beach with sloping flat rock shelves going down deep into the water. They were using heavy wooden planks and steel bridging equipment for ramps. They were building a supply dump. This was up fifty metres from the water. They had small tractors, four-bys, some six-bys, rows of portable generators, and prefabricated sheds and barns to erect.
Commandeered might be too strong a word. She’d spread a big bundle of cash around and then, after explaining that bit of the plan to the civilian captains, had phrased it as a request. If they wanted to back out, all they had to do was to return the money and no questions would be asked.
In front of their friends, neighbours and competitors, with their homes about to be invaded, not a one had spoken up.
That was a lot of money around here, another factor. All Interstellar Gold Coin, negotiable anywhere. She was sure they’d bury it in the fucking backyard when they had a minute—
They had a tent city up the lake, Command Centre Four all set up, and the latrines had been dug.
There were some small fuel dumps, ammo-dumps, well-spaced and separated from the shacks and even tents in some cases. Machinery, a generator for example, or weapons-caches didn’t need much heat. Rather, it was a case of keeping the weather off of them. They were knocking down trees and building a dock in deeper water. Some of the yachts were being armed with light weapons and sensors, proper communications and the like. Mostly wood and fibreglass, their upper-works were being cut down or stripped of radar-reflecting hardware. Painted matte-black, dazzle-striped in charcoal, they might do all right, at least in terms of patrolling and observation by night.
They’d brought in three of the howitzers in the rather vain hope that the Unfriendlies would attempt a landing, or even an overland attack from around the eastern end of the lake.
This camp would be well out of the present range of enemy rockets, artillery, but unfortunately not the drones…
Too bad about that, but with trenches and bunkers all over the place, a raid or two might have to be endured. On the plus side, the weather was worsening. With Sky-Cats on hilltops and even sitting under the trees right along the shoreline, the enemy would be risking valuable assets as there was a clear view of some miles out over the lake. A helo attack from behind the hills overlooking the camp had also been taken into consideration by placing a couple of low-level radars up there.
On their estimated time-line, with the Unfriendly speed of travel on the map, there simply wasn’t enough slack to take the stuff any further. Someone had already named it Donaville.
And this, this was the end-game. Everything was now on the table, her plan finally revealed to the naked eye. Resistance at all costs.
“All right, Colonel. I’m off.” Captain Aaron would take charge up there, activate Command Four, and keep people busy.
 All personal kit was in the bag, the weapon slung, pistol on the belt and a couple of rocket-grenades bulging in the side pockets. Paul very much looked the part, with a dark blue bandanna around the neck the only personal touch.
He grinned, eyes meeting hers, eyes glittering in some sort of self-appreciation, and she smiled back.
They still barely knew one another.
He had two hundred and fifty people and their personal bags all lined up, waiting to board six of the larger fishing boats. The sooner he left, the sooner he could send the boats back.
“Thank you. Good luck—and we’ll be seeing you in a few hours, unless I miss my guess.”
“Roger that, Colonel.”
Stepping back, he gave her a formal salute.
Turning, he was gone.
The rest of her troops would be sufficient to hold Ryanville for another day, and the stay-behind parties had their own orders. They had their own time-lines, their own supplies, and their own targets.
This was the nitty-gritty.

***

By sucking the enemy forwards, ever forwards, by putting out bait, always more bait, and then by selectively blowing this bridge here, now, and this bridge here, later, and by activating this automated defense there, and that other defense over there, later again, they had strung the enemy out.
The enemy was losing trucks, tanks, Samsons and people at an ever-increasing rate.
Still eight or nine kilometres out from the first commercial strip, composed mainly of motor hotels, truck stops and all-night coffee houses. This in a town of a few thousand people, but it was also one that helped feed the whole planet. One where land was cheap and plentiful. The Unfriendly forces had been broken up, delayed, and stopped in place. They had upwards of twelve hundred troops on that road, where Dona and the Confederation had less than a hundred to oppose them.
All Hellions, all but a few of the Panthers and Pumas, were on automatic mode. Their crews could still monitor and maneuver them, this all by fibre, in some cases hundreds of metres from the actual vehicle. As positions were overrun, Pumas and Panthers, any number of borrowed pickup trucks, loaded with Dona’s people, raced down to the docks. They were zigzagging through the narrow and gravelly side-streets, thankfully heavily-treed, dodging the resultant artillery fire as the drones tried to pick them up for the big guns. Driven right onto the barges, the tugs, engines hot, took them off up the lake…
It was all very slick.
They’d lost one Panther and five people by one such hit. So far, they’d been lucky, very, very lucky.
Half a dozen other casualties. One person missing and unaccounted for—that one might be a simple com-unit failure as they weren’t getting a return when pinged. This proved nothing either way. Trooper Singh might very well have taken a direct hit from a heavy shell. None of his mates had seen him in a while.
Enemy artillery fire was falling intermittently on the target hills and defiles out on the road. Still nothing on Ryanville town centre itself. Not yet, but it would probably happen.
With their off-kilter, eccentric orbits, both moons had come up, and the enemy was stalled at the one big hill before the last long, sloping plunge down across the face of the escarpment. When they got around to attempting it, her remaining howitzers were going to have a field day. The Barker teams in the town were quite looking forward to it. Fire a shot or two, make it count and then get the hell out. The bounty for a Samson was five hundred credits. A four-by, a hundred and fifty.
When the main column came down, their cameras would see it. Two hundred shot-holes, fired by an independent tactical observation computer, would bring down a significant portion of the cliff. Luckily for the locals, relying on trade and commerce for their livelihoods, there was another way out of town. It was a little tight and a little steep, but it would suffice. The town would still live. Most of the houses and buildings were quite far away from the escarpment.
Bonus time.
It was zero degrees Celsius, and the sky had cleared, cold, hard and clean, the stars unforgiving in their solitude.
The storm was roughly fifty kilometres out and closing fast.

