the commands of higher, when higher deigned to speak. They could also hear the heartbreakingly
precise reports and orders emanating to and from one Captain Robert Thomas, commanding the
company trapped at the ford. They'd been hearing them for hours.
The MI troopers had heard, "Zulu Four Three, this is Papa One Six. Adjust fire, over." They'd heard,
"Echo Two Two this is Papa One Six. I've got a dozen men down I have to get dusted off." They'd
eavesdropped on, "Captain Roberts, we can't fuckin' hold 'em . . . AIIII!"
Connors heard Echo Two Two, which the key on his display told him was the brigade's medical
company, come back in the person of some breaking-voiced radioman, and say, "We're sorry, Papa.
God, we're sorry. But we can't get through for your dust-off. We tried."
Things got worse from there.
"Echo Three Five, this is Papa One Six. We are under heavy attack. Estimate regimental strength or
better. We need reinforcements, over."
A Posleen regiment massed two or three thousand of the aliens. A light infantry company at full strength
with the normal attachments was one twelfth that size . . . or less. In this case, the personnel replacement
situation being what it was, the trapped company was less. Much less.
That's a good man up there, Connors thought, in consideration of the incredibly calm tone of a man,
Roberts, who knew that he and all his men were on the lunch menu. Too damned good to let get eaten.
Then came the really bad news. "Papa One Six, this is Echo Three Five, actual;"—the brigade
commander—"situation understood. The Second of the 198th was ambushed during movement to
reinforce you. We have at least another regiment . . ."
Things really got shitty then, though the first Connors knew of it was when the point man for the
company column shouted, "Ambush!" a half a second before the air began to swarm with railgun
fleshettes and the mucky ground to erupt steaming geysers with the impact of alien missiles and plasma
cannon.
The problem with killing the stupid Posleen, Connors thought as he lay in the muck, is that the rest of
them get much, much smarter.
The air above was alive with fire. Most of this was light railgun fire, one millimeter fleshettes most
unlikely to penetrate the armor of a suit. Enough was three millimeter, though, to be worrisome. That
was heavy enough to actually penetrate, sometimes, if it hit just right. It had penetrated several men of
the company, in fact.
Worse than either were the plasma cannon and hypervelocity missiles, or HVMs, the aliens carried.
These could penetrate armor as if it were cheesecloth, turning the men inside incandescent.
Worse still were the tenar, the alien leaders' flying sleds. These not only mounted larger and more
powerful versions of the plasma cannon and HVMs, they had more ammunition, physical or energy, and
much better tracking systems. They also had enough elevation on them that, at ambush range, they could
fire down, completely skipping any cover the MI troopers might have hastily thrown up. Nor did the
jungle trees, however thick, so much as slow the incoming fire. Instead, they splintered or burst into
flame at the passing. Sometimes they did both. In any case, the air around Connors resembled some
Hollywood idea of Hell, all flame and smoke and destruction, unimaginable chaos and confusion.
The only good thing you could say about the situation was that the Posleen apparently had few tenar.
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