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World War One-Act One

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  • World War One-Act One

    The tall pale man in the white uniform savored his tea. He was nearly sixty, though no-one would guess it by his appearance. The blazing white of his uniform was interrupted only by the six full rows of his “salad bar” of decorations, and quartet of medals. The two Navy Crosses were flanked by a Purple Heart, and a Medal of Honor. How fine it all looked, the admiral thought. How few men made it this—
    “Admiral Kedaesson?”
    “Yes, Lieutenant?”
    “It’s time, sir. Everything is ready.”
    “Very well.”
    Admiral Erick Kedaesson followed the young officer down the passageway, and up to the flag bridge.
    “Officer on Deck!” Senior Chief Leahy bellowed, and the collection of officers and sailors in the CIC snapped to attention.
    “Very good,” Kedaesson said. “You are all aware of the significance of this voyage, so let’s make it a perfect one. Captain?”
    “Yes, sir?” Captain Jack Lathrop answered.
    “If you don’t mind, I will take her out.”
    “Of course, sir.”
    “I have the conn. All ahead two-thirds, course one-nine-six.”
    “Ahead two-thirds, one-nine-six, aye.”

    The USS Steele slowly moved out of its berth at the Washington Naval Yard. It was the newest and most powerful ship ever built anywhere in the world, and the flagship for the world’s mightiest fleet. The American Navy was back at war, for the first time in over 100 years, and for one reason. Oil. Russia and Germany, the other two superpowers, controlled the vast majority of the world’s known oil supply, and refused to sell it at a reasonable price, so the free world mobilized behind America, and went to war. The problem: America, France, China, and England share the larger of two continents. Russia and Germany share the smaller, and the seas are “treacherous for the passage of all,” as the saying goes.

    The American battle-fleet was made up of the Steele, an America class Battleship, twelve Freedom class destroyers, nineteen obsolete Monitor class ironclad warships. The transport fleet was eight Olympic class transport ships, and six wooden-hulled galleons. The army being carried by this massive fleet was equally impressive. Sixteen tank divisions, twenty Cavalry divisions, twelve artillery divisions, and forty infantry divisions. The huge army had been built for one purpose: the liberating of the oil reserves of Russia and Germany. However, for it to accomplish that goal, it had to cross the ocean, and for it to do that, the Russian and German fleets had to be neutralized.

    “Sir! Smoke on the horizon!”
    “Let me see, Lieutenant!” The Admiral looked through his marine binoculars, and could clearly see at least seven smoke trails rising into the morning sky.
    “Captain, set new course, three-two-zero, all ahead full. Sound General Quarters.”
    “Aye, sir.”

    All throughout the American fleet, crews raced to their stations, those on the warships in anticipation of the battle, those on the cargo ships in mortal terror. The fleet turned as one single group onto a new course, in a well-practiced move, and began to bear down on the enemy. The Admiral ordered the transport squadron to hold back, as the warships moved to intercept, and if necessary, destroy.

    BOOOM!!!!!

    “Eat fire, Russkies,” Gunner’s mate Jeff Levison shouted as his six-inch gun fired its first warshot.
    “Got that right, pal,” agreed Lieutenant Marcus Swith, the gun captain.

    The air was filled with smoke, both from engines, and gun-fire, as the American battle-fleet opened up on the Russian destroyer flotilla. After half an hour of fighting, the Russians withdrew, and the Americans returned to their original course. Casualties were numerous. One destroyer had been sunk, along with four ironclads. One destroyer had been crippled, and its coal and ammunition were off-loaded along with the crew, and it was scuttled. When the transport squadron was re-joined, however, disastrous news awaited the warships. German submarines had snuck up on the unsuspecting ships, and sunk two galleons and a transport, sending thousands of combat troops, and several hundred tanks to their watery graves.

    The fleet moved on.
    BOOOM!!!!
    If this were a movie, there'd be a tunnel or something near here for us to escape through.....

  • #2
    WW1

    I apologize for the formatting of this, it did not copy very well from MS Word. Any constructive criticism? De-constructive crticism? Hopefully none of the last.

