Read Tactics of Mistake Page 7


  It was not pretty, but that was no reason for Athyer to scowl at it as he was doing.

  “What’s this?” he demanded.

  “It’s for me, Lieutenant,” said Cletus, cheerfully. “My left knee’s half-prosthetic, you know. I didn’t want to hold you and your men up if it came to moving someplace along the ground in a hurry.”

  “Oh? Well…" Athyer went on scowling. But the fact that the sentence he had begun trailed off was evidence enough that his imagination was failing him in its search for a valid excuse to forbid taking the electric horse. Cletus was, after all, a lieutenant-colonel. Athyer turned, snapping at Arvid. “Get it on board, then! Quick, Lieutenant!”

  He turned away to the business of getting the company of perhaps eighty men into the two atmosphere support ships waiting on the transport area pad some fifty feet distant.

  The boarding of the ships went smoothly and easily. Within twenty minutes they were skimming northward over the tops of the jungle trees toward Etter’s Pass—and the sky beyond the distant mountain range was beginning to grow pale with the dawn.

  “What’re your plans, Lieutenant?” began Cletus, as he and Athyer sat facing each other in the small, forward passengers’ compartment of the ship.

  “I’ll get the map,” said Athyer, ducking away resentfully from Cletus’s gaze. He dug into the metal command case on the floor between his boots and came up with a terrain map of the Exotic side of the mountains around Etter’s Pass. He spread the map out on the combined knees of himself and Cletus.

  “I’ll set up a picket line like this,” Athyer said, his finger tracing an arc through the jungle on the mountain slopes below the pass, “about three hundred yards down. Also, place a couple of reserve groups high up, behind the picket line on either side of the pass mouth. When the Neulanders get through the pass and far enough down the trail to hit the lower curve of the picket line, the reserve groups can move in behind them and we’ll have them surrounded… That is, if any guerrillas do come through the pass.”

  Cletus ignored the concluding statement of the lieutenant’s explanation. “What if the guerrillas don’t come straight down the trail?” Cletus asked. “What if they turn either right or left directly into the jungle the minute that they’re on this side of the mountains?”

  Athyer stared at Cletus at first blankly, and then resentfully, like a student who has been asked an exam question he considers unfair.

  “My support groups can fall back ahead of them,” he said at last, ungraciously, “alerting the rest of the picket line as they go. The other men can still close in behind them. Anyway, we’ve got them enclosed.”

  “What’s visibility in the jungle around there, Lieutenant?” asked Cletus.

  “Fifteen—twenty meters,” Athyer answered.

  “Then the rest of your picket line is going to have some trouble keeping position and moving upslope at an angle to enclose guerrillas who’re probably already beginning to split up into groups of two and three and spread out for their trek to the coast. Don’t you think?”

  “We’ll just have to do the best we can,” said Athyer, sullenly.

  “But there’re other possibilities,” said Cletus. He pointed to the map. “The guerrillas have the Whey River to their right as they come out of the pass, and the Blue River to their left, and both those rivers meet down at Two Rivers Town , below. Which means that any way the Neulanders turn, they’ve got to cross water. Look at the map. There’re only three good crossing spots above the town on the Blue River , and only two on the Whey—unless they’d want to go right through the town itself, which they wouldn’t. So, any or all of those five crossings could be used.”

  Cletus paused, waiting for the junior officer to pick up on the unspoken suggestion. But Athyer was obviously one of those men who need their opportunities spelled out for them.

  “The point is, Lieutenant,” Cletus said, “why try to catch these guerrillas in the jungle up around the pass, where they’ve got all sorts of opportunities to slip past you, when you could simply be waiting for them at these crossings, and catch them between you and the river?”

  Athyer frowned reluctantly, but then bent over the map to search out the five indicated crossing points that Cletus had mentioned.

