[FH] Breaking News - Margaritifer Now a Warzone

6 posts ยท Jan 5 2005 to Jan 6 2005

From: Beth Fulton <beth.fulton@m...>

Date: Wed, 5 Jan 2005 20:30:55 +1100

Subject: [FH] Breaking News - Margaritifer Now a Warzone

The Xenowar Takes Hold On Mars

New Guardian Times, RNAC Transport Bundaleer, January 3rd, 2194

In a scene repeated around the globe this morning, embeds from the NGT joined
the growing exodus for Mars. This morning, at the Harlow spaceport, we saw
shuttle after shuttle and pod after pod pick up thousands of Anglian soldiers,
lifting them to orbit for transfer to troop ships headed for Mars.

We went down to our allocated port terminal last night by hovertrain. Luckily
we heeded the advice to set out early, as it took more than twice the usual
time to make it up to Hadlow. The reason was easy to see. Again and again we
were stopped as the dim shape of a troop flitter shot past us northward bound
to the already overcrowded Harlow terminals.

When at last we reached the spaceport in the small hours, the main concourse
was packed and every square inch held a soldier, marine or paradropper in full
kit. Most of us stood or sat for a couple of sleepless hours on the floor,
waiting for our nanostims shot and glad of it. Without these shots Mars would
feel like a frozen, gasping hell. Even with the shots we are warned to keep
hold of our rebreathers. Already dubbed pigsnouts by the troops, the small
masks are surprisingly comfortable and easy to fit. Slotting down over the
nose and sealing up over the mouth and chin they give the wearer a rather
macabre but
comical appearance, as if a small child has decided mid-drawing to
forego the usual nose and mouth and replace them with skeleton-like
nasal slits and a series of thin, fluttering, horizontal feeding flaps.

As the rising sun turned the grey clouds over Hadlow to burnished copper, our
orbital carrier slid swiftly into its slot, its silhouette blocked quickly
from our view by a sea of heads as troops readied themselves to climb aboard.
When it finally came our turn to load up we shuffled on to find the
orbicarrier already near full capacity, soldiers standing shoulder to shoulder
amongst the hanging grip straps. Only a few minutes later there was the thud
of the door closing and the dull pressure of the hull vacusealing. Trying to
put growing nausea from our minds we took in the scene around us. A wild mix
of faces and emotions, the nervous glances and kit checking of a kid on first
deployment; a sergeant hanging asleep in the grip straps, his quiet snores
somehow at odds with his fully polyclad form; an officer with hud down nodding
and making quiet comments as he checks over orders and rosters.

Then we were free of the atmosphere and the orbicarrier slowed down, drifting
towards the spacedock. Sensing the change in thrust the soldiers on board stir
and quite a few begin making cheerful ribaldries. They at any rate did not
regard themselves as the central figures of an unfolding tragic drama. The
gangways are in position in no time and we all begin to clamber into the dock
corridors. Then more waiting. We wandered as best we could around the small
deck where we waited for our turn to board the transport for Mars. Every flat
surface was occupied. Small groups of soldiers in kit, some helmet down
sleeping, others helmet adrift sitting, chatting, sipping thermobrews or
chewing nicogum. Finally the clear voice of the load sergeant cuts across the
chatter and we grab our gear, form into lines and head for the transport.

The long string of helmeted men and women passes steadily but swiftly up
the gang-plank and away from the station. Once we have located a corner
to stow our gear we turn to the small tasks that are part of preparing for the
two day trip ahead. There aren't any viewports on our transport, at least not
in our section, but a large vidscreen shows an image of the controlled chaos
outside. Anglian ships and Europian, Swabian, Dutch,
OU, IFed and Eurasian, warships, transports, requisitioned Ftel-barges
and pleasure dome-yachts. Dancing about, trying not to foul each other
as they push off undaunted taking their loads across the hostile void and into
the inferno, where Vacforces and Army are fighting furiously to keep open the
entry points for our troops. We can't seem them yet, but out there somewhere
are fleets from every nation on Earth, protecting our route to Mars. News is
the Kraks have an equally large force guaranteeing their access to their
landing grounds. The two behemoths watching each other pour more souls
dirtside, unwilling yet to strike out at each other and cut the growing tide.
All the selfless courage of the nations of man is being thrown into the
resistance on Mars, and we refuse to believe it will be spent in vain.

> [quoted text omitted]

Paradropping Into Margaritifer

New Guardian Times, Margaritifer Sector, January 2nd-4th, 2194

The NAC 7th paradrop unit formed part of the Coalition airborne force which
has spearheaded the relief of the Tokalau Isthmus. It landed in Arda on
January 2nd at 4pm MMT, seizing vital corridor defence points and linking up
with the Japanese forces pushing down the valles from the north.

I've been with the 7th para for years now. In that time I've seen a lot of
combat with them. Each clash much the same, each unique in its own way. None
seemed so desparate as the current one. While the vets still joke, tension is
high now we are so close to home. As one of the few embeds already on Mars
when the Kraks struck I have the terrifying but equally thrilling privilege of
covering the main action here in Margaritifer.