(End of part forty.)

 
Previous Episodes.


Images.

Image One. Confederation Public Communications Office.
Image Two. Ryanville Chamber of Commerce.
Image Three. Ryanville Chamber of Commerce.
Image Four. CPCO.
Image Five. The cover of the book version of this story.
Image Six. Fred.

Poor old Louis Shalako has all kinds of books and stories available from Kobo, for all the good that it has done him. Incidentally, how stupid do you have to be to have no share buttons on a bookselling website.

Sorry, that wasn’t really a question, was it.


(Although you are certainly welcome to hang out to the end and read it for free in serial form. – ed.)


Thank you for reading.






Thursday, November 2, 2017

Tactics of Delay, Pt. 39. Louis Shalako.



Louis Shalako




Vicky Chan was just going off duty and briefing Dona on the day’s events.
“Yup. Looks like another night attack. It makes sense from their point of view. We knew they were going to take that hill, and they knew they were going to take casualties doing it. Our estimate is that they saved themselves fifteen to twenty percent in terms of casualties just by going in at night.” It was an interesting psychological insight.
They had used their best troops instead of their worst. So, lives meant something to them after all. Even after the fetuses had been born. The other thing was, that the regulars would want their fair share of the glory—
Even more so, their senior officers, who had their reputations and perhaps even some fortunes to be made.
“Right.”
“It’s our impression that they will continue with the night attacks. They might well have time to do four or five hills tonight. On the road, it is unclear whether they will attack by day as well. Even with superior numbers, they still need to rest. It’s hard to sleep beside an artillery barrage, even when it’s your own. When they get close enough to Ryanville, the attacks will be more or less continuous. By day or by night. There is yet another big column forming up in Deneb City. This one’s heavy on the infantry, and they will obviously have the manpower.”
“Roger that, and thank you. Off you go and get yourself a good night’s sleep—eight hours, all right? I’ll find someone to cover, don’t worry about that.”
Major Chan slumped.
“Thank you, Colonel Graham.”
“Don’t worry. Vicky. When this is all over, we’ll get together and have ourselves one smashing big piss-up.”
The tired grin was quick, but it was there and eminently worth it to see.

***

Dona was talking to Paul. Another private conference. They were trying to decide.
Paul had his doubts, but the decision was hers to make.
“Look. It’s a question of upping the ante, not so much as when, but by how much.” Dona went on. “As long as Mongoose One is sitting there, there is some possibility of discovery. We have exactly two reloads left. There are six Unfriendly ships on the pad…”
The enemy had the Red-Tails, on the concrete apron at the spaceport. Their air-defense could be jammed. There was no lack of targets.
The initial landing of roughly a thousand troops and a few scout and armoured cars had taken three small ships. The larger contingent, with all of their troops and equipment, perhaps even the nucleus of some new system of civilian governance, of which they had been hearing rumours, had been landed by the three big Boer-class ships. Once the field was declared secure.
“It seems to me, that if we take out a couple of the smaller ships. Our missiles are not wasted. In fact, they have been extremely effective. We’ve spent our money there, I agree. But we’ve taken out one or two ships, a heavy psychological blow. And the enemy still has enough tonnage to get their people out when the time comes. We have raised the stakes but then raked in a mighty big pot—it’s still not enough for them to get really ugly with the civilian population.”
The thing was to give them a kick in the ass. The kind of kick in the ass that would, psychologically, force them to accelerate their timetable. This wasn’t so much bait, as it was an added incentive. The carrot up front, waving around in front of their eyes, the stick going up their backsides. Hopefully, they’d get a few slivers along the way.
Paul was nodding.
With all of the satellite, visual, on-scene data from the fire teams, plus the ships’ own radio traffic, the probability of at least one hit was high. This was firing them on coordinates, in an almost ballistic fashion, although the feedback from onboard target-recognition, the fire-teams’ designators, and the cameras in the noses, would steer them the last part of the way down.
Sitting out there in the open, with their distinctive shapes, specifications, three-views and silhouettes downloaded from the databanks into the Mongoose’s own system, it would be a pretty hard target to miss.
Paul sighed.
There was more to discuss and this one wasn’t worth an argument. What the hell, it was only two missiles.
It was in the plan. He’d signed off on it originally, and Paul couldn’t immediately think of any real good reason to go back on it.
Now was as good a time as any.
“Who knows. Maybe the enemy will finally find the thing and then the Sky-Cats can get a shot.” One never knew, in war.
“Yes, Colonel. I agree.”

