Part 10 (1/2)
A couple of the new officers chuckled.
Behind them, the hangar doors closed.
”Before I show you the s.h.i.+p you will be learning to fly, I want to make it perfectly clear that you are free to leave in the next two minutes and no one will think less of you. If you stay here, you are agreeing to undertake highly dangerous missions behind Kurgan lines without the hope or possibility of extraction. Should your craft become damaged and is unable to return, it will self-destruct, taking you with it. Should you become incapacitated for any reason, your s.h.i.+p will self-destruct. In short, your deep s.p.a.ce raider will not fall into the hands of the enemy under any circ.u.mstances and neither will you.”
A captain put his hand up. ”Sir, what if there is a malfunction or a computer error, will the s.h.i.+p still auto-destruct?”
”Yes,” replied Wright bluntly.
A murmur ran through the crowd.
”Now if any of you wish to leave and carry on to another a.s.signment, please step aside and report to Major Fareed, who is standing off to the side of the hangar. He'll have you sign a series of non-disclosure papers and make sure that you are dispatched with all haste to a real transport squadron.”
Tarina looked around. No one moved.
Wright looked over at a technician standing by the wall and nodded his head. The curtain began to rise behind him. ”Now that we have that out of the way. Feast your eyes on the X-5 Avenger.”
Tarina's eyes widened when she saw the craft. It had two seats: one for the pilot, the other for the navigator. It was long and sleek, with short wings further back on the fuselage, which she took to be a sign that the Avenger could be used inside a planet's atmosphere. At the back of the s.h.i.+p was a large engine unlike any she had ever seen.
Wright walked over beside the Avenger. ”On the drawing books before the outbreak of the war, the X-5 was rushed into production. It is unique in the fact that it has a jump engine. No other craft this small has this capability.”
”How far can it jump, sir?” asked Wendy.
”For now, that and all other technical information will remain secret.”
Tarina and Wendy exchanged a look of disbelief. What else was going to be cla.s.sified? pondered Tarina.
Wright continued. ”You'll note there are no racks to mount missiles on. The only weapon you will have is a thirty millimeter cannon built into the nose of the craft. As s.p.a.ce was limited inside the fuselage, you have only enough ammunition to defend yourself with. Let me be clear, this is not a fighter. The Avenger is designed with only one purpose in mind and that is deep reconnaissance.”
”Sir, has it been tested yet?” asked a slender, dark-haired pilot.
”Yes, but not behind Kurgan lines.”
Someone in the back groaned.
”Come on, don't be shy, crawl around the X-5,” said Wright, waving the pilots over. ”For the next month you are going to learn all about this craft and what it can and can't do. During that time, your skills will be evaluated. Don't bother asking to team up with anyone. All crew a.s.signments will be my call. One last thing before I turn you over to Major Fareed and tackle the mountain of paperwork sitting on my desk. I hope that you all spoke with your folks last night because as of right now, you are confined to base. You will hand over your phones and any other communications devices you have on you to Major Fareed. There will be no communication with the outside world until I say so.”
Wright paused and looked into the eyes of his handpicked personnel. With a grin etched on his face, he said, ”Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the First Special Warfare Squadron.”
Chapter 14.
Sheridan was tired and hungry. His muscles were tired and his joints ached. They were down to one meal a day and in the cold, it never seemed enough. With the temperature dropping daily, the clothes on their backs were not enough to keep them warm.
Cole had a fire built. Sheridan was about to object, when the sergeant pointed out that they were the only group of people sitting around in the woods without one. Having one made them fit in with their surroundings; should an enemy drone fly over it would just see another bunch of refugees trying to keep warm. Sheridan quickly relented. He knew Cole had made the right call.
An hour later, Sheridan found himself on sentry duty. They had taken refuge for the day behind a large tree-covered mound. Sheridan sat with his back against a tall fir tree looking out towards the capital. He stopped counting the number of drones the Kurgans had in the sky over the city. Every couple of minutes one would let loose a missile, which would streak at super-sonic speed at its target. Once in a while, a ground to air missile would be fired by the defenders up at the drones. It was suicide. The instant the soldiers in the city fired back, three Kurgan drones would fire back, obliterating whoever had been there. The Marines trapped in the capital were being systematically hunted and destroyed without the Kurgans suffering a single casualty. Sheridan wondered how much longer this uneven fight could go on for.
”Pretty gloomy sight, isn't it?” said Cole as he sat down beside Sheridan. In his hands were two cups of black coffee.
”Doesn't make me want to go there,” replied Sheridan.
”And yet here we are trying to find a way in.”
Sheridan took a sip of coffee and felt it warm his innards as it slid down his throat. ”I've been sitting here studying the Kurgan's deployment and it stretches the entire length of the capital. They've dug trenches about two hundred meters back from the forward edge of the city. I don't think we can get in that way. I hate to say it, but we may have to hike around the capital and try approaching it from the other side.”
Cole picked up his binoculars and studied the tall mountains behind the city. He didn't like what he saw. They were almost out of food and with the weather getting worse by the day; he doubted they had the strength to make it. ”Sir, I don't think we could make it up and over those peaks, not with a person on a stretcher and a civilian with us. If it were just us Marines, I'd say go for it, but we've got other people to worry about.”
”I know, it looks like it's the front door or nothing.”
Cole surveyed the refugee camp. A couple of seconds later, he said, ”Sir, lend me your civilian jacket.”
”Why?”
Cole handed his binoculars over and pointed down at a group of people standing around a tall fire. ”What's wrong with that picture?”
Sheridan studied the people for a minute and then shrugged his shoulders.
”Sir, take a good look at the man in the blue jacket talking to a couple of women near the fire.”
Sheridan looked again. The man was appeared to be having a conversation with the women. ”Sergeant, I'm still not getting it.”
”The b.a.s.t.a.r.d is clean and has no beard. He's got to be from the capital. I'm willing to bet my pension that he's a black-marketer who knows a way in and out of the city.”
Sheridan raised up the gla.s.ses once more and studied the man as he dug into his jacket and handed over what looked to be cans of food to the women in exchange for their jewelry. ”d.a.m.n, you've got good eyes. I would have missed that.”
”I've seen his kind before,” explained Cole. ”He's a human parasite, but right now he's the answer to our prayers. Can I have your pistol too?”
With a nod, Sheridan handed over his jacket and pistol to Cole. ”What's your plan?”
”I intended to drag that fellow back here so we can ask him a few questions,” answered Cole, grinning. ”Sir, if this goes south, get your a.s.s out of here.”
With a handshake, Sheridan took Cole's rifle and wished him luck.
With the collar pulled up on the back of Cole's borrowed jacket, he walked through the woods, eyes fixed on his target. Keeping his head down, he avoided making eye contact with any of the people moving about the ramshackle group of shelters that had been built around the fire. Cole could hear the man asking anyone else if they wanted to make a deal with him before he moved on.
”I do,” said Cole, trying to sound tired and despondent.
”Ah, a new customer,” said the man. With combed blonde hair and a round face, the man was the polar opposite of the disheveled refugees. ”How can I help you, my good man?”
Cole kept his head down. ”My child is sick. I need medicine. What do you have?”
”I don't have any medicine on me today, but if you tell me what you're looking for I can return tomorrow... if the price is right!”
”I'm not a doctor. Perhaps if you took a look at my daughter, you could determine what she needs and how much it is going to cost me?”
”Sure, friend,” replied the man, smiling.