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The War for Iron: Element of Civilization Deluxe Boxed Set
The War for Iron: Element of Civilization Deluxe Boxed Set
The War for Iron: Element of Civilization Deluxe Boxed Set
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The War for Iron: Element of Civilization Deluxe Boxed Set

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Features 9 colour illustrations from the Iron series:

Mobile Command Station (MCS) Mark 6
SU 401 Fighter
X.77 Laser Pistol
Ischian Clover Leaf Laser Rifle
Ischian Light Cruiser
Battleship John F. Kennedy
Ischian Battleship Lu-kshîa
LC5150 "Bullpup" Laser Carbine


Please note: these images may not display correctly on all devices. Links to online high res. images are provided.

Don't miss the opportunity to download Running, prequel to the Iron series, FREE on Google Play.

Get Three Thrillers Free (including Too Bright the Sun) > tiny.cc/lazloferran

Too Bright the Sun
A man hell-bent on revenge for the death of his friend, in battle!

Seeking revenge for the death of a friend ten long years ago, Major Jake Nanden has pursued his own personal demons with an almost religious fervour through life and through battle.

He is a soldier so highly decorated for bravery that his fame reaches far beyond the desolate Jupiter moon, Io, where his battalion is stationed. His victories in the Jupiter Wars are hollow though, for he is a man scared of his own soul.

His life seems to be a trap from which he cannot escape. His is the Replicant Company, and replicants, or clones, are despised by all.

Unknown Place, Unknown Universe
Three rookie space cadets crash on an unknown planet with aliens hot on their tail!

While a dissident alien scientist struggles to control time, he discovers that his wife will betray him. His favourite student discovers a way to see into the past but find himself surrounded by enemies in a complex, fragmenting culture.

Meanwhile, Stone, douchebag son of Iron Cross winner Jake Nanden, a nerd and a feminist from the Space Fleet Academy crash-land on an unknown planet after falling through a worm-hole in this gripping and visionary science fiction thriller.

Called Anubians by humans, the jackal-headed aliens are now revealed as Ischians but they are hiding something on this unknown planet in an unknown universe.

Stone's world is shattered while he tries to escape and warn Earth of danger.

Worlds Like Dust
Domes now cover Earth's big cities and soon a force field will trap Earth inside!

The jackal-headed Ischians are here! When General Jake Nanden retired from the USAC, he could never have guessed that his greatest battle was still to come.

Since then, he has joined a spiritual cult called the Blue Path, trying to establish communication with a few peaceful Ischians.

But now his world has been torn apart; his wife and youngest son have been killed, probably his eldest too and the Los Angeles and Washington citizens sweat it out under inescapable alien domes.

His son, Stone, warned him of the invasion and he joined up with Gary Enquine to form a rudimentary resistance network.

Now, they must find a way to rise up and defeat the conquerors of Earth! Nanden must escape and unite the remaining human and clone forces, scattered across the Solar System.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherLazlo Ferran
Release dateOct 10, 2015
ISBN9788892505155
The War for Iron: Element of Civilization Deluxe Boxed Set
Author

Lazlo Ferran

Lazlo Ferran: Exploring the Landscapes of Truth.Educated near Oxford, during English author Lazlo Ferran’s extraordinary life, he has been an aeronautical engineering student, dispatch rider, graphic designer, full-time busker, guitarist and singer, recording two albums. Having grown up in rural Buckinghamshire Lazlo says:“The beautiful Chiltern Hills offered the ideal playground for a child’s mind, in contrast to the ultra-strict education system of Bucks.”Brought up as a Buddhist, he has travelled widely, surviving a student uprising in Athens and living for a while in Cairo, just after Sadat’s assassination. Later, he spent some time in Central Asia and was only a few blocks away from gunfire during an attempt to storm the government buildings of Bishkek in 2006. He has a keen interest in theologies and philosophies of the Far East, Middle East, Asia and Eastern Europe.After a long and successful career within the science industry, Lazlo Ferran left to concentrate on writing, to continue exploring the landscapes of truth.

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    The War for Iron - Lazlo Ferran

    Lorna.

    Prologue

    It’s been over ten years since Gary Enquine sent my friend Przeltski to a certain death. Not one day has gone by without the memories of that battle prowling my mind like a waking nightmare. Many times I have woken in a cold-sweat thinking about it. I will not rest, cannot rest, until Gary Enquine has been brought to justice and been forced to pay for his cowardice. Ten years; it’s a long time but I can be patient. Personal journal entry of Jake Nanden for 2101, Feb 3. 1.

    ***

    Chapter One

    The little voice asked, after peering out of another portal at an earlier moment in his life, Is it possible to time travel for I perceive that I can?

    Only after you leave this life, a voice, high and mighty, said.

    Then the little voice changed its tone for it had grown angry. But that’s not fair! For, the one thing I wish I can’t have.

    Until you leave this life, the high voice said.

    Yes.

    Then now you can see advantages to moving beyond this life you have.

    And the little voice perceived that all his previous angers, about matters of the flesh and daily living were not proper angers. A proper anger is the anger that desirable things lay beyond the portal of death. And so from that moment on his struggles to survive, to fight against the current, seemed improper to him and yet he could not help himself.

    Two of the Ionian Militia sat on top of Przeltski, ripping his helmet off while another aimed his laser at his eyes. In the vacuum of Io’s atmosphere, Przeltski mouthed the words, ‘save me’ but it was too late. I knew I couldn’t and had to try and save myself. I turned to get away but I could still see his eyes half closing, then looking up and his mouth rapidly shaping the words of the ‘Hail Mary.’ The IM would turn their lasers down to the lowest setting and first shoot out the eyes, then take off the arms and, if he was lucky, then they would aim for his heart. If he wasn’t lucky, the dismemberment could go on and on for as long as they wanted. I wanted to look away but I couldn’t. I struggled and struggled and then I woke and knew it had been the nightmare.

