Chapter 1
He opened his eyes. For a moment
he forgot where he was. But the perpetual hissing and that slow drip of water
brought him back. He just lay there, lost in his own thoughts. He knew he
should get up, sit up or at least do something. But everything was the same, a new
day, the same story. The lighting was the same, the smell was the same, and
even the sounds were the same. But as he came back to reality a new sound
emerged. He could hear boots thumping and a distant Klaxon. Something was
definitely up. He swiveled out of bed and poked his head out of the bunkroom
hatch. Soldiers were rushing past by the dozens. He saw the alarmed look on
their faces. The Klaxons were getting louder. He must have missed the
announcement which is hard to do on a submarine, but instinct told him to
follow the crowd. He ran to his bunk and pulled on some clothes, then shoved
his way into the crowd.
Chapter 2
The crammed bodies were moving at
a steady pace, churning along by itself. Although being a big guy, the crowd
was overpowering. He had no control over where he went. There seemed to be a
panic in the air, but for what, nobody knew. A rouge announcement could mean
anything from a forgotten ID tag to a hostile attack. But when paired with a
Klaxon, they tended to be on the more negative side. The end of the passageway
neared and the torrent of nervous, bleary-eyed soldiers emptied out into the
mess hall. But this was no lunch time. All the tables had been pushed to the
side and a small stage set up at the head. There, Lt. Larson stood straight as
an arrow with his hand folded behind his back. Lt. Larson was a good guy. He
could take a joke but always sobered up when the time called for it. Larson
wasn’t making any jokes, talking to his fellow comrades or even looking at the
masses of people pouring, simply staring stone-faced at an air vent. This
couldn’t mean good. When someone who had seen it all purses their lips, it
means bad news is coming.
“Yo Nate!” a voice called out
from behind.
Nate turned around, happy to
something other than bad news. His closest friend, Jason, had found him in the
crowd. Jason looked like a child among grownups. In the military where 5’7
won’t get you drafted, it seemed impossible that he passed the physical. How lucky Nate thought, or unlucky. 5’8 wasn’t bad, but
in a situation where strength is the difference between life and death, every
inch is indispensable. And surrounded by 6 footer’s, he looked tiny. Nate had wormed
his way through the crowd to Jason, who was eagerly waiting for him. Jason
flipped his long brown hair out of his eyes.
“What the hell is going on?” he
asked.
“I have no idea I was just going
to ask you.” Nate responded.
“I think we’re out here because I
forgot to make my bed.” Jason joked. He could always insert humor into the most
dire of situations.
Nate scoffed. “About that, why
didn’t you wake me up? I slept right though the announcements.”
“I'm not your mother, wake your
own ass up. I would have slept if I had a second chance. The announcements only
said ‘all members please come to the mess hall immediately’. Then the Klaxons
started wailing. I'm no seasoned veteran but when I hear that, it means we’ll
need all the sleep we can get.”
“Mhm.”
Chapter 3
Nate reflected silently. He knew
Jason is scared out of his mind, as is everyone else in this godforsaken tube
that passed for a boat. But by unspoken code, it’s forbidden to show your fear.
A certain shame came with showing fear. Apparently it detracts from the
ferocious warrior façade. But nobody except for a few select experienced
members on board are true warriors. The rest are sheep in wolves clothing,
simply miserable civilians in army fatigues. Not two months ago, Nate was
studying back home in Philadelphia. His mind flashed back. Just graduated
college with a degree in computer engineering and particle physics. He had a 4.76
GPA, while working a dream internship and pursuing his brain child he had
envision himself working on for so many years. The perfect way to start a
stable, successful life. He was one breakthrough away from scientific fame.
Nothing could touch him. But then the war came. He could still remember hearing
the first news stories. They always sounded distant; they never applied to him,
until that day. As he got ready to leave for the lab he heard of a pending
attack. ‘…The bombs will fall within the hour and many people are scrambling…’ he
assumed it was simply another update on the Indian-Iranian conflict. He
shrugged it off and continued to work. If only he had listened closer could he
have done something…Jason poked him in the face.
“What’s the matter with you, you
look like a statue.”
“I, just was, um…wait what?”
Nate snapped back into reality.
