
After we up-shipped to Mars Base, we sat for a solid day, trying to find out why the UAC miners on
Phobos had sent a distress call—and why they didn’t answer now. In the Marines, you spend eternity so
bored you’d look forward to your own court-martial as a break in the tedium. Then an unexpected
danger with huge, jagged edges comes rolling over all the set routines, a reminder that the universe is a
dangerous place.
The last message we received from Phobos was:
“Things coming through the Gate.” When something that serious hits the fan, boredom is returned to
its proper place as a luxury. The court-martial of a corporal was deemed less important than a potential
threat to Mars—and not important at all compared to an immediate threat to the profits of the Union
Aerospace Corporation.
With a ringing cry of “sounds like they’re smoking something up there,” Lieutenant Weems boldly led
his men into the transport. At first I thought I’d be left behind on Mars Base; but either Weems thought I
might prove useful to have along, or else he just didn’t want a loose end. I volunteered to go along.
Sometimes I’m not very bright.
Major Boyd did his best to brief us by video feed, under the obvious handicap of complete ignorance.
He made the best of it. We were issued pressure suits, in case we had to leave the immediate vicinity of
the Gate. You couldn’t stay very long outside the pressure zone, and you’d get mighty cold, mighty fast.
But at least the suits gave you a fighting chance to get to a ship or a zone before you were sucking
vacuum. I was pleased to be issued a suit; I was less pleased that Weems didn’t issue me a weapon.
While I contemplated the lethal uses of common household articles, PFC Ron Two brought the
promised cup of coffee. It tasted bad enough to be a strategic weapon of deterrence. The expression on
the guard suggested that he might have sampled it before passing it on to me; but maybe he was just plain
scared of the situation. I couldn’t really blame him.
A word about these Gates on Phobos and Deimos, the two tiny moons of Mars; you’ve probably
heard about the Gates, even though officially it’s a secret.
They were here when we first landed on Mars. It was a hell of a shock, discovering that someone or
some thing had beaten us by a million years to our own closest neighbor! It was long before I joined up,
of course, but I can only imagine the panic at the Pentagon when we found ancient and wholly artificial
structures on Phobos, despite the complete lack of any form of life on Mars.
It was pretty clear they’d been placed there by some alien intelligence. But what? All my adult life, I’d
heard speculation: all the usual UFO culprits . . . Reticulans, Men-in-Black, ancient Martians—that was
the most popular theory, despite not working at all: there was no native life on Mars; but try to tell that to
generations raised on Martian Walkabout, Ratgash of Mars, and Mars, Arise!
Me, I figured it was a race of alien anthropologists; they got here, said, “Hmm, not quite ready yet,”
and left a “helipad” in case they decided to return . . . which they might do tomorrow or a hundred
thousand years from now.
Somebody decided to call them “Gates,” even though they just sat there doing nothing for as long as
we’ve known about them. But surrounding them was a zone of about half Earth-normal gravitation ... on
a moon whose normal gravity is just this side of zero! In addition to the big, inert Gates, there were also
small pads scattered here and there that instantly transported a person from point A to point B within the
area, evidently without harm . . . teleports, if you will. I had heard about them but never seen one;
damned if you’d ever get me into one, either.
When the United Aerospace Corporation bribed enough congressmen for the exclusive contract to
mine Phobos and Deimos, they built their facilities around the Gates, taking advantage of the artificial
gravity . . . except for those parts of the operation that wanted low gravity, which they built outside the
“pressure zones.” After the big reorganization, the Corps got the task of guarding the Gates.
Well—it looked as though the big Gates weren’t quite so inert as we all thought.
Once we landed on Phobos, the gunny dropped me and my two guards at the abandoned Air Base
depot (in the “western” pressure zone—anti-spinwards) and took the rest of Fox Company on to the
UAC facilities, Weems in tow, to re-establish contact and “secure the situation.” All my friends went with
Weems, leaving me with the two Rons for company.