Author's note: This is a 10 part story, with two POV characters.
The setting is very mildly futuristic, but mostly alternate dimension. My warnings would be some violence (not particularly graphic), and unlawful characters behaving badly.
I welcome all feedback, positive or negative.
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David
I think the pettiest thing that annoyed me while growing up, was that I was supposed to be taller.
My best friend, Wesley, was taller than me at every age. My uncles were both taller than me. My dad, way taller than me.
You see it in the family photos. Of all the males, I'm the 'short' one. And six foot isn't even short. I spent all my childhood thinking I would match my father's height, then at some point I had to accept that I'd stopped growing.
Sounds like I've had an easy life if that's all I had to worry about.
The war started when I was about eight or so. I'm probably supposed to talk about the things that changed, and how it affected everything. I don't really know what to say. I don't remember what things were like 'before'.
The war seemed far away. It was a sequence of events seen through the TV screen. Slightly detached news stories that only told half the story. Told whatever the government deemed necessary. There was some tense cold war going on between world superpowers, and it eventually erupted.
Things did change, but they were subtle, small. Certain products slowly disappeared off the shelves of shops. Certain TV shows stopped. New movies and games stopped being regularly released. It always seemed so gradual, and I was young. In teenage years I'd turn around and wonder why something happened, swear that things used to be different when I was, like, 12.
The internet being hit was probably what started the biggest uproar. We didn't lose it, but it closed in. We had the national grid, but they tried to shut off the rest of the world. ISP's could block whatever the fuck they wanted, whatever the government told them to.
Our island was trying to close off from the world, losing trade with other countries, and suffering because it couldn't support its population.
There were problems. Things definitely changed. A lot of this war was economic. I suppose I was oblivious to it because my parents, my family, were rich. And that money was not drying up any time soon.
I was one of the lucky ones.
---
Violet
At some point, I had to realise I was bottom of the food chain.
When it's all you've known, all you've seen, and never had a chance to look in from the outside, it goes over your head.
You think you're okay. You think this is normal. You've never known better.
We were normal people. We just did some illegal things to get by. The way I actually saw it as a child, we were smart. Adapt and survive. Are you going to starve today, or will you slip that breakfast bar up your sleeve and make a run for it?
Better run fast. The slow ones get caught. And drafted.
---
David
The second uproar came when the fighting actually started, and the law changed. They introduced the National Service.
It was a disguised conscription. You could get out of it, if you did the right things. Once turning 18 and finishing school, you had a year to get a job or enroll in higher education.
Sounds easy enough, right? Good fucking luck getting a job. Getting into university was no walk in the park, either. You needed the right grades, they could be as selective as they liked, and you'd get horribly in debt for the rest of your life anyways. Then you probably still couldn't get a job once you were finished, so you were only delaying your drafting.
People wouldn't be dragged into the service anymore over the age of 29, except in special cases. So there was a long time of stalling.
I was 13 when it came into full swing. There were lots of school assemblies to make sure all the kids understood. If you misbehaved enough to get expelled, you were going to be put into the youth service. If you were a little shit in society, your third arrest would see you in service.
Nobody took it seriously at first. Then those naughty kids, the ones who always answered the teachers back, the ones who were always getting sent out the classroom, the ones who got into fights... they started disappearing.
It became that bullshit thing. Don't do this, or you'll get drafted. Don't do that, or you'll get drafted.
Even if you got through school without getting drafted, the year gap was reduced to six months at some point. They needed to deal with all the youths, because the youths were a problem.
People rebelled and tried to fight it. Kids ran away from home before the system came knocking at their door. Homeless kids formed gangs. It snowballed in a few short years.
There were anti-war activists - people who blamed the government for getting involved in things it shouldn't have, for dragging the country down. I'm sure they had some good message at the start of things, but it got marred somewhere down the line. Give people a cause, and the ones who want some way to take out their anger will taint it.
The activists struck close to home, because they targeted my family. Or more specifically, my uncle, Darren.
It built up for a while. I remember my dad coming home, swearing about the protesters he'd been chasing off company grounds again. There were conversations between him, my mother, my uncles, which usually trailed off because they thought it wasn't suitable for us kids.
Not like they could hide it, because the media took an interest.
I was 14, and I remember it clearly. It was one of those nights where my parents were out late, so Wesley and I were at home, looking after my little sister, Hanna. We were eating in front of the TV, watching the live six o'clock news. The name of the family company came up and we paid a little more attention.
There was some commotion somewhere. A swarm of protesters. The reporter's voice was hurriedly explaining whatever was going on, claiming it was happening because Darren SΓΆrensen was there. It wasn't the company complex. I wasn't sure where it was. The cameras focused on people coming out from a building, and I took a moment to realise I was looking at my uncle on live TV.
He looked both bewildered and angry at all the commotion and harassment. Bodyguards were trying to clear a way for him to a car, alongside a few police officers.
A protester broke through and threw a bucket of blood over him.
"Oh
shit
," Wesley said, leaning forward with his elbows on his knees, staring at the screen in disbelief.