    An eye opened. It was mine. The blurry horizon crystallised into the edge of the pillow as I realised where I was; Io. Being a commander has its perks, one being your own private cabin, but it was small and cramped. I closed my eye, reached up for the ledge of the sill above me and hauled myself out of bed. Feeling for the sanicube-handle opposite the bed, I released the cube from its folded position against the wall, selected ‘L’ and stepped in but then had to open my eyes to use it without spilling. A tube dispensed a sterilising solution onto my hands and the stream of water became hot air to dry them. Yawning enough for tears to clear my eyes, I took one step over to the n-gen, sitting on the white work surface above the bed. I selected ‘Fried,’ then ‘Coffee, black’ and clicked on the com centre. I had disabled the voice but I could see the display said, 2101, Feb 4. 2 – 06.30 I. 2 messages. Download?

    I waited for the ‘ding’ that would tell me my breakfast was ready. I knew I had just had another weird dream but I couldn’t quite remember it now. I tried. The n-gen ‘dinged’ and I opened the white door to reveal the plate of hot, fried food and a mug of black coffee. I looked at the food dubiously and lifted the dark blue mug to my lips. The caffeine rush to my head felt good. Putting my left hand on my hip, I arched my back and then looked down at the pallid skin stretched over my late-twenties belly. ‘Bigger,’ I thought. ‘But only slightly.’ I picked up the plate of fried; bacon, eggs, potatoes, beans, fried-bread and mushrooms, all preselected as my personal preferences and lifted some mushrooms and potatoes to my mouth with the forkette. My buds tested the taste; it had that slight hint of mint or something metallic about it. Damn, I said out loud. For a few days now, breakfast had tasted like this and I wasn’t sure if it was a fault with the n-gen or this batch of plasma. My n-gen was civvy and another one of the perks allowed to commanders; I’d had it for nearly five years and it had been everywhere with me. Normally they didn’t last longer than three years.

    Balancing the plate in my left hand, I picked up the remote, pressed ‘Monitor,’ chose ‘North elevation,’ then ‘R’ for recording and ‘Dec 9, 11.00,’ morning on the day we had arrived, a date I chose out of habit. I pointed the remote at the panel, shaped like a window, on the narrow wall behind the pillow of the bed and it filled with the image of the ground to the north of the command-post. Just like a window, you could even see ‘around’ the window frame, if you wished to put your head that close to it. Yellow and reddish sulphur stretched away between the rocky silicates to a jagged horizon, a few hundred yards above the level of the command-post and perhaps two miles away. In places, the silicate rock looked white and in others a beautiful emerald green. If it hadn’t been for the bright purplish glow of the morning aurora above, I could have believed I was in the Mojave Desert on Earth, a memory I had of visiting my grandparents once. Taking bigger mouthfuls, with my nostrils closed to avoid the nasty after-taste, I downed the breakfast and alternated my gaze between the landscape on the wall and the contents of the room. I took in the half-finished bottle of vodka next to the empty glass on the narrow table across the gang-way from my bed. I saw the open notepad next to it with a few scrawled lines at the top of a new page. Writing pulp crime-novels was my weakness or my hobby, depending on one’s generosity.

    I had finished the fried so I continued sipping black coffee and put on the Trion head-band, activating it by flicking a tiny black switch next to my left temple.

    Record, I said. Most company commanders, at least in USAC, were obliged to record their activities for viewing by paid subscribers; part of a deal USAC had made with the Amtel branch of RA. Most hated doing it but at least you could choose what to record and I never gave the leaches anything of real interest. The recording had been made by a cam in the com so a leach couldn’t see anything on my heads-up.

    Download, I said. A red light flickered once on the com. The first of two messages scrolled no the heads-up display in front of my left eye:

    Contact: Jena Ω "Hi Jake. I know you’re trying to make me jealous by not replying to my last messages but then again you could just be under attack and I’m supposed to be the rational woman so I can deal with that. I might just be too busy this week to record anything for you too. My boss wants me to prepare a legal-briefing for our merger with a company which has connections with Riccard-Amtel! Can you believe it? Oh I know we try not to bring business into our relationship but I couldn’t help myself. The consequences could be so far-reaching. Promotion, relocation. Who knows? Umm. In answer to your question last time; okay I’ve held out for quite a while haven’t I but, yes, women do feel that sometimes. I suppose... Tell me more about what you do... Not during the day (with the boyz and grrls) but after. Are you still writing? Chloe misses u too. xx" End.

    Contact: Mary Hi darling. Mum here. How’s the (censored) winter? I know this will probably be censored but I don’t care. There’s lots to tell you but I'll keep it short for now. I’m just off to a local council meeting and later there's an art exhibition; Raccauld, which Justine and I are going to. Actually I’m meeting her for coffee at lunchtime. I think she wants to do some shopping. You know what she’s like; you can’t stop her once hubby has been paid. The Gazette had a nice photo of you the other day, which I have stuck in the photo album. You’re a hero around here. The young boys talk of nothing else but the Iron Cross; I hear them when we go for picnics by the river. Oh yes and Robert O’Flannery has been elected Mayor again and has approved redevelopment of the area by the river. Office block I believe. Such a shame. One thing I was going to mention. A peculiar thing happened the other day...

    I heard a loud banging on the cabin-door which made me flinch. Stop record, I said and ignored the rest of the message in the heads-up. I took two steps to the door and opened it. Sergeant Stone’s chiseled face, topped with a brown flat-top and with shaving foam around its cheeks, confronted me. He stood, dressed only from the waist down.

    Yes Sergeant? I tried to sound patient.

    Sir. Seismic activity detected 700 yards east of perimeter. About 100 feet down.

    Okay. Pick four men and get packed. I’ll be with you in five.

    Sir? We can investigate if you want. You don’t need to come.

    No but I want to come. I need the exercise.

    Sir. He didn’t salute. I liked to be informal with my troops most of the time in combat situations, especially the officers and Stone in particular, who had been with me a long time.

    ***

    Lieutenant Osei, you have the comm.

    We were in the port airlock five minutes later, myself unshaven, all in full-combat gear and Sergeant Stone handed me a Trion X.50. As the red light moved to ‘Gravity-local,’ we all grabbed the hand rails. Gravity on Io was about one fifth of that on Earth or about the same as the Moon and without the S-Grav, the rocking motion of the lift as it took us down to the surface would throw us about. The hatch opened and I led the team out into the moonlit night. I could feel the crunch of sulphur and silicates under my boots but all I could only hear my breath and the steady beep, every two seconds of the uplink indicator. We used a two-step canter to move over the terrain in a defensive pattern of two columns of three, ten feet apart. That was enough separation to give covering fire in all directions without hitting each other if needed. We were looking for any sign of a drill rig at the indicated distance of 700 yards. The Ionian Militia normally didn’t have the resources for automated rigs so there would be two or three poor bastards manning it, armed with A.M. 27s most probably. They would be targeting our S-Grav singularity, 1000 feet below the MCS – a known Mob. Command Station weakness. Our MCS had been fitted with, as standard, S-Grav Type 4; a lot more stable than the Type 3. Its governor was accurate to 14-10 Volts, which it had to be to keep the singularity weak enough to be safe but strong enough to work effectively.

