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The Cost of War

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  • #16
    ...continued...

    Northern England

    Bill Reddie had not felt any better when he had come to. In fact, he’d felt decidedly worse. The wound in his leg, which he’d only noticed when he woke up, was obviously infected and this combined with the after-effects of shock to made him groggy and feeling ill. When he had staggered out of the half-destroyed barn, he had run straight into the farmer who owned it. The farmer had taken one look at Bill’s uniform and quickly taken him inside where his wife had looked after him.

    It took two weeks but Bill was finally well again. The infection in the wound had only just started to set in so that was put to heel quickly. The rest was reccuperation. And now he was on the road again, heading south towards where the battle would be.

    The lack of Russian activity in the region puzzled Bill. With the capture of territory, there was generally a supply line trailing behind the forward army, keeping ammunition, personnel and medical help close at hand. But Bill only saw the occassional Russian-made truck belching its way past. Either the troops were coming in from another direction or the Russians were hedging all their bets on this one offensive.

    From the destruction that Bill saw along the way, he saw what such a combined force could do. On his second day on the road, Bill came across the smoking remains of Colonel O’Donnels tank barracks. Out of the fifty tanks that the colonel had under his command, Bill estimated nearly thirty stood where they parked, now blackened and charred husks. Around the base were scattered the other twenty tanks of the colonel’s forces, with perhaps ten Russian tanks alongside them. Bill just shook his head as he walked past.

    It took eight days for Bill to finally reach far enough south to hear gunfire. He was worried by this time, because he was nearing Coventry, the northern most English city; his home. Gradually over the next two days, the gunfire got louder until eventually, Bill crested the mountain range north of Coventry and was able to see what lay before the English city. And what he saw chilled him to the bone.

    Coventry was burning like a massive candle. Scattered Russian troops, obviously a mop-up force, were in skirmishes with other soldiers. As Bill made his way towards the city, he saw that the majority of English fighting were women and children. People who had picked up a rifle from a dead man’s fingers and taken up the fight. Bill couldn’t blame them either. Their homes were gone; the Russians had literally raped the city of life and then moved on.

    Anger seethed in the very depths of Bill’s heart. His very being cried for him to do something, anything to inflict the pain felt by his countrymen onto the Russians. But common sense prevailed. For all he knew, he was the only survivor from the battle in the Wastelands and he needed to find somebody to tell them of what he knew. He had recon data for the north that he doubted anybody else could have.

    Giving one last, longing look at his home city, he started heading south again, unsure if London or anyone would still exist for him to tell his story.

    Northern Fleet, North Sea

    The RES Repulse looked nothing like it had done before the first engagement against the Russians. Her upper decks were peppered with holes from shrapnel. Great holes were torn in her upper decks from shell hits that had simply been roped off and sailors worked around. One of her funnels was missing from where a Russian shell had taken it off at the base. But still she sailed proudly as the flagship of the Northern fleet.

    And now, Harry Jackson carried the extra rank insignia of Rear Admiral. Admiral Edward Collins had unfortunately been caught in the wheelhouse when it had taken a direct hit. His last words were to promote Harry and place him in charge of the fleet. Harry doubted that the promotion would stick if they ever got back to port, but the fleet’s orders were simple: the only way it was coming home was if it was short of fuel, ammo or not at all.

    Stepping over the torn metal in the middle of the bridge deck, Harry raised his binoculars and looked at the approaching vessels. Powerful, sleek and decidedly Russian. Harry sighed.

    “How many vessels do they have?” He asked.

    Captain David McLennan snorted.

    “Infinite sir.” He replied. “The bastards are probably running them off a production line, along with their crews.”

    The vision of such an occurence seemed strangely funny to Harry and he started laughing. It became infectious and soon the entire bridge was chuckling. It was a sound that had been greatly missed since the war had started and it was welcome to Harry’s ears. If they should die now, at least that had had one last good laugh at the world.

    So far, the Northern Fleet had kept the Russians at bay, but at great cost. The Western Fleet no longer existed, being disbanded to replace the losses of the Northern and Southern Fleets. The pristine tactics used in the first engagement were also gone. Now, all engagements were slugging matches, straight and simple.

    It wasn’t long before the Repulse began receiving reports of sonar contacts. It was expected. The Russians always brought a large contingent of submarines with their intended invasion fleets. Even as the sonar reports came in, one of the forward destroyers was lifted bodily out of the water by an exploding torpedo. Water geysered up through the superstructure of the vessel as the resulting shockwave broke the ship’s back. Quickly, the vessel sunk below the surface.

    Any despair Harry felt at that was shortlived however, when the forward batteries signified the recognised start of a battle with a deafening roar. He smiled tightly as the first rounds straddled the leading enemy battleship. Countless engagements had honed the skills of the Repulse’s gunners. With a second roar, the main batteries fired again. This time, flame and debris sprouted from the lead battleship, signifying a magazine hit. The enemy warship stopped dead in the water and began to list. Without prompting, the gunners traversed and began firing on another target.

    The sinking of the Russian battleship would be the only clear cut victory for the Repulse on that day. The battered warship, even more battered after running the Russian gauntlet of fire, finally took a round that penetrated below decks and pierced the boiler room. With a screaming hiss, the boiler’s vented steam freely through the stacks and the hole below decks. Eventually, the sound died away, but the Repulse was dead in the water. Smoke billowed from her as destroyers moved in like jackals and picked at the carcass of the slain beast.

    Harry stood on the bridge, watching proudly as men remained at their positions, doing enough to keep the enemy distracted from the more operational warships. But slowly and surely, the Repulse’s guns began to fall silent as her crew died at their posts or had their weapons destroyed.

