Charley Brindley - The Last Mission Of The Seventh Cavalry

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A unit of the Seventh Cavalry is on a mission over Afghanistan when their plane is hit by something. The soldiers bail out of the crippled plane, but when the thirteen men and women reach the ground, they are not in Afghanistan. A unit of the Seventh Cavalry is on a mission over Afghanistan when their plane is hit by something. The soldiers bail out of the crippled plane, but when the thirteen men and women reach the ground, they are not in Afghanistan. Not only are they four thousand miles from their original destination but it appears they have descended two thousand years into the past where primitive forces fight each other with swords and arrows. The platoon is thrown into a battle where they must choose sides quickly or die. They are swept along in a tide of events so powerful that their courage, ingenuity and weapons are tested to the limits of their durability and strength.

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Sarge sat on a log nearby, holding a tin cup of coffee. He gave Autumn a look, like, ‘What the hell’s eating you?’

Autumn relaxed and grinned. “Sorry, Sparks.” She walked around the fire toward him. “I just had a cute little discussion with your charming pal, Blow Job.”

“My pal?” Sparks opened the Dragonfly’s cover to insert a fresh battery. “Since when is he my pal?” He set the aircraft on the grass.

“Well, someone has to be his friend.” She took Sarge’s cup and sipped the coffee.

“I wish him luck in that fantasy,” Sparks said. “All right, kids, here we go.”

A soft whirl came from the wings of the little drone, then it lifted off, going straight up.

“Take her slow, Sparks,” Sarge said as he picked up the iPad to watch the screen.

“Right.”

Sarge held the iPad so Sparks could see it as he worked the controls. The campfire grew smaller on the display as the Dragonfly lifted higher and higher.

“Two thousand feet,” Sparks said. “I’ll pan around, then center back on the fire.”

They saw nothing but total darkness, horizon to horizon.

“Take her up to three thousand,” Sarge said.

Kawalski and the others came to stand behind Sarge, watching the iPad.

“Look there,” Autumn said, “to the northeast.”

A slight glow arched above the trees.

“Zoom in, Sparks.”

“Right.”

“Damn,” Sarge said. “Those are campfires.”

Lojab came in from the woods. He glared at Autumn, then folded his arms and watched the display on the iPad.

“It’s the Vocontii village,” Autumn said.

“Yeah,” Sarge said. “And it’s a lot bigger than we thought.”

“There must be hundreds of fires,” Autumn said.

“Go up to five thousand,” Sarge said.

Sparks reduced the zoom and centered on their fire again. He then flew up to five thousand feet. The display of the campfire moved off the screen.

“What happened?” Sarge asked. “We lost the fire.”

“Wind.” Sparks rotated the controls. “I need to see the fire to find her.”

“What if you can’t locate the fire?”

“I can hit the ‘home’ button, and it’ll fly back here. But it might hit the trees when it comes down and tear itself apart.” He panned the camera left to right. “Ah, we’re almost to the Vocontii camp.” He watched the display as the Dragonfly drifted toward the fires of the Vocontii. “So, the wind is coming from the southwest.” He turned into the wind and flew forward. “Here we are.” Their campfire came up on the screen. “Now that I know the wind direction, I can hold our position.”

“Wow,” Kawalski said as Sparks panned around the horizon. “It’s as dark as midnight in a coalmine.”

“Damn,” Sarge said. “I thought sure we’d see a big city. How far away is the horizon at this height?”

“About eighty miles,” Sparks said.

“So, if there was a big city out there,” Autumn said, “even two hundred miles away, we would see the glow of the lights.”

“I think so,” Sarge said. “All right, Sparks, bring her down. This sinkhole is a lot bigger than I thought.”

“If we’re in a sinkhole,” Lojab said, “we can’t get up high enough to see out of it.”

“We were at five thousand feet, Lojab,” Sarge said. “That’s high enough to see something, if there was anything to see.”

“I think we should get moving,” Lojab said, “and see if we can climb out of here.”