    ***

    Database Download on the Ionian Militia: The Ionian Militia (IM) was formed by miners on Io, moon of Jupiter on June 1 2089. Their living conditions were already touch but falling iron prices led to smaller pay-rises and longer hours. They went on strike and in the long summer of 2080 Earth News bulletins were full of items about iron shortages and skirmishes between USAC troops and miners on IO. Led by Richard Ortega, the miners demanded some concessions, most prominent being that their families could live with them. This was granted but shortly after their families arrived, the miners were subjected to further pay-cuts and reductions in supply of essential equipment. From the Ionian Iron Miners Union was formed the Ionian Miner's Union, led by Ortega. This powerful union then began receiving equipment and other supplies directly from the Rebel Alliance on Earth, a move that was seen as highly provocative by the USAC forces, then in administrative control on Io and then attempted to block these supplies and suppress resistance using overpowering force. From the Ionian Miner's Union Ortega then formed the Ionian Militia, a small but highly trained and well-equipped force which operated using guerrilla tactics against USAC. The force gradually grew in size and strength until, ten years later, they are a significant force on Io, controlling one half of its surface. Only a few mines remained loyal to USAC, raising Solar System prices of iron and putting an end to the building of the great J stations. End Download.

    ***

    Micro-singularities were inherently unstable anyway, for safety reasons, but the governor itself created the only real vulnerability in the Type 4. Located, by necessity, in the column only a few inches from the singularity, it could be damaged by a small explosion. Then, there would be a good chance the singularity would run away and, if it grew rather than shrank, the result would be a massive explosion. Several MCSs had been knocked out this way.

    The militia squad wouldn’t be a problem but I wanted to be fully alert. Things still looked a bit blurry to me so I blinked a few times and squeezed my lids shut to lubricate my eyes. My stubble itched on the fabric inside the helmet.

    500 yards out, I raised my hand and we stopped. I pointed to the Sergeant and two of the corporals in their tan-coloured combat suits and motioned for them to move south of the target location which appeared to be behind a slight bluff. I motioned to the other two officers to follow me north. I felt sure Stone would spread his men out a little, standard procedure, and I did the same as we flanked the bluff. I thought I could see a faint plume of yellow dust rising, the usual tell-tale sign of a drill-rig, but, still very faint I couldn’t be sure of it. I crouched down and tapped the shoulder of the soldier in front of me. I pointed at the faint plume, he turned to face me and nodded. We tried not to kick up any dust ourselves when we rounded the shoulder of the bluff and the soldier in front held up his hand just before stopping. This was it. They were there. His gloved fingers counted down three, two, one and then he moved forward. He aimed his X.50 at something while I followed him, pointing mine in the same direction. When I emerged into the dip behind the bluff, I saw what I had expected; a low wall of sulphur-dirt around a square dugout, perhaps ten feet along each side, with a cover slung over it to collect the dust. One helmet peered through the gap, straight at us. I saw the red sighting beam from his A.M. 27 strike the helmet of the corporal and then the beam turned green as the plasma shot was fired. But he moved too slowly. The corporal had already jumped, done a one-eighty and come down with his X.50 blazing green. I fired too. The poor armour of the Ionian’s helmet couldn’t withstand the X.50 rounds. It split and little globules of red blood floated out from under the cover.

    The intercom crackled. It was Stone. Our man taken down sir. Going in for a look. That meant there had been another guard on the south-side and he had now been disabled. The rear guards stayed back while the leading four of us reached the entrance to the dugout, on its east-side. Stone poked his X.50 inside. He immediately backed out, saying:

    Two grubs.

    By now I could barely see the dugout entrance for yellow dust so we waited for the two miners to emerge from the cloud. They came out with their hands up and Stone made them turn through 360 degrees before making them sit up against a rock, a few yards east of the entrance. While Stone, recognisable by the over-sized dagger he usually wore, stood with his X.50 pointing at the two prisoners, one of his team dipped into the entrance to check all equipment had been switched off before placing a small charge.

    During daylight hours you could not normally see the faces of other men through the visors because the filters would reflect the sunlight but I could see the two faces of the Ionians. One looked full of hate but the other looked strangely sullen, scared even. I decided to question him.

    I tapped his wrist, where intercom units used to be, and drew 220 in the air with my finger, the standard Red Cross frequency. Of course he had to activate this inside the helmet verbally and might not choose to do so. I turned my frequency to 220 and waited patiently. After a minute or more, the intercom crackled and I heard a sullen, Yes.

    Greetings Ionian, I said jovially. It’s your lucky day. You are definitely going to live and you might retain all your limbs if you answer a few simple questions.

    Smith, Corporal, 00001, he said. His name, rank and serial number included the obligatory 00001. All Ionians used the same serial number. In effect, they had no serial numbers, which they felt confused USAC.

    I noticed out of the corner of my eye that the other Ionian glanced nervously at Smith, several times.

    Is he afraid this one will reveal something?

    Well Mr. Smith, Corporal Smith if you prefer ... I was digging and waited for a response.

    Smith will do.

    Mm. You don’t seem so attached to the Militia as your friend there. How long have you been mining?

    A few months, came the terse reply. The other Ionian winced.

    Uh-huh. Have you targeted a Type 4 before? The other Ionian looked surprised.

    I dunno. Maybe.

    "Maybe? It’s the latest type. What sort of charge were you planning to use?"

    What do you mean? I don’t have to answer these questions. Look, if you want to get it over and done with that’s fine by me.

    What charge? I made it sound angry and pointed my X.50 at his upper right arm.

    Hey! Wait. I dunno. Four pounds, maybe. We hadn’t decided.

    Oh. I don’t think so. Okay sonny. So I know you are not a miner so that raises a serious question. What are you doing here?

