© 2018 Unity Mitford. All rights reserved. The author asserts her right to be identified beyond the grave as the author of this story. This story or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a review.
Well, it's the Winter Holidays competition on Literotica, and okay, it's time for a grimly dystopian little wintery tale of snow, sex, love, war and death. This one's an alternative-future-history SF story and it's more than a little downbeat and way grim but it does have some hot sex of course -- but it's not primarily sex, so if you're after a quick stroke story, this isn't it. For any of you that've read S. M. Stirling's Draka series, that was partly an inspiration for this, as was Jerry Pournelle's "Future History" to some extent. George Robert Elford's "Devil's Guard" was also something of an inspiration, as were a few books on the Spanish Civil War. It's also "military sex" in a manner of speaking - so enjoy, or experience, or recoil in horror, as you wish.
Before you read, be warned. This doesn't have a happy ending. It's not at all Christmassy either, although the theme is wintery and in line with the Literotica Winter Holidays Competition guidelines. It's in the Winter Holidays competition, but I'm not running for any prizes with this one. Read it and, well, you'll understand. It is intended to provoke a little thinking and there's a lot of death and violence as well as sex so I can say with complete certainty that it won't be to everyone's taste. It was a bit intense to write too -- and after all that, please do remember, it is fiction, because some people do read the author into the story and really, you shouldn't. It's fiction. Maybe fiction with a message but still, it's fiction... Unity
Music to listen to while reading this: "The Snow Fell," version sung by Saga, "First to Die" by Haymaker and "Be Still My Soul," men's choral version
* * * And the Snow Fell * * *
And the snow fell
Covering the dreams and ideals.
And the snow fell
Freezing the blood and the wheels.
And the snow fell
They had to keep up for survival
And the snow fell...
"The Snow Fell", Skrewdriver, version sung by Saga
* * *
"Snowing again, ma'am." That was all Sergeant-Major Maddock said as she shook me awake and her face was grim in the grey light before dawn. Yesterday, the sun had been shining and it'd been one of those Indian summer afternoons. Today, this morning, zero five hundred on my watch, the ground was covered in a layer of soft white. Even inside the cab of the command truck it was below zero. Well below zero, from the frost on the glass but at least I wouldn't need to slap on bug juice.
"Right." I wormed my out of my sack, reluctantly, because the dreams 'd been real bad last night and I was exhausted. I remembered waking up screaming a couple of times. That was why I slept in the cab by myself now. So's my nightmares and the screaming that came with them didn't wake the others up and I tried not to think about them. The nightmares that is, because they were always bad now and they were getting worse and I just hoped they stayed nightmares because if I started screaming when I was awake, I was done.
Slipping my boots on was like sticking my feet into a freezer and I should have kept them inside my bag. Slide into my field jacket, shivering. Body armor over the top and I always wore body armor now, after what'd happened to Brad. No need for full battle rattle because right now we didn't anticipate any crap going down but I always wore the armor. Do a quick check of my M4 and yeah, it was the Mk18. Short barrel.
Easier for me to handle and it wasn't like my shooting was ever long range was it. Safety on, mag seated, round up the spout because if the Ratdogs did launch a sneak attack behind the frontline, better be ready for that at least. Not that they did that much, not these days. The Ratdogs 'd once boasted that their guerillas were fish swimming in an ocean of the people. Our High Command were onto that one. Not much use being a fish when the ocean was drained dry and that was my job.
Draining the ocean.
Me and a few hundred others and if I'd cared anymore, I'd have hoped the others weren't anything like as fucked up as me. Now? Didn't care. Anyhow, by the time we'd finished passing through, the Ratdog fish had no ocean to swim in anymore and they'd sure stopped boasting about that one. Checked my 1911 as well, because I used that most days and this was my third. Worn out two already and yeah, cleaned, mag in, worked the action and she was real smooth, round up the spout and I was good for another day I didn't want to face.
Ratdogs were getting desperate as we advanced. The further south we came, the more desperate they got, because they knew what was coming for them. We didn't make any secret of it, not now, not after what we'd seen the Ratdog militias doing on the streets of New Leeds and Los Diablos and a whole bunch of the cities they'd taken control of. Fifty thousand dead in New Leeds in the first weeks and those were the ones they'd broadcast over the web and on the news.