    Steele
    If this were a movie, there'd be a tunnel or something near here for us to escape through.....

    Comment


    • #3
      WW1

      I apologize for the formatting of this, it did not copy very well from MS Word. Any constructive criticism? De-constructive crticism? Hopefully none of the last.

      Steele
      If this were a movie, there'd be a tunnel or something near here for us to escape through.....

      Comment


      • #4
        World War One-Act One-Part Two

        After three more encounters with destroyers, both Russian and German, and one more run-in with German submarines, the fleet reached the coast of Germany-Russia. What had once been forty-six ships was now thirty-five, but it was still an impressive sight, especially since the once-mighty German and Russian fleets had been decimated.

        The warships opened up their guns again, this time not on ships firing back at them, but on a city. The city of St. Petersburg, the most powerful stronghold in Russia. The city commanded a large bay, and controlled access to the sea for several other German and Russian cities. The ships spent weeks cruising up and down the coast, firing nearly non-stop, day and night. Whenever the Russians sent ships to stop the bombardment, they were destroyed, as they possessed nothing capable of standing up to the modern destroyers in the American fleet, let alone the Steele. After forty days and nights of shelling, the population of St. Petersburg had dropped from about two million to less the two-hundred thousand, and the military presence stationed there was abysmal. It was time to invade.

        The plan was simple. The tanks and artillery were to come ashore on the hills north of town, and join in the shelling, while the seven remaining Marine divisions charged into the city. The plan was also effective. The hodgepodge of Russian troops present could barely hold a candle to the elite American Marines, and the fight was over soon. Casualties were light, relatively. Two divisions of Marines had been broken, and a third weakened substantially. The Russians had lost three divisions of riflemen, one infantry division, and five ancient units of spear-equipped militia. The rest of the army was offloaded, and the invasion continued.

        The armored spearhead of the American tanks was nearly unstoppable, as they rolled through the Russian countryside, heading for Moscow, the heart of the enemy. However, within a few hundred miles of the goal, the army was diverted south, towards the oil fields, the ultimate objective. Before reaching New Berlin, the city at the heart of the oil desert, the American forces ran head-on into a brick wall.

        The Germans had built an immense fortress in the hills, and garrisoned it with four infantry divisions. The tanks charged, but were repulsed, time and again. Finally, a huge assault was planned. All twelve of the artillery divisions were called into play. Shelling the fortress for days, as tanks moved to surround it, and cut it off. Meanwhile, a massed cavalry charge occupied the city of Bremen, the nearest to the fortress, and moved the German border back from the fortress, eventually replacing it with an American one. The German troops held out valiantly, but it was too much. The fort fell, and the juggernaught moved on.

        Through battle after battle, the American forces had been technologically ahead of their opponents, or at least numerically superior, and technologically equal. However, at the gates of Berlin, an astounding thing happened. The sky grew dark, and huge birds filled the air. These huge birds dropped bombs on the American tankers, killing hundreds before they knew what was happening. When word got to the high commander, he demanded to see for himself what was happening. He went with his escort, and with the protests of the general staff.

        “Sir, this way, we have prepared a bunker for you.”
        “Rubbish!” General Cole said, “I’m going to see these birds from the front lines.”
        The General commandeered a tank and went up to the front, and when he saw an assault being launched, he demanded to follow it. When in sight of the city walls, he asked, “Where are these fearsome birds?”
        “They will strike at--”

        BOOM!!! The tank shook heavily on the ground, and before the General could look out the hatch to see what had happened, the driver yelled, “Here they come, it’s the birds!”

        Major John Adams assumed command of IV Corps, because he guessed rightly so, that he was the ranking officer on the battlefield. In fact, he was the ranking officer on the continent. The American assault had been destroyed. The tanks had been nearly wiped out, and the infantry assault had failed miserably. Most of the artillery had been captured by the Germans, who were launching their counter-offensive.
        “Retreat. Sound retreat.”
        “Sir?” his aide asked.
        “You heard me. Retreat. We have lost.”

        The American army, or rather, the shattered remnants of what had been the American army limped back to St. Petersburg, where it was hoped, they could make a stand. But, with two tank divisions, three infantry divisions, and one artillery division, it wasn’t likely.