    Interesting. Is he an observer? A news reporter? Not sure.

    No. Listen. I am just a miner. Okay, so I have only been doing it a week. This is my first time. Training courses are hard to come by these days. He laughed.

    "An ironic sense of humour... I like it! Shows intelligence. Maybe too much intelligence for a grub."

    My men were gathered around now, tuned to 220, listening in. I could hear their breathing and their smirks from time to time.

    I tapped the shoulder of the one nearest to me. Stay on the proper frequency, corporal.

    He’s undercover sir, one of the other corporals said. I recognised the voice; Opinnskey. A bit of a joker by all accounts but clever.

    Undercover Opinnskey? Why do you say that?

    Look at those arms sir. He hasn’t ever lifted an A.M. in his life. Daddy is probably a high-up, I reckon. He squeezed Smith’s scrawny arms and the others laughed. The other Ionian looked very scared now.

    Maybe he is. Maybe he is. Maybe his daddy is high up in the army. I thought I saw just the slightest flicker of his eyelid through the visor. Did you want to see some active service? Blow up an MCS to impress a girl? I bet that would get you a few nights in bed with that pretty girl. He looked uncomfortable.

    Okay Stone. Take care of the other one.

    Stone turned the dial on his X.50 to minimum ballistic charge and pulled back on the trigger. He aimed the red bead at the Ionian’s right shin. He pulled back further on the trigger and a green shot of plasma pierced the Ionians shin. The shot left a neat black hole for a second which quickly ejected red bubbles before the suit sealed itself. I could see the Ionian was screaming but we couldn’t hear him. Stone repeated the shot on the other shin and then on both forearms. We couldn’t take prisoners and the Ionians wouldn’t take prisoners. But we didn’t want to kill so we just disabled the soldiers. Most of them would never see active service again so we were doing them a favour really. Their medics would pick them up quite quickly once we had broadcast the standard Red Cross distress signal for them. Of course, some of the other USAC companies were less lenient.

    I could see Smith grimace in anticipation of the pain that would surely come. Perhaps he thought he could get a lighter punishment.

    Well? I asked.

    Well, what? he said.

    What's the explanation for you being here?

    I've told you everything. Just get it over with.

    I crouched down and looked into his eyes. I could see a different kind of fear there now. It wasn’t fear for his physical safety.

    Take the other one away Stone.

    I gestured for the rest of our men to go with him and I waited while the writhing Ionian was dragged around the corner of the bluff.

    I spoke to Smith. Okay now we are alone. Anything you tell me will have been extracted under duress. You won’t have been responsible. I used a dose of SPA on you okay? Now all I want do know is; who's your father?

    Okay. I will tell you something, something big but you gotta give me something. Leave my arms okay. I heard some guys lose the use of their fingers. I need them, you know?

    Okay. I tell you what. I will just lightly graze one arm but I better hit the other one or people will be suspicious. Don’t worry. I know just where to hit it. I can reduce the pain too. Deal? I looked at him. Deal, I repeated. He already looked like he regretted it.

    Shit. Okay. My father is Anatolian Smith.

    And who is he?

    You haven’t heard of him? He seemed astonished. He is the General, effectively, of the Ionian Militia for the whole of the northern hemisphere of Io. Nothing happens up here without his say-so

    This was a supreme stroke of luck and I had to force myself to breathe deeply.

    Trying to sound calm, I asked, So what is it you were gonna to tell me?

    You wanna know something big? I’ll tell you. There is an offensive planned. We have twelve new SU 401s and they’re gonna to hit your mines at Ruwa Patera. Soon. I think maybe next month.

    SU 401s?

    You didn’t know that did you?

    Twelve? When did you say? In March?

    As far as I know.

    How? What weapons? Will there be ground troops? What is the strategic objective in all this?

    I don’t know all that. I told you what I know.

    Okay. I am going to give you a little ‘general.’ I’ll put it in your feed now. Relax. I took a small plastic container out of my Medi-pouch and took off the lid. I screwed the end to the connector of the emergency intake on his respiratory unit and pressed the button to release the general anaesthetic into his system.

    I waited for a minute. Then I stood up, aimed my X.50 at his shin and fired a shot through his tibia. A neat black hole filled with little red bubbles which drifted out into the thin Ionian atmosphere. Then a silver liquid, the sealant, trickled into the hole before it finally sealed the suit, leaving just a few red and silver bubbles floating away.

    He moaned but he didn’t scream.

    Are you right-handed? I asked.

    After a moment he answered, Yes, through clenched teeth.

    I fired a shot through his left forearm and then, as I had said I would, I grazed his right arm with the final shot. I saw a lot more blood so I called Stone over and told him:

    Get one of the men to put a tourniquet on him.

    I stood up.

    Well. This is a turn-up. At last a real piece of luck. A chance for real glory. With this I get promoted another rank, maybe two, and then we will see.

    A cold thrill ran through my spine but, for fear of it reaching my finger tips and making me dance around like a fool, I confined it to quarters.

    After dragging the two casualties a safe distance away, we detonated the charge and started back for base. I saw some commotion off to my right; it looked as if two of the officers were arguing on a private link, one of them stamping his foot and shaking his X.50 but I ignored them.

    I wondered what the landscape would look like with trees or even some grass. Riccard was rumoured to be working on a strain of grass that could grow in these conditions. For a moment I fancied myself as the governor of Io, with plans to geo-form it in some way but I caught myself. My life’s path had been decided for me a long time ago and creativity wasn’t a big part of it.

    The rest of my waking hours that day were spent communicating with USAC Command, first through my superior officer, Lieutenant Colonel Roanald, and then with Central Intel. Of course at first they were all skeptical about the provenance of my information but they had to admit it was brilliant, if thought up on the spur of the moment. They confirmed the identity and rank of Anatolian Smith. Finally, around 20.00 hours, a decision had been taken. I would lead a task force of three companies in a covert mission to prevent the taking of Ruwa Patera, close to Anderstown, capital of the USAC territories on Io. Covert because it was hoped we could surgically remove much of the cream of the Ionian Militia in this one operation if they weren’t expecting us.

