243
Five Rebels died in the first assault on Raton, New Mexico. Ben Raines considered that an acceptable loss figure when three hundred goose-stepping Nazi slime died in the same three minutes. Resistance outside Trinidad had become a screaming rout after Ben and his team visited the second communications van of the blackshirt withdrawal from the area. Following quickly on the heels of the demoralized troops, they discovered the message had carried clearly to Major Miller, who commanded at the pass.
Ben’s Rebels found the pass deserted. Only a few random rounds came from the last Nazi tanks to join in the race for Raton. Jubilant Rebels followed. The pace slowed when booby traps and land mines began to take a toll of vehicles and men. Ben Raines waited out the delay impatiently, knowing that it gave opportunity for the commander in Raton to strengthen his positions.
He had done that, Ben learned in that first bloody three minutes. Unwilling to spend Rebel lives unnecessarily, the advance stalled out while landing gear got unchained and crewmen fitted main rotor blades into position on the Apache gunships. In less than half an hour, the ungainly warbirds received a checkout and cleared for flight. The AH-64s lifted off all but silently in clouds of dust and leaves.
Ben Raines, back in the Hummer, watched their insectile shapes cruise past overhead and line up on the
244 targets below. Ben admired the courage of the crews who manned these aged craft. Each had logged more hours on its airframe than the manufacturer had ever dreamed possible, yet they faithfully served the Rebels’ needs.
Their four wing hardpoints flashed fire as mixed bags of eight Hellfire missiles and thirty-six 2.5-inch rockets sped off to bring mind-numbing destruction to the blackshirts. From turrets slung under their bellies 30mm chainguns made a path of destruction that Rebel troops could follow into the heart of the Nazi resistance.
Shock and confusion became frantic disorder. Ben urged Cooper closer to the crumbling resistance. The Hummer leapt forward and slewed around a burning blackshirt tank. Everywhere death seemed to come with unexpected ferocity. The radio squawked and Corrie offered the handset to Ben.
“Eagle, this is Rat. We’ve come on a large pocket of stiff resistance.”
“What are you looking at, Rat?” Ben came back.
“The bastards are dug into hillsides. A lot of them, and they have buried armor so we can’t use the ERIX missiles. Plenty of infantry, too.”
“Hang on, Rat. Corrie, bump R Batt, I want to talk to McDade.” When Bull McDade came on the line, Ben explained what he wanted.
“I don’t know, Ben,” Lieutenant Colonel McDade responded . “Those rockets aren’t as reliable as the old Sov BM-21s.”
McDade referred to the 122mm 40-tube multiple launch unit mounted on a truck bed. Rebel R&D had made close duplicates from some General Striganov had with his army in Canada. Two batteries traveled with R Batt. Ike McGowan had more with his command. Trouble was, the Rebel version lacked much of the sophistication of the 1964 Soviet version of the old Stalin Organ of World War II.
“I remember Georgi had some with him when we first locked horns,” McDade went on. “Some blew up as they left the tubes, as I recall.”
245 “Yeah,” Ben agreed. “Only our R&D people have bore-safed them. It was a matter of Soviet indifference to human life and lousy quality control. Besides, Buddy needs something strong and nasty to crack bunkers with indirect fire. It’s worth the risk.”
“A big ten-four to that,” Lieutenant Colonel McDade approved. “We’ll pull them up now.”
“I knew you’d jump at the chance,” Ben replied.
“I’m kind of curious to see them unload on something besides big buildings,” Stan McDade joshed back.
Ben called Buddy next. “Rat, you’ve some special equipment on the way. Hold what you’ve got and wait for the roar.”
When it came, the rockets in ripple-fire impressed everyone, even those who had experienced it before. In less than thirty seconds, the forty tubes of each battery unleashed their cargo. With a flight time of less than a minute for the maximum range of 16,395 yards, each salvo delivered . 76 tons of HE on the Nazi bunkers in a tight pattern of repeated shocks.