    Just as it seemed that the Repulse could not cause anymore damage to the enemy, one of the destroyers erupted into flame and immediately began to keel over. Even before Harry could phrase a question, a Spitfire of unknown configuration roared by overhead, closely followed by its squadron mates.

    The one remaining lookout called out to him.

    “Sir!” He cried. “On the horizon to the south!”

    Harry lifted his binoculars and what he saw sent a thrill up his spine.

    “By god!” He exclaimed. “They got the Ark Royal afloat!”

    On the horizon, steaming at full speed from the south, was the unmistakable silhouette of an aircraft carrier, surrounded by the equally unmistakable outlines of English warships. The RES Ark Royal was the last acquisition made by the English Empire before its vital resources had run dry. The might warship, prolonged by construction delays and the war, was now afloat and its squadrons of Seafires were roaring amongst the Russian warships with reckless abandon. Caught with a scenario they had never faced before, one of facing two types of opponents, the Russian fleet began to scatter and lose co-ordination. The arrival of the Ark Royal’s escort only sped up the inevitable.

    But the Repulse was never going to leave this battle. It’s engines were gone and the explosion of the boiler opened the hull below the sea line. Harry remained staunchly on the bridge until he was certain every living member was off of her. Then with Captain McLennon, he stepped onto the last lifeboat and saluted the mighty warship as she slipped beneath the waves for ever.

    Sighing, Harry sat down. The loss of the Repulse was not the highlight of his career. England needed every battleship it could put to sea. There was no way that the Repulse would be replaced. On the bright side though, they had stopped another Russian invasion force.

    Manchester Military Airbase, Mid-Northern Engand

    Charlie Gray blew on the wood fire and was rewarded with a face full of smoke and soot. He coughed and spluttered before giving his room mates a withering stare that stopped their laughing.

    “Laugh it up guys.” He said. “Otherwise we sleep in the cold tonight.”

    Any remaining laughter died instantly. Charlie turned away, hiding his own smile. When faced with the cold of a northern england winter, Charlie almost wished he was south fighting jerry fighters again...almost.

    The Russians had basically no airforce. Raids against Russian forces were proving deceptively easy, which was lulling the English forces into a sense of security. The edge the pilots had had was being dulled from lack of challenge. This worried Charlie because he knew the Russians wouldn’t ignore the need for a larger airforce for long.

    With a triumphant cry, the fire lit...and the klaxon blared. Charlie stumbled to his feet and ran towards the door. Any sign of having their edge dulled was apparently gone as the English pilots scrambled for their fighters. In the dying dusk, Charlie could make out silhouettes of enemy aircraft coming from the north. Nothing in size like the Germans had, but still it was a formation.

    Charlie’s Spitfire refused to start and he kept punching the starter futily. The other fighters around him spluttered to life and made takeoff runs either straight down taxi-ways or from the runway proper. Charlie pumped the starter button again, and this time he was rewarded with his engine firing to life. Grinning, he gunned his engine and began roaring down the nearest taxi-way.

    “Blue Two!” Screamed one of his squadron mates. “Get clear! You’ve got a bandit bearing down on you!”

    Charlie cursed as he saw the vibrating image of a Russian fighter bearing down on his aircraft in his rear-vision mirror. He quickly popped the top, climbed out and dove off of the moving plane. As he hit the ground, he heard a painful crack from his right ankle and it gave way. Luckily, he had enough presence of mind to roll away before he was clipped by the tail wing. In pain, he scrambled away as cannon rounds pounded the runway around his fighter. He was knocked flat on his face when his fighter exploded.

    Biting back the pain, Charlie hobbled, limped and crawled his way to a nearby anti-aircraft gun nest.

    “Need any help guys?” He asked with a wry grin. “Those bastards broke my ride. I want to return to favour.”

    “Sure you can help buddy.” The nearby sergeant said. “Grab a seat behind this here gun and pull the trigger.”

    Careful not to knock his ankle, Charlie climbed in behind the Bofors gun and adjusted the sight for himself.

    “Ready?” He asked. The sergeant gave him the thumbs up.

    “Locked and loaded.” He said. “Let ‘em have it.”

    Charlie pulled the trigger and his world was obliterated by the roar of the gun. Black puffs signified where his shell were exploding. With his pilot’s skill, he lead a bomber as it approached the airbase and with a satisfying puff of an explosion, the bomber wheeled over and plummetted earthward.

    Charlie let out a war cry as he kept tracking aircraft. By now, the sky around the airbase was thick with flack as the defenders were fully alert. The adrenaline pumping through Charlie’s body made him temporarily forget about the pain in his ankle.

    Finally, after what seemed like eons, but was in fact only twenty minutes, the attack was over. The Russian aircraft were in full retreat being harassed by English fighters. Charlie sat back, his gun now quiet.

    “Anybody got a smoke?” He asked. The sergeant smiled and handed him one.

    “You kinda need it after that.” The sergeant commented.

    “Yeah, I ‘spose you do.” Replied Charlie. “But I was thinking that I might not get another chance for a *** until I come out of hospital...and I want to enjoy it before the pain returns.”

    The sergeant and his men laughed, as did Charlie. He’d survived by the barest of margins and it felt too good not to laugh.

    London Palace, London

    “Welcome Invictius.” Winston Churchill said as the Roman Ambassador entered his office. “Please, take a seat. Brandy?”

    “Please.” Invictius Trenibus, First Ambassador to Caeser, replied. He nodded his thanks as Churchill gave him a decent shot of England’s finest.

    “Now, Ambassador, what can I do for you?” Churchill asked.

    “Mr Prime Minister, I first wish to thank you for your efforts in ensuring I made the treachourous trek across your countryside from my homeland in one piece. As you know, every country has elements that do not like to see supposed enemies meeting diplomatically.” Invictius said.