    ***

    As I left the mess for my cabin, with a grin on my face, some of the officers were still arguing over something but again I ignored them. Closing my door, I put the ruby ring, a present from Jena, on my second finger on my left hand and yawned before putting on the headband and saying, Download. I skipped the message from Jena but played the entire message from my mother:

    "A peculiar thing happened the other day. I was in the main terminal, collecting your cousin, when this army type, tall, dark-haired and good-looking, tapped me on the shoulder and asked for directions to Frisco South. Well, it is really obvious to anybody with a modicum of intelligence, it's right there on the board, so I was suspicious. I thought, forgive your old mother for being vain, but I thought that maybe he was chatting me up so I humoured him. We chatted for a few minutes actually. He asked me what it was like living on J5 and then he asked if I knew any other army types. I thought perhaps I should say that I didn’t know any at all but he seemed very charming so I mentioned you. He asked about you and I really felt quite uncomfortable at this point. He seemed far too interested in you so I cut it short. He was polite enough and I didn’t think too much of it. The funny thing was that he was unshaven and looked as if he had been sitting there for days. He had shiny glasses on so I couldn’t see his eyes but there seemed to be something familiar about him. I couldn’t place him though. Perhaps I have seen him in a paper or something. Anyway, I wouldn’t have thought any more about it but two days later, I could swear I saw him again loitering on a street corner while I was doing the shopping. I could be wrong. Do take care. Love Mum x"

    I lay on the bed and closed my eyes.

    ***

    The Ionian day is 42.5 hours so the next time I woke, it was still the same Ionian ‘day.’ We marked time in Earth hours and dates followed those of Earth but we divided the Ionian ‘day’ into two 21.25 hour ‘working’ days, too short for the human clock to endure for long periods. This time, when I awoke, it would have been dusk outside if I had put the monitor on and left it on ‘Real Time.’ Final arrangements had to be made with Stone before I left for the USAC Station 5, in orbit around Jupiter and not far from the orbit of Io. There, I had been invited by Roanald to take part in the planning meeting for the operation at Ruwa.

    Stone. I am leaving for S.5 within the hour. I want you to prepare the MCS for exit tomorrow morning. Something has come up and I am not sure we will leave tomorrow but best be ready.

    Yes sir! He swiped a salute at me, grinning. I guessed he had some idea it had something to do with the Intel from Smith.

    The shuttle had been prepared for me and, as the rockets fired, lifting the shuttle against Io’s weak gravity, I looked down at the grey MCS, settled on the only plateau in a flat sea of sulphur, which stretched for hundreds of miles. I looked at Jupiter, orange bands around a creamy sphere filling half of the view from the port with my face pressed close, and looked for S.5 but I couldn’t make it out from this distance.

    As the little craft drew away from the moon, I became aware of the Io Flux Tube, a glowing torus of green, blue and orange light wrapped around the orbit of Io. A field of highly charged particles, it made radio-silence a necessity while escaping the little moons weak atmosphere.

    After four hours strapped into the tight space of the shuttle, I saw the lights of Station 5, twinkling in the night.

    Major. What is your opinion? asked a bald colonel with a salt-and-pepper moustache, on the opposite side of the large black granite table in the lavish Ops Room. The convention seemed to be to stand up when speaking, more, I felt, to assert one’s self in this room of giant egos than for auditory reasons so I stood up to speak:

    Sir. There is a way to do this. It’s not conventional and may take a little longer to get into position but I think it can work.

    Well? What is it?

    "We drive sir. The MCS has four backup diesels which are hardly ever used. We only use them for very short distances or when the fusion reactor is broken down. In fact, many MCSs never use any apart from one, which is generally used for some life support systems. If we drive to Ruwa, then the IM won’t pick us up on the radar, at least I don’t think they will. They are not used to seeing anything moving across the salt-flats, as we call them. If we use the fusion reactors, we cannot get into position without somebody, somewhere, noticing, as you rightly point out."

    How long will it take?

    Well. 1200 miles at roughly 10 miles per hour is 120 hours; five days sir.

    "Five days? Well rather you than me Major. Good luck with your men." He chuckled and I heard general laughter around the table.

    The MCS stood only about ten feet tall, even when the wheels were down and in motion and I didn’t think the Ionian Militia radar, patchy as it was, would pick us up. But now that we were moving, I was nervous about my strategy. A great cloud of sulphurous dust plumed above and behind us and I just hoped that some observant IM grub wouldn’t see it. What made things worse was that there would be two other such plumes and all three traveling on convergent headings.

    On the third day, the second Ionian day, the bald colonel’s words came back to haunt me. I was sitting, leaning forward in my mess seat straps next to the window and looking at the desiccated desert outside. I enjoyed these moments of calm. I often spent hours watching the surface of Io roll by, with the arc of Jupiter stretching from the horizon up to the seventy degree mark. Stone’s face appeared next to mine. I could smell his breath and feel it on my cheek.

    Sir?

    Yes. What is it Sergeant?

    "What in Hell are we doing sir? Any more of this fuckin’ desert and the men will mutiny. On and on it goes and why? Does any other company ever, I mean ever use the diesels for motive power? Nope. For five days? Nope. So why are we the gullible idiots who are letting you do this to us?"

    Sorry Sergeant. It’s all part of my cunning plan.

    Cunning? Cunning? I could make a dirty joke using that word that might be closer to the truth. Sir!

    I laughed. Go and sit down. Just relax.

    I stared out at the sea of sulphur, totally flat and featureless, save for the occasional cracks, some of which were large enough for us to have to drive around. If you stared at it long enough, you started to feel that you were underwater, or floating in yellow and rust-coloured clouds.

    Just after the Ionian noon on day five, we were finally in position on the flanks of the great volcanic mountain of Ruwa Patera, inactive for many years. As the lead MCS, we were placed only about 400 yards from the main mine entrance and slightly above it, next to the track. I hadn’t seen the other two MCSs which were now under my command, each with a small company of 50 men inside but we had been in radio contact all day and now all three were in position, spaced evenly around the flanks of Ruwa.

    Okay Sergeant Stone. Let’s dig in. Disengage the PODs.

    Yes sir.

