"Don't know why you bother, Rico," Sergeant Zim’s voice boomed from the doorway. "The bugs’ll just cover it in ichor the minute you hit the dirt."
The MI moved as a single organism. They didn't run; they marched with the rhythmic thud of pressurized boots. Johnny slid into his egg-shaped pod. The darkness swallowed him, save for the amber glow of the HUD. "On the bounce, troopers!" the radio crackled.
Johnny stepped into the suit, the neuro-mechanical interface stinging as it synced with his nervous system. Suddenly, he wasn't just a man; he was a steel-clad titan, capable of leaping buildings and leveling hills. He felt the familiar weight of the Y-rack on his back, loaded with tactical nukes and jump-jets. "To the capsules!" Zim roared. ROBERT A. HEINLEIN FANTERIA DELLO SPAZIO
The floor dropped out. For a second, there was the stomach-flipping void of space, then the violent shudder of the atmosphere hitting the heat shield. Outside, the sky of Klendathu was a bruised purple, filled with the streaks of a thousand falling stars—each one a soldier.
He hit the ground at terminal velocity, his retro-rockets firing a micro-second before impact. The pod shattered. Johnny leaped out, his flamethrower clearing a circle of scorched earth before his boots even settled. "Don't know why you bother, Rico," Sergeant Zim’s
The sirens began to wail, a dissonant screech that signaled the "Drop."
The humid air of the base camp smelled like ozone and recycled sweat—the permanent perfume of the Mobile Infantry. Johnny Rico sat on his bunk, methodically cleaning the hydraulic joints of his powered suit. Around him, the barracks of the Rodger Young hummed with the nervous energy of soldiers who knew they’d be dropping onto a hostile rock in less than six hours. Johnny slid into his egg-shaped pod
Below the surface, the ground vibrated. The Bugs were coming.