Thursday, September 22, 2022

Chapter Nine

But there comes a moment in everybody's life when he must decide whether he'll live among the human beings or not - a fool among fools or a fool alone.

~ Thornton Wilder

Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Cheyenne Mountain, CO, NORAD Command, 27 Weeks Post-Apocalypse

Beth came awake, covered in sweat and hyperventilating, her arm and side stinging in sympathetic pain as she looked up to see her bed a foot above her. She looked around to see the floor next to her and the rest of her torso entangled in the blankets. Had she called out in panic? There wasn't any frantic knocking on the closed door, so she mustn't of cried out in her sleep or when she impacted the floor. She assessed her body for injuries, but aside from the throbbing abrasions from the no-skid floor, she was fine.

That dream was more vivid than she had thought, the Kuzka's Mother bomb, the one that the Russians claimed to have, the one that they didn't detonate for the sake of the earth. Their reticence to using that in test was that they hadn't wanted to set the atmosphere on fire with that large of an explosion. But in her dream, that bomb at a yield of over 100 megatons was more devastating than she had even imagined. Were they in danger from another nuclear detonation; this time by the Russians?

No matter which way Beth mentally turned that dream over, she couldn't make heads or tails out of it. She needed to take in the essence of what Horner and Stafford had said and figure out what her plan was next. If they stayed in power, they would end up going in a flash of a nuclear detonation and the world would be rocked with more devastation. Beth arose from the floor, threw her blankets back on the bed and walked over to the sink to splash her face with water; the cold water shocking her to some semblance of alertness. She looked at her pale reflection in the mirror; knowing that she would have to walk a moral tightrope: to make it seem as though she was acceding to Horner and Stafford, yet in the background, fostering dissension in the ranks. She would have to be careful of whom she discussed matters with; who would be trustworthy and able to be depended on when it came down to setting her plan in motion. As the low woman on the commissioned totem-pole, she would have to gain the trust of senior officers. She would also have to talk to the enlisted personnel but only after gauging carefully who reported to Stafford and Horner whether directly or indirectly. Until then, her best bet was to lay low and observe, and hopefully, Stafford's and Horner's spies wouldn't be alerted to her.

Mt.Storm Emergency Facility; Somewhere in the Blue Mountains. 28 weeks Post-Apocalypse

War was genocide; that much was certain. Animal's rational mind spun at the enormity of the fact that humanity had managed to do what many in the nuclear release chain of command said was impossible to do. It was surprising that anyone had rationalized this course of action, but humans had and the earth had suffered immensely for it. Sitting in a chair in what passed for a shelter; but more like a glorified talpidaean tunnel, Animal wondered if they would ever see the sky again. And even if they did, would they want to, in the sun's eidolic pall barely visible through thick ash clouds, see the devastation that humanity had brought upon the earth. And even so, a part of him yearned for the surface; to see the sky above him, not be constrained by twenty five feet high ceilings marked every quarter km by a bank of fluorescent tube lighting. Animal snorted in derision. If the fluorescent tubes went out; their vaunted vision would be just as useless as that of a blind mole-rat.

A tap on his shoulder caused Animal to startle as he bit off his reaction knowing that he was safe inside the armory. He looked up to see Jen looking concerned. Seeking to reassure her, he nodded that he was alright. She sat down beside him as Animal sighed.

"Do you miss the outdoors?" She asked casually. Jen was always observant and had noticed Animal continually looking up at the ceiling, but not seeing the ceiling. He was gazing up as though looking beyond the steel and stone roof over their heads. He seemed silent…aloof for a long moment while mentally thinking about the question that Jen had posed in his direction and just when Jen thought he hadn't even heard her…

"Have you ever wondered what life would have been like if the bombs hadn't gone off?" Jen looked over at Animal in question to his sudden comment.

"No." Jen replied slowly weighing her response, "But only because, for me, it would have just been the same old routine of getting up, going to work at JAG, and going home again. The what-if scenario would have driven me crazy after the bombs fell. Mainly because we can't go back to the way it was anymore...it's not possible." Jen's voice hitched a little. "All we have…is right now..." She looked at him with her two dark pools of brown eyes, twisted her mouth into a small smile. "...and each other..." She rested her the palm of her hand on his chest. "I can't think of what-if when all we can do is survive."

