I returned the young pilot’s salute by careerlong reflex. “Glad to see you. Jason Wander.”
His jaw dropped. “General?”
“Retired.”
His eyes widened as he looked around again at the silent Tressens. “Sir-Mr. Wander-I just got the one ship. My orders are to pick up cargo. Quick and quiet. I can’t-”
“I know. They know. We’re walking out.”
He turned his ear toward me as though he hadn’t heard. “Sir?”
I pointed at the ramp of his ship, where Tressens were already lining up, holding bulging sacks and bins piled high with stones. “Could you make sure they load your bay the way you want? We need to be out of here quick and quiet, too.”
He trotted to the ramp.
I turned to Jude and jerked a thumb at the Scorpion. “The second seat on that ship’s empty. You’re the best pilot we’ve got. Your place is in a cockpit. Finish this thing. For your family.”
Jude put one arm around Celline and swept the other around at the queued and gritty little army. “This is my family.” He nodded toward the leather-jacketed pilot. “Jason, I could never be that guy again. There are plenty like him who can deliver Silver Bullet. The Slug War is your generation’s-it’s your war to finish. My war starts here. Now.”
Ord’s last words echoed in my head. I was on my own now.
I jerked my head south, toward the canyon where Aud Planck and three hundred shopkeepers had held back an infantry division. “The lookouts say the Forty-fifth is through the pass, route marching north, already. No head start will be enough.”
The Scorpion’s cargo ramp whined as it clamshelled shut. The pilot walked to the three of us, peeling off his flight jacket. Beneath it he wore a Zoomie sidearm in a shoulder holster. “We’re loaded. General-Mr. Wander-Admiral Duffy said I’m to bring you back with me.”
I said, “Why?”
He shrugged. “Just in case, he said.”
“In case of what?”
“Can’t say, just now.”
I shook my head. “Then fuck off.”
“The admiral said you’d say that. Sir, the skipper gave me a direct order to get you into that cockpit. At gunpoint if necessary.” The kid didn’t smile.
Jude said, “Go, Jason. You know this war can still be screwed up. You might not be able to prevent that up there. But you sure can’t prevent that from down here.”
Celline touched my sleeve. “Iridians say that a thousand miles’ journey begins with one step. But if we falter, we need to know that we took that step for a purpose. You go, and be sure that these stones win your war. And tell the story of how we tried to win this one.”
The pilot held out his jacket to Celline. “I got another one just like it upstairs, ma’am. Looks like somebody down here can use this.”
The duchess took the jacket in a mittened hand and smiled. “A loan. Return for it in a few years, when we’ve won.”
I hugged Jude, then Celline, then I stood still and looked at them.
The pilot shivered in his coverall, then turned to me. “General Wander, my ship’s a sitting duck on the ground like this. And we’ve still got work to do.”
SIXTY-FIVE
THE SCORPION’S CANOPY whined down and sealed me in alongside the pilot. The cockpit looked familiar, exactly like the modified ship in which Jude had given me my flying lesson back on Bren, before so much had changed.
The pilot scanned instruments, adjusted controls, and punched touch panels rowed across the canopy top like a concert pianist playing upside down.
The screens lit, the canopy seemed to disappear, and we drifted into the sky.
As we rose, the pilot pivoted the Scorpion, so we gazed out across the Arctic wilderness, toward the black mountain wall that stretched for three hundred miles to the east, around which Celline and Jude would have to lead the malnourished army huddled below us. He whistled. “Quite a walk. But I wouldn’t bet against that lady.”
“The walk’s not the problem. The company is. There’s a Tressen infantry division ten miles behind them and gaining.”
When the altimeter read fifteen thousand feet, the pilot flipped back the hinged, red-striped shroud that covered the weapons console as he drifted the Scorpion south along the railroad.
I pointed at the console. “You can’t fight this ship.”
He nodded. “Correct, sir. Engagement within the airspace of Tressel’s strictly forbidden. We weren’t even permitted to load defensive armament for this pickup.”
“Then what…?”
“Admiral Duffy determined that the Tehran was carrying deteriorating stores.”
“Huh?”
“We can always jettison deteriorating stores that endanger the ship into nonorbital space or into deserted country.” He pointed below us. “Sir, could you have a look to assure that area below us is just deserted country?”
Below, a column of black specks stretched a hundred yards wide for a mile on either side of the railroad, as Forty-fifth Division gave chase to my godson, Celline, and their tiny band of innocents.
My jaw hung slack. “Eddie’ll get relieved without pension for this.”
“The admiral said that, too, sir, to me and the four red jackets that volunteered to load the pod. He said to tell you the dental plan’s lousy, anyway.”
“Son, this is no joke.” However, as I said it I mentally retracted every curse I had placed on the head of Eddie Duffy.
“The admiral’s log will say deteriorating stores were jettisoned above the Arctic Circle of Tressel. Only me, the admiral, and the four red jackets can say different.”
“And me. Why am I here?”
“The admiral wanted somebody spotting who knows where the friendlies are, where the bad guys are, and the target characteristics.”
I jerked my thumb over my shoulder, toward the stinger pod. “What are you packing?”
“Radar-guided Area Denial Explosive. Basically bundled cluster bombs that arrange themselves as they fall. The radar identifies moving targets and shifts the cluster units for maximum efficiency.”
I pointed below as we hovered unheard and unseen high above Forty-fifth Division’s quick-marching GIs. “There are no friendlies down there.”
He nodded as he laid his hand on a selector dial. “They got any hard-shell vehicles or body armor? RADE burst fragments behave like razor blades.”
I shook my head. “Dismounted light infantry. Cloth coats, steel helmets.”
“Then they’re toast.”
They weren’t toast. They were human beings, as cocky, imperfect, and mortal as he was.
The targeting screen winked on, the pilot tipped the Scorpion up, and the fuselage shuddered as the cluster bombs released and began their tumble, three miles above the unsuspecting marchers.
Onscreen, a wavering green rectangle materialized as the munition sized up its target. Then dozens of red lights swarmed like gnats within the rectangle as cluster-bomb units rearranged themselves in free fall, so their bursting bomblets would perforate every square foot of the target.
I peered down at the undulating smudge on the snow that was thousands of infantrymen shuffling north while cursing their blisters.
Ting.
The only sound we heard, as the munition detonated three miles under us, was a chime from the Scorpion’s targeting ’Puter.
A silent, rectangular snow cloud snapped into sight below. Prevailing wind at the point of impact, which the targeting ’Puter read at sixteen miles per hour, blew away the snow. The smudge that remained on both sides of the railroad track didn’t undulate anymore. Among the bodies, at most a few dozen moved. They would freeze solid by the next morning.
On a perpetually snow-covered graveyard isolated at the top of this world, the bodies would soon be snow-covered thousands among already-dead thousands. The magnitude of the carnage, perhaps even the fact of it, much less its cause, wouldn’t be apparent for years.
I turned my eyes north and let them rest on the tiny line of rebels that snaked its way east.