I watched the 7th ready for its latest mission as dusk descended on Unity only
hours earlier; everybody, from its captain downwards, in cam smeared faces and
wearing the dropsuits and rimless sealed helmets now common to all airborne
forces. Each of them appearing nearly as broad and as thick as they were tall,
by reason of the colossal amount of equipment they were carrying with them.
The captain made a brief speech, ending with the time honoured "Tonight we
write history". In what seemed spontaneity, but years of embed service with
the paras let me know was almost ritual, there were three cheers, a short
prayer, and in the gathering darkness they drove off singing, incredible as it
seems.

It was dark when we finally took off. One of an enormous armada of
troop-carrying airships, protected by grav-assisted gliders, launching
from across southern Mars. The weather was not ideal for an airborne
operation, but there were no other choices. The Kraks had already overrun
Middleton Dunes and were pressing hard on Jalal at Jamsah and Ojika Jima.

The paradrop was lead by the 7th, veterans of Fawcett's defence and the
retaking of Berens on Barnard's. It was their duty to destroy as far as
possible the enemy's anti-air defences and to secure cover points on the
corridor links at LK nodes 81 through 94. There were also some largish
grav-gliders carrying equipment and weapons of all kinds. It was a bumpy
descent, though not as hot as on Rheinhold.

It was a ghoulish site that greeted me when I landed. The sky shot with
brilliant yellows, reds, and greens as lasers, plasma and kinetics tear up sky
and ground a like. Noise and pressure waves rolled through me as huge
explosions rock the area, Krak bombers covering the alien's amphibious attack.
A chorus of small grunts on the hudcoms acknowledges the flight of Manitobas
as they put a Krak artillery bank out of action.

These low gain vids don't do justice to the chaos that's currently tearing
through Arda, but the best we can do with alien jammers snowing up our
channels tremendously. The paras have cleared three Krak nests
and LK81 was in lock-down within minutes of landing. LK82 wasn't as
easy. Lying across open ground and with the corridor shell pretty badly
cut-up there was little cover for our approach. We're also being
continually harried by snipers. The gun section is keeping their heads down a
bit and the mortars are slicing them up, but nothing seems to shake the
resolution of those monsters until they're killed or their ammo is exhausted.

Jamming has grown stronger now; it will be voice comms only for a while here
sorry. The shelling has stepped up again and now there are flitters at the
other end of the valley. We're trying to dig in here now, Krak armour is
coming up the valles against us. We may have to blow 82 and push on for 83. I
think I'm going to be roasted by the heat of the L20A1s, but I'm thankful
these boys bought these plasma hogs along. They do seem to be holding the Krak
advance a little, looks like they'll have enough time. There is a low thrum,
just on the edge of hearing. Heads all around me are searching the sky and
close horizons for the source.
Its Europians! Aero-Gliss's are taking on the Kraks. Who would've
thought the 7th paras would be glad to see Europians?!....

...Sorry for the jumpy coverage, trying to conserve energy-packs. No
live bursts possible at present unfortunately. Now the immediate threat is
pinned, we can see other small bodies of Anglian troops moving along under
cover of the valley walls and small scrub to our west now. The odd discarded
dropchute is still fluttering down the valles. We're moving forward again now
on toward LK 83 and 84. We've left a small force at 82 until the Eurasian
troops can move across and take over. As we get closer to Ojika Jima we can
see black shapes scattered over the ground. Some are abandoned mining
gravcarts, left by the refugees that fled here
a day or so ago; most though are smashed grav-sleds and Japanese
gliders, the blackened bodies with damaged wings or shattered tails sticking
up at odd angles. It is an apocalyptic site. The true red of Mars showing
through every newly torn gash in its surface, twisted vehicles, smashed
buildings, smashed and scorched corpses.

We can see where the main Krak line is, even though it is still miles off. The
sky dark with smoke and dust is cut by flashes of fire and explosions. I
thought we were heading for LK84, but we've just come upon the main drop zone.
Material is coming down like snow and that already
landed is being moved forward in multi-wheel mine lorries, or
concentrated in scrapes where it is best hidden from the air. Apparently the
main body of paras has secured most of the corridor nodes, so we're
to cover a mine-clearing op...

...We're moving into the outskirts of Yokaichi now, southeast of the main
clash zone now nudging Ojika Jima. We're running into increasingly intense
actions with Kraks. Their snipers and foot patrols seem to be saturating the
entire area we're to clear. Every window seems to have been smashed and the
ring walls are crumbling. Before leaving, or dying, the local miners have done
a good job though, the place is dotted with small Krak tanks, all hulled and
well out of action.

Perched up in this cliff-top perch we have a good view of the main
action in the Arda. Wire netting is rolling out like crazy snakes and our
troops are being forced to wade through the mars grass up to their chests. The
tinder dry grass is ready to seed at present so spot fires are breaking out
with each action. Only the winds from the heavy bombardment are currently
keeping the lot at bay, snuffing out each patch with the debris and gusts
they're kicking up...