He glanced at Jason then up to the Lieutenant who was no longer standing still.
He had moved to the podium and was preparing to give a speech. With a cleared
throat the mess hall went deathly silent. The only sound was the hum of the
engines.
Chapter 4
Lt. Larson’s amplified voice
echoed though the cramped walls.
“As I am standing here the war
progresses. Not two hours ago, our best soldiers went into battle in response
to a counter-attack. They were sent in to put a stop to the advances, but it
was a trap. Enemy planes were called in and 60% of the entire battalion has
been wiped out. With no one to stop them, they are now 40 miles from the
border. That’s where we come in. We are the only combat-ready battalion within
80 miles of the enemy. They need help out there protecting the border and we
are going to help them. This may be
your first combat scenario, but do not be afraid. 95% of you live through this
experience. All of you will be scared, anyone who says they aren’t is a liar.
Some of you are cowards, but a coward will still fight bravely or feel the
consequences more than any bullet. Fighting despite fear is what makes a
solider truly brave, and I trust you will all fight bravely.”
Lt. Larson stepped away from the
podium and turn off his microphone. He then took one more sweeping glare at
everyone in the room and resumed his statue stance. No applause was given, no shouting, rioting
or hoorah, just a quite shuffle and a murmur.
“you scared?” Jason asked
“uhhhhhhhhh…nope.” Nate responded
“Bull.”
“That was sarcasm, I'm about to
piss my pants.”
“Well me too. Me too.”
Just then a lower class officer
stepped up to the podium. He pulled out a crisp piece of paper. Nate could see
the light glinting off of the glossy surface. Definitely from higher command,
he concluded. Although far off, he recognized the U.S.A eagle emblem in the
corner. It could only be one thing: deployment lists. The chess game had just
started and they were about to be deployed like pawns, sacrificial for some
higher plan. But something seemed odd about the situation. A surprisingly
strong Chinese force spends resources and risks lives invading South Korean
land almost completely useless to them, and is willing to wipe out an entire
battalion doing so. That was messing with the big brother on the block. The U.S
has been fairly dormant in combat every since the incident, willing to keep
violence at a minimum, but this bold move will spark hell for every country in
the war and the entire world. The only logical explanation for defending or
attacking an neutral country would be if they weren’t completely neutral…like
if they were hiding something…Nate turned to ask Jason if he was thinking the
same thing but Jason was gone. He spotted him moving toward the stage along
with masses of other people. They were picking out their deployment schedules
so they could organize into groups and receive the necessary equipment. Nate
looked back to the man at the podium.
“…1700 hours company 3. 1800
hours company 4. 1900 hours company 5. Repeat. Deployment begins at 1500 hours
on the western shore. The battalion will regroup on land and move to the
nearest infantry base for recovery and preparation. From there strategic roles
for interception will be assigned. Our expected time of arrival is…”
Nate pushed his way through the
crowd and caught Jason by the shoulder.
“Hey man, are we leaving right now?” he asked
“Nah, we’re just reporting to our
stations for more briefing,” He replied coolly, but with a sadness in his eyes,
“go get your tag scanned and
they’ll give you your schedule.”
Nate slapped him on the back. “Aight catch you later.”
He twisted his way through the
crowd until he reached the table. A dancing laser light twirled on the table.
Nate swiped his dog tag under the scanner and it beeped, flashing his profile
up on the screen above. Then a sheet of paper sped out of the slot beneath the
screen and tore off into his hands. Nate walked away and examined the
deployment order. In bold, his company and platoon were listed next to the room
number: L2|45. He automatically began to make his way to the second level. His
mind was absent as he slid down the stair railings and took two lefts, a right
and a left. It almost seemed like a normal day. Almost. There was no way to
prove it, but Nate felt an electric buzzing in the air. He could feel his head
become lighter as he navigated the narrow halls. I’m going to be in combat in less than a day… the thought kept
pinging through his mind. Halls he had been living in for months suddenly
seemed too small. His feet were a little hazy in front of him, so far away…I might be dead by tomorrow, this is the
end…He felt sick to his stomach. His vision blurred and claustrophobia set
in. He stumbled into the gray metal wall, desperate for some space. Nate slid
down to the floor and took a deep breath, but it only made him dizzier. The
harsh fluorescence pounded at his head and darkness started closing in.He
closed his eyes and let the darkness come.