    “Are we enemies Invictius?” Churchill asked. “Or merely two people caught up in the ambitions of others?”

    “Ah!” Invictius said with a smile. “How I have missed your musings Mr Prime Minister. You always seem to shade what is otherwise a black and white world.”

    Churchill smiled politely, but kept quiet, allowing Invictius to continue.

    “But you are more right that you probably know.” The Ambassador continued, his tone changing to more serious. “To be frank Mr Prime Minister, Rome wishes to leave the Quadrant Alliance and ally herself with England.”

    The statement rocked Churchill back. This was the last thing he had been expecting. Completely lost for words, his mouth opened and shut like a fish out of water. Not knowing what to say or do, he gulped down his brandy in one swallow. The fire that burned its way down his throat cleared his thoughts.

    “This has taken you by surprise?” The Ambassador said, obviously amused by the fact the the English leader was for once without anything to say.

    “You could say that, yes.” Replied Churchill. “But let me ask, what does Rome have to gain by leaving the Alliance?”

    “It is more about what we have to lose.” Invictius replied. “It is not publicly known, but Rome did not wish war against England. Rome entered the Alliance initially to protect itself from the possibility of Russia or England invading it.”

    Invictius raised a hand to cut of Churchill’s protestations.

    “Mr Prime Minister, what you may see as impossible is something that we saw as a real threat.” He continued. “Rome is one of the smaller nations on this planet and yet we share borders with the three powers on this continent in Russia, England and Germany. When we entered the Alliance, we did so believing that having Russia and Germany as allies would protect us from England and our allies would not turn on us.”

    “But they have?” Churchill asked, curious.

    “Not yet.” Invictius said. “You may have already summised this, but General Stalin has taken control of Russia through a military coup. Catherine is but a puppet Head of State. Stalin's ambitions are somewhat more destructive and single-minded that Catherines ever were.”

    “What is his ambition?” Churchill enquired, now leaning forward with interest.

    “He wants Europa for Russia and Russia alone.” Invictius said. “Rome is no longer safe with her allies. Bismark probably has similar ambitions to Stalin, but before they face off against each other, they will be content to share the other nations on this continent among themselves.”

    Pieces were beginning to fall into place for Churchill.

    “So the attempted invasions of Greece were to try and get on equal footing with Russian and Germany?” Churchill said. “In the hope that when the day did come to fight either of those two nations, you could possibly stand up and fight for yourselves?”

    “Exactly.” Invictius said. “But we were wrong. The cost in man power to gain Greece as our own would not be worth the final result.”

    “What does England get out of this?” Churchill asked, realising he possibly had the upper hand in this bargain.

    “We will stop any further aggressive acts towards Greece.” Invictius replied. “You will get more troops because you will not required to fully man the England-Rome border.”

    Invictius paused before continuing.

    “And Caeser will trade you excess oil for your excess rubber.” He finished.

    Churchill simply looked dumbfounded. Mentally, he thanked god, any god, for the gift that the Romans had brought him. Externally, he looked newly labotamised. Shock, surprise and relief literally rolled off of him once he regained his composure.

    The Romans had never been close friends with the English Empire. In fact, diplomatic relations had barely existed until the Quadrant Alliance had been born. Many might see the Romans as untrustworthy, but there were factors at play that couldn’t be ignored, the least of which was the possibility of oil.

    “Ambassador,” Churchill finally said, “I need not consult anybody on this. I formally accept Caeser’s offer and enter into an alliance with Rome. May god spare us and may we live to see happier times.”

    And god hope that oil comes in time for redemption, he finished mentally.
    Oooh! Pretty flashing red button! * PUSH *

    Comment


    • #17
      great!!!

      Comment


      • #18
        BUMP

        It is in the finals, so thought I'd be egotistical and push it to the top.
        Oooh! Pretty flashing red button! * PUSH *

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        • #19
          Bumperoonie

          Is there more coming?
          AI:C3C Debug Game Report (Part1) :C3C Debug Game Report (Part2)
          Strategy:The Machiavellian Doctrine
          Visit my WebsiteMonkey Dew

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          • #20
            Yes there is...from what I can tell about the story, it is not even half way through...just hope my ideas don't run up short.
            Oooh! Pretty flashing red button! * PUSH *

            Comment


            • #21
              It's fantastic. Your story is very much like one of those Band of Brothers episodes
              AI:C3C Debug Game Report (Part1) :C3C Debug Game Report (Part2)
              Strategy:The Machiavellian Doctrine
              Visit my WebsiteMonkey Dew

              Comment


              • #22
                You write awesome stories and this is great as well. Doing us Aussie boys proud.

                Comment


                • #23
                  The Cost of War - Part III

                  The Cost of War - Part III

                  Northern England

                  If somebody had asked Bill Reddie how he was feeling, he would most likely have shot them with the Springfield rifle he had liberated from a dead soldier. His current world consisted of how much road he had to walk and how much road he had walked. Two months of trudging south had yet to bring him within sight of the frontline and frankly, it was starting to piss him off.

                  He had spent years training to defend the Empire, only to get knocked out of battle and spend all of the time chasing a frontline that moving south faster than he was. Initially, this had been alarming to the point of distraction, but two months of seeing the same fate befall any person in front of the Russians had just left a burning rage in the pit of his stomach. Liverpool was nothing but a charred pile of ash when he had arrived there. Charred bodies had scattered the ground and it was obvious that women and children were amongst them.

                  The Russians were committing genocide against a people that just wanted to live in peace. What right did they have? What right?!?!

                  Bill suddenly realised he was on his knees, babbling to himself softly, his hands clenched tightly around his rifle. He opened his eyes, allowing the bright sunlight to penetrate the fog of his thoughts. It was only then that he realised that the sound of battle could be heard.

