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Chapter Thirteen




The cliff was as foreboding as ever; the straw dummies waited passively at the base. Still, Tidwell realized his interest was at a peak as he sat waiting with Clancy for the next group to appear. The two mercenaries were perched on the lip of the cliff, dangling their legs idly, about five meters to the left of the trail.

They came, five of them darting silently from tree to tree like spirits. As they approached the cliff, the leader, a swarthy man in his thirties, held up his hand in a signal. The group froze, and he signaled one of the team forward. Tidwell smiled as a girl in her mid-twenties slung her rifle and dropped to her stomach, sliding forward to peer over the cliff. The leader knew damn well what was down there because he had run the course hundreds of times before, but he was playing it by the book and officially it was a new situation to be scouted.

The girl completed her survey, then slid backward for several meters before she rose to a half-crouch. Her hands flashed in a quick series of signals to the leader. Clancy nudged Tidwell, who smiled again, this time from flattered pleasure. Since he had taken over, the entire force had begun using his habit of sign language. It was a high compliment. The only trouble was that they had become proficient with it and had elaborated on his basic vocabulary to a point where he now sometimes had trouble following the signals as they flashed back and forth.

The leader made his decision. With a few abrupt gestures from him, the other three of the team, two men and a woman, slung their rifles and darted forward, diving full-speed off the cliff to confront their luckless “victims” below. The leader and the scout remained topside.

The two observing mercenaries straightened unconsciously. This was something new. The leader apparently had a new trick up his sleeve.

As his teammates sprinted forward, the leader reached over his shoulder and fished a coil of rope out of his pack. It was a black, lightweight silk line, with heavy knots tied in it every two feet for climbing. He located and grasped one end, tossing the coil to the scout. She caught it and flipped it over the cliff, while the leader secured his end around a small tree with a quick-release knot. This done, he faded back along the trail about ten meters to cover the rear, while the scout unslung her rifle and eased up to the edge of the cliff ready to cover her teammates below.

Clancy punched Tidwell’s shoulder delightedly and flashed him a thumbs-up signal. Tidwell nodded in agreement. It was a sweet move. Now the three attackers below had an easy, secure route back out as well as cover fire if anything went wrong.

Tidwell felt like crowing. The reorganization of the force was working better than he would have dared hope. The whole thing had been a ridiculously simple three-step process. First, there had been a questionnaire asking eight questions: Which four people in the force would you most like to team with? Why? Who would you be least willing to team with? Why? Who would you be most willing to follow as a leader? Why? Who would you be least willing to follow as a leader? Why?

The next step was to pass the data through the computers a few times. Two jobs were done simultaneously: first, the five-man teams were established along the lines of preference stated by the individuals, second, the deadwood and misfits were weeded out to be sent back to other jobs in the corporate structure.

The final step was to pull various members of the teams for special accelerated training in the more specialized skills necessary in a fighting unit. He had had to argue with Clancy a little on this point, but had finally won. Clancy had felt the existing specialists should be seeded through the teams to round out the requirements regardless of preference lines, but Tidwell’s inescapable logic was that in combat, you’re better off with a mediocre machine gunner you trust and can work with than an expert machine gunner you wouldn’t turn your back on.

From then on, the teams were inseparable. They bunked together, trained together, went on leave together; in short, they became a family. In fact, several of the teams had formed along family lines with mother, father, and offspring all on the same team, though frequently the leadership went to one of the offspring.

It was a weird, unorthodox way to organize an army, but it was bearing fruit. The teams were tight-knit and smooth running and highly prone to coming up with their own solutions to the tactical problems Tidwell was constantly inventing for them. It was beyond a doubt the finest fighting force Tidwell had ever been associated with.

The attackers were regaining the top of the cliff now. Suddenly, a mischievous idea hit Tidwell. He stood up and wigwagged the team leader. With a few brief gestures he sketched out his orders. The team leader nodded, and began signaling his team. The scout recoiled the rope and tossed it to the team leader. He caught it, stowed it in his pack, surveyed the terrain, and faded back into a bush. Tidwell checked the terrain and nodded to himself. It was a good ambush. He couldn’t see any of the team even though he had seen four of them take cover. He hadn’t seen where the scout went after she tossed the rope.

Clancy was smiling at him.

“Steve, you’re a real son-of-a-bitch.”

Tidwell shrugged modestly, and they settled back to wait.

They didn’t have to wait long. The next team came into sight, jogging along the trail in a loose group. The leader, a girl in her late teens that Clancy was spending most of his off-hours with, spotted the two sitting on the edge of the cliff. She smiled and waved at them. They smiled and waved back at her. They were still smiling when the ambush opened up.

The girl and the two men flanking her went down to the first burst of fire. The remaining two members dove smoothly under cover and started returning their fire.

Tidwell stood up.

“All right! Break it up!”

There was an abrupt cease-fire.

“Everybody over here!”

The two teams emerged from their hiding places and sprinted over to the two mercenaries. Tidwell tossed his “activator key” to one of the survivors of the second team who ducked off to “revive” his teammates.

“Okay. First off, ambushers. There’s no point in laying an ambush if you’re going to spring it too soon. Let ’em come all the way into the trap before you spring it. The way you did it, you’re left with two survivors who’ve got you pinned down with your backs to a cliff!”

The “revived” members of the second team joined the group.

“Now then, victims! Those kill-suits are spoiling you rotten. You’re supposed to be moving through disputed terrain. Don’t bunch up where one burst can wipe out your whole team.”

They were listening intently, soaking up everything he said.

“Okay, we’ve held up training enough. Report to the firing range after dinner for an extra hour’s penalty tour.”

The teams laughed as they resumed their training. Sending them to the firing range for a penalty tour was like sending a kid to Disneyland. Ever since the new weapons had arrived, the teams had to be driven away from the ranges. They even had to take head count at meals to be sure teams didn’t skip eating to sneak out to the range for extra practice.

The girl leading the second team shot a black look at Clancy as she herded her team off the cliff.

“Now who’s the son-of-a-bitch, Clancy old friend? Unless I miss my guess, she’s going to have a few words for you tonight.”

“Let her scream.” Clancy’s voice was chilly. “I’d rather see her gunned down here than when we’re in live action. I wouldn’t be doing her any favors to flash her warnings in training. Let her learn the hard way. Then she’ll remember.”

Tidwell smiled to himself. Underneath that easygoing nice guy exterior was as cold and hard-nosed a mercenary as he was. Maybe colder.

“Nit-picking aside, Clancy, what do you think?”

“Think? I’ll tell you, Steve. I think they’re the meanest, most versatile fighting force the world has ever seen, bar none. Like you say, we’re nit-picking. They’re as ready now as they’re ever going to be.”

Tidwell felt a tightening in his gut, but he kept it out of his voice.

“I’m glad our opinions concur, Clancy. I just received new orders from Yamada this morning. The jump-off date has been changed. We’re moving out next week.”




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