Chapter 5
The field was bright and
luminous. Sunlight glinted off specks of dust and pollen floating above the
chest high wheat. Nate was small, with childlike hands and stubby fingers. Up
ahead he could see his old farmhouse from West Virginia, made of curling wood
with a simple yellow paintjob. His grandparents beckoned him from their cozy
rocking chairs on the porch. Nate laughed and stomped his way through the
wheat. He pounded up the steps; he was wearing his favorite shorts and t-shirt
and had his rubber band gun in his hand.
‘go ahead hon, have a cookie.’
His grandma held one out for him with the biggest smile. He snatched it
greedily and began munching. Nate reached up to grab a glass of milk from the coffee
table but it slipped through his tiny child fingers and shattered on the porch
deck. There was a moment of silence;Nate stared at the milk dripping off his
little sandals. Then Grandpa started yelling at him. Only it wasn’t Grandpa’s
voice. Nate turned to see his drill instructor from boot camp towering over
him, spewing insults at him faster than he could comprehend. He backed away as
his drill instructor grew in height, screaming pure hatred at his clumsiness.
Nate turned around and started running. Drill instructor ran after him, clawing
at his head.
Nate wailed, “Sir, forgive me,
Sir! It won’t happen again Sir!”
Drill Instructor roared and sent him
flying into the field with a swing of his arm. Nate coughed and stumbled to his
feet. Recruits from his boot camp rose out of the dirt and aimed their rifles
at him. Panicked, he shot the rubber band gun at the nearest soldier, but it
fired a thunderous gunshot making him explode into a cloud of dirt. Nate yelped
and ran, the other soldiers chasing after him, sending shots whizzing through
the wheat. The air shook as Chinese jets shrieked over head. Geysers of dirt
were exploding around him as missiles pounded craters into the earth; their
shockwaves shoving him over. Up ahead hundreds of soldiers rose from the ground
and loaded their guns. Nate came to a stop and stared at the army surrounding
him. Then they fired at him. He stood in shock as bullets passed through his
body. He was being hit from every angle by an endless volley of fire. Nate fell
to his knees, struck by shot after shot. Suddenly, the ground beneath him
disintegrated into a deafening explosion of soil as shrapnel cut through every
part of his body in gruesome slow motion. As he lost consciousness he saw the
drill sergeant smiling wickedly and shaking his head.
Chapter 6
Nate awoke with a gasp.He in a
cold sweat on his back.After a few moments his eyes adjusted to the blinding
lights and he realized where he was. The hum of the engines and the familiar
damp smell came to him. Nate had a foggy realization that he passed out on the
way to briefing and must have had a nightmare. Someone must have found him
because he was in the medic bay. Nate sat upright and swung his legs out of the
bed. The entire room was empty. Rows of unoccupied beds lined the walls. Just
as he was pulling himself out of the cot a doctor ran in the room. The doctor
glanced in his direction and grabbed a clipboard lying on a stand across the
room. Nate called out.
“Hey! What going on?”
The medic replied, “You’ve been
out for 3 hours. Your company is leaving in less than half an hour so you
better hurry your ass up.”
“Am I okay?” Nate sounded worried.
“Yeah. You just passed out.” The
medic sounded annoyed.
“Just?” Nate raised an eyebrow.
The medic snorted loudly. “You’re
fine. Okay? You were being a wimp. Now hurry.” He turned to go.
“Wait…Wha…Hurry where?!”
He quickly ruffled through his
papers then rushed out.
Nate called after him, “wait!”
But he was gone. The silence returned. Nate let out a deep sigh. He looked at
the clock. 25 minutes before he had to face his demise. With careful
deliberation he crept out into the hall. It was almost empty. Quite the
contrast to the beehive craziness he witnessed hours before.
Chapter 7
Nate began walking. He thought
about all that had happened and all that was going to happen. He couldn’t
imagine what state he would be in a few hours…prisoner? Shot? Abandoned? …Dead?
