Excerpt - chapter 9A Chapter by Bennett R. ColesIn this much-anticipated sequel to the award-winning Virtues of War, author Bennett R. Coles sweeps the reader back into the futuristic world of the Terran Astral Force.Casualties
of War By
Bennett R. Coles Excerpt
" chapter 9 Katja
dropped the fork onto her half-eaten stew and sat back. The rain was still
pelting against the window of her office, the heavy dampness of the air seeping
through the thin fabric of her garrison uniform. The beef stew had appealed at
the time, a good, thick meal to ward off the chill, but now she couldn’t bear
another bite. She sighed and rubbed a hand across her face as she tossed the
remainder of her lunch into the bin. She stared at the
screen for a moment longer. The curt, mil-speak message was only two paras
long, but it was the first positive direction she’d received from the Astral
Corps in weeks. And it summed up pretty neatly what her career had been reduced
to. She was going to be staying at this tiny airlift station on the eastern
edge of the Malayan archipelago. She was to take formal command of the three
drop ships and their maintenance crews, and provide local lift services as
requested by military forces. Why
was the Corps making such a big deal about her psychological test results? Of
course she was affected by her time in combat " who wouldn’t be? And hadn’t she
proved her worth in combat several times over? It hardly seemed fair for a
recipient of the Astral Star to be banished to some backwater while young pups
like Jack Mallory got sent right back into space. Jack
had already sent her a few messages, describing his new ship and the strange
command structure of a Research vessel. Katja smiled slightly as she imagined
young Jack set loose like a happy bull in a china shop of petrie dishes, and
wondered how his bubbling enthusiasm would mesh with stringent experimental
protocols. The fact that Thomas Kane had apparently joined him on the ship was
a bit of odd news " she felt Thomas would have aimed higher in his post-war
career " but at least he’d be able to keep Jack on target. She didn’t envy either
of them their new lives in lab coats, but at least they were still contributing
to Terra’s well-being. The
three screens built into her desk stared up expectantly, their insatiable
demand for administrative oversight crying out to her. She stared back at them,
taking a moment to curse the doctors and their compassion. She’d done all the usual
post-traumatic training " it was part of the fourth-year curriculum at the
Astral College " and she knew that they’d done right by posting her here. A
nice, slow-paced administrative posting that kept her connected to operations (the
three drop ships under her command were theoretically available to reinforce
local troops in case of invasion or insurrection) but kept her out of stressful
situations. It was a text-book example of where to post a struggling combat
veteran. And it was hell. Cradling
her chin, she looked out again at the dark grey world through her window. Northern
Oceania had sounded so exotic, with its green mountains and glistening beaches.
No-one had mentioned the monsoon. And despite the State Terraform Department’s
best efforts, the rains still lasted for nearly half the year. She’d been here
over a month and had yet to see a day without rain. She leaned back,
closing her eyes. The tears were suddenly close, much closer than they ever got
during the day. Her vision blurred like the rain-pelted window. It was only a
matter of time before her family found out where she was, laying out her shame
for all to see: decorated veteran Katja Emmes, cracked after her first combat
tour and buried in a washed-out backwater. Anger was
becoming her friend these days, as it pushed aside more vulnerable feelings,
and she wrapped herself in it like an old blanket as she began typing up her
weekly logistic requirements message. A gentle buzz in
her ear distracted her. It was the military line. She tapped her commpiece.
“Lieutenant Emmes.” “Good afternoon, Miss Katja.” The voice
was slightly garbled and the length of delay suggested a transmission from
beyond orbit. “This is Chuck Merriman,
ANL.” Her hands
clenched into fists, but she forced them to relax. “Hello, Mr. Merriman.” “I’m sorry to disturb you on duty, but you
haven’t been returning my calls to your civilian number.” She leaned back
in her chair, vaguely remembering deleting all of her messages over the past
few days. “I’ve been very busy. How did you reach me on this military circuit?” Even through the
clutter she heard his wry amusement. “It’s
a public number, Lieutenant. I just
spoke to your base operator and asked to be patched through.” She took a long,
final deep breath, and made a note to speak to the idiot trooper who’d
obligingly given access to the media. “Well, you just caught me between
meetings, so make it fast.” “I’m going to be in your region next week and
I was hoping to do a follow-up interview like we discussed back at Longreach.
