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ARMORED PODS (AP) – EPISODE 03 – SECOND CHANCES

Jason stared out from his position on the wall of FOB Chicken Hawk. He looked at nothing in particular. Though he scanned his sector for terrs his mind was on his lost pod. It had taken Jason the better part of a year to get the damaged Armored Pod he’d found to the level of repair he’d achieved. 

In one evening, all of Jason’s hard work was wiped away. 

Vince and his technicians had set to work dismantling Jason’s labor of love to repair Task Unit Commander Gray’s AP. Jason understood the utilitarian need. Gray’s AP functioned, and Squadron headquarters couldn’t push logistics convoys with the required AP parts to FOB Chicken Hawk in light of expected terr attacks in sector. It would have been foolish for Vince to leave prime AP parts just sitting there simply because of Jason’s feelings toward the pod. 

It didn’t make it any easier for Jason to accept. All my work gone, Jason thought as he scanned the fields and plains surrounding FOB Chicken Hawk. I’ll never get a pod now

Jason had to admit his dream of piloting a pod had been a pipe dream in the first place. Even if he completed work on the damaged pod, no other parts such as guns, legs, and other chassis were readily available. Task Unit Commander Gray only had his pod and associated attachments due to the military’s supply chain, his rank, and his experience – Jason had none of that for a pod of his own. 

“Are you still griping about that pod?” Gabe stood to Jason’s left. 

“Huh?” Jason asked as he turned to face Gabe. 

“What were you going to do with it if you did fix it?” Gabe asked. 

“Pilot it.” Jason recognized the ridiculousness of his statement even before the words left his mouth. 

“With what other parts?” Gabe asked. 

Jason sighed and turned back to scanning his sector. “I don’t know, man. I hadn’t thought that far ahead. I just wanted to get it fixed and then. . .” Jason’s voice trailed off. 

“You may not have an Armored Pod,” Carlos said from Jason’s right, “but I’m glad you’re our element commander.” 

Jason turned to Carlos and smiled. “Thanks.” 

“Now stop griping,” Carlos spat. 

“Yeah, yeah,” Jason said with a frown. 

“You had a pod?” a woman’s voice asked. 

Jason turned around to see Kveta Grof standing behind and below him inside the FOB, hands on her hips. The walls of the FOB weren’t particularly high, and Jason was sure the voices of he and his men carried as they bantered away. 

“It was a damaged one I found in a farmer’s field a while back,” Jason said. “I had been working to fix it.” 

“And then it had to be used to fix your TUC’s A-P,” Kveta said. She pronounced the abbreviation for Task Unit Commander as “tuck” instead of saying each letter. 

“That is such a weird way to say the Task Unit Commander’s rank,” Jason said. 

“It’s how we say it in the city,” Kveta replied. 

“Well, we’re not in the city,” Jason countered. “How do y’all say Element Commander?” 

“E-C.” 

“I guess that’s normal.” 

“So now you have no pod,” Kevta said, changing the subject. 

“Right,” Jason sighed. “I guess I never really did. Was a nice thought.” Jason turned back to face the plains and hills surrounding the FOB. “It is what it is.” 

“So now what?” Kveta asked. 

Jason shrugged. “Now I lead my element with my truck.” 

“Issued to you by the Army.” 

Jason shook his head but didn’t turn around. “Nope, it’s mine, bought and paid for. The Army needs vehicles, especially out here in the boonies, so we irregulars, and some regular army, get to keep their personal vehicles and obtain leadership positions that way. That’s why I’m element commander.” 

“So, it’s not based on your abilities,” Kveta said. 

Jason was about to reply when the seven men of his element erupted in raucous laughter. 

“That’s for damn sure,” Berny said. 

“If Jason didn’t have that truck, he’d be a grunt like us,” Andy said. 

Carlos nudged Jason in the shoulder with his elbow. “I’d probably be E-C if that was the case.” 

“Maybe we wouldn’t get shot up so much,” Gabe added. 

“Hilarious,” Jason said with a frown. 

Jason turned to see Kveta with a grin on her face. 

“Why do you want to know?” Jason asked. 

“Just curious,” Kveta said, then turned to walk away. “I want to know what I’m dealing with out here away from the city.” 

Jason turned back to the wall and shook his head. “Typical city folk,” he said, voice low to make sure Kveta couldn’t hear him. “Thinking they’re better than us.” 

“She is better than us,” Carlos replied. “From her new gear to her fine-” 

An explosion a hundred meters to Jason’s right and in front of the wall cut off Carlos’ words. 

“Contact!” Multiple voices along the wall cried out in unison. 

Someone down the line along the wall pointed out and away from the FOB. “Here they come!” 

Jason looked up to see a long line of personnel and an array of technicals crest a small hill to bear down on FOB Chicken Hawk and its defenders. Several of the technicals – civilian vehicles modified into weapons of war, like Jason’s pickup truck – sported recoilless rifles. Jason could see the crews on the back of the technical which mounted the recoilless rifles work to load more rounds and yell at the drivers to slow down. 

Task Unit Commander Gray’s voice filled Jason’s ears via the headset he wore. “All Hawk elements, this is Hawk Actual, weapons free!” 

“Light them up!” Jason exclaimed. 

Half a moment later the air was filled with rounds of multiple calibers flying toward the oncoming hoard of terrs. Some troops guarding the walls of FOB Chicken Hawk hadn’t waited for the order, and were already changing magazines to pour more fire into the advancing enemy. One-hundred-twenty-millimeter mortars were launched into the air from the backs of TU-17 technicals to fall and explode amidst the clumps of oncoming enemy. Terrorist troops began to fall left and right, struck by the bullets of Task Unit One-Seven. 

A heavy machine gun mounted in one of FOB Chicken Hawk’s towers raked back and forth over two enemy technicals. The .50 caliber rounds punched into the vehicles’ engine blocks and windshields, and into their drivers. One technical rolled to a stop, its driver little more than a red mess in the shattered glass-covered driver’s seat. The driver of the second technical jerked as he was hit and turned the wheel. The second technical swerved hard before it tipped over on its side and spilled its occupants and their weapons all over the plains. They were sitting ducks for the TU-17 defenders. 