                  He looked around trying to guage its direction, but it sounded like it was all around him. He stood there confused. And then he looked up.

                  Wheeling and flashing across the skies, fighters fought each other. The sounds of explosions and gunfire filtered down to Bill who stood entranced at the beautiful, yet deadly, ballet being played out in the sky above. He stood there and just let the image cleanse him, ignoring the obvious implications of what was happening up there. He chose to see it through the eyes of a child.

                  Blue Lion Squadon, Northern England

                  Eight thousand feet above Bill Reddie, Charlie’s world was somewhat more clear, a lot less tranquil and completely unforgiving. The English Air Force had begun sorties into captured land in a hope of attacking Russian convoys. Their first such sortie had essentially been ambushed and the squadron was fighting for its life.

                  Gritting his teeth, Charlie threw his new Spitfire into a vicious spiral in an attempt to shake the two pursuers on his tail. Tracers raced past his fighter and he tried to slip through them. A couple of round punched holes in his wings but the damage was only superficial. Luckily, two of his wingmates came to help.

                  “Thanks Blue Leader, Three.” Charlie breathed as he levelled out and went looking for more prey. The sheer numbers of aircraft the Russians had was breathtaking. Charlie really wanted to see what the manufacturing cities of Russia looked like...then he’d have to bomb the living daylights out of them.

                  Latching onto an enemy’s tail, Charlie let loose a burst of cannon fire and watched it walk along the length of the fighter. With deceptive gracefulness, the figter rolled over and headed earthward. The lack of fire or smoke suggested to Charlie that the pilot was dead at the stick.

                  He wheeled his fighter about to attack another and was suddenly thrown forward into the flight stick as something struck his fighter with great force. Dazed, he fumbled to regain control of his aircraft, but it failed to respond. He shook free the cobwebs in his brain and tasted blood in his mouth. Just as he was getting some sense of what was going on, the fighter was slammed hard again.

                  Fire poared from the engine and land filled the cockpit’s vision. Charlie fumbled with the canopy release catch, but it failed to work. He slammed his hands futily into the glass with no effect. He couldn’t get out.

                  The plummet from the sky had put out the engine fire, but Charlie doubted that would prolong his survival much. He’d lost an elevator and was dead-stick and going vertically downwards. Any faster and the fighter would break apart.

                  Grunting with effort, Charlie pulled back on the stick. Adrenaline flowed through his veins and a new surge of strength burst through him. He kept pulling on the flight stick, and with slow, shuddering pain, the nose began to pull towards horizontal.

                  With a crash, the tail fin ripped from the fighter and fluttered away. Not that Charlie cared. He wasn’t going to really land this fighter again. His goal was to crash it in such a way that bits of him might walk away from it.

                  The aircraft was groaning now as the g-forces pulled at its entire structure. But the good news was that he had the plane more or less flying horizontally and he was continuously bleeding off airspeed. He kept nursing the fighter, willing more airspeed to drop before he found a flat area to belly it on. He also kept worrying that he would run out of airspeed before such a flat area appeared.

                  Then to his relief, he saw a field. Caressing the fighter downwards, he brought it in. The sound of tall strands of wheat cracking against his wings filled the cockpit moments before the lower air-scoop touched. And then all smooth flight stopped. Charlie was flung forward and his head bashed the console as the Spitfire piroetted on the spot where a wing had dug into the ground. A couple of more hits and finally the Spitfire was on the ground, perfectly still admist ruined wheat and a large dust cloud.

                  Charlie tried to think what he should do but all his mind wanted to do was sleep. A bash on the cockpit didn’t even startle him. The face that appeared in front of his did. It was smiling.

                  Northern England

                  Bill Reddie had watched the Spitfire plummet from the battle and had watched as the pilot successfully pulled it out of the dive. Bits were flying off the aircraft and he kept willing the pilot to jump but he never did. Eventually, the Spitfire had whistled overhead and crashed in a nearby field.

                  He reached it quickly enough that the dust cloud still surrounded the crash site. He tried the cockpit but it appeared to be stuck. Bill saw the pilot moving inside and called out to him but go no response. He didn’t know if the fighter would blow, but he had to get the pilot out.

                  Grabbing a rock, he smashed down on one of the latches and kept smashing until it was a mangled mess. Dropping the rock, he grabbed the cockpit and lifted. It came open with surprising ease. He leant inside and smiled at the pilot until the pilots eyes registered him.

                  “Nice landing.” Bill commented. “Might want to try it on a runway with wheels sometime.”

                  The pilot’s mouth split into a smile showing a bloodied mouth.

                  “I doubt they’ll let me out again.” He said. He tried to rise.

                  “Here, let me get you out of this thing.” Bill said, hooking his arms under the pilots and lifting. The pilot let out a blood curdling scream. Bill almost dropped him.

                  “Just kidding.” The pilot said, laughing then coughing. “Sorry.”

                  Bill cursed something about flyboys as he helped the groggy pilot clear of the fighter and moved him away. Without warning, the Spitfire exploded, throwing both men to the ground.

                  “Look mate.” The pilot said. “We’ve only just met. Don’t get fresh with me.”

                  And then the pilot fainted.

                  Bill lifted his nameless companion and carried him to a nearby clump of trees before collapsing there. He set about examining the pilot. He noticed that he wore a plaster cast around his right ankle and lower leg. Maybe he wasn’t so weak kneed after all.

                  The pilot let out a cliched groan and opened his eyes.

                  “Ow!” He said.

                  “Something hurt?” Asked Bill.

                  “Yeah, my head.” The pilot replied. “Feels like I’ve been drinking all night and decided to start a pub fight with the ten strongest guys there.”

