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Rock of Ages

From Desperation, Deception, and Daring: The War Between E-Day and the Foothold; University of East Urbana Press: Urbana, 1940.

Asteroid CTO 12, christened “Gibraltar” and inevitably nicknamed “the Rock” by the spacers stationed there, constituted the primary staging area for Operation Foothold. Troops and materiel were shuttled to Gibraltar during its slow (approximately nine month) transit to Mars. Placed in a low-energy transfer orbit, the Rock nonetheless could not be readied before its first approach to the enemy planet. With supply lines stretching, the Service simply could not continue to resupply, much less augment, the base on Gibraltar.

In one of the most daring deceptions of the War, SACFEF convinced the Martians that Gibraltar had been intended as a planet buster that had failed to achieve the necessary orbital parameters. The base was reduced to a state of “hibernation” during its treacherous four-month swing through the Martian sky. The skeleton crew lived daily with the threat of the Martians piercing the deception and demolishing the base.

In light of the psychological stress inherent in such a situation, the few incidents on record become much more comprehensible…

MacElroy’s introduction

I don’t really see the point of this, but if Captain Atherton says to do it, I do it. Seems some high brass in the Service thinks it’s a good idea to record a “soldier’s-eye view” for the benefit of our future posterity. And who knows? Maybe it makes sense, now that it looks like we’ll have one.

This war and me, we go way back. My ma brought me into this world the night before the Grace. Well, to be more exact, G-Day in Brooklyn. So you might say I was getting started just as the walkers were winding down. Like any boy I kept an ear peeled for whenever someone’d report another lone cylinder. They weren’t scary then, more like pathetic. The papers would follow it for the seven or days it lasted, almost like following the ball game. People needed that, I guess, something that helped them forget how close we’d come. But I always knew in my bones they’d be back in strength eventually.

I signed up right after St. Petersburg. It’d been in my head since they announced the discovery of the Red Weed Field; I knew what was coming, but I didn’t want to admit it even to myself. But that changed when we started getting reports out of Russia — and when we stopped getting news from Russia, my mind was made up. So I was in the Service before there was a Service. Regular Army, back then, understaffed and underpaid. A fine American tradition.

Anyway, that meant I was under arms even before Minnesota and Georgia. My unit was mobilized after Minneapolis fell but we didn’t get moving before the cylinders came down near Atlanta. They boosted us down that way right quick. [laughs] I guess the brass in Washington looked at a map and saw it was only half as far to Georgia as it was to Minnesota. Anyway, we got down there a day after the cylinder opened. We had our new equipment but the really big stuff hadn’t made it yet. Some of that you had to move by rail; the old Zeds couldn’t lift it.

Things didn’t go the way they had in training. I’ll give you the full story some other time, but suffice it to say it was a combination of a hidebound Army and innovation on the part of the Martians. We got stomped, but we did withdraw in good order, trading ground slowly, doing it by the book. Hell, some of the less-bright types treated it like a game. We fell back on Norcross, in Gwinnett County, and waited for the Martians to be struck down by Grace.

Then we got the reports out of Minnesota. It was more than ten days past planetfall and the Martians weren’t dying