“This is too easy!” Vic exclaimed before he took aim and sank a burst of rounds into a particularly skinny, short terr jogging toward the FOB amidst the hail of fire. 

“They’re either very brave or very stupid running in the open like that,” said Vic. 

Jason continued to mash the butterfly trigger of the Ma Deuce he pulled from his truck to mount on the FOB wall. “That is a fine line.” 

While the terr attack had begun strong, it seemed to quickly taper off as the defenders’ resolve repulsed them. A handful of terrorist personnel and technicals had made it to the wall, only to receive the gift of grenades and automatic fire from above. Several terrs and technicals exploded in the middle of the plain when hit just right, apparently strapped with improvised explosive devices to destroy the FOB wall. 

Jason sensed this particular battle was over – an underwhelming performance compared to the details in the intel they uncovered, in Jason’s opinion – when another sound filled the air over the din of combat. The sound was greeted by cheers and hollers from the terrs. Suddenly, the battle flared up again as enemy troops who had been fleeing or hiding found renewed courage and motivation at the thing which entered the battlefield on their side. 

“Armored pod!” someone from down the line yelled. 

Jason watched as the AP crested a small hill. It looked similar to Task Unit Commander Gray’s – reverse joint bipedal legs, standard bulky power pack and communications suite on the back, and a gun mounted on either side of the spherical pod. It was a standard, widely available load out from the war.  

The enemy AP began to pelt the FOB wall with thirty-millimeter autocannon fire. Some shots fell short and hit the ground around FOB Chicken Hawk, some rounds even hit some of the terrs charging the FOB. Not the best pilot, Jason thought. A few rounds from the enemy AP found their mark, and the FOB wall shook, dirt, sand and debris spilling from the block barriers comprising the fortification. 

Jason heard the repeated thump of autocannon fire from the other side of the FOB. 

“All Hawk Elements, this is Hawk Actual, enemy Armored Pod at the FOB E-C-P,” Gray reported over the comm from his position at FOB Chicken Hawks entry control point. “Engaging.” 

“Two AP’s?” Gabe exclaimed with an added curse at the end. “We’re screwed!” 

Jason discounted Gabe’s perception of events as he saw an opportunity in the chaos. 

“Gabe, with me,” Jason said suddenly. 

“W-what?” Gabe stammered. 

Jason turned to Carlos. “Keep up the fire up here, see if any of the other elements can spare a few rocket launchers.” 

“What the hell are you going to do?” Carlos shot back. 

Jason didn’t respond to Carlos’ question. Instead, Jason flipped his Ma Deuce to rest over his left shoulder and dragged at Gabe’s torn brown shirt with his right hand. Gabe looked at Jason wide-eyed. 

“What are we doing?” Gabe asked as he followed Jason off the FOB palisade and toward Jason’s parked pickup truck. 

“We’re going to take out that AP,” Jason replied. 

“Y-you’re nuts!” Gabe exclaimed. “You’re going to get us killed.” 

“Not today,” Jason replied. “Now drive.” 

“My mom was right.” Gabe’s tone was dejected. “I should have stayed in finance.” 

Jason mounted and locked the .50 caliber machine gun back on top of the pickup, then slapped the vehicle’s roof. “Gun it!” 

Gabe hit the gas the moment the truck started up. Jason was forced to hold on for dear life as Gabe followed his orders and made the beat-up maroon pickup fly through the FOB and out the ECP. To Jason’s left he could see Gray’s AP engaging with the other enemy AP. It was clear Gray had the upper hand as his twin autocannons pummeled the enemy AP in the machine’s weak spots in the joints and weapon mount points. Gray didn’t move slow, but methodically, taking cover behind a small stand of trees when the enemy AP got a bead on him, only to appear on the other side to hammer the enemy machine again. The enemy AP pilot seemed stressed and erratic, and shots that should have hit Gray’s AP went wide. Task Unit Commander Gray walked his AP forward to finish off the terr machine. 

“Drive around the FOB and toward the other enemy A-P,” Jason ordered Gabe. 

“I’m going to die,” Jason heard Gabe say from the driver’s seat. “This is it. Today’s the day.” 

Despite his misgivings Gabe kept his foot on the gas and propelled the pickup faster over the rolling plains. Soon the other enemy AP was in sight. The bipedal walking metal ball had closed the distance to the FOB wall, and the TU-17 defenders were hard pressed to repel it. 

As they plowed through the battlefield Jason and Gabe passed groups of terr fighters advancing on the FOB. Some of the terrs took pot shots at them, but many just gaped at what they saw, unsure what to do. 

Jason depressed the Ma Deuce’s butterfly trigger with his thumbs and rained .50 caliber rounds into the terr AP.  

“Drive into him,” Jason ordered. 

Gabe said something undistinguishable as he hit the gas harder. The pickups engine revved louder as Gabe and Jason practically flew toward the enemy AP. The terr AP suddenly seemed to notice Jason firing at it, and turned its guns toward him as he neared. As the enemy machine turned to bring Jason and Gabe into its crosshairs it lifted a three-toed metal foot. 

“Turn and break!” Jason exclaimed. 

Suddenly, inertia pulled Jason the direction he had been going as Gabe swung the pickup around at the last minute and broke hard. The side of the truck slammed into the terr AP’s still planted foot. Jason braced himself in the bed of the pickup and held onto his machine gun with a white-knuckled grip. 

Jason knew it had been a gamble. The AP was significantly heavier than his little pickup by several tons. Normally a maneuver like this would barely have phased the AP and its pilot. But, the force of the crash with the AP’s foot in the air, the other foot at an odd angle on plains, and the poor piloting by the terr inside created the opportunity Jason needed – and it paid off. 

The terr AP pitched forward and left to crash to the ground. A cheer rose from the FOB wall and the TU-17 defenders repulsed the advancing terrs with renewed vigor. Though rattled from the crash with the AP Jason didn’t hesitate to launch himself from the back of the pickup and toward the spherical pod itself. 