***

“Okay. Next on the agenda.”
Paul looked up from his com unit to the eyes clustered around the table.
“With the Mongoose’s last two shots accounted for, we still have another fairly large column forming up in Deneb City.” Team Four might get a shot with the Barkers or anti-tank rockets. “They still have a good three or four thousand troops in reserve.”
Teams One and Two were on the other side of the city.
The thinking was that this one, assembling in the late afternoon and early evening hours, was preparing to make a mad, night-time dash up Highway 17. There was little sense in forming up a column and then just letting it sit there all night.
“All right. Make Team Four wait. They are completely unsuspected. Wait until they come within range, and then hit them with the mortars stashed just south of Gossua.” The enemy had taken a Mongoose missile at the village earlier in the battle, but the fact that there were mortars in the vicinity would come as a distinct and unpleasant surprise. “After that, anyone that wants to, can have a crack at them.” Time to earn some bonus money—
“Roger that, Colonel. They will be notified.”
Her troops had strung the mortars out in a line, up in the hills, roughly a kilometre apart. With a range of up to five kilometres, launching the heavy, armour-piercing smart-rounds, they’d be damned hard to find by even the most determined infantry.
Each one had six loads in the rack, enough to make a mess of almost any combination of vehicles or troop-carriers.
There was a Confederation team right in the area. The best thing for them to do was to wait and to keep themselves under cover. They’d get their chance next time.
“Very well. Next.”

***

“Ah, yes, the satellite.”
“So, Colonel. What do we do.”
“Hmn. We wait.”
And waiting was hard.
But, as long as they were getting anything from their own satellite at all, and as long as the battle was unfolding more or less as predicted, it was best to keep their bird up there.
The only real way to destroy the enemy satellite was to work their way in as close as possible and then to self-destruct. That charge was very small, and the shrapnel effect would be uneven due to the nature of the Mark Seventeen’s components and architecture.
The very definition of a crap-shoot.
If they were going to do it, it had bloody well better work.
As usual, she knew one or two things that they didn’t.
***

“How many churches are there in Ryanville?”
It was a question that should have been asked earlier.
Turns out, someone had.
“Four churches, one mosque, a Temple and one or two others. There are certain denominations…” Presumably, the temple was Jewish, or maybe Zoroastrian.
Who cared if they were Rosicrucians, Christadelphians, Amish or Hindus. They were all her responsibility.
“Yes?”
“Well. I don’t quite know what to say. But Catholic churches aren’t independent.”
Some guy didn’t just rent a storefront somewhere and start preaching the Gospel. Not Catholics.
Some of those little operations were quite small. It was easy enough to miss the smaller, Protestant denominations.
“All right. See if we can get General McMurdo on the line. Tell him we will undertake not to use those particular buildings for any military purpose. Ask him if he would accept our assurances, and if he would be so good as not to fire on those locations. Also schools, hospitals, and the ambulance centre.” The ambulance centre, with three modern ambulances and a small number of civilian employees, was about two blocks from Ryanville General Hospital.
Negotiation theory at work. Get him to give up a few little things—reasonable things. That big old negotiating table was always lurking in the background.
“Me, Colonel?”
“Yes, Harvey. You. A junior, talking to a senior, ah, officer. Make sure you have all the addresses or the map coordinates lined up for him. And if he asks to speak to me, tell him that I am presently unavailable.”
“Er…yes, Colonel.”
“Okay. Trooper Harvey. The other thing is to be polite—diplomatic. Do you think you can do that?”
Reddening slightly, he nodded.
“…yes, ma’am.”
“Thank you.”
And now, back to work.
With the enemy preparing for their second night attack, this one on Hill 212-B, it was time to vary up the punches again.