...The situation is worsening here as our artillery march has gone quiet and
the Kraks on the west have renewed their push through the township. We're
under constant fire now and it looks like transmissions will be cut altogether
soon. Grenades are rattling against the outer walls of our position. I can see
what must be an entire company of Kraks flooding
up the main parade. They're cracking poly-armour like eggshell. Even
with the pig snout my stomach is turning with the acrid smells, though the
sickly sweet of burning flesh is much worse.

The huds are showing ghostly marks moving below, the green outlines mean
they are ours thankfully. We're descending into the main sub-t-system
now. Hard to imagine an entire war was fought in tunnels like these a hundred
years back. Ghosts above us now, red and pulsing outlines, a platoon of Kraks.
They've swept through the area we just left, levelled
all the buildings, cracked the domes. More reds, this time veh----- ---
art---y strike collapsing t-- ----- ------ -udcoms intermit-e-t...

...Sorry about that break, bit more sudden than I would've liked, but
conditions are extreme. The fighting is raging behind us. The entire mining
centre of Yokaichi has been overrun. Great swaths have been levelled and there
are unconfirmed reports of glowballs being used.
Guess the Kraks don't know about the Martian Anti-BCN-WMD treaty. Seems
ironic we should get this news as we settle down in the store shed of a
terraformer's PFC factory, the township's nuke stakes just over the rise. We
spent ages making the place glow to keep it warm so we could scratch out a
living here and now aliens are using them to smack us out again.

The squad tech Stephenson hails from south of here, outside of Vogel. Family
has been in core terraforming for generations. She reckons word is elsewhere
on Mars the reactors and PFC flumes are in full production, trying to
counteract the effects of the shelling of the Margiterif. Says it's uncertain
if they can fully neutralize the cooling effects of the kinetic stikes.
Decades of terraforming could've been undone in the last few days, the whole
planet maybe heading for the deep freeze. Sitting here, sweating in polyclad,
puffing into a pig snout, flinching with a sound like antique freight cars
roaring overhead, it feels anything but cold right now. Steph says wait until
the thermsticks run low and the polyclad hasn't seen sun for a recharge in a
week. Then I'll know
cold...

...A hudsup hush as swept through the troops here. Word's comes down that we
are to move again, the Japanese and Swabians have linked up with us and we're
going to push back down through Arda. I have been informed it is likely all
comms will be down from here, they're even putting therm pant on their fingers
so hand signals won't be missed. This is all very surreal....

This was a delayed televid from the counterattack in the Margaritifer Sector.
We again apologise for the lack of continuous live coverage in this conflict,
but jamming and operational security is making such immediacy impossible and
we are grateful for your understanding in these trying times. We will post
further reports as they become available.

From: KH.Ranitzsch@t... (K.H.Ranitzsch)

Date: Wed, 05 Jan 2005 13:23:51 +0100 (CET)

Subject: Re: [FH] Breaking News - Margaritifer Now a Warzone

Beth.Fulton@csiro.au schrieb:
> In a scene repeated around the globe this morning, embeds

Just a minor quibble: As far as I understand the word, "Exodus",
whether the original Biblical one, or the post-WWII Exodus to Israel,
are evacuations or flights, not really the start of a deliberate military
operation. You could describe Dunkirk as an Exodus, but not
the embarkation for D-Day.

Otherwise, a nice piece.

Greetings Karl Heinz

From: Frits Kuijlman <frits@k...>

Date: Wed, 5 Jan 2005 14:17:44 +0100

Subject: Re: [FH] Breaking News - Margaritifer Now a Warzone

> KH.Ranitzsch@t-online.de wrote:

> Beth.Fulton@csiro.au schrieb:
They were escaping british food and going to paris. The germans were
just in the way:-)

From: Indy Kochte <kochte@s...>

Date: Wed, 05 Jan 2005 08:18:54 -0500

Subject: Re: [FH] Breaking News - Margaritifer Now a Warzone

> KH.Ranitzsch@t-online.de wrote:

The definition of 'exodus' is "a large scale departure of people". So in this
case it probably fits okay.

However, if it's only a minor quibble, you gotta give Beth's field reporter
some credit. How many field/news reporters get more facts wrong than
right
in stories? ;-)  In some of my fiction news pieces (which another will
be coming out soon, set a couple decades or so before Beth's current postings)
I purposefully put in some erroneous and/or contradictory bits (even
spelling errors in one or two instances), which a couple of alert listers
called me
on. ;-)

Mk

From: Beth Fulton <beth.fulton@m...>

Date: Thu, 6 Jan 2005 09:59:02 +1100

Subject: RE: [FH] Breaking News - Margaritifer Now a Warzone

G'day,

> Just a minor quibble: As far as I understand the word, "Exodus",

I could proclaim that the english language has changed a lotin the next 200
years so the term has been softened (that has started here already which is
why I didn't pick up my own slip), but to be honest it was because I was using
the evacuation from Dunkirk as the germ for that article... oops;)

Cheers

From: Adrian Johnson <ajohnson@i...>

Date: Thu, 06 Jan 2005 00:30:22 -0700

Subject: Re: [FH] Breaking News - Margaritifer Now a Warzone

Hey Beth,

another great post.

I got all excited reading that one, and found myself skipping bits to see what
was coming next...

thank you for taking the time!