A smart AP pilot would have remained calm in the situation the terr AP was in. Though grounded, it still had use of its autocannons and could still wreak havoc on the walls of FOB Chicken Hawk, perhaps even kill some of the TU-17 troops. A very skilled AP pilot could have even stood the machine back up and returned to the fight. The terr pilot was neither smart nor skilled. He tried moving the AP’s feet, only to grind them into the dry, plains soil. At the same time the terr pilot swung both autocannons wildly. In the end, the enemy pilot managed only to dig him and his AP a shallow grave. 

At first Jason gave the AP a wide berth, a personal 9mm pistol held up and ready in the event any other terrs approached. When the enemy AP pilot decided to stop moving, Jason rushed the pod. 

“Come on out!” Jason ordered, his voice sharp and deep. “Surrender, or we’ll blow this A-P with you in it.” 

There was a pause, and for a moment Jason thought the terr pilot decided to take his chances and hunker down in his armored shell. A moment later there was a hiss and the sound of machinery, and the front of the spherical pod folded open. A bedraggled, elderly man in a threadbare cut-off brown shirt and olive drab shorts stomped out of the pod, his torn-up hiking boots thumping off the pod’s metal armor. 

“I surrender,” the elder terr said in a gruff voice. 

Soon the battle was over. With the loss of both of their APs and dozens, if not hundreds, of their fighters, the terrs fled in disorganized retreat from FOB Chicken Hawk. 

Reports from Squadron HQ spilled in after the battle. Similar battles played out throughout the area of operations. Other combat task units and Squadron Headquarters repelled legions of terrorist forces augmented by one or two Armored Pods each. Some of the pods were clearly salvaged wrecks from The War, but others were of newer manufacture. Squadron intel believed it meant one of the governments further West had begun supplying the terrorists to a greater degree than before. 

With the battle over and the elderly terr AP pilot handed over to the Intel Task Unit Eleven personnel for questioning, Jason wanted to recover his prize. 

“You want to what?” Brad Feldman asked. 

Jason stood in the Task Unit headquarters. Task Unit Commander Josiah Gray sat behind his desk in front of Jason. Brad and the Task Unit’s head mechanic, Vince, stood to Jason’s left. 

“That was reckless,” Gray said, his tone cold. “You could have been killed, along with your driver.” 

“But it worked,” Jason countered. 

Gray was silent, acquiescing to Jason’s logic. 

“Who the hell do you think you are, claiming an A-P?” Brad asked. 

“An irregular,” Gray said, his voice a growl. “You know the laws.” 

Jason tried not to smile, but the thought of what he had achieved made it difficult. “In an effort to attract and maintain irregular forces, irregulars may claim salvage of enemy equipment and material directly neutralized by that individual.” Jason quoted the law almost verbatim. 

The laws surrounding irregular troops – once called National Guard or Reserves – were written shortly after The War when the government found itself short troops. Along with the requirement irregular units be pulled from the same town, or at least the same county, irregulars were also allowed to claim battlefield salvage. Active military, on the other hand, were generally required to pool battlefield salvage into the unit’s motor pool, except in cases where there was a certain level of excess. 

Brad cursed colorfully and loudly. 

“That’s the law, sir,” Jason said. “I request assets to retrieve my prize.” 

Gray stared hard and long at Jason. 

“Fine,” Gray finally said. “Vince, help Element Commander Brenner retrieve his salvage. Make it quick.” 

“Yes sir,” Vince replied. 

“Thank you, sir,” Jason said. 

Outside Task Unit HQ and out of view of Gray and Brad Feldman, Vince held up a fist. “Congrats, man.” 

Jason knocked fists with Vince. “Thanks.” 

“Now, let’s go get you’re A-P.” 

ARMORED PODS (AP) – EPISODE 02 – BEST LAID PLANS

“Wake up.”

Jason started at the voice inside his shipping container room. Hadn’t he locked the door the night before?

“Geeze, you irregulars really are lazy,” the voice continued.

Jason rubbed his eyes hard to clear the blurriness of sleep and see his tormentor clearly.

“Oh, Brad, what do you want?” Jason asked with chagrin.

Brad Feldmann was the Element Commander of First Element in Task Unit One-Seven. Brad was regular Army, and a veteran of numerous anti-insurgent battles.

“Making sure you lazy irregulars are up and ready,” Brad sneered.

Jason looked at the digital clock next to his twin bed. “It’s zero-five. Our planning meeting with Task Unit Commander Gray isn’t until zero eight.”

Brad stepped closer to Jason so he was eye to eye with him, their noses mere inches apart. “In the Army we wake-up early.”

“And what are you going to do for the three hours between now and our planning meeting with Gray? Hang out with your boyfriend in Second Element?”

“Brewer isn’t my boyfriend,” Brad said with a growl.

“Oh so you two are just fellow window-licking retards, then.”

Suddenly, Brad’s fist flew up to meet Jason’s face. Jason took a step back and slapped the fist away.

“Now, now, do I need to kick your ass again like I did in the ring last week?” Jason asked.

The week prior Jason fought Brad in a unit-sanctioned mixed martial arts match and beat him soundly. Brad was more muscular than Jason, but Jason had more skill.

“I’ll get you next time,” Brad said, his fists still up, ready for a fight.

“Sure,” Jason retorted. “By the way, how did you get into my room?”

“It was unlocked,” Brad said, lowering his fists a fraction of an inch.

“Damn.”

“You irregulars really are lazy.”

“I must have been more tired than I thought,” Jason said. “I stayed up working on my pod.”

“That thing that will never run?”

“Shut up.”

Brad turned to leave. “Just make sure you’re not late, irregular.”

Brad slammed the door to Jason’s room as he left.

“Regular Army thinking they’re better than us,” Jason said with a huff.