        President Steele was forced to seek a peace treaty with the Russians and Germans. The Russian version would be easy. The Russian army was worse off then the Americans. The Germans, however, would prove more difficult.

        “Chancellor Bismarck, we must end this conflict before any more lives are lost.”
        “You mean any more of your lives,” Bismarck snorted, “What do you offer me?”
        “We return all of your cities, pay you thirty millions per month, and give you our finest silks, in return for peace and oil.” Steele hoped Bismarck wouldn’t demand more. He did.
        “I can retake our cities by force, and I have little need for your worthless American money, and less need to trade you oil. However, listen to this. I will give you peace, and oil; in exchange for returning all of my cities, and all of what you took from the Russians; your silks, gems, and rubber; eighty millions per month, and six hundred millions now.”
        “Bismarck, I have no choice. I must accept.” The two leaders shook hands, ending the longest, and bloodiest conflict the world had even known.

        Or so they thought….
        If this were a movie, there'd be a tunnel or something near here for us to escape through.....

        Comment


        • #5
          Hmmmmmm

          I don't trust that Bismark feller...

          Keep it up! It's a good read!
          What?

          Comment


          • #6
            World War One-Act Two

            The year after American forces pulled out of Germany, the Chinese saw an oppurtunity to recapture the city of Shanghai, held for thousands of years by America. The Chinese army was technologically inferior, but was huge, especially compared to the shattered American army. The southern border of America was defended with eleven infantry divisions based in an equal number of cities and fortresses, and four tank divisions to repell any incursions that may be made. When the Chinese invaded, they did so without any warning, without any declaration of war. Sixty-seven divisions of cavalry and riflemen charged Philadelphia, just east of Shanghai. The defenders were overran, but not before destroying nine enemy divisions. Forces were slim, but everything available was brought to bear. The alliance with the English in the south was activated, and the knowledge of bombing airplanes was purchased from the Germans. America was truyl mobilized for war.

            The first divisions to reach the Chinese army were the four tank divisions based along the border. These were brushed aside like a fly, and the Chinese continued north. American forces then began massing at the Valley Forge staging area, fifty miles east of St. Louis. The first of the new bombers were put into play, constantly bombing the Chinese force. Every tank in the arsenal was collected. Hundreds of thousands of troops, and hundreds of new planes were shipped off to war. When forty-five divisions were gathered, the counter-offensive began. The first key battle, and the turning point was at the battle of Los Angeles. Eighteen tank divisions, twenty infantry divisions, and seven artillery divisions faced off against fifty-odd divisions of Chinese mounted troops and infantry. The air was once again filled with smoke and fire, as industrialized Death began making his rounds.

            Sergeant Mike Tomlinson was driving a tank, a brand new Liberty class M2 battletank, capable of firing ten rounds with its 80mm cannon every minute, and hundreds more with its .50 caliber machine guns. Tomlinson, however, was not concerned with these. He was concerned about the huge mob of mounted units charging up the hill at him. He put the tank in gear, and started forward.
            "Target, squad, eleven o'clock."
            "Identified," the gunner said.
            "Fire!" yelled the commander.
            The cannon above their heads spat a four foot tongue of flame, and sent a thirty pound explosive straight at fifteen of twenty Chinese cavalrymen at nearly one thousand miles per hour. The round impacted directly below one of the men, and the squad was vaporized in an instant.
            "Target, squad, one o'clock." And the process began again.

            Captain John Micki was piloting his B-2 Heavyweight bomber at two hundred miles an hour, and sixteen thousand feet above the battlefield. The bombardier in the nose was busy sighting on what looked like the Chinese headquarters, and all the Captain had to do was fly straight and level. This was the easiest thing he had ever done. He had learnt to fly in the first aircraft ever made by his country, the A1 Scout. That had been a challenge. Flying at barely seventy miles per hour, lower then one thusand feet, and with less range then a quarterback.
            "Target sighted, unloading," said the bombardier.
            "Good, carry on," Micki said. So, so easy.