"The Malcontents aren't making it easy..." Animal opined as he indicated with a look as to what he would want to do to any of such rebels if they were to make their presence known.

"They're jealous of what we have." Jen stated. "That's why we have the armory and the weapons. If they had them, they'd throw us out into the radiation."

Animal had a dark thought pass through him that he'd feel a lot safer if they threw the rebels out into the radiation. "Where's Gunny and Kat?" He asked casually; reassured that Gunny was standing guard, but not so certain about Kat. All it would take would be one person not doing their job and the armory could potentially be unsecured. He wouldn't feel protected until the armory was on a separate level from the main shelter with no ability for the rest of the shelter population to get access to the armory.

"They're out front in the main armory on guard." Jen replied, her hand casually rubbing circles on Animal's chest which was clad in NWUs. You couldn't get the Navy out of this man. Jen thought as she leaned casually against Animal, letting the warmth of her body close to his, arouse him.

"Where's Harm?" Animal tensed up?

"He's with Meg right now." The amused tone of Jen's voice gave him an idea of just what Harm and Meg were up to; the throatiness of her voice indicated as to what she would like to be doing at the moment as well. "Boone's orders…"

"Ah…" was Animal's sarcastic snort. He wasn't too sure of Boone's command either and he missed Lia yet, the tug of his arm by Jen was enough to get him on his feet as Jen pulled him towards his private quarters and drew the privacy curtain.

"Boone's orders to him extended to me as well…so…" Then Jen's descending lips on his quelled any protest as clothes were tossed aside in a torrent of passion as they made love.

USS Birmingham SSBN-588, McMurdo Station, Antarctica, 28 weeks Post-Apocalypse

The wind didn't howl as unnervingly, as it did the week prior, which meant that the storm was dying down, but they were still stuck in the ship as the killing temperatures outside made the trek to McMurdo Station for more supplies untenable and risky. The men onboard the USS Birmingham were on short rations as the storm raged on and on and morale was plummeting at an alarming rate. The reactors were kept functioning as they generated heat within the ship so that they wouldn't freeze to death.

"What about the Russians?" CAPT Van Buren asked CDR Turner who had, with the help of both American and Russian sailors managed to set up a rope and carabiner method of travelling between both submarines, so that they would be able to maintain a line of communications during the storm. But even so; travel between the two ships during the height of the snowstorm was a dangerous business.

Turner looked at Van Buren for a long moment before responding. "Sir, the Russians seem to have stocked supplies for just this very reason." He paused. "They have enough to get them through another week but we're running low on supplies and if this cold persists for another week, we're going to have a mutiny on our hands and it's not going to be pretty, sir."

"I know…" Van Buren replied as he looked over at Commander Turner. "If this storm lasts another week, we're going to have to brave the elements and go up to McMurdo to fetch supplies. Are the men up at the station hunkered down too?"

"As far as I know, they are, sir. They managed to get the generators going and they're locked down tight. The buildings are insulated against the cold." Turner responded.

"All right. See if you can get a team together to make a run for McMurdo and then we'll see if the conditions improve enough to make it there and back to restock the ship enough so that we can manage to outwait the storm."

"Yes, sir." Turner snapped to attention.

"And…Commander. If you're stuck up at McMurdo when the weather comes back in, I want you to stay put there. I don't need you to do anything unnecessary that will lose us personnel. Is that understood?"

"Aye-aye, sir!" Turner responded.

27th Guards Vitebsk Red Banner Rocket Army, Tatischevo, Vladimir, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 28 Weeks Post-Apocalypse

"Comrade Major General Melyanin." One of the remaining soldiers who were monitoring the rockets left over for a second strike. The rest had deserted their posts and Melyanin could not blame them. They knew that the Russian Federation was finished as a power. Now it would be a series of bunker-states that would vie for supremacy. And those that had nuclear weapons still would be those in control. "Soyedinennyye Shtaty na kolenyakh. Dolzhny li my sledit' za vtorym yadernym udarom? The United States is on their knees. Should we follow up with a second nuclear strike?"

"Tam net neobkhodimosti dlya vtorogo udara, my unichtozhili zemlyu! There is no need for a second strike, we have destroyed the earth!" Major General Melyanin replied as he looked at the scope which was blast-hardened to initiate a follow-up nuclear strike should the United States survive. "Tam net neobkhodimosti, chtoby unichtozhit' yego dal'she. There is no need to destroy it further."