Since he was up anyway, Jason decided to workout at the FOB gym. He noticed Brad was there, too, and made sure to add extra weight to his deadlifts. With lifting and a grueling kettlebell workout out of the way, Jason showered, threw on a clean muscle shirt, olive drab shorts, socks and his beat up boots (he’d have to replace those when he went to town on leave) and made his way to the mess hall for breakfast.

Jason strode into the Task Unit One-Seven headquarters to be greeted by the staff and seven other Element Commanders within Task Unit One-Seven standing around a square table. There were two people Jason didn’t recognize standing off by themselves. Who are they? From squadron maybe? One of the newcomers was a tall, fit redhead with green eyes and curvaceous body. 

“Irregulars late as usual,” Brad said as Jason approached the table.

Jason checked his watch. “It’s zero-seven-four-five hours.”

“We’re not late,” said Victor Koenig, another irregular and Element Commander of Seventh Element.

John Krecek, the Sixth Element commander and an irregular himself, folded his beefy arms over his broad, t-shirt-clad chest. “You regular army boys need to cool your jets. We’re supposed to be working together. Why do you gotta corn cob up your ass? Why do you gotta antagonize us like that?”

“Shut up, K,” Brad said with a snarl, using Krecek’s nickname.

“Or what?” K asked.

Brad was about to respond when Gray walked into the HQ. “Alright, stow that talk.”

“Just getting the irregulars in line,” Brad said.

Gray stopped just short of the group of staff and element commanders and glared down at Brad. “I told you to shut up once. Don’t make me do it again.”

“Yes, sir,” Brad said sheepishly.

“Now,” Gray continued, “we have a mission sent down from Squadron to seek out and destroy a major terr encampment. We’ll break down the Squadron operations order shortly, but the gist of the mission is we seek out and destroy the camp while the other combat Task Units in the squadron draw the terr’s attention elsewhere with their own attacks. It’s going to be an intel heavy operation, so we’ll be working with two intel elements from Military Intelligence Task Unit One-one.” Gray motioned toward the vivacious redhead and her compatriot. “This is Element Commander Kveta Grof and Element Commander Jared Smicer. They will plug in with us directly. I expect you to work closely with them.”

I’d love to work closely with her, Jason thought as he eyed Kveta.

“Any questions at this time?” Gray asked.

There were none.

“Alright, let’s start this planning session.” Gray motioned to Bill Edelman, Task Unit One-Seven’s intelligence officer. “Edelman, let’s start with the overall situation in the area.”

*

“Of course you volunteered us for point,” Gabe said in complaint as he drove the beat-up maroon pickup truck through the grassy hills ahead of the rest of TU17.

Planning had taken all of the previous day. As more of the plan was developed, Jason and the other element commanders would duck out to relay updates to their eight-man elements so preparations could be made while planning continued. That night at twenty hundred hours Gray issued the order to the whole of Task Unit One-Seven, and seven hours later TU17 drove out of FOB Chicken Hawk’s main gate to find the terr base.

“Hey, this is our chance to get a major terr base,” Jason replied from his vantage point behind the Ma Deuce on the back of the pickup. “I wanna get there first.”

“I think you just want to impress that redhead from T-U-one-one,” Carlos said.

“Can you blame him?” Danny asked before Jason could respond. “I couldn’t stop staring at her. The way she walks. . .”

“I’m more of a boob guy, myself,” Andy said.

“I’m a whatever-she-is kinda guy,” Danny said.

“What kind of name is Kveta Grof?” Matt asked.

“It’s Czech,” Carlos replied.

“I wouldn’t mind czech-ing her out,” Berny said.

Jason’s element emitted a collective groan at Berny’s bad joke.

“Get it?” Berny continued. “Because she-”

“Yeah, we get it,” Jason said.

“Y’all are acting like you’ve never seen a woman before,” Gabe said.

“Well, stuck on the FOB and missions for the last few weeks makes a guy lonely,” Carlos said.

“There are plenty of females on our FOB,” said Gabe.

“They have too many miles on them,” Carlos said in disgust. “You can’t throw a rock without hitting a group of guys on the FOB they’ve been with.”

“And given STDs to,” Berny said.

“First hand experience?” Matt asked.

Berny hesitated a second, his slightly chubby face turning red. “No.”

“Let’s be honest, the females on FOB Chicken Hawk are only attractive here, because there is no one else,” Carlos said. “Not one of them would get the time of day back in the towns or the city. This Grof chick is at least a nine no matter where she goes.”

“Hawk eight-one, this is Hawk Actual, SITREP,” Gray called Jason over the Task Unit secure communications channel for a situation report.

“Hawk Actual this is Hawk eight-one,” Jason replied into his headset. “No enemy contact, current grid location to follow.”

Jason tracked their position on the paper map he had affixed to the top of the truck’s cab top in front of him, and relayed the coordinates to Gray.

“Hawk eight-on, Hawk Actual, good copy. Continue mission.”

“Isn’t the base supposed to be in this area?” Gabe asked.

Jason looked at the map in front of him again and frowned. “It is. In fact, we’re just about right on top of it.”

Jason lifted his head and looked around. The only thing he could see were rolling hills bisected by dirt and gravel roads every square mile. Some of the land had been planted to corn or wheat, but many more plots lay fallow due to the recent terr activity.

“All this land unfarmed due to the damned terrs,” Carlos said from his position in the front passenger seat. “Those idiots don’t even know how to farm. How do they even survive?”

“Someone is supplying them,” Jason said as he scanned the surrounding area for the enemy. “West Coasters or Denver.”

“Bunch of idiots,” Carlos said, shaking his head.

“Aren’t you from Denver?” Berny asked.

“Before The War,” Carlos replied. “There’s a reason I left.”

“Ope!” Gabe exclaimed suddenly. “Saw something, twelve o’ clock, about four hundred meters.”

“Dismount and spread out,” Jason said. “Wedge with the truck as point, fifteen to twenty foot spacing.”

A string of acknowledgements answered Jason’s order and six of his men spilled out of the vehicle and into the mix of long dead crops and growing prairie grasses. Gabe drove the pickup forward, ensuring to go slow enough so the other six men in the element could keep up.

