That division died, for the most part, in Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, but not before that ten million could be evacuated to shelter. Curiously, no one north of the border found cause to complain about illegal immigration. Ten million Mexican immigrants meant another million or more men and women for the United States Army.
A small group of relatively poor Posleen set down in Colombia between the mountains and the sea. The Colombian army folded quickly. The various private armies, paramilitaries of the right, the left and the narcotraffickers, succeeded for the nonce in holding substantial parts of the undeveloped part of the country, as well as the mountain fringed capital, Bogotá.
The invaders also touched down on both sides of the Rio de la Plata in the vicinity of Buenas Aires, Argentina and Montevideo, Uruguay. Pastoral and open, ideal ground for the Posleen “cavalry,” both countries quickly succumbed.
From their base in southeastern South America the Posleen spread out to the north and west. For the nonce Brazil was able to hold them out, though at terrible cost. To the west Chile, with strong natural defenses through the Andes passes held by well trained, tough and disciplined mountain troops, and aided by a company of 1st Battalion, 508th Infantry (ACS) stopped the Posleen cold… literally cold.
The smell from the “puke trees” that marked the demarcation line between the Army’s Fort Kobbe and Howard Air Force Base drifted across Kobbe’s main street, making those not used to it, as Scott Connors wasn’t used to it, want to retch. Fortunately, Connors and his battalion commander were walking south, away from the trees and toward the tent city in which the First of the Five-O-Eighth was billeted.
The stench of the puke trees matched Connors’ mood as it had been since opening his mail on the long space voyage back to Earth. It was hard to take an interest in things after one’s carefully constructed world falls down around one. Still, he was a soldier, was an officer, and going through the motions wasn’t that difficult after more than fifteen years of service.
“That’s not a helluva lot of prep time you’re giving us,” Connors said to his battalion commander, Snyder.
“Captain, there isn’t a lot of prep time we’ve been given. So stop sniveling about what can’t be changed and just soldier on, why don’t you?”
“Yessir,” Connors answered. In truth he wasn’t a sniveler and he knew the Old Man knew that. Must be the pressure of seeing most of this hemisphere fall so quickly that’s making him testy, he thought.
“The submarine’s going to be here tonight,” Snyder continued. “It will spend the night loading consumables, mostly ammunition, for your company. You and your men will board around 0500. You’ll have a four day sail, underwater, to Valparaiso, Chile. From there you will attach yourselves to the Chilean Army but only for purposes of helping them hold the Uspallata Pass.”
“Why Chile?” Connors asked.
“Two reasons, I suspect,” Snyder answered. “One is that, since the Posleen have not landed on the western Side of the Andes and the passes over range from ‘limited’ to ‘no fucking way,’ we might actually have a chance to hang on to the place. The other reason is that Chile is still the world’s best source of copper, which we need for damned near everything, and produces — especially since the expansion for the war — a couple of million tons of nitrates a year. We need the nitrates even more than we need the copper.”
“Okay, boss. Roger, wilco and all that happy horseshit. But what the hell do they expect a single company of MI to do?”
Snyder almost laughed. “If nothing else, Captain, the Army expects you to die well. I, on the other hand, expect you to hold that fucking pass until the Chileans can get some better fixed defenses in and then get your ass back here, as whole and as sound and as up to strength as humanly possible.”
“One company of MI?” Connors asked dubiously.
“Captain, have you ever seen the Andes?”
Connors hadn’t really expected the sub to be as big as it was. Although mostly hidden, the length of the thing dwarfed the pier. The only thing bigger, nearby, was the heavy cruiser, USS Salem, docked two bays over.
A navy chief with a stupendous gut met Connors dockside. He introduced himself as “Chief Petty Officer Kaiser, Major.” Connors did a double take and then remembered that, aboard ship, there could be but one “captain.”
“Sir,” Kaiser continued, “we’ve actually got space for more troops than you’re bringing aboard. What we don’t have space for is the number of men and those big bloody suits. This trip out, you’re going to be stacked like sardines.” He added, apologetically, “It’s gonna suck like a convention of Subic Bay whores.”
Connors shrugged indifferently, then smiled. “Chief, if you’ve never been in a C-130 after a twelve-hour flight trying to on-board rig for a jump then you don’t know what ‘suck’ is. We’ll be fine once we get settled in.”
The chief liked Connors’ sense of proportion. “That’s another thing, Skipper. The boat’s decks and all were never meant for half ton suits of armor. We’re trying to reinforce them but…”
“Stop trying, Chief. We can dial down our effective weight to nothing. Matter of fact, if we really wanted to, working together my company could probably pick up the sub and fly it… bounce it around for a while anyway.”
“No shit, huh?”
“No shit, Chief. Oh, we couldn’t fly it all the way to Chile… well… maybe if we could somehow tap into the sub’s own reactor and charge the suits at a rate of about ten to one. But we could move it around. It would take longer than sailing though.”
“Coool,” admired Kaiser. “Well, you don’t need to fly us anywhere. And the captain will be mighty pleased to hear that you’re not going to warp our decks.”
“How long’s it going to take us to get to Valparaiso?” Connors asked.
Kaiser looked around to make sure no one else was in earshot. Then, conspiratorially, he said, “Officially, we couldn’t get you there in less than four and a half days at top speed. Unofficially, you’ll hit the beach seventy-three hours after we set sail.”
“Cooool.”
“Cooool,” intoned Connors as he stepped up from the cramped troop bay of the submarine and took his first look at the Port of Valparaiso. He was suited up, of course, since he and B Company were heading into action as soon as they finished unloading, but his helmet was under his arm so that he had an unobstructed and natural view of the city.
Valparaiso was laid out more or less in the form of an amphitheater, with a wide, flat, circular harbor surrounded by steep hills on all side. The houses clinging to the hillsides were gaily, even gaudily, painted. Connors thought he could see elevators moving up and down the hills carrying people to and from their work.
A dress-white clad Chilean naval officer (for Chile had a very long, honorable, and even impressive tradition in its naval service, as well as in one other) met Connors from the pier. Connors took a double take; the Chilean officer bore an absolutely striking resemblance to Admiral Guenther Lutjens who had gone down with the Bismarck in 1941.