Melyanin was a pragmatic man; there was no need to initiate more conflict. It was enough that there were those who had survived. Those who did would have to rebuild the world. Melyanin could foresee no use for any nuclear weapons that survived unless it was to bring peace by eliminating a threat from the world or a megalomaniacal dictator that would try to use the remaining population as a power-base from which to enslave the entire world.

Ever since the bombs had fallen, he had not heard one radio transmission from Moscow. Evidently that nest of termites and roaches had turned into a festering radioactive crater judging from the number of nuclear missile that had been targeted upon the Russian capital.

Marshal Goprov had given the order to fire rockets and Melyanin was a good general; he had followed the Marshal's order to the letter, however the Marshal was now a heap of radioactive ashes as he had been with the mobile rockets when the bombs fell and the chain of command had now fallen to Major General Melyanin. He nodded his head looking over at the readout from the scope. "YA uveren, chto amerikantsy imeyut gorazdo bol'she na ikh tarelke, chem bespokoit' nas. I am sure that the Americans have much more on their plate than to bother us."

"Ya, konechno, nadeyus', chto tak , tovarishch general-mayor I certainly hope so, Comrade Major General." The soldier said as he continued to watch the scope. It had been months since the exchange and there had been no retaliatory strike. There had only been the one exchange of rockets and that had wreaked enough devastation that they wouldn't want to exchange any more. Besides the futility of sending more destruction would be redundant. Let the rockets left in their silos wait for the order to launch that would never come; they would be left a monument to the stupidity of humanity. If humanity would ever recover from the apocalypse; it was more likely that it wouldn't.

Mt.Storm Emergency Facility; Somewhere in the Blue Mountains. 28 weeks Post-Apocalypse

Sarah Mackenzie pondered the simple fact that the disenfranchised or the Malcontents, as they were called, were few and knowing that the Malcontents had no weaponry other than their fists or their ability to create improvised weaponry. With one of the Privileged injured and in a coma, the Malcontents had a big target on their back and the Privileged had been very angry about the situation as it stood. That put every single Malcontent in the crosshairs where they were suspected for every thing that went wrong. Mac knew that she was treading a dangerous tightrope when it came to a head to head with the Privileged. But considering the level of animosity felt between the two factions, it wouldn't be long before both were at war with each other.

The Sarah Mackenzie she remembered was lost in the conflagration of nuclear warfare. When the blast doors had closed on the would-be survivors, her mental stability had gone with it. As she stared into the bathroom mirror, she saw dark soulless eyes stare back; wells of pain stoked in betrayal, fanned flames of hatred: a soul who thirsted for nothing other than revenge. It was more than vengeance; the reprisal against betrayal that fuelled Sarah Mackenzie. After everything she had done for those she had once considered friends, she was embittered against those exact same ingrates; how they had cashiered in their popularity to ensure that they received privileges beyond the rest of the vault. She remembered their suspicions after the bombs fell; the fear that they saw when they looked into her eyes and she wanted nothing more than to make the Privileged pay for their duplicity against her.

There was no way for her to retrace her steps to become part of the Privileged. She had burned those bridges and they already suspected her. There was no trust any longer. She was an outcast forever maligned and treated with contempt. Was there any remorse in Sarah Mackenzie any longer? It was doubtful as she considered that the Privileged treatment of her brooked no mercy in the end.

Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Cheyenne Mountain, CO, NORAD Command, 28 Weeks Post-Apocalypse

Beth knew that anyone that wasn't in Horner's circle of compatriots was suspected. General Horner was paranoid; consciously aware that he was being measured in terms of leadership ability and such paranoia fed upon itself, turning him into someone that jumped at shadows. Perhaps comical prior to the Apocalypse; afterwards, it made Horner a very dangerous man. He intended for everyone to be in lockstep with the dictates of Stafford and Horner, himself. And if Horner was privy to the thoughts running through Beth's head at the moment, she would be in danger.