                  “You’re lucky that’s all that’s hurting.” Bill commented. “You should have been dead.”

                  “Yeah, I know.” The pilot agreed. “Strange, isn’t it? People get run over by a bus in London by stepping out into the road and I walk away from an uncontrolled crash into a wheat field. Be buggered if I can figure out that.”

                  “Well, I wouldn’t walk into anymore streets if I were you.” Bill said. “You’ve used up all your luck as it is.”

                  “You don’t know the half of it mate.” The pilot said, before casting his eyes to Bill and offering him his right hand. “Charlie Gray’s the name. Getting shot down appears to be my game.”

                  Bill smiled.

                  “Bill Reddie.” He said, shaking the offered hand. “Let’s just rest here for a while.”

                  “Sure.” Charlie replied. “Got any brandy?”

                  Chuckling, Bill rested his head against a tree and closed his eyes. It was good to talk to another human being again.

                  London Palace, London

                  Standing on the balcony of London Palace, Winston Churchill could hear the gunfire to the north. Reports were also filtering in that the southern sector was about to collapse. The parade of dead was nearly a continuous flow through the capital’s streets as the population mourned the loss of loved ones and the possible loss of the Empire.

                  A knock on the office door brought Churchill out of his reverie and off the balcony.

                  “Come in.” He ordered.

                  General Bernard Montgomery strode in and saluted.

                  “Ah General.” Churchill said. “How goes Operation Sea Serpent?”

                  Montgomery looked decidedly uncomfortable.

                  “Mr Prime Minister, the operation proceeds well.” He paused before continuing. “However, I am unhappy with my position in charge of this. I should be leading the defence against the invaders.”

                  “Bernard, if the population discovered this, there would be mass hysteria. We will ensure everyone is safe, but they will not believe us.” Churchill said. “I need you in charge because it is your plan and you know the intracacies of it. There is nothing more I would want than to have you defending our Empire, because you would do a splendid job, but the Empire needs you here more.”

                  Montgomery sighed his resignation and nodded his acceptance.

                  “I do not want to lose you when we will need great leadership on the battlefield in the future.” Churchill said. “I do not intend for our situation to last forever.”

                  “What of the Romans?” Montgomery enquired.

                  “The rubber we have been supplying them has allowed the Romans to bolster their forces enough to stand alone for a reasonable amount of time.” Churchill said. “They took a great risk by leaving the Alliance and I intend to have them remain present on this continent. Please, sit Bernard. We need to discuss the future of England.”

                  Montgomery sat down and relaxed.

                  “The French are effectively gone.” Montgomery stated, matter-of-factly. “The Iroquios have attacked and are taking their remaining cities at a constant rate. The Greeks are starting to show signs of growth now that the Romans have stopped attacking them. For some reason, the Germans do not seem too worried about the Greeks. Perhaps they are focusing all of their efforts on us.”

                  “We should feel flattered.” Churchill grumbled. “No ill intentions to the Greeks, but if the Germans were somewhat distracted by them, we wouldn’t be overwhelmed on the southern front."

                  "Can't disagree with you there sir." Montgomery nodded his affirmative. "However, we are getting extra forces now that we don't have to worry about the Roman border, though that is probably a mute point because at the rate the Russians are advancing, we won't have a Roman border."

                  Churchill chuckled mirthlessly.

                  "What a pretty mess we're in." He said. "The Americans are of no use to us because of their war against the Aztecs; the French will soon be but a footnote in history; the Greeks are of no use because they are still trying to rebuild themselves; and the Romans are still trying to find their feet now that they're out of the Alliance. We may have a supply of oil again, but we're still effectively on our own and we can't get weaponary built instantly. All of our treasury was used to get the Ark Royal afloat. Tell me friend, what do you see becoming of our once glorious Empire."

                  "We will survive sir." Montgomery survived. "We may not be alive to see the Empire return to its rightful glory, but the plans we have in motion will mean that some generation will have the chance to strike back at our enemies. The English people have stood at the gates of hell before and walked away."

                  "I only hope you're right Bernard." Churchill commented. "I only hope you're right."

                  The two men fell into silence, contemplating the path they were on and where its ultimate end would be.

                  Protection Fleet, English Channel

                  The RES Olympia was a far cry from the Repulse but it was still a battleship. Rear Admiral Harry Jackson stood on the bridge of the elderly warship and scanned the horizon. The English Channel was also a far cry from the blood-soaked North Sea.

                  Once Harry had returned to Dover and Fleet HQ, the Navy had conferred on him his field promotion to Rear Admiral. However, the Ark Royal and her commander Admiral Sean O'Lachlan were now the leaders of the Northern Fleet, so Harry had been posted to the Olympia and placed in charge of the Protection fleet.

                  The English Channel was peaceful, like it had always been. With the two main fleets guarding the North and South Seas and massive minefields at either end of the channel, no enemy ship tried to come anywhere near the channel. And it was getting boring for Harry. After three months of flatout action, he was suddenly baby-sitting Channel Convoys and the slowdown was too sudden for his liking.

                  The Olympia and its associated flotilla of one battleship and eight destroyers had the duty of protecting the transports that were constantly flowing between the mainland and the English Isles. Harry had been told he was assisting Operation Sea Serpent but what it exactly meant, he had no idea. All he knew was that he escorted the enclosed transports to the Brighton Harbour, where his flotilla waited outside. Then the transports came out and he then escorted them to Portsmouth on the other side of the channel and the same deal happened.

                  What Operation Sea Serpent was about, he didn't have a clue. But he was a career navy man, and he knew when to follow orders and when to ask questions. He was pretty damn sure this was a time for following orders.

                  "Aircraft sir!" A lookout called and Harry's pace quickened slighty. "Awaiting visual recognition."