Would there be a good time for me to drop in for an hour or so?” There was no way
her father was going to see her rotting in this backwater on the system-wide
news. “I’m actually going to be very busy with operations for the next while.
Perhaps you’d have better luck catching up with my father " I think he’s still
here on Earth.” “Mars, actually " low-g combat training. I’m
definitely going to meet up with him, but since I was in the area I wanted to
take advantage of my proximity to you.” A reporter knew
with greater accuracy the whereabouts of her own family. That spoke volumes.
And that wasn’t the only thing that didn’t sit right. “What do you mean you’re
in the area? What else is going on?” A gentle laugh. “Although it may surprise you, Miss Katja,
you’re not the only important thing in my life. I’ve been covering the strikes
in Papua New Guinea for the last two weeks.” Katja stood bolt
upright. Strikes in Papua New Guinea? Where were her orders? Then she recalled
watching the news: labour strikes, not combat strikes. She searched her memory;
something to do with munitions workers trying to organize a labour union or
some nonsense like that. Like the State would ever let such a critical industry
start calling the shots. Now she felt
stupid. “Mr. Merriman, thanks for your call. I have your contact info so I’ll
get back to you.” She broke the
connection and sat down again, sighing. He was just a reporter doing his job,
and she supposed it should be an honour, but she was going to set the tone of
how the worlds saw her, and this was not it. She
was a combat veteran of the most elite fighting force in Terra. And there was
nothing her father, Chuck Merriman, or even those f*****g doctors could do to
take that away from her. She heard a knock
on the open door. Sergeant Huebner filled the door frame. “Lieutenant
Emmes, ma’am?” “Yes,
Sergeant?” “Ma’am,
the Army’s outside. They say they want our drop ships to lift them to Goa.” She
called up the day’s operational schedule. Of her three drop ships, one was in
maintenance, one was being used for training and one was on stand-by. No
scheduled lift of Army assets. “We’ve
got nothing planned. Did they give you a movement order?” “Uhh,
no, ma’am.” “Did
you ask for one?” His
dull silence was answer enough. She’d already been wondering how she could put
a positive spin on Huebner’s annual assessment. He’s not very bright, but can
lift heavy things. She
pushed back her chair and rounded the desk. “Tell
them I’ll be right there.” He
obligingly withdrew. A
glance at the rain on her window prompted her to reach for her combat jacket.
Her hand froze in mid-motion, however, as her eyes fell upon her tunic hanging
against the wall. She brushed her fingers on the
qualification badges, one for Strike Officer and a second, smaller one for Fast
Attack, and she reminded herself that most Terrans would never " could never " earn such qualifications.
She was part of an elite, and even if living within that elite made it seem
routine, she reminded herself that it was exceptional. Below the badges were
the newest additions to her uniform, to her career, to her life. Two medals. On
the outside was the campaign medal for the recent troubles " known officially
as the Colonial Uprising " with bars for Sirius and Centauria. And next to it,
in the place of honour over her heart, was the Astral Star. The third-highest
award for valour in the Terran military, it set her apart from her peers,
declared her truly exceptional even amongst the elite. But
it had earned her little more than a glance from her father, and it hadn’t
prevented her being shipped off to an Astral backwater to rot while the doctors
wrung their hands over her precious mental state. Maybe
those doctors should view the recordings from her helmet-cam. As she reached to
pull the tunic from its hanger she remembered the severed limbs of Centauri
crewmembers floating in zero-gee around her, of blood floating in ever-growing
spherical globs around the smoky interior of the enemy battle cruiser as she
and her three troopers blasted it apart from the inside. The smoke began to
move, sucked by the ominous wind that spoke of an uncontained breech in the
hull. The hatch ahead open for a moment. Bullets pinged off her armoured
spacesuit as Hernandez pushed her aside and returned fire. She burst through
into the darkened space, firing her explosive rounds at the hidden Centauri
crew. A bullet cracked off her faceplate. She tucked into a ball as she floated
helplessly upward, more shots pinging her helmet. Maybe
those doctors should watch her helmet-cam as the deck exploded downward, and
revealed an APR robot staring back up at her. As she felt herself flung aside
and watched as rockets smashed up into Hernandez, blowing his powerful body
apart like scraps of meat. She scrambled along the top of the corridor in
zero-g. “APR’s!
