Chapter 38
Marching South
24th of Eighthmoon, MC 299 (6 Charles 9)
Near Del Lago, North-South Border Region

Except for the old capital of Santiago that straddled border and was claimed by both sides, North and South Malvina were separated by a stretch of no man's land about a kilometer wide that ran from coast to coast. The two countries had built up fortifications over the years to ensure that no attempt to invade would be easy.
Capitán Joan-Paolo Guinsales was charged with his own little five-kilometer slice of this heaven. The border troops were a little more concentrated here as it was close to one of the few roads connecting North and South. The road was wide enough for trucks with their cargoes to come and go, but not quite suited as a route of ingress for an invading army. You could never be too careful, though.
Tempting as it was to stay holed up in the relative comfort of the company bunker until his two-year tour was over, Capitán Guinsales would run the circuit of his area of responsibility once a day unless he had more pressing duties to attend to. It was going a bit overboard, yes, but he was aiming for a promotion at the end of this so he would never have to worry about being assigned to this sort of post again. He would never stop by at the same time two days in a row so as to keep the men on their toes. They might as well be performing at the level where they end up with promotions and tickets out of here, too.
A two-meter berm was built up along the defensive line to keep troops and vehicles going up and down the circuit out of direct fire. Pillboxes were built into this berm every couple hundred meters to provide a covered position for overlapping fire should the need ever arise. Each pillbox could house an entire squad, but ordinarily they lacked the manpower and any reason to pack them full. A two-man team on a 14-hour rotation was more than sufficient for everyday duty.
Much as Capitán Guinsales would patrol the company's area of responsibility, his platoon leaders would do the same for their smaller AORs. Here in Second Platoon's AOR, Teniente Eduardes happened to be at the current pillbox the Capitán was inspecting.
Upon noticing Capitán Guinsales' arrival, Teniente Eduardes said, "Atten-shun."
He did not raise his voice, nor did he salute, as the border was treated as an active combat zone regardless of the current state of hostilities. It would take a truly eagle-eyed sniper to notice here inside the pillbox, but laxity has a way of snowballing, so the fact that Teniente Eduardes was so on point was a good sign for the health of the unit.
"As you were," Capitán Guinsales said, and the two enlisted men resumed their observation of no man's land. He then told Teniente Eduardes, "I was just making the rounds, as are you, it would seem. Anything to report?"
"No, sir," Teniente Eduardes replied. "Same as ever."
The Teniente had only been assigned to the unit for a few months, so he did not have nearly as much weariness in his answer as those who had been here a year or more.
"Well, no news is good news, they say," Capitán Guinsales said. "I would be quite happy to have nothing but 'Nothing to report' in my log entries."
"It can't last forever, sir," Teniente Eduardes said. "We've stayed out of this war so far, and so have the Norteños, but we're going to have to pick a side."
This was something that had been argued ever since King Seleuceus declared the formation of the Free Miravel Coalition. Publicly, La Doña condemned both the Palatinian attack on the Imperial diplomats and the Imperials' indiscriminate bombing of Palatinian cities while calling for a diplomatic solution to the conflict. President Bustamante in the North made similarly neutral statements, but who knew what was really going on behind the scenes?
The way a major power like Byrandia so quickly capitulated to these Imperials and spearheaded the effort to bring the whole world in line was simply baffling. Capitán Guinsales fancied himself as something of a student of history. Byrandia had scarcely ever ceded a single sench to anyone in over 200 years and now suddenly she was an obedient lapdog to this foreign power that claimed to be from another world. There was so little information about these Imperials that was released to the public. Capitán Guinsales did not know what to make of it.
The Capitán's thoughts were disturbed by a whining, buzzing sound in the distance. Capitán Guinsales went to the loophole of the pillbox to look outside and saw a small single engine plane from the North coming their way. Just as there were only a few avenues connecting the North and South by land, air travel was tightly restricted and they were nowhere near one of the approved lanes.
The plane was too small, too noisy, and flying too low to be a spyplane, but it could be that the Norteños were probing their defenses. Maybe they were trying to provoke a response in order to drum up a casus belli. Air defenses were outside Capitán Guinsales' authority, so if the plane was to be shot down, it would not be his decision.
The plane crossed the border, so shooting it down would have been fully justified, but the commander of the anti-air battery held his fire. As it was directly overhead, the plane turned and started going down the defensive line. Capitán Guinsales moved to stick his head out the loophole to get a better look, but he felt a hand take hold of his collar and pull him back. It was Teniente Eduardes.
"Really, sir," he said reprovingly, "I don't think Teniente Marones wants a promotion that bad."
The Teniente was referring to Capitán Guinsales' executive officer, who would assume command if something were to happen to him. The threat was near zero, but trying to stick your head out of a pillbox like that was still a stupid thing to do, Capitán Guinsales had to admit.
"Sir, look!" one of the enlisted men said, pointing out the loophole.
The air was filled with flyers fluttering to the ground like fall leaves.
"Armendáriz, go check it out," Teniente Eduardes said.
"Yes, sir," Armendáriz replied, shouldering his rifle and going out of the pillbox.
He returned shortly thereafter with one of the flyers in hand, offering it to Teniente Eduardes. The Teniente gave it a once-over before handing it to Capitán Guinsales. The message was printed in large block letters.