There was no one that she could turn to for help. Essentially she was on her own. She wasn't sure exactly which way Shawn Hanson would turn in terms of allegiance; could he even be trusted? For all intents and purposes, she was on her own and that fed into her own paranoia about who to trust and who to keep at arm's length. And she wasn't sure as to how to manage. All she knew was that she had to tread carefully or end up being carried out in a body bag. And if Horner found out, they'd feed her a 9mm hollow-point right at the base of the neck. It wouldn't be pretty, but it would be efficient. And she would be labeled a seditionist with traitorous intent. There would be no-one on her side. So she kept silent and watched with careful eyes what the rest were doing, speaking to no-one about her suspicions and feeling as though eyes were upon her measuring her intent.

She looked up to see Shawn Hanson making his way towards her at the mess-hall area of the vault.

"Hey, how are you?" He said jocularly as he laid his tray down at the table and sat down. "Been pretty busy, so haven't had time to talk much." Hanson said conversationally.

"Been busy here too…" Beth said; her tone non-committal as she picked at her food. She thought it would be best to stick to a harmless topic. She kept her mood and uncertainties carefully masked so that Hanson wouldn't pick up on them. After all, she wasn't one hundred percent sure who she could trust. One misstep is all that it would take.

In a ways, Cheyenne Mountain Vault was like the Wild West: everyone had a side-arm on their person and their mentality was that of survival of the fittest. And all insults to one's person were magnified; already there had been some reports of occupants pulling weapons on one another. And Beth was well-aware that the carefully orchestrated façade of military decorum was breaking down.

"Not much to talk about, is there?" Shawn Hanson looked unhappy with the whole situation in the vault. "It seems like we're stuck like rats in a trap with nowhere to go. The occupants aren't happy about it and it seems like the tension's mounting." He continued looking over at Beth to see what her reaction was to that. Beth knew it all too well, but her only response was a non-committal shrug of her shoulders and a tilt of her head that told him that he wasn't going to get much else out of her.

Was there a motive to his questioning? Beth thought there might be and thus she wasn't keen on giving him much to go on. Unless she knew just where Hanson stood on the situation with Mt. Storm and that would give her a big idea of where he stood with the likes of Horner and Stafford. "So…what do you think about Mount Storm?" An innocent enough question, but one that would allow her to gauge where he stood with regards to the leadership of the vault they were in.

Shawn Hanson paused for a long moment at this question, "We're all a group of vault-states. Each one has the right to self-governance…" he paused a long moment as he looked around at the fellow occupants of the cafeteria area to make sure that no-one was reaching out an ear to listen in on their conversation. He lowered his voice to almost a whisper. "It may not make sense to Stafford or to Horner, but each one of these vaults has a leadership and like nations, can choose whether or not to ally with another vault. Mt. Storm's decisions are its own and each vault has to make its own choices. I may not agree with Mt. Storm's decision to go it alone, but I respect their right to do so." He paused again then spoke slowly. "Everything's breaking down…it's not a good situation…"

"We don't know what the situation is outside." Beth replied succinctly as she looked over at her table-mate. "For now, this shelter is our refuge. We don't even have the ability to wage war in any shape or form. And who know what we'll see when we open up the vault door." His return look was rational enough that she felt that she could continue. "What use will waging war against another vault bring us?"

"I think they think that we'll have another refuge, but there's no way that Mt. Storm will open up the vault door just because we come knocking. Our ability to respond to any threats is diminished and there is no way that we'll be able to breach their door." Hanson commented, finishing the remnants of his meal and then moving as if to get up from the chair, giving her a quizzical expression as if to notify her that he wanted to continue the conversation, preferably someplace a lot more private than where they were. And if there was a situation where they needed to get out of the vault, he would have an ally. And lately, the vault leadership at Cheyenne Mountain was starting to become claustrophobic at the very least. If the situation was tenable topside, then they would need to strike out on their own. It had been over six months since the missiles fell on key military targets and in that time there had been no reprisal. Perhaps now was the time to go it alone for the two of them.

Mt.Storm Emergency Facility; Somewhere in the Blue Mountains. 28 weeks Post-Apocalypse

Meg looked over at Harm as they lay in their bunk, sated after a round of love-making wondering if life was ever going to be normal again. She already knew the answer to that question. Normalcy went out with the first detonation and it never would return. "Harm, do you think that Boone knows what the vault mood is like?" she paused as Harm quizzically looked at her, still drowsy with the after-effects of their amorous encounter and then continued her train of thought. "Does he know that there's a mood of underlying discontent in the vault? And it's not getting any better." She commented, looking at him. "If this continues, we're going to have a major insurrection on our hands and it's not going to turn out well for us."