APR’s!” she screamed to Assad and Jackson, still trapped one deck below. “Get
out of there!” Maybe
those f*****g doctors should watch as Assad and Jackson were blasted to pieces
by the Centauri war machines. And they should listen to the radio chatter as Sergeant
Chang reported his own team’s casualties in the engine room. The smoke was
moving faster now, riding the precious air out into the vacuum of space. Katja
knew she was cut off and alone. Ignoring Chang’s attempts to fight his way to
her, she ordered him and his team to escape even while she followed the river
of smoke through a buckled door and into a darkened, outer compartment. The
air pressure was dropping outside her spacesuit. On her external audio she
could hear the frantic calls of enemy troops approaching. There was only one
way out. She pointed her rifle at the crack in the bulkhead and fired twice.
The hull exploded outward and she felt the tidal wave of escaping air carry her
forward. She crashed through the opening. Spinning stars. And then darkness. Silence
and darkness. Silence
and darkness. “Ma’am?” She
opened her eyes, eyes darting around the dim, grey walls of her office. Rain
pelted against the window. The air was still. The walls were stable. The tunic
hung from her balled fist, soft fabric clutched between her fingers. She shook
off the nightmare and took several deep, calming breaths. “Ma’am?” Huebner had
reappeared. Forcing her fingers
to relax, she slipped the tunic in a swift motion. “Let’s deal with these Army
idiots.” The
rain bounced high off the paved surface of the courtyard, breaking down into
mud the long tracks of dirt that had fallen off the three dark green, armoured
vehicles that loomed in front of her. She stepped to the edge of the building’s
canopy, just out of the rain but in clear sight of the dozen or so Army
soldiers that stared down at her from their machines. “Which
one of you requested the lift?” she asked. “That’d
be me,” said a man in the second vehicle. “I just need your drop ships for a
couple of hours.” “And
you are?” He
glared down at her. “Storm Banner Leader Ciotti.” Her
stomach twisted in a knot. The same rank as her father, and a senior enlisted
rank. But still enlisted. She was an officer, whether the Army recognized that
or not. “Well,
Storm Banner Leader Ciotti, your command hasn’t sent any requests for Astral
Force assistance. Do you have an urgent operational requirement?” His
glare took on a shade of contempt. He glanced at his watching soldiers, then
climbed down the vehicle. He was at least as tall as Huebner, and with his full
combat gear could have blocked out the sun. He loomed over her, bare inches
away. She fought the urge to step back and tilted her face up to meet his eye.
Rain pelted her cheeks. “You’re
new here, Lieutenant.” He spat the rank. “And you don’t know how it works. We
have a standing agreement with this station, upheld by your predecessor, where
we can use the drop ships when we need them, without having to do all the
paperwork. Now I suggest you start issuing orders to make that happen.” She
felt her face flushing, the rage suddenly welling up within her. “The only
order I’m issuing,” she forced herself to say, “is for you to take your
vehicles and get out of my compound. If you’re still here in sixty seconds, I’m
arresting you.” Ciotti
sneered. “You don’t have the stones, princess.” The
cheap insult shouldn’t have phased her, but the next thing she knew her pistol
was out and aimed at Ciotti’s face. Her hand was steady, finger on the trigger.
Ciotti’s sneer vanished. “Get
back in your vehicle.” She willed him with vicious anticipation to disobey. It
would be so sweet, and so justified under military law. “Get out of my
compound. If you say any words other than “yes, ma’am” I will pull this
trigger. Do you understand?” He
stared at her for a long moment, jaw clenched. There was clear comprehension in
his gaze, but no fear that she could see. This probably wasn’t the first time
he’d stared down the barrel of a gun. But it wasn’t the first time she’d aimed
one, either. Finally he looked
away and forced the words from his mouth. “Yes, ma’am.” He
stepped back cautiously, turned and climbed slowly up his vehicle. A few quick
orders and the Army machines whined to life and rolled away. Only then did Katja lower the
pistol and holster it. She kept her grip on the holster to stop her hand from
shaking, fighting down sudden fear. Not of any loudmouth soldier, but of
herself. © 2013 Bennett R. Coles |
StatsAuthorBennett R. ColesAboutBennett R. Coles served 15 years as an officer in the Canadian Navy. His deployments took him around most of the Pacific Rim and included such highlights as being in the first Canadian task force to.. more..Writing
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