BROTHERS!
IS LA DOÑA WORTH YOUR BLOOD?
WE ARE AT WAR WITH ARTURO, NOT WITH YOU!
LAY DOWN YOUR ARMS, FLEE YOUR POSTS AND SAVE YOUR LIVES!
YOU HAVE 10 MINUTES TO ESCAPE! HURRY!
 

At the bottom of the page was a cartoon illustrating the two choices. One was a scene of carnage overseen by a grinning devil, while the other had a Norteño tank roll by on a clear road with the smiling tank commander waving at an unarmed Sureño soldier holding up a flower, all while a little angel looked on approvingly. This was psyops at its most elementary, but the threat could not be ignored.
The pillboxes were connected to the company bunker via a simple party line. Capitán Guinsales snatched up the receiver and dialed his office.
His bored secretary picked up the phone and said, "Company HQ, how may I help you?"
"Correa! Patch me through to Battalion now!"
"Uh... Who's speaking?"
"Correa!"
Correa managed to figure it out rather quickly after that.
"Oh! Yes, sir! Right away, sir! Please hold a moment, sir!"
If the flyer was right about the ten minutes, they did not have a moment to spare. The Capitán only hoped Correa did not fumble about operating the switchboard.
Correa came back on the line to say, "Sir?"
"Yes, Correa?"
"I've got Battalion on the line. I'm, ah, I'm putting you through now, sir."
There was a click as the line switched over. The operator on the other end said, "Battalion HQ. How may I help you, sir?"
"This is Capitán Guinsales of Company Three. Connect me to Coronel Estrella. It's urgent."
"I'm afraid the Coronel's line is busy at the moment, sir."
"What part of 'urgent' don't you understand!?" Capitán Guinsales snapped.
"Would you like to hold, sir?"
"No, I wouldn't like to hold! I'd like to talk to Coronel Estrella!"
"I could call you back when the Coronel is available."
"There's no time! Get him on the line now!"
"I'm sorry, sir, but you're going to have to wait."
"Dammit, man! The Norteños are about to launch an attack!"
"Is... is this a drill, sir?"
"No, it's not a drill, damn you! Get the Coronel!"
Only at this point did the operator seem to truly appreciate the gravity of the situation, exclaiming, "Ah! Ye, yes, sir! Just a minute, sir!"
They did not have a minute, but any more shouting would not accomplish anything. All the Capitán could do was look uneasily at his watch as he waited for the operator to come back on the line.
"Sir? Are you still there?"
"For the moment."
"The Coronel is busy with Capitán Algoel of Company One. He said to tell you to hold the line, sir."
"Hold the line?"
"Yes, sir. Hold the line."
That was not all that helpful, but orders are orders.
"Alright," Capitán Guinsales said. "You can tell Coronel Estrella, 'Orders received.'"
He hung up the phone, then dialed for everyone on the line to pick up.
"This is Capitán Guinsales," he said when he thought enough of them were on the line, "here at Two-Three. From east to west, sound off."
"One-One."
"One-Two."
There was a pause.
"Is One-Three on the line?" the Capitán asked. "Sound off."
Still nothing.
"Continue," Capitán Guinsales said. "If there's no response after three seconds, the next one sound off."
"One-Four."
And on down the line to Four-Six with three not reporting in. Capitán Guinsales would deal with that later.
"Code red, code red," he said. "Enemy action imminent. I repeat, enemy action imminent. This is not a drill. I want every man armed and ready. Our orders are to hold the line. I repeat, hold the line. Anything that crosses into no man's land is to be considered hostile. Engage at will. I repeat, engage at will. This is Capitán Guinsales. Out."
With that done, the Capitán Guinsales turned to leave, telling Teniente Eduardes, "I'm heading back to HQ. Take care of things here."
Teniente Eduardes caught his arm before he could go.
"Sir, it's been ten minutes."
As if on cue, there was the sound of cannonfire from the North's side. It sounded like they fired every piece of artillery they had. Then the shells came screeching in. They say you never hear the one that gets you, but that did not seem to be true at all.