  “The two Whey River crossings,” Cletus went on, “are closest to the pass. Also they’re on the most direct route to the coast. Any guerrillas taking the passes on the Blue River are going to have to circle wide to get safely around the town below. The Neulanders know you know this. So I think it’s a fairly safe bet that they’ll count on your trying to stop them—if they count on anyone trying to stop them at all—at those two passes. So they’ll probably merely feint in that direction and make their real crossing at these three other fords over on the Blue River.”

  Athyer stared at Cletus’s finger as it moved around from point to point on the map in time with his words. The lieutenant’s face tensed.

  “No, no, Colonel,” he said, when Cletus had finished. “You don’t know these Neulanders the way I do. In the first place, why should they expect us to be waiting for them, anyway? In the second place, they’re just not that smart. They’ll come through the pass, break up into twos and threes going through the jungle and join up again at one, maybe two, of the Whey River crossings.”

  “I wouldn’t think so—” Cletus was beginning. But this time, Athyer literally cut him short.

  “Take my word for it, Colonel!” he said. “It’s those two points on the Whey River they’ll be crossing at.”

  He rubbed his hands together. “And that’s where I’ll snap them up!” he went on. “I’ll take the lower crossing with half the men, and my top sergeant can take the upper crossing with most of the rest. Put a few men behind them to cut off their retreat, and I’ll bag myself a nice catch of guerrillas.”

  “You’re the field officer in command,” said Cletus, “so I don’t want to argue with you. Still, General Traynor did say that I was to offer you my advice, and I’d think you’d want to play safe, over on the Blue. If it was up to me…"

  Cletus let his voice trail off. The lieutenant’s hands, with the map already half-folded, slowed and ceased their movement. Cletus, looking at the other’s lowered head, could almost see the gears turning over inside it. By this time Athyer had left all doubts behind about his own military judgment. Still, situations involving generals and colonels were always touchy for a lieutenant to be involved in, no matter who seemed to be holding all the high cards. “I couldn’t spare more than a squad, under a corporal,” muttered Athyer to the map, at last. He hesitated, plainly thinking. Then he lilted his head and there was a craftiness in his eyes. “It’s your suggestion, Colonel. Maybe if you’d like to take the responsibility for diverting part of my force over to the Blue…?”

  “Why, I’d be perfectly willing to, of course,” said Cletus. “But as you pointed out, I’m not a field officer, and I can’t very well take command of troops under combat conditions…“

  Athyer grinned. “Oh, that!” he said. “We don’t stick right with every line in the book out here, Colonel. I’ll simply give orders to the corporal in charge of the squad that he’s to do what you say.”

  “What I say? You mean—exactly what I say?” asked Cletus.

  “Exactly,” said Athyer. “There’s an authority for that sort of thing in emergencies, you know. As commanding officer of an isolated unit I can make emergency use of any and all military personnel in whatever manner I feel is necessary. I’ll tell the corporal I’ve temporarily allowed you status as a field officer, and of course your rank applies.”

  “But if the guerrillas do come through the Blue River crossings,” said Cletus, “I’ll have only a squad.”

  “They won’t, Colonel,” said Athyer, finishing his folding of the map with a flourish. “They won’t. But if a few stray Neulanders should show up—why, use your best judgment. An expert on tactics like yourself, sir, ought to be able to handle any little situation like that, that’
s liable to turn up.”

  Leaving the barely concealed sneer to linger in the air behind him, he rose and went back with the map into the rear passenger compartment where the soldiers of half his command were riding.

  The support ship in which they were traveling set Cletus down with his squad at the uppermost of the three crossing points on the Blue River, and took off into the dawn shadows, which still obscured this western slope of the mountain range dividing Bakhalla from Neuland. Athyer had sorted out a weedy, nineteen-year-old corporal named Ed Jarnki and six men to be the force Cletus would command. The moment they were deshipped, the seven dropped automatically to earth, propping their backs comfortably against nearby tree trunks and rocks that protruded the unbroken, green ferny carpet of the jungle floor. They were in a little clearing surrounded by tall trees that verged on a four-foot bank over the near edge of the river; and they gazed with some curiosity at Cletus as he turned about to face them.