He was walking faster. I’m weak. He
thought. I’ve let everyone down. I bet
they’re cursing my name right now. I’m an embarrassment. He was nearly
running now without realizing it. He yelled in his head I can’t do this! No one cares if I die. I won’t be on the news, I’ll be
a number. A goddamn number to add to the endless casualties. I don’t give a shit
in hell about this war. Forget fighting for your country, this isn’t even my
country! We should leave. Let them havewhatever we’re hiding. Let them do what they
want with it. Let them kill their neighboring countries, they were jerks
anyways. Let them destroy, let them murder, let them win, lose, live, die, end,
begin. The world will be gone. I’ll be
gone. None of this matters…I can’t do this…Nate was sprinting now. He had
reached the balcony overlooking the cargo bay. Everyone was there, bustling
about, preparing for departure. Nate looked over the scene with hatred. He
hated his life and he hated the military. It was all so pointless, he couldn’t help
but look disgusted. But he forced it down and put on a neutral face. It was not
his position to hate. He was just a grunt. An insignificant jarhead. Spotting
his platoon, he stepped down the frail metal staircase to the lower deck and sauntered
over to his group. The platoon leader glanced at him, then did a double take.
“NATE! WHERE THE HELL’VE YOU
BEEN?!”
“I was sick, sir.” Nate responded
monotonously.
“WELL GET YOUR SICK BUTT INTO
UNIFORM YOU’RE LATE” the platoon leader was yelling in his normal voice.
“yes sir.” Nate turned around
scanned the tables set up along the edges of the bay. He jogged to the nearest
one and pulled off a package of fresh cammies with combat specifications.
The solider standing behind the
table spoke to him.
“You’re late.”
Nate ignored him and entered the
makeshift changing stall next to the table.
As he got changed he could feel
the engines kick up. That meant they must be rising. He pulled on his new jungle-pattern
camouflage jacket and strode out. Nate tried to look normal but he felt like a
waddling penguin. He was wearing two pairs of pants, a shirt, a flak jacket, a
cameo combat vest, and combat boots with his helmet dangling at his side. His
fellow recruits also seemed a bit clumsy in their new garments as well. He
checked the overhead clock: 5 minutes before company 2 departs.
Chapter 8
Nate arrived back at his platoon.
Finally he blended in with the crowd. Suddenly Jason was there.
“Hey you made it!” Jason
practically yelled.
Nate jumped, “Jesus could you be
any louder?” But Nate was smiling as he scolded.
“What took you so long?” Jason
asked
“I was busy fighting crime, you
know, the usual stuff.”
“Pfft you can’t lie to me. I know
you fainted. I hope you didn’t break a fingernail.” Jason snickered, pretended
to inspect his nails.
“Yeah, yeah you’re hilarious.”
A silence fell between them. Jason
knew Nate was embarrassed so he let it go. An announcement came over the loud
speak, filling up the silence.
“All platoons under company 2 please board.” That was their cue. Up
ahead, a hatch on the wall hissed and it swung open revealing the inside of the
mini-submersible that would carry them to shore. They had the smallest company
of the 5, only 90 members and they all fit inside the roomy mini-sub.
The sub doors closed and sealed
with a vice sound and the sub detached with a solid clunk.That was the sound of an old chapter of his life ending. It
was real now, there was no going back.
Everyone inside sat in complete
silence, during the 5 minute ride to the shore. With every passing second, the
dark outline of the main submarine faded into the murk and with it, the feeling
of safety.
Slowly, sunlight began filtering
through the ports, until it was blindingly bright. The water had pillars of
sunlight stabbing the depths. Nate stared in awe. It had been months since he
had seen the sun.
Jason whispered, “This will be
good for you. You’re the pastiest guy on this boat.”
Nate elbowed him in the ribs but
kept staring. A sudden thunk got
their attention. They had hit the beach. The submersible driver hit the cargo
lever. Everyone’s eyes followed the cargo door as it whined itself into the
sand. Then, as if in unison, they stood up and marched single out onto the
beach.
The company commander strolled
out in front of the soldiers. He clapped his hands together and said, “Welcome
to Korea, Boys.”
Chapter 9
Nate slept through the uneventful
3 hour drive to the camp site. When they got there, the Captain stood in front
of them with his hands clasped, ready for detailed mission briefing.
