Bloodstar. Ian Douglas
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So how were we able to see all of those Qesh vessels? Well, they weren’t trying to be inconspicuous, for one thing. Each one was cheerfully emitting a cacophony of microwave and infrared wavelengths, pinging one another with radar and lidar, and generally doing just about everything short of hanging out the “Welcome Earth Commonwealth” signs and setting off fireworks. Our AIs could take that data from long-range sensor scans, work out the enemy vessels’ sizes and masses, and display the distillate on the graphic projection.
In fact, I had the distinct impression that they were deliberately showing off.
“So how come the bad guys aren’t playing it safe and putting out their stealth screens?” Corporal Latimer asked. She shook her head, as if exasperated. “I mean, it doesn’t make sense. Why show us their numbers like that?”
“Yeah,” Sergeant Gibbs added. “It’s pretty freakin’ stupid if you ask me.”
“Nobody asked you, asshole,” Tomacek told him.
“It’s a fair question,” Hancock said. “And we might have a fair answer if we knew more about the bastards. Best guess is, the Jackers are supposed to be a warrior culture. Think seventeenth-century Samurai in Japan, or maybe ancient Visigoths or Huns. Hiding, sneaking around, that’s for cowards. Their culture demands that they show themselves to the enemy.”
“The art of intimidation,” I suggested.
“It’s still freakin’ stupid!”
“Uh-huh,” Hancock agreed. “But there’s something else to consider, too.”
“What’s that, Gunny?”
“What makes you think we’re seeing all of them right now?”
We all grew a bit more quiet at that as we studied the graphic.
Maybe that massive fleet we could see orbiting Gliese 581 IV was the bait.
“So,” Andrews said, “we’re outnumbered and outteched.”
“Maybe so,” Hancock said. “But we do have one important advantage.”
“Yeah, Gunny? What’s that?”
“We’re Marines.”
“That’s ay-ffirmative.” Thomason laughed. “The poor bastards’ll never know what hit ’em.”
Sometimes the sheer arrogance of the Marines amazes me.
On the other hand, maybe it’s not arrogance when it’s true.
Since Captain Samuel Nicholas recruited the first Continental Marines at Philadelphia’s Tun Tavern in 1775, the Corps has been America’s first and best line of defense. Are American interests at risk? Are American citizens threatened? Does the Army need a beachhead? Send in the Marines
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