  He said nothing. He only gazed back. After a second, Jarnki, the corporal, scrambled to his feet. One after the other the rest of the men rose also, until they all stood facing Cletus, in a ragged line, half at attention.

  Cletus smiled. He seemed a different man entirely, now, from the officer the seven had glimpsed earlier as they were boarding and descending from the support ship. The good humor had not gone from his face. But in addition, now, there was something powerful, something steady and intense, about the way he looked at them, so that a sort of human electricity flowed from him to them and set all their nerves on edge, in spite of themselves.

  “That’s better,” said Cletus. Even his voice had changed. “All right, you’re the men who’re going to win the day for everyone, up here at Etter’s Pass. And if you follow orders properly, you’ll do it without so much as skinning your knuckles or working up a sweat.”

  8.

  They stared at him.

  “Sir?” said Jarnki, after a moment.

  “Yes, Corporal?” said Cletus.

  “Sir… I don’t understand what you mean.” Jarnki got it out, after a second’s struggle.

  “I mean you’re going to capture a lot of Neulanders,” said Cletus, “and without getting yourselves hurt in the process.” He waited while Jarnki opened his mouth a second time, and then slowly closed it again. “Well? That answer your question, Corporal?”

  “Yes sir.”

  Jarnki subsided. But his eyes, and the eyes of the rest of the men, rested on Cletus with a suspicion amounting to fear.

  “Then we’ll get busy,” said Cletus.

  He proceeded to post the men—one across the shallow ford of the river, which here swung in a lazy curve past the clearing, two men down below the bank on each side of the clearing, and the four remaining in treetop positions strung out away from the river and upslope of the direction from which any guerrillas crossing the ford would come.

  The last man he posted was Jarnki.

  “Don’t worry, Corporal,” he said, hovering on the electric horse in midair a few feet from where Jarnki swayed in the treetop, clutching his cone rifle. “You’ll find the Neulanders won’t keep you waiting long. When you see them, give them a few cones from here, and then get down on the ground where you won’t get hit. You’ve been shot at before, haven’t you?” Jarnki nodded. His face was a little pale, and his position in a crotch of the smooth-barked, variform Earth oak he perched in was somewhat too cramped to be comfortable.

  “Yes, sir,” he said. His tone left a great deal more unsaid.

  “But it was under sensible conditions, with the rest of the men in your platoon or company all around you, wasn’t it?” said Cletus.

  “Don’t let the difference shake you, Corporal. It won’t matter once the firing starts. I’m going to check the two lower crossings. I’ll be back before long.”

  He swung the electric horse away from the tree and headed downriver… The vehicle he rode was almost silent in its operation, producing nothing much more than the kind of hum a room exhaust fan makes. Under conditions of normal quiet it could be heard for perhaps fifteen meters. But this upland Kultan jungle was busy with the sounds of birds and animals. Among these was a cry like the sound of an ax striking wood, which sounded at intervals; and another sound that resembled heavy snoring, which would go on for several seconds, only to break off, pause, and then begin again. But most of the woodlife noises were simply screams of different pitches and volumes and musical character.

  Altogether these made an unpredictable pattern of sound, among which the low hum of the electric horse could easily be lost to ears not specifically listening for it—such as the ears of a guerrilla from Neuland who was probably both unfamiliar with the noise and not expecting it in any case.

  Cletus flew downriver and checked both the lower crossings, finding them empty of all human movement. He turned from the lowest crossing to move through midair into the jungle from the river, upslope, in the direction of the pass. With luck, he thought, since they had the longest distance to cover if several crossings were being used. Undoubtedly a rendezvous point and time would have been set up for all groups on the far side of the river.