Harm sighed deeply, sitting up. "I know that…but I don't know if Tom knows that. He's become too insular. He doesn't have a read on how the rest of the vault occupants are feeling and that's become a dangerous situation." He looked over at Meg who gave him a look of disbelief. Boone needed to understand that the situation was rapidly getting out of hand. If the pressure cooker that was the vault occupants who were discontented were lit off by the Malcontent band, it would rip the shelter to shreds in a outburst of violence. Meg fell silent as Harm continued, "He doesn't seem to think that the shelter needs a democratic voice. And he doesn't listen to what is being said."

"Yet you follow his orders." Meg replied disconsolately, as Harm winced. "…and you carry out those orders like good little pawns." Harm looked shocked as he sensed the deep bitterness in Meg's voice.

"What do you want me to do, Meg?" was the answer from Harm that she couldn't answer.

"I don't know…Harm." Meg sighed, her frustration boiling over with suppressed anger focused on Harm "But all I know is that we can't keep sitting on this pressure cooker and not expect it to go off like a bomb. And you need to let Boone know that we're the ones that are going to suffer the consequences of his actions while he's shielded from any and all problems. Don't you see? That's his whole objective. We're his sacrificial lambs."

Harm paused to think about that for a long moment.

Crow Rock, Blue Mountain Ridge, Pennsylvania, 28 weeks Post-Apocalypse

Tracy Manetti and former SECNAV Sheffield had formed a familial bond where each looked after the other, in terms of security. If something looked suspicious, one would inform the other and they would strive to keep from being suspected of subversive activities. Moreland was a nasty piece of work and he had spies all over the vault searching out those suspected of being against his whim. Coded signals could with difficulty be deciphered; while hidden nooks and crannies had cameras and other surveillance. Tracy had to hand it to Moreland. The guy was a paranoid schizophrenic. He suspected plots and sub-plots and machinations against his power.

If he had any idea of what SECNAV Sheffield was doing, he'd have had Sheffield executed by firing squad which Moreland had done to at least three shelter occupants whom he had tried, convicted and sentenced for stealing food from the cafeteria. The entire shelter was on short rations in order to make the shelter food last longer. Crow Rock did not have the facilities for growing their own food as Mount Storm and as such, they needed to institute rationing to make the food last. This meant that many of the shelter occupants were going hungry even though they all had food to eat; maybe not enough to fill the belly, but enough to keep them from starving. Yet it was human nature to want to eat until one's belly was full. But that wouldn't be possible on rationing.

Tracy knew that her body wasn't meeting what would be considered the daily nutritional guidelines for good health and it seemed as though her body wasn't showing the natural resilience as it should. The bones of her elbows were starting to show in stark contrast and the people around her were beginning to look gaunt.

There was also a psychological element to short rations. When human beings were left unable to eat, they resorted to other desperate means. With the brutal suppression of the food-thieves by Moreland, there was more of a desperate hunger to the looks of the shelter occupants. How much longer before there was an uprising. And with only access to the weapons by a select few of Moreland's cronies, any revolt would be viciously eradicated and those responsible for instigating the rebellion against authority would follow the same fates of those who had stolen food. And yet another vile lesson would follow for the shelter occupants.

Tracy knew that the only relief from this brutal dictatorship by Moreland would be to take their chances in the radiation and hope that it wouldn't take long before they could escape the affected area. But even then, what would they encounter? She thought long and hard about the options that she and her godfather had. Would they be able to hot-wire a vehicle; a shielded vehicle and how would they escape? The only vehicles on the premises were the CBRN Stryker vehicles that were located down in the motor-pool in the vault, but they were guarded by Army Rangers with M-16A4s with orders by Moreland to shoot to kill. If she and her godfather were unable to escape, they would be executed by firing squad. There was no way out in the elements to escape the mounting radiation count that their bodies would absorb. The five megaton Dong Feng was a surface blast that had irradiated the surrounding area for twenty miles. That would make it absolutely difficult with an unshielded vehicle to escape the radiation without an intolerable amount of exposure to get out of the blast area. But the crux was whether she could stand to tolerate the violations of her independence that further residence within this vault was to inflict upon her. The only way that she would be able to gain access to a Stryker would be to befriend and sway to her side, one or more of the guards but how to go about doing so without suspicion?

