“Well,
“I’m it, sir.”
The captain nodded, but hesitated. As if something in his head wouldn’t come clear. “Well, you know the mission,” he said at last.
“That a question, sir?”
After another flash-to-bang delay, Garcia realized that the captain wasn’t really thinking about him at all. He was thinking about his losses. One of his platoons shot to shit. Maybe thinking about the mission, maybe about his own future. It was a revelation Garcia would have preferred to postpone, but he saw to his bewilderment that officers had no special magic, after all. The captain was as shaky as he was. And struggling just as hard to hide it.
“No,” the captain said. His voice was firmer now. “It wasn’t a question. You’ve got the platoon. And the mission.”
A mortar round shrieked in. Everybody flattened. It struck in a courtyard behind high walls, close enough to give the earth a shiver. Another screamed toward them, falling short and biting into the street. Shrapnel stung the air.
“They’re bracketing us,” Garcia yelled. “Get out of here, sir. I got it. Just get us some mortars on that line of buildings up on the crest, if you can.”
“Fires on the way in five. Semper Fi.”
“Semper Fi, sir.”
Gallotti looked at him. The corporal’s eyes caught the glow off a fire down-range. “You still want us to—”
“No. Round ’em up and move out.
Where did plans come from? The Virgin of Guadalupe? He knew exactly what he was going to do and how he was going to do it. So the Army could go for its Sunday drive.
Buy me a candy-apple-red, extended-cab pickup when I get back…
He told Corporal Banks and Barrett to stay with Gallotti and then hustled back to round up the rest of his platoon.
I can do this, he thought. Fuck, yeah.
“Okay, Deuce,” Lieutenant General Harris said as he dropped into his chair, “talk to me.”
The G-2, Colonel Val Danczuk, stood up and made his way through the packed wardroom until he reached the screen.
“Sir,” he addressed Harris, “we had a solid imagery feed for almost a half hour. The Third Jihadi Corps has definitely been pulling back and—”
“Plan, or panic?”
“I’d say ‘panic.’ The deception worked. They were locked and cocked to defend south of the ridges. Thought we’d come ashore between Netanya and Caesarea, right on the flank of the MOBIC assault. Now they’ve abandoned Hadera, and it looks like they’ll tie in a new forward line of defense on the Megiddo-Qiryat Ti’von line.”
“Main line of defense?”
“Afula-Nazareth-Shefar’am.”
Harris nodded. “You sure they didn’t stop jamming the overhead link on purpose? To show us what they wanted us to see?”
The G-2 took a quick chaw on his lip. Tall and blessed with the sort of good looks that gray hair only improved, Colonel Danczuk looked like a general from the casting office. It amused Harris, who was five-eight and as plain as a church supper, to think that, if you took off their rank and put the entire staff in a line-up, any right-thinking civilian would pick out the Deuce, not him, as the corps commander.
“No, sir,” Danczuk said. “I wouldn’t ever want to underestimate an enemy, but I don’t think this was on purpose. The highways feeding back into the Jezreel Valley looked like a giant clusterfuck.”
Harris turned to the senior Air Force officer in the room. “And you boys still aren’t flying? We used to call that a target-rich environment, back in the days of the horse cavalry.”
The brigadier general reddened. “Sir… We’d like to be flying… We
Harris’s entire corps had just a few more artillery tubes than a division would have fielded a generation earlier. The Air Force was supposed to be the Army’s flying artillery, delivering precision munitions on any enemy foolish enough to fight. Except that now, the smart bombs didn’t work, and the airplanes couldn’t fly.
Harris mastered his temper. Maybe the zoomies would deliver down the road. And the blue-suiter looked sufficiently beaten up. “Yeah, I know. Wipes out your computers. Gonna take up a collection and buy you boys a squadron of old Phantoms from the Paraguayans — Deuce, the Paraguayans still have Phantoms?”
Danczuk took the question seriously. “Sir, I don’t think they ever… I mean, maybe some old F-16s. I can check…”