    I felt the fusion drive building to full power and then the teeth-loosening vibration began as the MCS started digging itself down into the sulphur so that only the top few inches would be left visible. Although the grunts hated it, the manoeuvre would only last a few hours and activating the S-grav immediately afterwards was always a relief that compensated for the discomfort. The vibration’s amplitude, less than half an inch, only shook the MCS severe enough to tip cups off the tables. We still found it possible to work in the MCS. Indeed, working was necessary because, often at this point in a mission, we would be vulnerable and need to secure the perimeter using radar, deployed squads and covering fire. The eight tracks; four in a row on each side of the vehicle, were now turned through 90 degrees, using their variable teeth to cut through the sulphur and shift it to the side of the MCS. From there, compressed air jets forced it to the surface and out into defensive banks. Blue U.V. cabin lights came on as the sulphur rose over the windows.

    Our MCS wasn’t the very latest type but only a year old. It looked like a long, low tank without a main turret or perhaps a heavily-armoured, single-storey military building on tracks, 126 feet by 64 feet. There were turrets at all four corners and a row of small windows either side of the port turret, one of two, each half way along each of the long sides. The two Protective Ordinance Deploys, PODs, engaged half way along each long side and could be detached and deployed with their nuc-lasers to protect the MCS. Called fondly ‘decoys’ by the men, their crews of ten had one of the most dangerous jobs in the USAC Army so the role rotated among the crew of thirty on the MCS. The decoys were also useful to provide extra power to get the MCS out of sticky situations, or when stuck in difficult terrain. They were able to operate as tractors or simply contribute their own traction. The skin of the vehicles were coated in an electrolytically-controlled film which could take on just about any colour or pattern. On Io it, the colour would almost always yellow. Of course, when fully submerged, all you would see from above would be a few unusually shaped boulders.

    Deploying S-grav, came a voice over the speaker in the mess finally. I heard a mighty roar of approval from the men.

    All the hammocks and fold-aways were stowed and an impromptu game of football ensued. I kicked the ball around myself for a while before helping Stone break out the four crates of beer we had smuggled on board after the last shore-leave.

    So what’s the plan Cap? asked Stone pulling the tab on a can of Viper X, releasing a spurt of gas.

    Well, the main briefing will be tomorrow morning, early, and we have a few days to hang around but basically; ambush. Ambush the Ionians.

    Yeah? Cool. Why here though. I mean why this mine?

    You’ll find out...

    Two of the officers had been having a heated discussion in a corner of the mess and now one of them stood up and prodded the other in the chest. They both shouted and the commotion caught my attention.

    Stone. Isn’t that the two who were arguing the night before we left?

    Yes sir. I think so.

    I walked over to them, holding my hand up to stop the football. By this time, one of the Corporals had grabbed the other’s wrists. DeTunne, Walsh, what’s this about? Walsh looked angriest so I asked him again.

    Nothing sir. Sorry sir.

    DeTunne?

    Walsh has been griping since that little raid on the grubs the day before we left. His X.50 jammed and he blames it on poor equipment but I told him he should have checked his weapon before we left.

    I could have been killed sir! Walsh said. "A grub guard pointed his piece directly at my face; just luck that DeTunne covered me. It’s shit equipment! Same as usual. We shouldn’t have to check everything all the time."

    He knew I hadn’t checked my X.50 before we left, the one handed to me just before we entered the airlock, but he wouldn’t dare say it. Normally I would have cut this conversation short but the looks on the faces of men, now surrounding us, told me that he wasn’t the only one to feel this way. I sat on the arm of a foldaway.

    Well it’s best to get this out in the open and for once we have time. I pulled the rings on two more cans of Viper and handed them to Walsh and DeTunne. Let’s hear it.

    "Well sir. When I joined USAC I thought I was joining the best. I thought we that we had the best men and we would have the best equipment. Now I see that we do have the best men but we do not have the best equipment. Constantly, we’re being let down by stuff that doesn’t work or is just badly made. I mean my old man’s dad used to talk about cars being made on Friday afternoon, having loads of faults. Some of our gear is like that. I mean look at this thing! He pointed to the ceiling. There isn’t one civilian transport on this moon that uses diesels. Nothing uses diesels any more. Everybody knows solar fusion is better; smoother, quieter and more efficient. But no. The army still uses diesels. Man, that technology is like the Stone Age. I mean, the only innovation I can remember is that we use Diesel’o now and that’s a laugh! Diesel’o. You can’t buy it anywhere, even on the black market. Only USAC use it and that’s only because Riccard-Amtel make it. So this army is owned by Riccard-Amtel." Feeling he had scored a point, he lifted the Viper to his mouth and took a long swig.

    He’s got a point sir, Opinnskey said. Why are we even here? Another cruddy mission like the last one. We spent fifteen weeks holed-up on the side of that rock just waiting for any IM traffic from the mines. Why the hell would they bother? There’s nothing there! All we were doing was watching no-man’s land. Border guards. That’s all we were but that’s just cos we are R-Company. There was general laughter from the men. Our name was K-Company but we were known colloquially as R-Company.

    Ah, now you’re talking! DeTunne said. "I agree that all we are is border guards. We get all the shit jobs, and I hope this job’s gonna be better but I don’t agree about equipment and I don’t agree about what you say about USAC."

    Republican! shouted one of the other officers.

    DeTunne swung to face him. "No! Yeah I know that USAC is short of cash. Every government’s short of cash these days but I don’t think we’re owned by RA."

    There were a lot of shouts from the grunts and officers and the word ‘Diesel’o’ from somebody; a private.

    Speak up! I said to him.

    Well everybody knows the oil barons were desperate for one last fix so they created Diesel’o.

    Yeah and we’re the only buggers who use it! added Walsh.

    Everyone grew silent.

    There are more Iron Crosses in K-Company than any other company on Io, DeTunne said quietly, his head down, as if reading from a book. His long nose suddenly looked noble to me.

    Yeah. Another invention by Riccard-Amtel, spat the grunt who had mentioned the oil barons.

    No way stoopid, the grunt next to him said.

    Yeah. You moron, added DeTunne, with a flourish of his mech hand. "You think I lost this for RA? The Iron Cross goes way back. Second World War I think. Germany?" He looked at me for confirmation.

    Further back I believe, Lieutenant Khan said, with precise, clipped diction.

