Lying in a freezing cold mountain stream was not one of Jake Mosovich’s favorite pastimes. And doing it next to a troop with two broken ankles wasn’t adding to the experience any a’tall.
“Jesus, I’m sorry about this smaj,” Nichols gasped. Sister Mary had used a neural stunner to deaden the ankles, but it still wasn’t going to feel all that good and the cold water obviously wasn’t improving the sniper’s shock; his face was a pasty gray.
“I didn’t figure you did it on purpose, Nichols,” Mosovich whispered. “Shit happens.”
So far there had been no sign of the Posleen on this side of the mountain, but crossing the stream with a busted up sniper and all their gear was not going to go fast and a patrol could be along any time.
There were basically two choices: take off like jackrabbits, hoping to make it across the stream and the mercifully narrow open area on the other side, or find a hide along the streambed and hope the Posleen eventually gave up and figured that the team had moved on.
Of course, there
“Okay,” Mosovich said. “Change of plan. Again. Mueller, move up the stream. Look for a better hide, someplace we can stash Nichols, you and Sister Mary. Nichols; we’re going to put you under with Hiberzine. Moving you is going to tear up your legs something fierce. This way if they’re bad enough, Sister Mary can just tie ’em off and forget about them.”
“I can make it, sarge,” Nichols said, shivering with cold.
“Can it, you idiot,” Mueller said. He looked at Nichols under lowered brows. “If we don’t put you under, your own body is going to put you down before the day is out. This is not a good way to grow old, Jake.”
“What is?” the sergeant major said, starting to strip his combat harness. When he started pulling off Nichols’ harness, the sniper grunted.
“You’ve got to be joking, right?” the specialist said, rolling over so the sergeant major could yank the harness, with its pouches of .50 caliber magazines, out from under him. Nichols was not as large as Mueller by any stretch of the imagination, but he made Mosovich look like a shrimp.
“No, I’m not,” Mosovich said, folding up the bipod on the sniper rifle and submerging it in the water. “I was humping a Barrett when you weren’t even a gleam in your daddy’s eye.” He looked over at Mueller. “Go to ground while I raise a ruckus. When the Posleen pull their patrols off wait a bit then hump buddy-boy out of here. Head for Unicoi; I’ll lead ’em off to the southwest.”
“Okay,” Mueller said. “Have fun.”
“Oh, yeah,” the sergeant major said, submerging in the icy water until only his mouth and nose were exposed. “Never better.”
Mosovich was shivering from the cold, but he hardly noticed. The current was strong as it pushed him downstream over rocks and occasional rapids and he floated backwards on his stomach, hauling the Barrett behind him and moving slowly and carefully from one bit of cover to the next. The river was full of old snags and boulders, fallen limbs and natural dams so there was more than enough concealment to be had and the river actually had passed
He was lying on his belly behind a long fallen white pine, getting ready to move over a set of falls, when he saw the first Posleen patrol. It was better than two miles downstream from the team’s crossing, but moving up the highway in the general direction. Mosovich froze when he realized it was being led by a God King. The indications were that at anything under a hundred yards the God King sensors could detect humans no matter what; they certainly had done so one time to him on Barwhon. But in this case the group of about three hundred passed on oblivious, no more than twenty meters from where his ghillie clad body crouched.
After that he was a little less circumspect since he had a particular point he wanted to make and not much time. The team was, apparently, not spotted by those Posleen, but it was only a matter of time before they
Finally Mosovich reached the position he had been looking for, where the stream made a sharp bend to the east and was intersected on the west by an old forestry road. In this case the road had been recently repaired, that is not much prior to the war, and was in fairly good condition. However, it only went “straight” for a short distance before angling south towards Ochamp mountain. It was across the highway, but beggars can’t be choosers.
Mosovich carefully looked both ways, up and down 197, then heaved his dripping form up and began trotting. A trot was the best he could do, weighted down with the Barrett and nearly a hundred pounds of ammunition. But he made it across the road, continuing to trot up the forestry road and leaving as little trail as he could manage.