Not even reinforced concrete, of which the blackshirts had very little, could withstand such a cataclysmic pounding. The bunkers collapsed in fountains of dust, dirt, and cement chips. Along with them, the defense around the old town of Raton fell. Major Miller threw up his hands in alarm and despair and led the pell-mell flight southward to Santa Rosa.
Ben Raines watched from a hillside as the rout grew in numbers of demoralized “supermen.” He had allotted three days to reduce Raton, given the refugees from Trinidad and the intact command from the pass as reinforcements. Buddy happening on and destroying their main line of resistance so early had provided them with time to spare. Ben gladly allocated a full day to preventive maintenance and R&R.
An enterprising squad of Buddy’s headquarters company located a large herd of wild cattle in a side canyon in Raton Pass and had selected a few to provide fresh meat. That left enough to ensure the survival of the herd and to
246 allow for a large barbecue for all hands. After weeks of Dr. Lamar’s patent glop, they quickly cleaned the piled-high tables and mopped up any stray juices with slices of fresh-baked bread. Some of the Rebels braved the cool highlands air to splash and cavort in the inviting waters of the north fork of the Cimarron River.
Stuffed full of spit-roasted beef and vastly superior Nazi rations, Ben Raines relaxed for the first time since Cheyenne. Jersey stood watch and even diverted would-be visitors, while Ben lay under a bullet-scarred tree.
“The boss is sleeping,” she declared. “Give the guy a break, huh?”
Thermopolis and Headquarters Company did not receive such a break when their advance stalled out some five miles from Shoshoni, Wyoming. Thermopolis carefully considered his options and tactical choices, as he had been taught by Ben Raines. In the end, he summoned Leadfoot, Wanda, and Emil Hite.
“Those Nazi pricks have us stopped cold ” he began his briefing. “Leadfoot, and you, Wanda, I want you to take your bikes and get around on the west side of their operation. Emil, you and your people will take the south. The rest of the company will handle the north and east. The idea is for you to make all the noise and confusion you can when we open up. We want those crud to think they are overrun and caught in a box.”
“My girls will love this,” Wanda remarked. “Just thinking about us gets those blackshirt pukes pissed off.”
Leadfoot produced his wolfish grin. “Me’n the boys can come on like Atilla the Hun. We’ll scare those fuckers so bad they’ll be crappin’ tomorrow’s breakfast.”
“Never fear, O wise Day Star of Hippiedom, we shall perform to your specifications,” Emil chimed in.
“Okay, okay. The thing is, you need to get right in among them before you open up with the diversionary action,” Thermopolis urged them. “Use suppressed weapons, knives, that sort of thing, to take out OPs and perimeter guards.”
247 “When do we do this?” Leadfoot asked.
“Tonight. Well after dark, when the goose-steppers are sacked out. You’ll be in dark clothing and grease paint. Oh, and another thing. I’ve had the company armorer work up some gimmicks to help identify friend from foe.” Thermopolis produced a small, springy metal clicker, unaware he had reinvented one of the devices used by Allied troops on D day in World War II. “One click to question, two clicks to reply friendly.” He demonstrated.
“Everyone will have one of these?” Wanda asked.
“By the time you are ready to pull out, yes,” Thermopolis assured her.
“I can hardly wait,” the leader of the Sisters of Lesbos responded.
Ghosting along with the mufflers reducing the exhaust of their Harleys to whispers, the Sons of Satan navigated by the gridlike layout of country roads. Dressed in black, their faces smeared with dark camo grease paint, only the chrome on the motorcycles picked out the light of the stars. Leadfoot had a good feeling about this raid. After they had demolished the headquarters in Casper, he and his men had wanted badly to get roaring drunk.
Although not teetotalers, the Rebels frowned on that. Particularly when armed and in a combat zone. Alcohol and gunpowder did not mix. Now he and his followers were out doing what they did best. Beerbelly, on point, braked his scoot and raised a hand to signal a halt. Leadfoot coasted up beside him.
“What gives?”