    Napoleonic Wars I think, and Prussia originally, not Germany, I added. It was made more famous by Germany though in the First and Second World Wars. It faded from use after that but you have a point, Emphill, isn’t it? It was re-popularised at the beginning of the Ionian Wars. I think they needed something with more gravity, if you'll excuse the poor joke, than the Medal of Honor; something that sounded tougher and the core of Io is Iron so it seemed appropriate. Iron medal for iron men on an iron moon. At least that’s my interpretation. And don’t worry, some of you may well win one in the next few weeks.

    There were lopsided smiles from some of the men at my rousing speech. They had seen many of my press-interviews and didn’t buy the character I portrayed for the public: super-tough soldier with few ambitions but to win the Iron Cross with all its embellishments.

    The Major has won the Iron Cross five times, all on Io, added Osei irrelevantly.

    Yes. Ten years, since I was a grunt, I said. It’s been a long ten years. Okay. Five-a-side soccer match with the winning side getting a bottle of vodka I happen to have stashed away.

    I made my excuses soon after and retired to my cabin.

    Sitting at the desk, I took up the pen and stared at the last line of my novel; ‘Dusty picked up the scrap of paper and looked at the address scrawled in a neat, feminine hand.’ I had only recently settled on the name Dusty. I had tried Rusty but decided it sounded too immediate. I thought Dusty sounded better for a private eye who specialised in cold cases but I still felt unsure. I wrote; ‘The faint smell of a Turkish cigarette, held between perfumed lips hung in the …’ and then threw down the pen. I just wasn’t in the mood.

    I glanced at my left hand. It shook. I tried to stop it and then looked at my right; steady as a rock. I laughed out loud for a moment and then felt the coolness of a single tear, rolling down my cheek.

    I sat there for some time, thinking, trying to master my fear, before taking a shower and lying flat on the bed. I closed my eyes and, as I drifted off, a powerful memory came to me.

    My dad was taking me out of the dome on his hoverbike to watch a sunset on Mars, soon after a big dust storm. Of course, you could see sunsets from the dome but the U.V. protection took out most of the colour and I had nagged him for weeks to take me outside to see one. In my little hand-made spacesuit, I clung to his waist. My heart thumping in my ears as we covered a few miles across the ochre desert. The hoverbike skittered easily around the few rocks we saw and I laughed inside my helmet. I knew I was a lucky kid. No other kid had a dad rich enough to have a child-sized spacesuit made. I loved him so much I wanted to squeeze him but my arms weren’t strong enough. I wanted the trip to go on forever but eventually my dad stopped the bike and it sunk silently to the ground. He lifted me off and I turned to look for the dome but I couldn’t see it any more. This would be the first time I had been out of site of the dome and it felt strange. I felt a moment of fear but then my dad’s hand on my shoulder made me turn and look up at his helmet. I couldn’t see his face, only the reflection of the lowering sun in the visor. It was like a burning disk of white. He took my hand and we climbed together to the top of a steep bank. There we waited. When the Sun was almost touching the horizon, he said:

    Now Jake! Lift up your filter.

    With difficulty, because my fingers were so small, I lifted the outer U.V. filter and gasped. The white disk of the sun almost burned a hole in my head, its white so intense it seemed almost blue. The blue became a corona as my eyes quickly looked up and away from it. The corona gradually faded into a riot of colour that filled the rest of my vision. The purples and oranges were deeper than those in a bowl of the freshest and most tangy grapes and peaches. For a moment I almost lost my balance and felt myself falling forward into a forever-sea of spectral light. We stood on the edge of time, until the Sun had completely disappeared below the horizon and then, eventually, my dad sighed and said:

    Let’s go.

    My briefing to the men had to be made early. In conclusion, I pointed the laser to the nearest warehouse indicated on the map, projected on the front wall of the mess and said:

    "Our nearest five tanks are hidden in this warehouse. The other ten are here, in this warehouse and in a third here, five in each. Now, we don’t know exactly what is going to happen but I can tell you personally that our Intel is much better this time. There will probably be twelve SU 401s, no more, and I would guess a few hundred IM grubs and grunts, no more; they cannot spare the troops and anyway any more would be too hard to conceal."

    I heard a quiet, Shit! from one of the grunts sitting at the back.

    Yes soldier? Your point?

    Sir. Did you say twelve SUs? We will be slaughtered! How come our force is so small?

    Good question. There are two points here. The first is that the USAC can’t spare any more troops, or armour either. The second, and most important for us, is that we know how the SUs are equipped and we will be concealed. Don’t worry. Now, my guess is that they won’t try the main entrance here, which is protected by our five tanks. They will try to tunnel down to the shallowest tunnel in the mine. Some of those old tunnels go all the way back across the slope to here. I pointed to a point nearly five miles closer to the IM front line. If they can get in here they have full access to the mine. But we will be listening for any seismic activity and I don’t need to remind you we have the very latest equipment. Concealment: you all are wondering what I have in mind here. Well the mine has been told to leave us a nice pile of slag near the entrance which we can use to cover the MCS. I know you will all want to volunteer to do that but don’t all rush at once. I could see a lot of the faces grinning back at me. "The slag, in case you didn’t know, is a bi-product of raw iron production and is strongly magnetic so the SU air-to-ground radar will miss us. Of course, it may pick up the PODs but they like to take risks. More jeers from the audience. Finally; two points; of course ours is the lead MCS and so we will be in overall control of the tanks. Their crews and commanders may well visit here at time for briefings and as usual, we offer a place for men to unwind on long missions. I don’t mind you fraternising, indeed I can’t stop you, but that doesn’t mean I want to hear about a lot of drug-induced comas while on duty. We will be on yellow alert from our zero hour, midnight tomorrow, and that means none of you do anything that stops you being ready for action at ten minutes notice. Understood?"

    I heard a discordant and disapproving chorus of Yes sir, from the men.

    Finally, I want all of you in your suits at all times from now. We don’t know when they are going to attack or how they are going to attack and there's no point taking risks. That’s all. Any questions?

    I heard an even louder chorus of disapproval at the last point but no questions.

    Dismissed. Two of the men sat down. "When I said, ‘suits now,’ I meant now." Irritably, they started pulling their suits from their lockers which were set into the side of the mess, over the officers’ cabins.

    Osei and Khan; I need to speak to you both privately in the Office. The ‘Office’ was actually the corridor, beside the washroom on the starboard side, which led to my own cabin. We used it for storage but there was no other possibility for privacy on the ship beside my own cabin. The two lieutenants lounged on crates while I addressed them.