“And I say we stay here,” Sarge said, “until we have a better idea of what’s happened to us.”

“Well, I vote for heading north until we come to a big city and civilization. Then we can get back to our own time.”

“This army unit is not a democracy.” Sarge stood and took a step toward Lojab. “We don’t vote on what we want to do; we follow orders.”

“What are we?” Lojab said. “A bunch of lap dogs, lying around, waiting for you to tell us when to eat, when to sleep, and when to go take a piss?”

Sarge looked around at the others as they watched him intently. “I wouldn’t call any of my soldiers lap dogs, Lojab, but yes, everyone is going to wait until I decide what to do. And that includes you.”

“Fuck this shit.” Lojab stormed off toward Trevor and the other two crewmen from the C-130.

Behind Sarge, Sparks barked like a dog.

“Down, boy,” Kawalski said. “Be good and I’ll let you sit in Apache’s lap.”

* * * * *

The next morning, Kawalski walked with Liada, down by the river. His rifle was across his back, and he carried his helmet by the chin strap.

“Liada,” he said.

She looked up at him.

“Those men are foot soldiers.” He pointed toward a group of men working on a raft.

“Yes.”

“And those are horse soldiers.”

She watched the four men ride by. “Yes.”

“The horse men in the scarlet capes…” He tried to explain with his hands, as he’d seen Autumn do. He plucked a red flower from a bush and fluttered it over his shoulder.

She laughed. “Carthage sons of, um, big peoples.”

“Ah,” Kawalski said, “the aristocracy.” He slipped the flower into her hair, over her ear. “Okay, we have the foot soldiers.” He held his hand out flat, at about waist height. “Then the horse soldiers.” He raised his hand a bit. “The sons of Carthage.” He held his hand a little higher. “Then comes Rocrainium,” his hand went higher, “the boss.”

Liada wrinkled her brow.

“Who is up here, on top?”

Liada stared at Kawalski for a moment, then her face brightened. “Big boss?”

“Yes, who is the big boss?”

“Hannibal is.”

“Hannibal?”

“Yes,” she said.

Kawalski put on his helmet and touched the comm switch. “Anybody out there?”

Several people answered.

“Apache?”

“Yeah.”

“Sarge?” Kawalski asked.

“Yes, what’s up?”

“Ballentine?”

“I’m here,” Karina answered.

“As hard as it is for me to say this, Ballentine,” Kawalski said, “you were right.”

“About what? I’m right about so many things, I’ve forgotten most of them.”

Someone laughed.

“Remember that four-star general we saw on the big black warhorse?”

“Yeah?”

“I know his name.”

“Really?” Karina said.

“How do you know?” Sarge asked.

“Come to me,” Kawalski said to Liada.

She came close to him, and he put his arm around her, pulling her even closer until her lips were almost touching his.

“Who is the big boss?” Kawalski pointed to the mic in his helmet.

“Hannibal,” she whispered into the mic. She looked up, into his eyes, keeping her lips close to his.

He tilted his helmet up.

“I knew it,” Karina said.

“Where are you, Kawalski?” Sarge said.

“Hannibal is going to cross the Rhone,” Karina said. “Then he’s going over the Alps. Right, Kawalski?”

Kawalski pulled off his helmet and let if fall to the ground.

“Who is the big boss?” Kawalski whispered.

“Hannibal.” Liada’s warm breath brushed his lips.

“Hannibal?” He drew out the last syllable.

“Hanni…”

“Ask her when Hannibal’s going to cross the river.” Sarge’s voice came from the speakers inside Kawalski’s helmet where it lay on the ground, but it was too faint for Kawalski to hear. “Kawalski?”

“I think his comm went dead,” Karina said.

“Either that, or he’s trying to get something more from Liada,” Sarge said.

“Yeah.” Autumn giggled. “Probably that.”

Chapter Thirteen

Sergeant Alexander sipped his coffee and watched Sparks unfold the solar panels and plug in his charger to recharge the batteries for the Dragonfly.

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