At first Jason couldn’t see anything. Maybe Gabe saw a coyote or rabbit. As they crested a hill, though, Jason spotted what remained of a tent.

“There,” Jason said, pointing to the tent. “Someone’s been here.”

Another hundred meters or so beyond the tent was a large copse of trees perpendicular to Jason’s position.

“And they can see us again,” Gabe sighed.

Jason wasn’t so sure. “I’m going to call it up.”

A moment later Gray responded to Jason over the Task Unit net. “Hawk eight-one this is Hawk Actual. What do you have for me?”

“Hawk Actual, Hawk eight-one. We found an abandoned tent at the following grid location.” Jason rattled off the grid coordinates of the tent. “Approximately a hundred meters further is a group of trees which could provide cover and concealment.”

“Hawk eight-one, Hawk Actual, have you been spotted?”

“Hawk Actual, Hawk eight-one, unknown, but no one is shooting at us. I’m going to advance into the trees.”

 “Hawk eight-one, Hawk Actual, affirmative. Move out and report. I’m moving to your position to support. Hawk Actual out.”

“Task Unit Commander is bringing the big guns,” Jason announced.

“Oh boy!” Carlos exclaimed. “Terrs won’t know what hit them!”

“So what now?” Gabe asked.

“We’ll advance into the trees,” Jason replied.

“Shouldn’t we wait for Gray?” Carlos asked.

“Gray said to move out and report,” Jason replied. “He’ll be here soon. We can handle anything we run into until then. Now let’s go.”

Gabe rolled the vehicle forward while Jason scanned the trees and surrounding grassy plains. Even from his vantage point he couldn’t see anything too far into the darkness of the thick tree cover.

“Normally they’d shoot at us by now,” Gabe said from the driver’s seat.

Jason shrugged. “Maybe they’re not here. Intel can be wrong, you know.”

Gabe just grunted in response.

Jason expected to make contact with the enemy the moment they crossed from the field into the trees – they hadn’t been shot at up until that point, and an ambush was the terr’s most likely course of action at that point. But as the pickup rolled under the shade of the trees and Jason pushed branches out of his way they were met with silence.

Then Jason spotted it: a group of tents huddled together with branches broken off trees and laid over their tops for impromptu camouflage. Poor impromptu camouflage, Jason thought as he trained his Ma Deuce on the collection of tents.

“Tents, twelve o’ clock,” Jason called out.

By that point if the terrs hadn’t seen or heard Jason and his element they were either deaf or already dead. The pickup truck’s rumbling engine was the opposite of quiet, and the six other men in Jason’s element crunching through brush and over fallen tree limbs didn’t attempt to muffle their movements.

Jason was just about to report the collection of terr tents when a man stumbled from one of the tent openings wearing only his underwear. Gabe hit the brakes and the eight-man element came to a halt close enough to hit the terr with a well-aimed rock. The man wobbled on unsure legs as he made his way from the tent he occupied to the edge of the atrociously camouflaged encampment. If the terr noticed Jason and his men he didn’t show it. After three precarious steps past the farthest tent the terr dropped trow and began to urinate.

“What the. . .” Carlos whispered, as if concerned he’d alert the terr directly in front of them.

The man’s eyes were closed, and as he peed he lowered his head and held a hand to it with a groan.

“They’re drunk,” Jason said. “Or hungover.”

Jason’s voice seemed to snap the terr out of his pain for a moment and the man’s head whipped up to stare wide-eyed at Jason and his men.

Just as the terr opened his mouth to alert the rest of the camp, Berny put two rounds in the man’s head. The terr’s head snapped back, and blood sprayed from his destroyed cranium before his corpse collapsed to the ground.

Suddenly, all hell broke loose in the camp. Terrorist men and women, and perhaps their hangers-on, spilled out of the collection of tents in different states of undress and coherency, a myriad of weapons proffered in their hands.

Jason didn’t wait for the terrs to gather their wits and rained .50 caliber bullets into them. Jason’s men followed suit with their AKs. Men and women fell like corn to a combine under Jason’s element’s onslaught.

“Hawk Actual, Hawk eight-one, contact, terrs, twenty-five meters,” Jason reported over the Task Unit net.

“Hawk eight-one, Hawk Actual, how many?” Gray replied in Jason’s ear.

“Hawk Actual, Hawk eight-one, a lot.”

“Hawk eight-one, Hawk Actual, I’m on your right flank, moving to support.”

The air was suddenly filled the the heavy, mechanical thumps of twin thirty-millimeter autocannons. The giant rounds ripped into the terrs and their tents as Task Unit Commander Gray walked his Armored Pod into the copse of trees. Gray’s AP was a basic model; the pod itself, resembling a giant armored baseball, sat mounted on two reverse-join legs, the twin thirty mike-mikes jutting out from modular points on either side of the pod, and the pod’s power pack situated on the back of the pod looked like a giant backpack.

Those terrs still left saw the AP and ran, some naked, many without shoes.

“Hawk three-one, Hawk Actual,” Jason heard Gray say over the Task Unit communications channel sas he continued to fire. “Terrs in the open headed your way. Swing around and catch them. Hawk one-one and Hawk two-one, set a blocking position a hundred meters behind Hawk three-one and catch any squirters. Hawk four-one-”

Gray’s words were cut off by an explosion against the AP’s armor. The AP rocked on on its feet, but Gray managed to keep the pod upright. Within the camp, hidden between some fallen logs, a terr stood with a rocket propelled grenade launcher. Jason peppered the terr’s position, but missed as the man ducked behind cover. Another terr popped out of some brush to launch another RPG at Gray’s AP. Gray cut the man down, but not before the terr fired the rocket. The RPG slammed into the bottom of Gray’s ball-like pod.

“This is Hawk Actual to all Hawk elements, I am still mission capable.” Jason breathed a sigh of relief as he heard Gray’s voice and watched the AP stride through the smoke which hung in the air. “Hawk four-one, move to my position, coordinates to follow.” Gray rattled off the grid coordinate before continuing. “Hawk five-one, six-one and seven-one set up a perimeter to catch any squirters which don’t move toward Hawk three-one.”