Just
another high rank guy directing forces
Nate thought. He wondered what his platoon’s role would be.
Jason murmured in his ear,
“watch. I bet he’s going to clear his throat.”
The Captainre-read his assignments
from his clipboard, then cleared his throat.
“The Chinese are now 10 miles
from the border of South Korea. South Korea has identified as neutral, but if
the Chinese cross the border from North Korea the U.S forces in position at the
border, us poor bastards, will have no choice but to apply defensive tactics.
Gentlemen, I would like to assure that this is a terrible idea. We are out
gunned and out manned. These Chinese are coming at us with everything they’ve
got. So why are we choosing to protect South Korea? Well, I'm about to tell you
all some pretty top secret information, so sit pretty.
We are protecting South Korea
simply because they have our bomb. The past few years, the U.S has been
developing a new kind of bomb over in South Korea. It’s called an M-bomb, short
for matter bomb. It’s not some kind of futuristic laser shooting bomb, it blows
up like any other bomb. But you’re probably wondering what makes it so special.
Simply put, it blows up very big. It makes an atom bomb look like a match. It
makes a hydrogen bomb look like firecrackers. We got some stats attached to the
report regarding its destructive power. It uses matter and anti-matter to
convert 1.5 kilograms of mass into pure energy. According to E=mc2,
our bomb releases 13 quintillion joules of energy. That’s enough energy to
power San Francisco for 2 years. All of that energy is
released in under a second in a radioactive fireball. This thing could level a
city…no, two cities.As well as all the
surrounding suburbs. This is the most devastating weapon ever developed in
human history. And the Chinese want it. Bad. I would like to inform all you
soldiers, that only thing standing between the Chinese and that bomb…is you. It
is your duty to protect the bomb at the cost of anything, including, if need
be, your life. This is beyond you, beyond politics, beyond American interests.
This is for the integrity and safety of the entire planet.”
When the captain finished,
everyone suddenly burst into conversation. Nate felt his gut sink. He turned,
alarmed, to Jason.
“What the fuck? Now we’re saving the whole world?”
“uhhhhhhh…” Jason responded. This
news shocked even him.
Nate rubbed the bridge of his
nose for a solid minute, groaning with frustration.
The Captain was yelling for
everyone to quiet down. Once he had regained control he added on to his speech.
“I will give you one hour to
prepare for combat. All of our equipment is ready to go at a moment’s notice.
The only thing we’re waiting on is the soldiers. This battle will go down in history
and I will not allow America to be the butterfingers that let the world slip
through its fingers and die. Come up here and get your tag scanned and your
role will be printed.”
Nate and Jason walked up and
swiped their ID tags. The schedules flew out into their hands and they quickly
examined them. Nate was hoping to be assigned to a position with Jason. If they
were going to fight, he wanted to fight together.
“Damn.” Jason said.
“What?”
“I'm in infantry. It says I’ll be
in the first wave on the ground.”
Nate felt a ping in his chest.
His closest buddy was assigned to the front lines. That’s the most dangerous
position to be in. It was almost like a death sentence. A momentary wave of
emotion came over him.
“Wow. That sucks.” Nate answered
“Yeah but at least we’re there
together right?” Jason asked hopefully.
“No. I'm a sniper.” Nate replied
numbly. He should have felt sad Jason was on the front line or happy that he
was far away from the action. But he felt nothing. He was tired of it all.
“Oh.” Jason’s eyes fell to the
ground. He stood quiet for a moment, then turned and walked away, leaving Nate
with his thoughts.
Chapter 10
This was the slowest hour of Nate
life. He couldn’t feel anything, and he didn’t want to. His friend was gone, in
more ways than one, and he had nothing to do for the remaining 50 minutes. Nate
wandered around the base, he saw men in the mess hall having their final meal,
there were games in the rec room, cots to nap on in the bunkhouses, and practice
ranges. Nate stayed at the range for some unknown attraction. Barely conscious
of his actions, he took out a long range 50 caliber rifle and slid on a scope.
He quietly walked out into the dirt and lay down in prone position. I might as well practice before the battle
he thought to himself, I’m gonna need it.