  He drifted forward just under treetop level, some forty to sixty meters above the ground, at a speed of not more than six kilometers per hour. Below him, the upland jungle flora showed less of the yellow veining than there had been in the greenery near the shuttleboat landing pad; but the threads of scarlet ran everywhere, even through the outsize leaves of the variform Earth trees—oak, maple and ash—with which Kultis had been seeded twenty years back.

  The Earth flora had taken more strongly in these higher altitudes. But there was still a majority of the native plants and trees, from fern-like clumps reaching ten meters into the air, to a sprawling tree-type with purple fruits that were perfectly edible but exhaled a faint but sickening scent through their furry skins as they ripened. Cletus was about eight hundred meters away from the river crossing before he spotted his first sign of movement, a waving of fern tops below him. He checked his forward movement and drifted downward.

  A second later the foreshortened figure of a man in a brown-and green-splashed jungle suit moved into sight from under the fern.

  The infiltrator was unequipped except for the pack on his back, a soft camouflage-cloth cap on his head and the pellet-gun sporting firearm he carried by its strap over his right shoulder. This was to be expected where the guerrillas were concerned. The convention that had grown up on the newer worlds in fifty years of intercolony disputes was that, unless a man carried military weaponry or equipment, he was subject only to civil law—and civil law had to prove damage to property, life or limb before any action could be taken against an armed man, even from another colony. A guerrilla caught with nothing but a sporting gun was usually only deported or interned. One with any kind of military equipment, however—even as little as a military-issue nail file—could be taken by the military courts, which usually adjudged him a saboteur and condemned him to prison or death. If this man below him was typical of the infiltrators in his group, then Jarnki and his men with their cone rifles would have a massive advantage in weapons to make up for their scarcity of numbers, which was a relief.

  Cletus continued to watch the man for several minutes. He was making his way through the jungle with no real regard for silence or cover. As soon as Cletus had a line of march estimated for this individual, he turned off to one side to locate the other members of the same guerrilla force.

  The rapidly rising sun, burning through the sparse leaves at treetop level, heated the back of Cletus’s neck. He was sweating from his armpits, all across his chest and back under his jungle suit, and his knee was threatening to revive its ache once more. He took a moment out to force his muscles to relax and push the knee discomfort from him. There was not time for that—not yet. He went back to searching the jungle for more guerrillas. Almost immediately he found the second man, moving along parallel to and perhaps thirty meters from the infiltrator Cletus had spotted firs
t. Cletus continued looking, and within the next twenty minutes he ranged out to both ends of the skirmish line that was pushing through the jungle below him and counted twenty men moving abreast over a front perhaps three hundred meters in width. If the Neulanders had split their forces equally between the three crossings, which would be only elementary military precaution, that would mean an infiltration force of sixty men. Sixty men, assuming they lost something like 20 per cent of their group’s strength in getting through the jungle from here to the coast, would leave about forty-eight men available for whatever assault the Neulanders planned to celebrate deCastries’ visit.

  Forty-eight men could do a lot in the way of taking over and holding the small coastal fishing village. But a good deal more could be done with double that number. Perhaps there was a second skirmish line behind the first.

  Cletus turned the electric horse in midair and drifted it back under the treetops behind the man he had just spotted advancing. Sure enough, about eighty meters back, he discovered a second skirmish line—this time with fifteen men in it, including at least a couple who looked like officers, in that they carried more in the way of communication and other equipment and wore sidearms rather than rifles. Cletus turned the electric horse about, slid quietly through the air just below the treetops and back toward the outside lower end of the approaching skirmish line. He located it, and saw that—as he had expected—the guerrillas were already beginning to close up so as to come into the crossing point together. Having estimated the line along which their lower edge would be drawing in, he went ahead on the electric horse, stopping to plant singleton personnel mines against the trunks of trees not more than four inches thick at intervals of about twenty meters. He planted the last of these right at the water’s edge, about twenty meters below the crossing. Then he swooped back to make contact with the end of the second skirmish line.