“Up ahead. That low mound.” Leadfoot could vaguely make it out in the dim light. “I’d say there’s two of them in there,” Beerbelly went on. “Only damned if I don’t think they’re both stackin’ z’s.”
“Why not? They’re watching the back door. They don’t expect any Rebels to the west of them, right? What say we slide up and pay a call?”
Experience gained even before they allied with the
248 Rebels let the ex-outlaw bikers advance on their unsuspecting prey with ease. Close at hand, Leadfoot noted that a hollow had been dug out and the dirt used to form a breastwork. Branches had been laid over all and covered in leaves. Two blackshirts slumbered inside, lulled by a long period of inaction and boredom. Leadfoot raised the muzzle of his suppressed Uzi, and the bolt clacked as he stitched one Nazi with a neat three-round burst.
Beside him, Beerbelly dispatched the other blackshirt with equal elan. “This must be State 789,” Beerbelly observed of the road they traveled. “That bridge we went over would be the one across Boysen Reservoir.”
“Good figgerin’,” Leadfoot complimented. “We turn east now. You done good, Beerbelly. Keep a sharp eye.”
Half a mile farther on, they came to a roadblock. A long, slender lodgepole pine had been trimmed and rigged as a drop bar across the road. Two bored sentries manned the barricade. Soft whaps from silenced weapons ended their lives before either could shout a warning or fire a shot. Leadfoot pointed to a small, ramshackle tear-drop trailer to one side of the road.
On tiptoe, three bikers angled over to the door. Braced for anything, the one in the center reached out and opened the sagging, holey screen. The door swung out at a touch. A sleep-muffled voice spoke inquiringly from inside. Swiftly, the trio swarmed in and made short work of the off-duty guards with razor-sharp knives.
“You do good work,” Leadfoot praised his men as they emerged from the trailer. “I wonder how Wanda is making out?”
Wanda and the Sisters of Lesbos had skirted close to the northern edge of town, to avoid the problem of crossing the reservoir. With their backs to the water, they approached the shattered town from half a mile west. Two squat MBTs blocked the onetime residential street the Amazons scouted from behind rubble heaps. One of the girls touched Wanda’s arm after they had surveyed
249 the actions of the inattentive crews who sat or stood outside their tanks.
“Watch this and be ready,” the young Sister urged.
She stepped out into the open and sauntered through the darkness toward the listless Nazis. Finally one of them, a sergeant in command of one tank, noticed her. “Who goes there?” he demanded.
Without altering her pace, she walked right up to him. “Hi there, big boy. D’you like to fuck black girls?”
Outraged at this insult to his racial purity, the blackshirt sergeant flushed scarlet and spoke with a voice choked by hate. “You degenerate slu -“
His outrage got choked on a gush of blood as the Sister of Lesbos shoved an eleven-inch knife into his gut and wrenched it upward. More of the deadly women materialized out of the night and quickly slashed the life from other unwary Nazis. Two of Wanda’s girls dropped down the hatches of the MBTs to slit the throats of the drivers.
Greatly pleased with their success, Wanda rounded up her command. “Let’s move on into town, girls.”
From the corner of one eye, Emil Hite saw furtive movement to his right. Tensed, he positioned his assault rifle and squeezed on the clicker in his left hand.
Click!
Click -click!
“Oh,” Emil Hite sighed in relief. “You’re a friendly.”
“Nein,” came a guttural reply. “I watched you Rebels infiltrating, learned how you identified one another, killed one, and took his noise-maker.”
It was not the high priest of the Great God Blomm, nor even Emil Hite, con man supreme, who responded. It was Emil Hite, Rebel soldier. He shot the Nazi through the heart. The 22-inch suppressor on his assault rifle swallowed the detonation of the cartridge and the smug blackshirt fell on his face in the waste-choked street of Shoshoni.
“That was close,” Emil panted.
250 “You did all right” one of his closest followers remarked as he appeared out of the dark. “We’d better move on.”
“Ah, Ezra, it is you. That one, he tricked me.”