                  Before the lookout to recognise the aircraft, the radio operator stuck his head onto the bridge.

                  "Sir, we're receiving radio transmissions from incoming aircraft." The operator reported. "They are stating that they are here to provide air cover. They gave the correct security codes and countersigns."

                  Sighing, Harry nodded.

                  Air cover? From what? The only airborne assault they had had to face was from seagulls. But the sudden extra forces intrigued Harry. What was this Operation Sea Serpent and why did it require such a large force to protect its interests? And were the aircraft here because the enemy land-borne forces getting closer to striking range?

                  Yes, he would definitely have to look into this further.
                  Oooh! Pretty flashing red button! * PUSH *

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                  • #24
                    ...continued...

                    Northern England

                    Two men in differing uniforms walked along the road in silence. One was a relative veteran of land battles and had been chasing an accelerating frontline for five months. The other was a fighter ace who had been shot down behind the frontline and had been chasing it for a month.

                    And they were currently silent because they were having a contest to see who could stay silent the longest. It was a stupid contest, but it was just one of a long line of stupid contests the men had created to keep their minds occupied.

                    "Bugger it." Charlie Gray cursed. "I can't do it any longer. I'm used to having radio chatter in my ear or be joking with someone. Ok, you win."

                    Bill Reddie smiled.

                    "Damn right." He replied. "That makes it 13-15 your favour. C'mon flyboy. Your turn."

                    "Let's just walk." Charlie said. "I've had enough of playing stupid games for a while. So tell me, why did you join the army? No co-ordination for flying? No sea legs? Your mother and father were brother and sister?"

                    Bill shot a hot glare at Charlie.

                    "For your information, I joined the army because it was family tradition." Bill replied. "My father was in the army, as was his and so on. It was expected of me. And I haven't regretted a moment of it since."

                    Charlie arched his eyebrow at Bill.

                    "Ok, up until I met you, it was pretty damned perfect." Bill said. "Seriously though, you do question why you joined when you see a massacre like you do in the Wastelands or at Coventry. But you quickly realise it is so as you can at least stop one person from inflicting that pain on somebody who doesn't have a chance to fight back."

                    "You do realise that they still have no idea what happened in the Wastelands or how the Russians pushed south so quickly and easily." Charlie said. "Before I got shot down, we were actually supposed to be starting recon missions to the north."

                    Bill snorted.

                    "I can tell 'em what happened." Bill said. "The Russians rolled over us like we weren't even there. And we..."

                    Bill stopped as they crested a hill and the city of Wolverhampton came into view. The city was destroyed, but that wasn't what surprised Bill, because Coventry and Liverpool had been destroyed as well. What shocked him was the fact that the city had simply been partially knocked down.

                    "C'mon." He said, breaking into a trot.

                    Charlie ran alongside him until they finally reached the the outskirts and began moving through the partial rubble. It was eerily silent.

                    "Is it me, or does it seem like nobody actually died here?" Bill asked, stepping over a suitcase that had spilt open and deposited its contents on the footpath.

                    "Yeah." Charlie said, pivoting as he walked. "And it freaks me out."

                    The wind whistled through the empty buildings and rubbish fluttered along the ground. Charlie felt a shiver run down his spine. It was too surreal to describe.

                    "They just packed up and left." Bill said. "It's like the entire city knew what was coming and simply left. It's unbelievable."

                    The two men stood there, amongst the deserted city, trying to comprehend what the hell it all meant, and neither of them liked what they were thinking.

                    Moscow, Russia

                    If winters in northern England were cold, then winters in Moscow could be classed as bordering on insane. Sam Smith was just glad that the summer had come. Now it felt like a brisk day in Liverpool rather than the inside of an ice-box. But the weather was only a secondary concern for Sam.

                    Sam Smith, a.k.a. Sergei Vladakov, was the first spy that England had successfully inserted into the Russian capital since the war had started. As far as he knew, he was also the only spy that the English had successfully inserted into the Russian capital and he had very good reason to believe this.

                    The Russian capital was locked down tighter than the Bank of England's vault. It was nearly impossible to get in and trying to find information was like trying to use a brick wall for a shake-down. Combine this with the constant cold and Sam was starting to get extremely frustrated.

                    It had taken a good four weeks of nosing around and being kicked out of Military Clearance Zones (MCZs) for Sam to finally discover that Stalin was in fact in charge of Russia. With mission one complete, and six weeks later, Sam still hadn't got close to finishing mission two, which was to estimate the Russian's overall production capability. All information of that nature was locked away in the Kremlin and the only way Sam was going to get into there was to join the Army and that was a last-resort method and one he wasn't too interested in using.

                    Sighing his frustration away, creating a plume of steam from his breath that mingled with the steam from the train at the platform he was standing on, Sam climbed into one of the Second Class carriages and found a seat. Second Class cars were not heated, but it was better than being crammed into a cattlecar like the poor buggers in Third Class got.

                    Sam was heading to Kiev, supposedly one of the biggest ship building cities in Russia. With nothing coming from his searches in Moscow, he had decided to visit some of the bigger cities around Russia and visually see if he could find their production capacity. He had some information on Moscow, but as the oldest city in the world and one of the most industrial, it was already estimated by London what that city was capable of.

                    Sam sat back in his seat as the steam train pulled out the station. It was dangerous for a spy to go travelling across the enemy countryside away from the immediate vicinity of their safehouse, but Sam saw the risks as acceptable. His country needed that information. They needed that information so they could go to the countries in Americana and try to get them on her side, otherwise they could be the next stepping stone between Stalin, Bismark and their ambitions.

                    Sam must have fallen asleep because the next this he knew he was being poked with the muzzle of a rifle. His eyes shot open and he nearly cursed in english before he realised where he was and checked himself.