    "In my briefing with Roanald, I found out some other things which, in my opinion, it’s useful for you to know; all strictly confidential of course and, in fact, for now, secret. What we know is that recently the Mine Director, Choi was his name, was sacked when it was found out he’d been handing over information about the mine to the IM. Now, unfortunately, this is particularly relevant in this mine because only recently they discovered a rich seam of iron ore right underneath Anderstown suburbs and have dug a tunnel to reach it. The IM know this now and they know if they can get into the mine from any of those points not too far from their own front-line, they can quickly get right under Anderstown and, from what I have heard, it’s no great task to get into some of the old sewers from there. What I haven’t told the men is that we have to stop the IM at all costs, even if it means destroying the mine. For that reason charges have been placed on the IM side of the mine, close to the main access shafts and also half way between the access shafts and Anderstown, in this new tunnel. It’s called Tunnel M and if this goes badly wrong and any one of us is left alive, it will be up to them to make sure these charges are blown. I’ll take you down there and show you them in more detail in the next twenty-four hours."

    There were nods from the two men.

    Osei, get ten men together and take one of the PODs over to the mine to pick up the slag. Then deploy the PODs in good defensive positions.

    ***

    Database Download on the Mobile Command Station (MCS) – Mark 6

    The MCS officer’s cabins were at the rear with the flight-deck sandwiched between the two shuttle bays. Behind the flight-deck and also between the shuttle bays was the reactor and behind this the mess where the private soldiers spent all day, sleeping in hammocks. The mess was to the left of the MCS with windows along one edge next to a row of benches, raised to cover one of the four backup diesels. On the other side of the mess was the wash-room for the grunts and a door to a short corridor to the commander’s cabin. This was in the right rear corner of the vehicle and the other officers had, or shared, smaller cabins next to this along the rear edge of the MCS. The beds in the smallest cabins covered a second backup diesel; the third and fourth being underneath the flight-deck. A complete description, along with a very detailed illustration, can be found in the Appendix.

    Mobile Command Station (MCS) – Mark 7

    Very similar to the Mark 6 but entrance was through a hatch in the centre of the front which led straight onto the flight-desk. The Mark 7 had the new anti-laser refracting armour which looked like so many polygonal scales on its skin. The pods were now grouped in pairs at the front and back, to provide protection in the event of high-speed impact, a move that many of us had called for, which gave it a bug-eyed look from the front and from the side it looked like a truncated centipede, squatted on the deck. From the gantry, its top surface was still a mass of pipes and vents but slightly less messy now with more armour plating covering it. My initial impressions of it on the testing flight had been good with the reservation that the cabins were all even smaller than the Mark 6 and that the extra armour plating had made it heavier and less manoeuvrable. End Download.

    ***

    We didn’t have to wait long for the attack. On the third day, night on Io, an operator picked up a single SU 401 on the radar, coming in high and fast. He didn’t wait to be shot at and probably took a few nice photos of empty ground around the mine.

    As Khan called out the intruder over the intercom, the men jumped into action. Plates and dice were dropped as men reached for their weapons but it turned out to be a false alarm.

    Only reconnaissance! Khan’s voice crackled through the speakers.

    Moans of frustration from the men filled the fetid air in the ship.

    Don’t get complaisant! I told them. They are coming... soon!

    I had been more accurate than I had expected.

    Thirty minutes later, we heard a sudden flash from somewhere outside and then the MCS shook.

    Khan’s voice, calm but urgent, announced the obvious, Incoming! and then the not so obvious, I think they’ve spotted us!

    Khan! What’s happening? I shouted when I reached the flight-deck hatch.

    In the red light, I could see Osei’s open mouth, saying something to me but another explosion drowned out his words.

    What? I yelled.

    Both Osei and Khan together shouted, MCS Bravo is hit!

    How?

    Dunno. Infra-red? They know where we are! Look

    I looked in the direction Khan, sitting in the driving seat, pointed. The radar screen showed seven blips, SU 401s, and smaller blips streaking from them towards all three positions of the MCSs.

    Somebody has ratted on us. But who...

    Coming at us! shouted Khan.

    This was it. My worst nightmare had come at last. I didn’t hesitate. I reached for the red Evac button and punched it. The Evac button bi-passed all other safety procedures so there could be no time to prepare. Instantly the hot air in the MCS started rushing out through the open hatch.

    Lids! I screamed pointlessly. Every man would have already taken a deep breath and be closing his visor. The escape hatch lay just inside the mess and I could already see men lunging up the ladder.

    Come on! I shouted to Osei and Khan but I already knew we would be too late. I waited for the stream of men to escape and as the seconds ticked by, each like an eternity, my heart beats grew louder and my breaths fewer.

    Crash! Everything went mad as the missile hit. My helmet hit the rim of the mess hatch and I couldn’t see. Instinct kicked in and I groped for something so that I could pull myself towards the ladder. Somebody grabbed my arms and then I saw Stone’s face, blurry but distinct, grinning at me.

    Hit the rear! came over my intercom. Within moments, I had clambered out and stood on the roof of the MCS. Multiple explosions lit the night sky with white flashes, which cooled to red and yellow, eerily silent.

    As I jumped up onto some slag to quickly survey the battlefield, I saw troops of IM snaking over the ridge of the volcano. Laser-fire streaked out towards some of the PODs near us.

    Laser-fire hit a lump of slag near Stone’s head and he dived for cover. The lump glowed, reddish black.

    Our position had been under a bluff just above the main approach track to the mine entrance. This sloped up from the south along the side of the volcano before turning ninety degrees into the mine entrance. Most of the terrain looked harsh and slag-strewn but the track offered a chance of escape.

    To the track, men. I said over the intercom calmly. Regroup near POD 5; half way between here and the mine entrance. Stone. Where is Osei?

    I saw him with a group of men, taking up defensive position the other side of the MCS Cap!

    Osei. Get onto S.5 now. We need air-cover and we need it now.

    Osei’s voice crackled through the interference from the battle.

    Sir!

    Then get your men to the rendezvous. We are going to launch a counter attack. Where is Khan?

    Don’t know sir. I think he stayed in the MCS.

    "What? Stone, I want

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