A hot summer breeze blew through his hair as he adjusted the focus on the
distant target-shaped person. He ran through his instantaneous check list:
distance, adjust for gravity, wind, arc…he pulled the trigger. The 50 cal
slammed back into him in a fiery explosion. He repositioned the scope to see
where he hit. Center Punch. He tried again, and again and five more times, each
hitting the center within a 5 inch group. Nate had always been good with guns.
He had grown on a farm with a rifle in his lap. He was never of for fighting,
but something about him made him good with guns. He didn’t like the purpose of
guns. Killing was bad, even hunting was avoiding. But Marksmanship was a
different story. Nate would sit in the back yard and shoot at cans all day
long. When he got recruited those skills came handy and he became a part of the
sniper squad. It was fun to learn all the secrets of good marksmanship he
couldn’t have taught himself, but during his entire training he knew he might
have to turn is weapon on a person one day. That day had come. Nate shook off
the thought and fired angrily at the target. Reload, fire, reload, fire,
reload, fire. He was shooting faster and faster trying to shoot his anger out.
Round after with perfect accuracy. Finally
there was a click. The magazine was empty. Nate put his head down into the dirt
and took a shaky breath.
“Whoa…” Nate looked up, the range
master was standing behind him gawking at the target in amazement. The range
master looked to Nate,
“That’s a record you know. You
shattered the old record by 15 seconds with twice as much accuracy.” The range
master said.
Nate slumped his face back into
the dirt. He wasn’t aware he was being timed. He didn’t care either. “Aren’t you excited? That time is really good.” The range master was
enthusiastic.
Nate stood up and shoved the gun
into his hands, then brushed past him.
“Whatever.”
Nate quick-walked away. He just
needed some time to think. He consulted the built in watch on his new jacket:
30 minutes. He stopped. Where am I going?
Nate felt supremely tired. Just get the
hell out of here. He jogged over to the bunkhouse. A few other soldiers
were sleeping with caps over their eyes. Nate grabbed the nearest unoccupied
bunk and flopped down. He wanted to sleep, but couldn’t. He envied the soldiers
next to him. With only 30 minutes left, sleeping seemed like a monumental task.
So Nate just lay there staring at the ceiling. He would think about his
predicament every once in a while, but for the most part, his mind was empty. The
precious minutes started passing by in a blur and Nate could feel it happening,
but he keep sitting. 20, 15, 10 minutes remaining. Suddenly, a loud tone
sounded from the loudspeaker in the center field. Its echo reverberated around
the campsite. Then, a voice came over. All
personnel report to the camp center. The speaker clicked and went silent. Here I go thought Nate.
|
Chapter 11
Within 5 minutes, all the
soldiers were lined up in groups at the camp center. Everyone was grouped
according to their combat role stated on the sheet they printed out. Nate was
with a group of around 15 fellow snipers he had never met before. No one said
anything to him and he said nothing to them. They waiting in silence until an
officer came up and handed them their weapons and rounds. Then they boarded a
nearby C-30 carrier and waited. Once two other platoons had boarded the tail of
the plane closed and the engines started up. With a low rumble it coasted to
the runway. The engines spooled up and the massive giant of a plane began
speeding up and lifted off the runway. The ground dropped away and the roar of
the turbines leveled out.
The plane was in the air for half
an hour. Nate saw several planes returning to get more soldiers. The plane
approached the landing strip at the next campsite. It was roughly paved and
looked hastily cut out from the jungle. There were trees growing back on the
edge of the strip and little dirt paths ran under the cover of the trees. Nate
held on to his seatbelt as the plane descended. Within moments it touched down
with a squeal and came to a stop. It taxied off the runway and the cargo doors
opened. Nate and his new sniper platoon walked off. The commander pointed to a
truck on the border of the trees and told them to get in. they obeyed. They
weren’t even thinking at this point. Nate felt like a robot, mindlessly obey
every command without thought. As they piled into the truck, once again silent,
one soldier pulled out a tin flask of alcohol took a swig from it. The
commander saw it slapped the flask out of his hand.
“WHAT THE HELL DO YOU THINK
YOU’RE DOING?!” he screamed at him
“I..I’m sorry sir!” he stammered.
He staggered a bit, clearly intoxicated. The commander shoved him out of the
back of the truck.