                    "Papers?" The soldier standing over him asked in russian.

                    Sam dug out his forged papers and handed them to the soldier. The soldier looked them over and then looked at Sam.

                    "You are on leave?" The soldier asked.

                    "Yes." Replied Sam in russian as well. "I am returning to Kiev to see my mother before I must return to my post."

                    "You are a clerk?" The soldier asked. This worried Sam as to why he was being asked this before he realised that the soldier was possibly wondering why Sam wasn't wearing a uniform of a soldier.

                    "Yes I am." Sam said. "Not everybody can fight, but we must serve mother Russia as best as our abilities and our country's needs require."

                    The soldier held Sam's gaze a little longer before nodding and handing him his papers back.

                    "I agree comrade." The soldier said. "Enjoy your leave."

                    The soldier moved on, but Sam restrained himself from letting out a pent up sigh of relief. The last thing he wanted to so was make it seem to a casual observer that that had been nothing but routine.

                    Keeping an outwardly calm expression, Sam looked out at the passing countryside and thanked god for surviving his latest close call.

                    Brighton, England

                    The first that Harry Jackson knew he was in trouble was when two MPs arrived at his sides.

                    "Excuse me sir." One of them said. "Could you please come with us?"

                    Harry raised an eyebrow.

                    "Do I have much choice?" He asked.

                    "Not really sir." The other MP said. "We have orders to subdue you if necessary but we'd prefer not to."

                    Shrugging, Harry fell into step behind them. He already had an idea what this was all about and getting himself knocked unconscious wouldn't help him in anyway.

                    For a month Harry had spent every spare moment he had trying to determine what Operation Sea Serpent was about and without much luck. He had never seen so many doors close so quickly and so abruptly. With the obvious amount of logistics being carted across the channel, Harry would have thought somebody, anybody would have been willing to tell him what the hell was going on, but everytime he got close to finding out the oppurtunity was slammed shut.

                    And his escort told him that somebody had taken an interest in his nosing around and did not appreciate it. Well, he would at least give himself the satisfaction of finding out what the hell was going on before they threw away the key and forgot about him.

                    A car waited by a nearby curb and Harry climbed in. The back door was closed behind him and he noticed wryly that the insides of the doors had no handles and that a mesh cage protected the front compartment from the back. His enquiries to his captors about their destination was met with with stony silence, so Harry simply sat back and enjoyed the ride.

                    After six hours travel along the road between Brighton and London, the last place Harry expected to pull up to was London Palace. He looked out with disbelief as to Palace Guards opened the doors and then escorted him up to the central office. He stood nervously in the office, knowing exactly who was going to walk through the door.

                    When Churchill did walk through the office door, Harry snapped to attention and saluted.

                    "At ease Admiral." Churchill said. "Please, have a seat."

                    Harry took the offered seat and waited for Churchill to ready himself.

                    "You pose a difficult problem Admiral." Churchill finally said, leaning on the desk. "I knew that Sea Serpent couldn't stay a secret for ever. It never would. Eventually everyone would become involved with it, from myself all the way down to the youngest newborn child."

                    Churchill sighed.

                    "I have had many of your superiors calling for you to be forcibly retired." He continued. "But I cannot and will not do it. England owes you a great deal of gratitude. Your efforts in the North Sea helped keep the Russians at bay long enough for the Romans to join our side and for us to actually conceive the idea of Operation Sea Serpent. So, I'm doing the only thing I can think of doing. I'm making you part of the team."

                    Harry was about to protest.

                    "Admiral," Churchill said, cutting him off, "you already know too much. You don't have much of a choice here. Join the Sea Serpent command team or go have a holiday in the Luton Military Penitentiary."

                    "Well, if you put it that way Mr Prime Minister." Harry replied, wishing that his curiousity hadn't got the better of him.

                    "Good." Churchill said. "Now, to tell you what Operation Sea Serpent is. It is possibly the biggest undertaking by any civilization ever on this planet. We never stood a chance against the combined assaults of Germany and Russia. The Russian forces and apparent production might meant they could easily overrun us. We've still yet to find out what happened in the north exactly. It's obvious that the army up there was destroyed, but we have no true intelligence of the enemy.

                    "In the south, the Germans have been advancing more slowly, but none-the-less, their superior forces were eventually going to overrun our forces again. Every month we lose contact with another city or town. York is a smoking ruins and we can summise Coventry and Liverpool are the same. The Russians weren't merely interested in conquest but complete annihilation."

                    Harry's mouth begun to drop open as the full import of what Churchill was saying began to strike home and the first ideas of what Sea Serpent was all about began to take root in his mind.

                    "You're retreating the entire Empire to the Isles?" He asked with disbelief.

                    "Yes we are." Churchill said. "We've abandoned Wolverhampton, Manchester, Preston and Edinburgh. Even as we speak, London and Brighton are being evacuated. Apart from our rapidly dwindling defensive line of troops surrounding these two cities, the other regions of the Empire have been lost."

                    Harry sat there silently. The fact that Churchill had managed to pull this off without a mass hysteria was beyond belief.

                    "I want you to take command of the fleet operations." Churchill said. "General Montgomery is in charge of it overall at the moment, but as we near the completion of Sea Serpent, which effectively means we've completely lost the mainland, I want him to look after specifically the land operations. It will be up to you to fully co-ordinate the fleet logistics and make sure our people arrive on the isles safely. Can you do this?"

                    Harry simply nodded.

                    "Good man." Churchill said, extending his hand which Harry shook hesitantly. "The car outside will take you to your new centre of operations in Brighton. Good luck."

                    As Harry made his way down to the waiting car, he so wished he had been content on the Olympia.