Australian High Command Nuclear Bunker, Alice Springs, Australia – 28 weeks Post-Apocalypse

"Captain Brumby, sir." As the highest ranking Royal Australian naval officer in the bunker, Mic had the most responsibility of all the shelter occupants. The Alice Springs bunker had taken a minimum of five direct hits from Soviet ballistic missiles each measuring eight hundred kilotons each and it had only shaken a slight bit with a bit of dust dribbling down into the corridor from each impact.

Mic sighed as he looked at the USN Lieutenant, "What is it? Lieutenant Miller?" he asked tiredly. If he had known that the post-apocalyptic duty consisted of paperwork and more paperwork, he would have begged off. But at least this wasn't the courtroom. Legal make-work had flown out the window in the face of the nuclear holocaust. And now he had the most responsibility of any commander of a vault in the entire Australian continent; whatever was left of their land down under was an irradiated sandpit as far as they knew. All Mic knew was that the radiation counts were steadily increasing in the corridors nearest the entrance. At least where they were situated deeper into the bunker, they were moderately safe as there was a secondary blast door and another thick wall impeding any gamma radiation and x-rays from entering the main shelter. Each rad-count was done with a Geiger counter in hand and the men were told to not stay up there for more than fifteen minutes. Damn the Seppos and Commies and their ability to make war. Australia had no nuclear weapons, but they were still targeted for destruction. It wasn't fair in the least, Mic thought, but such was life. They had their one chance to get it right and fucked up majorly. Now they all had to live with the consequences.

"The shelter occupants are getting restless. We have no sign of radiation decrease in the last forty eight hours and the residual radiation from the northern hemisphere is getting worse." Lieutenant Miller replied. "The radiation from the surface blasts throwing the radioactive dust into the air in North America and Asia has surrounded the globe and it's bleeding down into the Southern Hemisphere."

Mic nodded perfunctorily. He knew that the outcome of nuclear war would be world-wide irradiation. There was no going back after nuclear war. With the extinction of the planet's ecosystem, the animals and plants above would perish and there would be nothing other than the animals and plants that those planning the vaults would have thought of before-hand to take in with them. "How are our greenhouses doing? We had them placed in the shelter area farthest away from the radiation bleed. Is that correct?"

"Yes, sir." LT Miller replied as he consulted his note-pad. "We have those who have had experience in gardening in the past, taking care of the greenhouses. And the growing cycle is being attenuated to the cyclical LED lighting to simulate the sun. That way it grows the same way that it would in natural soil and under optimal lighting conditions."

"How are the potatoes doing?" Mic asked, acknowledging the report. "We've heard that Cheyenne Mountain had some trouble growing potatoes, they tended to turn green and "

"Our potatoes seem to be doing well under LED light." Plus we tend to use extra soil to simulate the depth of soil required to cultivate the tubers." Lieutenant Miller replied as he pointed out the report. "They seem to be growing without too much problem. The problem with too much light in potatoes is that there may be an increase in the presence of glycoalkaloids, especially the substance solanine but that is only if the potato tuber is planted in too shallow of depth of soil. Hence the reason why we are utilizing at least a foot of soil cover on potato tubers to allow them enough nutrients from the soil and cover from light to allow them to grow naturally without the detrimental exposure to light."

"So we should be able to grow potato plants without them becoming poisonous. Am I correct in assuming so, Mr. Miller?" Mic asked.

"Yes, sir." LT Miller responded. "All plants are doing well."

Mic nodded; silently relieved that the prognosis on the gardens that he had implemented with foresight were doing well. It meant that the occupants of their shelter wouldn't starve or experience situations where food was in short supply. And that he wouldn't have to institute autocratic measures where the food supply would be rationed. Life would continue as it had done for the past six months and with careful cultivation and restocking of seeds from the plants that they grew, they would have plenty of food to fill their stomachs for years to come.

He had come a far way from the selfish attorney that he used to be, Mic thought to himself. Prior to the bombs falling, he'd not thought of much else beyond than his own immediate gratification. Now with at least a hundred lives at stake in the bunker that was to be their home for the long-foreseeable future, he had to focus on their survival.