Jason hammered the top of the pickup cab with the palm of his hand as Gray rattled off more coordinates for the other elements in Task Unit one-seven to maneuver to. “Gabe, drive forward. Everyone, stay on line with the vehicle. Time to clean-up!”

Before Gabe could hit the gas Gray’s voice filled Jason’s ear once more. “Hawk eight-one, remain in place. Our friends from Military Intel Task Unit one-one will move forward of your position and conduct site exploitation. Provide overwatch for them. How copy?”

“Hawk Actual, Hawk eight-one, good copy.”

Just as Gray signed off four pristine-looking armored vehicles pulled past Jason and his men and up to the terr camp site.

“Man, city units get all the good stuff,” Carlos said as he pointed to the two armored trucks.

The moment the armored vehicles stopped the two elements from Military Intelligence Task Unit one-one spilled out of the doors, compact automatic rifles up and scanning the area.

Gabe pointed from the driver’s seat of Jason’s maroon pickup. “Even their gear is better.”

Each man and woman in the M.I. elements had matching plate carriers, magazine carriers, and helmets. Their uniforms, though worn, were in better shape than anything most of the men in Task Unit one-seven could scrounge up. They even had matching tactical sunglasses.

“Must be nice,” Berny said.

As his men spoke Jason noticed Kveta Grof, her fiery red hair pulled into a tight bun under the brim of her combat helmet. As she ran her uniform hugged her well formed buttocks, and her ample bosom pushed her plate carrier forward.

“She’s nice,” Jason said.

“And how,” Carlos said as he noticed where Jason looked.

As Kveta Grof and Jared Smicer directed their personnel around the ruined terrorist camp site Gray walked his AP forward to stand near Jason and his men.

“Hawk eight-one, Hawk Actual, good work today. You make the irregular soldiers in our Task Unit, and in the armed force, proud.”

Jason heard “K” and Victor Koenig whoop over the net.

“Don’t tell him that,” Brad Feldman said over the Task Unit communications channel. “He’ll think he’s useful.”

Just then Kveta strode up to Gray’s AP. “Task Unit Commander Gray, you’re going to want to see this.”

“Unfortunately I’m stuck in my pod,” Gray said through the AP’s external speaker. “Those RPGs did some serious damage to my machine. What do you have?”

“Maps of our FOBs and attack plans,” Kveta replied.

*

There was no rest for Task Unit one-seven and FOB Chicken Hawk. Upon their return Gray set the entire base to work preparing for what seemed to be an impending attack. Kveta Grof and Jared Smicer communicated their find from the Task Unit headquarters while Gray was extricated from his AP by Vince and his mechanics. 

Hours later Gray pulled himself out of the bipedal pod and stretched legs stiff and painful from being stuck in one position for so long. Despite his discomfort, Gray ran from the Task Unit motor pool to the headquarters to obtain updates from Squadron and ensure FOB Chicken Hawk was ready.

With preparations complete and his men in place in their designated sector on the FOB walls, Jason stole away to check in on his pod. He told Carlos he had to piss.

“You don’t have to pretend you’re not scared,” Carlos said.

“Funny,” Jason retorted.

Jason ducked into the maintenance shop and slipped past mechanics and technicians busily repairing and reinforcing several of the Task Unit’s vehicles, along with Gray’s AP.

Vince brought Jason up short as he reached his half-repaired pod.

“What’s wrong?” Jason asked.

Vince hesitated a moment before answering. “Gray just sent word. Squadron can’t get Armored Pod replacement parts to us. The operations area is too hot for logistics convoys to move through.”

A sinking feeling filled Jason’s stomach.

“I’m sorry,” Vince said. “Your pod is the only way we could fix the Task Unit Commander’s machine.”

ARMORED PODS (AP) – EPISODE 1 – THE GRIND

The heat that Summer was oppressive. It hung on the land like a thick, heavy blanket no one wanted. The Summer heat brought with it humidity so thick people swore it could be cut with a knife. Cicadas droned their monotonous chorus through the trees interspersed throughout towns and between farmers’ fields. Normally active birds took roost in the shade of trees and the eves of buildings. 

Jason Brenner stood atop the bed of his beat-up mid-sized pick-up truck; the handles of the tripod-mounted M2 Browning .50 caliber machine gun gripped tightly in his gloved hands. Sweat streamed from his blond hair and forehead to sting his bright blue eyes. A ragged, threadbare plate carrier covered a dirty black cut-off muscle shirt which hung loose on Jason’s body. Short khaki shorts were held in place around Jason’s waist by a leather belt. Brown leather boots which had seen better days planted Jason to the metal floor of the truck’s bed. A radio headset adorned Jason’s close-cropped blond hair, connected via wire to the radio clipped to his belt at his hip. Bluetooth models were available, but no one relied on wireless connection out here. 

Around Jason in the bed of the pick-up sat three of his squad of six men; Danny, Vic, and Carlos. Gabe drove the maroon vehicle, and Berny, Andy, and Matt, sat inside the once plush extended crew cab. Each man cradled a Kalashnikov AK-47 or AK-74 – the attempted AR-15 ban years before had made that weapon scarce, but people adapted and overcame the bureaucracy of the time.  Each of Jason’s men also donned plate carriers and radio sets. Gabe and Danny even had ballistic helmets. Optimists. 

The truck had been Jason’s before everything fell apart. Jason’s ownership and maintenance of the vehicle was why he stood on the back with the machine gun and the others followed his orders. It helped Jason was stronger and a better fighter than the other men in his team. It also helped they had all been high school friends in the small town where they grew up. 

“Are you sure these idiots are here?” Gabe asked from the driver’s seat, his window rolled down. The glass wasn’t bulletproof, and there was no point boiling in this heat without air conditioning. 

“The Taks Unit Commander said there was intel of insurgents here,” Jason replied. 