            General Ghengis Khan was worried. The battle had started so well for him, capturing three American cities before they could react, and one more against stiff resistance. Now, however, was vastly different. The Americans had better guns, and these "tanks" were unstoppable. But the worst of all was the American airplanes. Only they and the Germans from across the sea could build such things, and it was suddenly clear why the Americans had lost their previous war. One could not fight them. 'It is one thing', one of his men had said, 'to shoot something you cannot see. It is another to shoot something you cannot see with a gun that wont reach far enough.' Even the huge cannons he had brought along were inadequate.
            "Sir!!" An orderly ran up to him.
            "Yes, what is it?"
            "Sir, the forward command post has been wiped out. Their last telegraph message was that they were under air attack by the American birds of prey, and before the commander could estimate casualties, the wires or the transmitter were destroyed. We senttwo riders to investigate. The one who returned brought the news. The post has been destroyed, sir."
            Damn. "Very well, orderely, you may leave."
            "Thank you, sir."
            This was troubling news. That command post had been designed to be hidden from the airplanes. Everything had been built for that purpose: to avoid air attack. But, if they could find that one, could they find this one?

            The battle ended up a draw, with the numerical superiority of the Chinese balancing out the technology of the Americans. However, within a week, four fresh tank divisions had been brought down, and the counter-offensive continued, this time, rolling over the Chinese, and smashing fully forty divisions. The Chinese sued for peace, and President Steele willingly obliged, but only after extracting serious concessions from China.
            "Chairman Mao, you want peace, yes? As do we. Peace can be obtained in exchange for four things. We want three hundred millions now, one hundred millions per month; and your finest gems and dyes."
            "President Steele, you drive a hard bargain, but we'll take it."
            The two leaders reached across the table, shook hands, and ended, for the second time, the longest and bloodiest war the world had even known.

            Or so they thought...
            If this were a movie, there'd be a tunnel or something near here for us to escape through.....

            Comment


            • #7
              Hmmmmmmmmm 2

              I still don't trust that Bismarck feller...

              I'm really enjoying this! It's... alive!
              What?

              Comment


              • #8
                Thanks Richelieu. It's gonna be a couple days before I post the last part(s). My computer took a vacation, so I'm in a computer lab now.

                Steele
                If this were a movie, there'd be a tunnel or something near here for us to escape through.....

                Comment


                • #9
                  When are you going to finish your story steelehc????
                  Donate to the American Red Cross.
                  Computer Science or Engineering Student? Compete in the Microsoft Imagine Cup today!.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Great read and good storyline. More... please!
                    "I don't have a personality conflict - I get along with all of myselves."

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Hey Steelehc, when's the rest of this story coming out? Listen to your readers. We want more! Please.
                      "Listen lad. I built this kingdom up from nothing. When I started here, all there was was swamp. All the kings said I was daft to build a castle in the swamp, buit I built it all the same just to show 'em. It sank into the swamp. So, I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third one. That burnt down, fell over and then sank into the swamp, but the fourth one stayed up. And that's what you're gonna get, lad, the strongest castle in these isles."
                      - Swamp King (Monty Python and the Holy Grail)

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I haven't bothered to check on the story thread in the last few weeks. Wow. There is a demand for my writing. Seeing as how I have already written half of the next (maybe final) part, it should be up sometime tomorrow (its 2AM right now). Thanks for liking it.

                        Steele
                        If this were a movie, there'd be a tunnel or something near here for us to escape through.....

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Twenty years after the victory over the Chinese armies, and thirty years after the slaughter at the hands of the German air forces, the American army was once again gearing up for war. Germany had declared war on the helpless Russians, and conquered the entire Russian Republic. The only power capable of opposing the German Blitzkrieg was the USA, so now Germany turned towards America. The coming war would be the most brutal, most costly, and bloodiest conflict ever fought between men.

                          Captain Michael Wright was in command of what had been the largest ship ever put to sea. The USS Philadelphia had been the world’s first aircraft carrier twelve years before. She was now on her first combat cruise, accompanied by her six sister ships, seven America class battleships, and five Freedom class destroyers.
                          “Sir, we have reached Station Lima. We are in position,” the lieutenant said, interrupting the Captain’s reverie.
                          “Very well, Jackson, sound General Quarters. We commence operations at 1335 hours.”
                          “Yes, sir.”