***

It was time.
With over four hundred troops in the Ryanville area and the Unfriendlies a bare twenty-plus kilometres down the road, Dona was committing some of her human resources.
The moons had sunk below the western horizon. With virtually no lights along the roads outside of the cities, and a heavy, damp overcast that yet refused to rain, naked-eye visibility was just about nil.
She had about two dozen troops involved in her own night attack, timed to disrupt the enemy as they assembled and took up their start-lines. Most of them were in covering positions, waiting to lay down fire when the forward elements withdrew.
Satellite data was almost non-existent. The ground and the enemy’s emplacements, their troop dispersals, had been pretty well mapped. For that, the big dogs had been very helpful. The battleground was an undulating ridgeline, with a lower notch where the road went through. There were only so many of the enemy. It was heavily-forested, and their lines of attack could be predicted with some degree of accuracy.
Her people had crept in to within a few metres of the forward pickets. Several of the dog units had penetrated the perimeter and were observing the bivouac and assembly areas from the edges of clearings, screened by the underbrush and sheer darkness.
The thing to do was just to watch for a while…
Every forty-five minutes to an hour, a sergeant or corporal would follow a narrow track, checking on the pickets and making sure they weren’t asleep. This was the best time to hit the pickets in silent-killing mode. There was a long line of posts and their immediate superiors had a real bad habit of strolling, all alone, along that path as if nothing in the world could ever touch them. These were definitely not the Guards units.
Unbelievable.

***

The enemy, confident of success, well-fed and well-rested, had no clue.
The first of the big dogs rose from its hunker-down position, and darted forwards into the middle of an Unfriendly infantry platoon, this one led by a senior sergeant. People squawked in dismay, people shouted. People stared open-mouthed. One man, with desperately fumbling hands, was trying to unsling his weapon…
The resulting explosion, a ten-kilo charge, all ball bearings and shards of light casing, bits of mechanical dog, would have taken out the bulk of them. This unit had just been written off the order of battle for all intents and purposes. The survivors would be in a hospital or sent to the reinforcement pool.
She waited ten minutes, as surviving Unfriendlies tried to figure out what had just happened, talk flying back and forth and the officers and NCOs trying to reorganize. There was now a big hole in the line and that would have to be filled. They were behind schedule already. It took time to deal with the dead and wounded. Only a fool would not send out some quick patrols and have a look around before proceeding.
The eastern sky was a dull shade of lighter blue in the curious false dawn at these latitudes. That would be moon number one, laying just below the horizon. That was one fast moon, but all planets were different.
“Okay. Send in the next one.”
“Roger that, Colonel.” This would initiate Phase Two of their plan.
Whoever was supervising the enemy picket line would know something was definitely up, and more than one enemy NCO was about to get their throat cut or a real big knife in the kidneys.
Another big flash lit up the night, this time their animal having gotten to within fifteen metres of the battalion command post.
Little dots on screen sped up, as a couple of sergeants or corporals on perimeter duty, caught between guard-positions, broke into a run. Although one dot in particular appeared to be stationary, and only thirty metres from a guard post.
Another combat kill, another bonus earned.


Her people were already on the rush, personal arms set for full auto, and with the enemy in a state of confusion. All of those pickets, hearing the bombs go off. It would be against human nature not to be looking the wrong way.
Backlit by smoke and flame. Rifle grenades, dropping in at your feet—
All they wanted was enemy casualties, and mostly likely, they’d drag off one or two prisoners as well.
The vehicles were two or three hundred metres away, on a side-road that was passable all the way to Ryanville. And again, if the enemy wanted to follow that road, it would require another division of forces. More mines, more booby-traps, more automatic weapons and trained snipers.
More casualties.
The enemy barrage had opened up, still fixated on the hills out in front of them, although Ryanville town centre was well within range.
Her own gun batteries were on standby.

(End of part thirty-nine.)

Previous Episodes.




Images.
Image Two. Denebola-Seven Chamber of Commerce.
Image Three. Confederation Public Communications Office.
Image Four. The cover of this book.
Image Five. Sgt. Russ Nolan
Image Six. Collection the author.


Louis Shalako’s completed novel, Tactics of Delay, of which this is the serialization, is now available in several ebook formats from Smashwords, and within hours, from Amazon. It will be available in ebook from Kobo and Google Play in a matter of a day or so. Paperback versions are on the way, a 5 x 8” paperback from Createspace and a 4 x 7” from Lulu. If you really want a hardcover version, use the contact form and let me know. I’ve never done one, but it’s not that difficult either. Please help a guy out and consider rating or reviewing this book.

Thank you for reading.