“Could have been any of us. What time do you have?”
Emil checked his watch. The faintly glowing hand pips and numbers indicated less than ten minutes to the assault by Thermopolis and the company. “We need to hurry. Is everyone spread out?”
“Yes. Let’s go.”
Emil took three steps and tripped over the loose sling of his assault rifle. His inept foot caused the weapon to be yanked from his grasp. It clattered on the ground. At once a figure loomed in front of them.
“Who are you and what are you doing here?” an American voice asked.
Emil clicked at him and got no reply. The Nazi swung the muzzle of his rifle to cover Emil, and Ezra did the only possible thing. He shot the blackshirt through the head. Reflexively the man triggered a round that sounded like a 155 going off in the stillness.
“Was ist das?” a muffled voice demanded.
“We’re under attack!” came a frightened shout.
A shrill scream came from Emil’s left. “They’re in among us,” another blackshirt shouted in alarm.
Suddenly an intense flood of white light came from a large halogen flood mounted on a former telephone pole. Emil and Ezra stood out in its glare. Despite his klutzy nature, Emil could act swiftly when needed. He snatched up his rifle and did what any good Rebel trooper would. He shot out the light.
New darkness changed to a red-orange glow as Headquarters Company mortars opened up.
Howling like demons, Leadfoot’s Sons of Satan swarmed toward Emil. The little con artist clicked his clacker furiously. Laughing, Beerbelly swept up the minute ex-leader of Blomm’s children in a huge bearhug.
“Get to killin’ Nazis, li’l feller,” he roared.
Keening like the shades of the Inferno, Wanda’s Sisters
251 of Lesbos brought terror and death to more swastika worshipers. Muzzle flashes began to light up the foreground as the stunned Nazis recovered their senses and started to offer resistance.
Leadfoot lobbed a grenade through the window of a trailer and ended the lives of six muzzy-headed American Nazis. Thermopolis, with the second wave of his company, advanced steadily into town. Frightened, disoriented blackshirts tried to surrender, only to be gunned down by grim, vengeance-hungry Rebels.
“Remember the kids from Kansas,” became an oft-repeated rally cry.
Within five minutes the first vehicles started a mad race for the causeway bridge over Boysen Reservoir. They met more of the Sons and Sisters, along with claymores and shoulder-fired rockets. An ammunition truck erupted in the heart of the demolished city and added a bright mushroom of roiling flame. At thirty-three minutes into the operation, Thermopolis declared the Nazi cantonment totally suppressed.
Ben Raines spoke briskly into the mouthpiece of the handset. “That’s good news, Therm. I assume you have everyone patched up and ready to move out to Riverton and Thermopolis?”
“Oh, yes. Emil got a broken toe. He’s limping around and making a big thing of playing the invalid. We took eleven KIAs and twenty-three WIA. Nobody missing, except some Nazis.”
“They won’t be mourned. Keep it up. I want pressure on them in the north for as long as you can hold out. Resupply will be at the Casper municipal airport as soon as flights can get out of Base Camp One. I’ll have Georgi detail enough men to keep the roads patrolled and open. Eagle, out.”
Ben returned the handset to Corrie’s keeping and picked up his binoculars. An excellent pair of twenty-power optics with superior light-gathering properties,
252 the field glasses picked out individual details of the vista below their position on a ridge on the right side of U.S. 54/66, five miles outside Santa Rosa.
Santa Rosa, being built on a series of hills and the valley floors between, Ben evaluated, would be much like laying siege to Rome. Intel indicated that the Nazis had one battalion of Hans Brodermann’s regular SS and one of American SS defending the partially rebuilt town. Added to that were the remnants of the blackshirt garbage that had abandoned Raton, Tucumcari and other, smaller outposts. Taken as a whole, it provided a formidable obstacle.
Impatience chafed at Ben Raines. His commitment to aid Gen. Raul Payon weighed heavily as he considered the efforts made by the Nazis in Santa Rosa to make use of rubble, natural terrain, and man-made obstacles to consolidate their position. He was glad when Ike McGowan’s three battalions rolled into the assembly area. With him came Dr. Lamar Chase.