                          Commander George Merlic was the CAW, Commander, Air Wing, for the Philadelphia, the flagship, so he was the first pilot to take off. His NB-20 Widow-Maker lifted off, and climber rapidly to 55,000 feet, and 800 miles per hour. Behind him, three-hundred thirty five other NB-20s lifted off from the flattops below. Their target was Berlin, the capital of the German Empire, three thousand miles away. Several hours later, the navigator spoke up.
                          “Sir, we are approaching the radar coverage of the city.”
                          “Very good ell-tee.”

                          Johann Kirlov was a Russian by birth, but a naturalized German citizen in the polyglot German Empire. He had joined the German army to help secure his place in society, and had found himself thrust into the air defense network. His current post was Gun Captain for a battery of eighty-eight millimeter flak cannons, defending Berlin. Everything was as it should be. Nothing was amiss, the foolish Americans would never attack this far inland, their weak bombers wouldn’t even reach—

                          BOOOM!!!!!

                          The huge explosion wasn’t far away. His first thought was that some damn fool had set off one of the magazines for another battery. It would serve the bastard right, he thought. This proved to be an inaccurate guess, as a string of explosions ripped through the ground, straight for his guns. He now knew what was happening.
                          “Firing solution??” he screamed at his radar operator.
                          “No, I can’t see them, there is nothing on the scope, they must have hit the towers.”
                          “Searchlights, then, we’ll fire manually.”
                          “Yes, sir.”

                          “General, the fleet has destroyed any semblance of resistance near the coast. It is safe for the army to move in.”
                          “Very well, Colonel. What of the bombing of Berlin?”
                          “A surprising success. We suffered few casualties, two bombers had mechanical defects, and had to turn back, and one was shot down by a German fighter pilot. He must have gotten lucky, his plane wasn’t any faster then our bombers.”
                          “Any word of the results?”
                          “I would estimate that we killed more then 500,000 people last night, General. We also destroyed many factory complexes, a number of military barracks’, both airports, as well as many of the roads surrounding the city.”
                          “I see. That is indeed surprising. I suppose this changes the face of war.”
                          “Yes, sir.”

                          Sergeant Jake Feathers rolled ashore in his tank. This was the finest bringer of death any land army had ever featured. It could roll along at 70 miles per hour, it had fourteen inches of armor, enough to resist almost anything in the German arsenal, and it bore a massive 135mm cannon, and three .50 machine guns. Currently, however, he was stuck in traffic. The quintessential Americanism, it even happened in a foreign country that he was at war with, while driving a 80 ton beast designed to destroy things.
                          “Hey, Corporal,” he yelled at an MP. “What the hell happened?”
                          “Some jackass got the loading orders mixed up for a truck, doubled the weight limit, it turned over. It’s gonna be another half-hour or so.”
                          “Well, hurry it along. I can sit in traffic at home in New York, I didn’t come five thousand miles across the world to do the same thing. And this seat ain’t too comfy, if ya’know what I mean.”
                          “Yes, sir, I’ll do what I can.”

                          Within an hour, the American Third Army was rolling through Germany. It featured as its centerpiece thirty of the most powerful tank divisions in the world, accompanied by fifteen Multiple-Launch-Rocket-System divisions. The artillery component of this army could destroy an entire city within a few days.



                          To be continued……
                          If this were a movie, there'd be a tunnel or something near here for us to escape through.....

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I can see somebody has been reading his Harry Turtledove.

                            If we just make a slight adjustment, Jake Feathers becomes Jake Featherston, the future Adolf Hitler of the Confederate States of America. Or at least, thats the direction it seems to be taking...

                            Anyway, with regards to your story, I like it. It's very well thought out and well-written.
                            Dom Pedro II - 2nd and last Emperor of the Empire of Brazil (1831 - 1889).

                            I truly believe that America is the world's second chance. I only hope we get a third...

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                            • #15
                              I like this story... Much better than any works I done. I am currently going to try and work on a more humourous story in my game...

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