In the not too distant future...
It had all begun innocently enough. The world financial markets were still reeling from the economic instability caused by the over-extended real estate markets. Then there were a series of seismic events including earth quakes and volcano eruptions; mostly in the Pacific, what is called the ring of fire. No one thought that much of it. Only a few scientists and conspiracy buff types seemed to take any notice.
But then it began in earnest. First, Mount Vesuvius blew its top; destroying much of Naples and killing over a million people. Then, scientist noticed a marked increase in activity in the two hundred volcanoes scattered on tiny Iceland. It began with just two small eruptions, but soon spread to over a dozen others. The Hawaiian Island volcanoes soon followed suit; although in that case it was the underwater ones that seemed most active. Within the space of just a week two of them had managed to create another substantial island, although it was not likely to be inhabitable for some time.
By this time, governments, scientists and the media had begun to speculate on what global phenomenon might be causing this increased seismic activity. But before they could come up with an answer, it happened...the unthinkable; the eruption of not one, but three of the world's handful of supervolcanoes. Yellowstone had been the first to go; resulting in the death of more than two million people and forcing millions of others to flee the central United States. Before the global community could even respond to the six day eruption there, the Siberian Traps in Russia began to erupt as well. If that was not enough for a divided global community, the Taupo Volcano in New Zealand soon added its voice in the Southern Hemisphere.
The thing is that scientist always knew that the eruption of even one of that handful of supervolcanoes could result in a new ice age that would last for several years or even decades. No one had even dared to postulate what might happen if three were to simultaneously erupt. The result was too horrid to even contemplate. But soon enough mankind found itself facing just such a reality. This is the story of how we re-built our society.
Even before the disastrous volcanic winter began to descend upon civilization, over half of the world's population had been eliminated by the global eruptions. In the United States alone, the inhabitable land mass was reduced to a dozen southern states and parts of California. Florida held the most potential, but suffered from flooding resulting from rising sea levels. The President had ordered a mass relocation of those in the devastated central regions, but it had been slow going.
In the end, only about five million people had been successfully housed before the sub-zero temperatures began to plague even Miami. Anything much further north than the new capitol of Atlanta was virtually frozen that first winter. When summer finally came, it was not much better. It lasted only from late June to mid-August; too brief a time to grow enough food for even such a dwindling populace. The countries that faired the best were ones such as Central America and regions of Africa and Asia that had once been considered the Third World. But even there, it was virtually impossible to grow food without the use of greenhouse technology.
We survived those first few years only by overcoming the petty differences that had divided us for millennia. The developed countries shared technology with those other countries upon which fate had shown its mercy; allowing them to produce barely enough to sustain the world's shrinking population of less than twenty million people. Gone were the days of gluttony and avarice. It was back in many ways to the bare basics that our ancestors had known. We made use of every single resource.
But it changed our societies in other ways as well. The most noticeable became the family. In a world with decreasing numbers of humans, reproduction became not a private matter for individuals; but the central issue to rebuilding the species. As the skies began the clear and the days began to lengthen hailing if not the end of the ice age at least a tempering of it; it became even more crucial that humans breed.
And that was exactly what it was...breeding. It became much the same procedure of selecting mares and sires that it had once been with horses, cattle and other domestic animals. All women from the age of eighteen to thirty-five were enslaved once again to task of producing children, as many as they could. Gone were words like birth control and reproductive choice. Our sole purpose was the bearing and raising of children.