“I hear you’ve been risking your life again, in spite of all the good advice you’ve been given,” the rotund doctor complained in the pitch of a musical saw.
“Yep, Tubby. Every word is true. I’ve been eating your outrageous imitation food for nearly two weeks,” Ben quipped back. “Today I dined on delicious fresh beef.”
“Cooked rare enough to moo, no doubt,” snapped the disapproving medico.
“How else?” Ben was enjoying this. He decided, though, that the time had come to get serious. “Have you received enough supplies to support a major campaign? We’re facing a tough go here at Santa Rosa.”
“We can handle it,” Dr. Chase said, frowning. “Why do you suppose they picked this place for a major stand?”
“It’s a crossroads of the Southwest,” Ben told him. “From here you can access Flagstaff and points west, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, and everything south of there.”
“Well, damn them for being smart enough to know that,” Chase snapped, then launched into another pet worry. “I’m concerned about Cecil Jefferys. He keeps
253 chewing on me to release him early from his recovery program.”
Ben started to answer when a young corporal appeared in the doorway of the communications van. “General, we have General Payon on a secure channel.”
“I’ll come at once,” Ben responded. “I’d like you to tag along, Ike, Lamar.”
Inside the van, the high-altitude advantages to radio communication became clear when the sharp, nearly static-free voice of General Raul Francisco Payon came through the speaker. “Well, my friend, I hear you are in a messy situation up north of us.”
“Not so’s you’d notice, Raul,” Ben stated calmly. “The usual run of things when dealing with Hoffman and his blackshirts. How are you situated?”
A sigh, colorless over the scrambler, preceded Payon’s reply. “We were betrayed at Chapultepec by the politicians. They welcomed these Nazi cabrdnes like liberators. I sometimes suspect that all politicians are corrupt and seek only to exercise absolute power over everyone else. I also believe that at least half of our crop in Mexico are secret Nazis. But I wander. We were forced to withdraw to the central highland. There we fought a few indecisive battles and again we retreated northward. We are now on a line between Parral and Ciudad Camargo.”
“Where does that put you in relation to Rasbach’s dispositions?” Ben asked next.
General Payon chuckled. “We hold the high ground, once they get out of the mountains. I have discovered that the bandidos are at least loyal Mexicans. The outlaws who used to rob our trains are now fighting guerrilla actions against Rasbach, who is bogged down in the steep passes around Torreon.”
“How are you and they supplied?”
“We have air cover and supply drops from Ciudad Chihuahua some sixty kilometers north of us.”
“Can you give me a time frame?”
“A week. A few days. Hours, if Rausbach’s men can clear the boulders and refuse from the passes. He has
254 some good engineers with his army. They are working in spite of the snipers and bandit raids.”
“How long can your, ah, guerrillas hold out?”
“With better supply arrangements, indefinitely. Alas, Ben, our planes are few and small. If only we had the big cargo craft the Rebels use.”
“I understand, amigo. But considering the distance involved and the refueling problem, it’s out of the question. Hang in there, we’ll be joining you within the week.”
“I look forward to it, my friend, Ben. Adios.”
From outside, the rumble of armor, moving fast and with a purpose, alerted the commanders of a new development. “Let’s take a look,” Ben suggested as he put up the mike.
Nazi tanks had rolled out of Santa Rosa and lined up for a classic desert tank battle. Rebel MBTs raced to oppose them. The first of the big guns let go with long lances of muzzle flame and pearly smoke rings. Crews with ERIX missiles hurried to get into position to support the Rebel armor. With all attention centered on the developing battle, it came as a surprise to hear the rattle of small arms and yells of alarm from the rear of the Rebel positions.
Ben Raines directed his attention that way and saw a wave of white-robed people rushing the Rebel rear. In the center, beard and hair waving in the air, came Brother Armageddon, urging on his demented followers.