“Then they can see us,” Berny said with a sigh from the front passenger seat. 

Jason eyed the small, tree-covered hillock a few hundred meters in front of them. “They could see us anyway no matter which way we came up on them. They chose a good spot to operate from.” 

“Until now,” Carlos added. 

“Until now,” Jason agreed. “Drive forward, Gabe. Standard movement to contact.” 

“My favorite,” Gabe grumbled as he hit the gas. 

The beat-up maroon pick-up rolled forward over what used to be a farmer’s field, thick treaded tires digging into the sunbaked soil. The field they drove through lay fallow after years of inattention. The truck’s body wobbled and bobbed as the tires hit divots and holes, making its occupants sway and grip tightly to the vehicle’s sides. 

“Damn, Gabe, do you know how to drive?” Vic said with a whine. 

“Shut up,” Gabe grumbled. “You want to drive?” 

“No, I don’t want to be the first target for the enemy,” Vic replied. 

As if summoned by Vic’s words automatic weapons fire belted from the patch of trees, bushes and shrubs on the hillock roughly two hundred meters away. 

Jason smashed the butterfly trigger of the M2 Browning down with his thumbs and released a torrent of heavy .50 caliber rounds into the foliage. “Contact!” 

With practiced precision Gabe slowed the vehicle, and the other six men dumped out and off the truck and into a rough line on either side of it. 

“Advance!” Jason bellowed as he continued to rake the bush with machine gun fire. 

Danny, Vic, Carlos, Berny, Andy, and Matt jogged forward at Jason’s command and fired bursts from their Kalashnikov AK-47 and AK-74 automatic rifles. Gabe drove the pick-up forward to follow in line with the other six men, his own AK stuck out the window to add suppressive fire to the mix. 

Soon Jason could see the insurgents. Four men huddled around some fallen timber for cover. Too easy, Jason thought. 

“Gabe, pull up behind that berm,” Jason ordered through their radio over the din. “Berny, Andy, Matt, take up positions here and continue to lay suppressive fire. Danny, Vic, Carlos, flank left.” 

A series of calm acknowledgements flowed over the radio back to Jason as each man executed their part. As Gabe pulled behind a small berm Jason rotated the M2 Browning back and forth and sent dozens of heavy rounds towards the insurgents. Berny, Andy and Matt “mag dumped” in the insurgents’ directions – accuracy would have been nice, but this would be over soon. 

“Lift fire, advancing,” Danny said over the radio. 

A moment later Danny, Vic and Carlos dashed forward from the insurgents’ left, pelting the enemy with short bursts of fire from the AKs, while Jason and the other men ceased fire so as not to shoot their comrades. Whether they were bad at what they did, or had been worn down from seemingly endless fighting, the insurgents weren’t prepared for the attack to their left flank. Two of the insurgents swung wildly in an attempt to address the attack, only to be gunned down by Danny, Vic and Carlos. Seeing what had become of their own comrades, the remaining two insurgents quickly threw down their guns and threw up their hands. 

“Surrender!” one bearded, disheveled man yelled. “We surrender!” 

“Please!” yelled the other man, equally dirty and bedraggled as his comrade. “Don’t kill us! We surrender!” 

Jason sighed. Just another batch of cowards. 

Three-sixty security,” Jason said. “Search them. Gabe, wheel this bad boy around and scan for anyone trying to get the drop on us.” 

“Yes, boss,” Gabe replied as he began to maneuver the pick-up around. 

Moments later the remaining two insurgents were on their knees, wrists secured behind their backs with black plastic zip-ties. After everything that’s happened, plastic is still manufactured, Jason mused as his men went about searching each insurgent. Jason had dismounted his vehicle to oversee the mop-up activities. 

Carlos approached Jason a moment later. “No intel on these guys. The two still alive say they haven’t eaten for two days.” 

“Nothing?” Jason asked. 

“They say they joined the insurgents with hopes of a meal,” Carlos said with a shrug. “They were given guns, about an hour of training on how to shoot, and orders to terrorize farmers in the area.” Carlos pointed to the bearded man who had surrendered first. “That one, his name is Phil, said they started out with six men, but two of them were killed at the first farm they tried to attack.” 

“Good to see our farmers are still tough as nails,” Jason said with a smile. “Good also to see the terrs getting desperate.” 

Terr was a term the Rhodesians had used during the Rhodesian Bush War for terrorists and insurgents who would hop the border from Mozambique and terrorize locals and farmers. The term caught on almost a century later in the now wild Midwest of the former United States. 

“Desperate, or just causing chaos to distract us,” Carlos added. 

Jason nodded. “That’s a good point. Let’s bag them up and bring them with.” 

Phil and his compatriot, Willy, were forced to lay on top of their dead comrades as space in the bed of the pick-up was scarce. Danny, Vic and Carlos sat atop Phil and Willy. 

“Let’s go,” Danny said, scrunching his nose. “These dead ones are already starting to smell.” 

Just another day in the grind, Jason thought as Gabe hit the gas. 

The truck lurched forward, then suddenly died. 

“What happened?” Jason asked from his perch. 

“I don’t know,” Gabe said as he tried to turn the key to start the pick-up, “but she won’t even turn over.” 

Jason sighed. “I guess we’re pushing.” 

A chorus of collective groans filled the air. 

“Oh shut-up!” Jason yelled back, then looked down at Phil and Willy. “Looks like you two are helping.” 

In short order Jason and his men, minus Gabe, had tied Phil and Willy to the rear of the truck, and each man began to push the beat-up pick-up truck back to base. 

“How far?” Vic asked. 

“Three miles,” Jason replied. 

“Shit, Gabe, why are you so fat?” Danny yelled. 

“Shut up!” Gabe shot back. 

“Does this mean we’ll get to go free after we help?” Phil asked. 

“Absolutely not,” Jason spat. “Now push or I’ll shoot you.” 