                    Northern England

                    "Took 'em long enough." Bill commented dryly as another convoy of Russian trucks ground past them where they hid in bushes. "Looks like the Russian's logistics have finally managed to catch them up."

                    Charlie looked at him.

                    "You said you were layed up for two weeks." He observed. "How come it has taken the Ruskies so long to organise their supply lines."

                    "I doubted they expected the English defences to crumble so fast." Bill said. "I definitely didn't. But whoever is in charge of 'em decided to press home the advantage. Damn!"

                    "What?" Charlie asked of Bill's curse.

                    "My method for getting message to command was all wrong." Bill explained. "I was too busy city-hopping that it's taken me twice as long to get where I should have headed for in the first place. If I'd struck for the coast and headed straight for Brighton I would've already been there."

                    "And I would be a char-grilled bit of toast in my fighter if you had of." Charlie said. "I don't know about you, but I'm bloody glad you happened to take the 'long' route."

                    Bill smiled.

                    "Now you've just made it worse." He said before nodding towards the road. "C'mon, they've gone past now. We better make some tracks otherwise we're going to be stuck here until winter."

                    Crawling out from under the bush, the two men quickly ran across the road and into the field there. The sound of gunfire could be heard and had been noticeable for a good three days now, signifying that possibly, finally, they were nearing their destination.

                    Suddenly, something whistled past Bill ear and thudded into a nearby tree and was closely followed by the crack of a rifle shot. Spinning around, Bill saw an enemy patrol running from the south towards them.

                    "Damn, all this way just to get done by the parents." Charlie said, hefting his "acquired" sub-machine gun and letting of a quick burst. "Better run before they call in something heavier."

                    "Will that do?" Bill asked, pointing at the mechanised anti-infantry vehicle grumbling down the road towards them.

                    "Good enough." Charlie said as the two men broke into a sprint. The whistle of bullets and the crack of rifle shots pursued them as they made a bee-line for a nearby forest. "Good thing these guys can't shoot."

                    Once they had reached the tree, Charlie gave another burst of sub-machine gun fire to keep their heads down.

                    "Make sure we're still heading south." Bill commented. "Last thing we want to do is run all day and end up five miles back from where we came."

                    "Oh, that would really cap of this holiday, wouldn't it?" Charlie quipped. "Which reminds me, I'm never going on holiday with you again."

                    They ran through the forest, hoping that they weren't running in circles. Bill visibly shivered when the sound of howling dogs could be heard.

                    "Oh great." He cursed. "They've got their pets with them. Look for a creek. We need to throw our tracks."

                    They ran in silence, each concentrating on keeping the flatout pace going. Lack of proper food or sleep began sapping their energy quickly. Bill was beginning to wonder if they would ever get out of it alive when Charlie pointed at a trough of flowing water. The two men waded in then began walking up-stream.

                    After ten minutes of this, they finally emerged from the creek, soaked up to the knees but a good 500 metres from where they go in.

                    "This way." Bill said as he started running again down an embankment. "Let's just hope there isn't a welcoming party when we finally get out of here."

                    They could see daylight in front of them. They had lost track of how long they had been running but they were both hoping it wasn't for much longer.

                    When they finally burst from the forest, there was no sign of pursuing enemy. But that wasn't what stopped them in their tracks. What stopped them was the fact that Brighton lay in front of them. Bill let out a sob of relief before noticing the more intricate details. The first one was the ten transports now steaming under full power for the ocean, escorted by aircraft and warships. The second one were the numerous Russian columns within the city. And the third was that Brighton looked exactly like Wolverhampton had.

                    "Hands up!" A decidedly English voice said to them.

                    "Thank god!" Bill said, turning to face the young soldier standing behind them. "At least we're not on our own."

                    The other soldier relaxed.

                    "We might as well be." He commented. "The bastards have left us to rot. There's nobody left. Those transports out there are the last ones leaving this god-forsaken place."

                    "What about London?" Charlie asked.

                    "Same deal." The soldier said. "Completely abandoned. The next transport to come from England will be carrying an invasion force and that might be in 10 years time."

                    "You have to be..." Before Bill could finish his question, rifle shots rang out and the young soldier pitched forward. Both Bill and Charlie looked at each other before breaking into a run. "Head for Brighton!"

                    "What?!?" Charlie asked between pants. "With the Russians there?"

                    "If you haven't noticed, there's Russians here as well." Bill replied. "We can hole up in the city until we can escape to open ground."

                    "Better plan than nothing." Charlie said. "Not like we're gonna get any help wherever we go."

                    The two men ran towards the deserted city and to an unknown and possibly short future. Only time would tell.

                    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                    What will happen to Charlie and Bill, stranded in hostile territory with an enemy bent on the annihilation of their race? Will England rise again or has it doomed itself by abandoning its allies and its homelands?

                    Stay tuned for the next installments of The Cost of War.
                    Oooh! Pretty flashing red button! * PUSH *

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                    • #25
                      Wow!

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                      • #26
                        Civman2000, I think we should get WTE_Ozwolf to take some screencaps and reprint his story on a website with high production values
                        AI:C3C Debug Game Report (Part1) :C3C Debug Game Report (Part2)
                        Strategy:The Machiavellian Doctrine
                        Visit my WebsiteMonkey Dew

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                        • #27
                          hmmm...well, when he finishes this one he'll have written 3...let's wait until there are ten and then publish them as a short story collection!

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                          • #28
                            keeping me inspired Oz Wolf.
                            DANGER! - Unexploded Civilian

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                            • #29
                              Hey Oz! Where is the next part?! I can't wait!

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                              • #30
                                Since this won, will there be a next part or has he accomplished all he needs to?
                                -->Visit CGN!
                                -->"Production! More Production! Production creates Wealth! Production creates more Jobs!"-Wendell Willkie -1944

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