Nope. No secret what we were doing either and now we made a real point of telling them. We were well down Highway 5, the frontline way south of Blacking and moving southwards fast. Fast as High Command could keep the frontline units supplied. The artillery thudded faintly in the distance, right at the edge of hearing and over on the highway, an endless column of supply trucks and new units rumbled south to join the fight. By the time we were done, Azteca would be a memory and so would the People's Republic of Barkley and all those other Ratdog-infested shitholes around San Martinez and Los Diablos and then we'd be turning and heading east and after everything that'd gone down, there wasn't any mercy left in the National Liberation Army.
We were coming for blood, their blood, and after what'd gone down in Emerald City and Rose City and what was going down right here and now as we moved south, they knew it.
"Praise the Lord for the snow," Sergeant-Major Maddock said, deadpan, and I was never sure if she was serious with the religious stuff or not.
These days, probably best not to ask, not that I really cared anymore. Me, I was Catholic, although I doubted the Pope and I'd be seeing eye-to-eye anytime soon because what he'd been saying about us lately, I kind of suspected he'd be taking a high dive from some twenty fifth story window soon enough and Catholic or not, I wouldn't be crying if he did. I didn't go for that praise the Lord stuff either but the regs said you gotta respect your soldier's beliefs and I followed the regs to the letter these days and Maddock had been with me for a long time. Right from the start and we knew each other.
"Keeps the smell down," she added as I slid out of the cab and down into the ankle-deep snow, shut the door behind me and I still had no idea if she was joking or not but I didn't really care.
"You go first Ma'am." The old guy at the back of the chow line gestured. New troop. Didn't recognize the face but he didn't have that lack of confidence that an FNG has and I could read the name tag. White. Didn't recognize that one either and he was carrying his own rifle, a .308 and it looked well used, not one of the standard M4's or the older M16's that units like ours got so he had to be real new.
"Nah," I said, bleakly, moving in behind and I wasn't hungry but regs and Maddock said eat so I ate. "No privileges for rank in this Army. When'd you join?"
"White, ma'am?" Sergeant-Major Maddock said. "Walked down out of the hills yesterday with maybe fifty others. Prior experience, most of 'em. Signed White here and half a dozen of the older guys on before anyone else could grab 'em. You'll see them this morning if we have time, ma'am. Provisionally assigned 'em to Ryan's platoon. He's short and he needs 'em for clearance work. That okay, ma'am?"
"Concur," I said. "Good to have you on board, White." Because the regs said you should greet new soldiers and do some social shit to make them feel welcome and I used to be good at that. Not so much anymore. "What were you? What's your story?"
The ones that walked in usually had one. Usually wasn't a good one. Kinda like mine, and that meant I probably didn't want to know but you had to ask. Brad 'd always asked and I was doing Brad's job now, as well as mine.
"Grunt, way back when," White said. "Couple of tours in the sandbox. Got out years ago, minded my own business. Goddamn Ratdog militia came up from San Martinez, started pulling anyone on their lists from their houses, shooting them in the street. Got a call from a buddy, grabbed my guns and my bug out ruck, made for the hills, linked up with a few buddies. Found a few like-minded folks and we made it through until you guys came down. Killed a few of the bastards along the way."
He turned his head and spat and there were tears in his eyes when he looked back. "Arlene was at work, couldn't get to her, she'd registered her guns along with me, dang fools that we were. Ratdogs didn't even try to take her away. Shot her on the spot."
Yeah, White's story was no exception and I didn't need to ask who Arlene was. Par for the course these days and the further south we went, the worse the stories got and yeah, sounded like White was a good fit.
"You okay with what we do, White? Lot of people aren't and no foul there. This Company's all volunteer and it's crap work..." I'd volunteered once, and now I couldn't un-volunteer because if I stopped, I'd start to think and the nightmares were bad enough now that they woke me up even when I took the pills the medic gave me every night and he wouldn't give me more. I'd asked and sometimes now I almost remembered the nightmares and I was scared that one day I would.