Over an hour later Jason’s truck finally rolled into Forward Operating Base Chicken Hawk. A litany of cheers and jeers followed Jason and his men as they rolled the maroon pick-up through the main road of the FOB and into parking lot of the FOB’s maintenance shop. Phil and Willy looked as though they wish they were shot – they had no luck there. 

“Carlos, Vic, take these two to Task Unit headquarters,” Jason said, jerking his thumb over his shoulder in the general direction of the HQ. “Once these two terrs are handed over everyone go get cleaned up, eat, and try to catch some shut eye.” 

As Jason’s men dispersed a burly man in grease-soaked overalls and a white wife beater shirt sauntered out of the open doors of the maintenance bay toward Jason. 

“What did you do this time?” the man asked. 

“Hi, Vince,” Jason said in greeting. “Not sure. She just died on us.” 

“Mmhmm,” Vince replied. “I swear you just break it to give me heartburn. This is the third time this week.” 

“Breaking things and giving them to you to repair is my love language,” Jason said with a wink. 

“Uh huh,” Vince said, rolling his eyes. “Anyway, give us a day and I’ll let you know.” 

“Thanks Vince,” Jason replied. “Now I think I’m needed at HQ.” 

Vince began to walk back to his shop, then thought of something and turned back to Jason. “And when are you going to get that giant piece of crap out of my shop?” 

“The pod?” Jason asked. 

“No, the other giant piece of crap you have covered with a tarp in the back of the maintenance bay. Yes, the pod.” 

“When I get more parts.” 

“You’ve been saying that for a year now. That pod is done. It was shot up in The War.” 

“I’m nursing it back to health.” 

Vince shook his head. “It’s still missing some major parts, Jason. I’m not sure where you’d find them in this day and age. Only the bigger cities have armored pod manufacturing, and we don’t see many in these parts.” 

“Except the Task Unit Commander’s,” Jason said. 

“Except his,” Vince agreed. “But he came from the city to lead Task Unit one-seven. We “irregulars” out in the country don’t get that kind of love.” 

“Well, I’ll be by later to work on the pod some more,” Jason said. 

Vince bade farewell to Jason, and Jason trudged his way through the FOB and toward the Task Unit headquarters – a squat, one level brick building which had been a store at one time in the not-so-distant past. 

One step into the headquarters door Jason was hit by a wall of cool, dry, refreshingly cold air. Jason took in a deep breath and allowed the chill air to fill his lungs as he closed the flimsy wooden door behind him. 

“Jason,” a deep voice said from the other side of the small room. 

Jason looked over to see Task Force Commander Josiah Gray. The tan-skinned bear of a man looked as if he was cut from marble, and when he stood, he towered over everyone else at the FOB. The brown haired, blue-eyed man from the city had been a tough task master, but was fair and rewarded his subordinates based on their merit. 

“Sir,” Jason replied as he approached Gray, but didn’t salute; new era, new army, new customs. 

“Task Unit intel has the two terrs your element rounded up,” Gray began. “We didn’t get much out of them.” 

“Neither did we,” Jason replied. 

“Thoughts?” 

Gray was the type of commander who made his subordinates think. His belief was even at their low level the Task Unit, and the eight Elements which comprised it, including Jason’s, had to be more strategic to beat the terrs and keep their homes safe. 

“I had thought maybe the terrs were getting desperate hiring simple bandits,” Jason said. “Carlos brought up the fact they may be recruiting untrained thieves and thugs to sew chaos and distract us while they prepare to attack somewhere else.” 

“And you agree with Carlos?” 

“Carlos has dealt with the terrs as much as any of us. I don’t see why his seat-of-the-pants analysis wouldn’t hold merit.” 

Gray nodded. “I’m apt to agree with both you and Carlos. According to intel reports from Squadron and Group, the terrs are losing personnel faster than they can recruit. A lot of their efforts are focused on shoring up their shortfalls with whomever they can bribe or coerce into service. On the other hand, they want to strike a blow against us to either push us back, or at least give them some breathing room.” 

“Then we should go find them.” The moment Jason let the words spill out of his mouth he knew Gray would say something. 

“That’s thinking too tactically, too low level,” Gray replied. “More than likely it will just be our Task Unit going to dig these guys out. We have to think operationally, even strategically, in our planning. Not only do we have to be two steps ahead of the enemy, we need to think of the second and third order effects of our actions on a local and regional level.” 

Jason sighed. “Yes sir.” 

“Are you “yes-sir-ing” me?” Gray asked with a chuckle. 

“Just a little too much thinking after today,” Jason said. 

“Well go get some rest. Planning begins tomorrow. I want you here tomorrow morning at zero-eight able to do your best thinking.” 

Jason loathed to think about the planning session with Gray and the other Element Commanders the next day. But, Jason reminded himself, if he wanted to continue to fight on top of his truck, and not in the line of troops on the ground, he had to attend to the duties Task Unit Commander Gray assigned him. 

Fortunately, that was a problem to worry about the next morning. Jason rushed to his room – a twenty-foot shipping container which had been modified into living quarters with plumbing, and had seen better days – dropped his gear, and made his way back to Vince’s maintenance shop. With the later hour most of Vince’s mechanics and technicians had left for the day, either returning to their billets, or their homes in the surrounding towns. Jason brushed past a plethora of civilian vehicles retooled for war in varying states of repair and disassembly – he noticed his own pick-up had its hood up and parts removed – and made his way to a small corner of the shop. 

There, in a dark alcove at the back of Vince’s maintenance shop, was a tan tarp covering what looked like a giant tennis ball, taller than a normal human being. Jason grabbed the tarp tight and yanked it off the ball to expose the armored metal shell of the pod. 

“Another night working on the armored pod,” Jason said to himself. “One day I’m going to pilot this thing.” 

Jason wasn’t sure what piloting a pod – or AP as the regular military types called them – entailed, exactly. Gray had explained it a little to him, and it seemed like an intuitive system. Jason was sure once he completed repairs on this pod, he could learn quick. 

Without another word Jason opened the overlapping armored hatches on the pod’s front to expose the pilot’s seat and controls within, and went to work.