“IF I SEE YOU DRINKING BEFORE A
MISSION EVER AGAINI WILL HAVE YOU
DISCHARGED.”
The commander was furious, his
face had turned red.
“Let this serve as a reminder how
serious this mission is.” He scanned their silent eyes. After a moment he got
in the driver’s seat and started the engine. The drunken soldier had stood up
and was staggering after the truck, but it sped away and left him in the dust.
Chapter 12
Everyone was still quiet. Nate
missed his old platoon but said nothing. He quietly cleaned his gun. After 15
minutes the truck reached the sniping tower. Everyone piled out and surrounded
it. It was a tall, spindly wooden structure that was covering in natural vines
and camouflage netting. A semi-hidden ladder lead up to the upper platform.
Nate stared up in awe at the platform. The bottom part was expertly camouflaged
and the top platform reached high into the tree’s canopy. He would be nearly
invisible.
The commander spoke from behind,
“half of you are going to be on this tower and the other half on the second
tower further down. You are going to provide cover for our forces and take out
enemy forces whenever possible. You will fight to the last man, it’s simple as
that.”
A soldier raised his hand, “is
this where they’re attacking?”
“Our satellites are tracking
their progress. By the way they’ve been heading its very likely they will pass
through here and obliterate the base. A group has been sent ahead to do light
engagement but when they reach this area, the rest of the battalion will have
arrived. At the speed they have been going we expect them to reach this area in
about 20 minutes.”
His answers seemed to satisfy
because no further questions were asked.
“Alright then get in your
towers.”
He counted everyone off by ones
and twos and separated them into groups.
“One’s go in this tower. Two’s
follow me.” Nate was a one. He watched as the two group picked their way
through the vegetation and disappeared bushes. Then he turned around and
started climbing.
Chapter 13
Nate reached the top of the
platform and set down his rifle on the farthest spot on the left. The platform was
heavily camouflaged. It had wooden front boards with reinforced Kevlar
backboards. That made Nate feel safer, but he knew that the enemies’ rifles
could easily pierce two inches of Kevlar.
He loaded a mag into the gun and attached the scope. Nate pushed his dog
tag into the butt of the gun. It beeped, indicating authorization. He attached
the bi-pod and turned on the scope. Even the scope had a heads up display. It
told him how many rounds he had left, how steady he was holding the gun, the
gun’s elevation, and the wind direction.
“Jesus, this thing’s
complicated!” Nate remarked to the person next to him. He was also marveling at
his own guns complexity.
“Yeah, these days the guns
practically do the shooting for you.” He responded. Nate stuck the barrel
through his hole in the Kevlar front board and lay down behind it. He put in
his radio earpiece and became 100% soldier. His emotions were gone, his fear
was gone. He was focusing on was the field and nothing else.
I just found my Flashdrive (if
you don’t understand what I’m referring to I emailed you) and polished off
chapter 12 and started 13. In the interest of time I’m updating the blog now
that I passed the required 390 lines (13 chapters*30 lines/chap). As I
understand it you aren’t grading on content necessarily but on required length.
But I can’t simply end in the middle of a sentence so I will continue and
finish the story later today for your entertainment and in case I am horribly
mistaken about content thing (plus I
want to finish it).
CURRENT STATISTICS:
PAGES: 25
WORDS: 5,773
CHARACTERS /WO SPACE: 26,152
CHARACTERS /W SPACE: 31,814
PARAGRAPHS: 144
LINES: 433
Excellent so far--but keep going!
ReplyDeleteExcellent so far--keep going!
ReplyDeletenice job tyler.
ReplyDeleteTyler your story is AMAZING! There is so much detail about that is going on. What Nate is hearing and seeing. You talk about other people in great depth as well as yourself and what you are thinking. Plus you manage to add some dialogue in. You mention a little bit about Nate's life before the war. I hope to hear more about it later in the story. Overall you are doing a great job!
ReplyDeleteI like it so far but you should continue working on it
ReplyDeleteGreat job, Tyler. It works in nearly every way, and has great lines like: "I will not allow America to be the butterfingers that let the world slip through its fingers and die."
ReplyDeleteperf 10/10 would read again
ReplyDelete