Surface of Planet Earth, 28 weeks Post-Apocalypse

It wasn't the picturesque green of pre-Apocalypse earth that the survivors would greet, if they were ever brave enough to venture from the supposed security of their vaults, but a barren ash-gray and white panorama of devastation.

When viewed from space, the earth was not the long-remembered blue and green sphere teeming with life that orbited Sol, but a barren planet streaked with red and yellow and brown; the color of ruin; of death. It was unlikely that the world would ever regain life on its surface unless it was a life-form that was resistant to the extreme radiation that covered the planet; the radiation that resulted from the almost simultaneous explosions of over ten thousand nuclear warheads with varying yields.

Humanity had been driven back to numbers that were even lower than prior to 70,000 years ago when the world population was between three thousand to ten-thousand people. Whether humanity could rebound from this latest near-extinction event would remain to be seen. Human nature would play a big role in what would come to pass.


Author's Note: To the Guest Reviewer: Appreciate feedback even if it isn't positive, however, I am going to state the simple fact that psychologically, people in a traumatic situation devolve to the lowest common denominator. As much as people would like to think the "best of people's character" people will generally resort to "survival mindset" meaning that they will ostracize those who in their mindset are incapable of holding up their end. We have seen in canon after Chaco Boreal that Mac disintegrated mentally, though she tried to put up a good façade of competency. In a case such as an all-out nuclear war she will completely fragment and it will be a toss-up to which will come first, the psychosis or the blame-game. And no, Harm is not on an even psychological keel though he tries to prop everyone up. Everyone is surviving day to day in the bunker and everyone is in "me-first" survival mode. As I've stated before in the story, this is not a story of heroes and villains, it's a story of people trying to survive day to day after a holocaust that they could never have imagined happening in their life-time. In a survival situation, there is no time for entertainment, nor any time for "breaking the ice." You have tasks that you are to do each single day to ensure the security and functioning of the shelter and you do them; there is no time for fun activities and icebreaking. If you do not do your chores, you end up ostracized as Mac and her fellow Malcontents and could potentially be cast out.

And no, I don't particularly like the way that Mac was written in canon. If we're talking about how Mac was treated by Harm, then how about we discuss how Harm was constantly asked to measure up to Mac's expectations of him, that no matter what he did wasn't good enough for her. The Measure of Men episode's quote: "He gave up his career and country for me! Are you willing to give up your GIRLFRIEND?" and when he did in "A Tangled Webb", it wasn't even good enough for her. You know what a man does when faced with that kind of expectation? The smart man usually runs the opposite direction which he should have.

Mac's difficult childhood cemented her adult reactions – she ends up psychologically running and blaming others and frankly, in this type of situation, Mac will not have the intestinal fortitude to remain psychologically intact. In that respect, Meg and many of the other characters are psychologically stronger than Mac and would more than likely withstand the trauma of seeing the entire world end a lot more. But NONE and I repeat none will come out intact.

Chapter Eight

27 weeks Post-Apocalypse

A desolate wasteland, where the winds howled amongst debris, a blood-red sun rose, travelled the course of the cloud-filled sky, and set amidst a pool of red on the horizon, its passage across the heavens unwitnessed by living eyes. What living things that were left were insects and one-celled organisms resistant to radiation, that could potentially restart the cycle of advanced life on earth. Wind blew dust piles from one place to the other and not a blade of grass could be seen anywhere for miles around. Airbursts dissipated radiation quickly, but a few surface detonations had provided a blanket of radiation that would kill any exposed within a few hours. Some of the radioactive elements had an effective half-life of 50,000 years polluting any environment and turning it into a virtually unliveable habitat for humans on the surface of the planet. Pockets of radioactive water circled the globe on the ocean currents; battles between fleets with nuclear weapons having turned into large areas emitting radiation. Perhaps eventually, one day, life would return to this abused planet, but that wasn't now and not for the foreseeable future.

But pockets of life did exist, below ground, in the vaults, grasping at survival, hoping against hope that generations beyond theirs would be able to see a life beyond the Apocalypse. To perhaps repay the debt that civilization owed to Mother Earth for abusing it so severely. Whether they would, however, remained to be seen. For even though this devastation was wrought by their own hands, humankind was lacking in their wisdom; and slow to make corrections even when their very survival was on the line. For even now, avarice, paranoia and man's ability to wage war was still very much on display

"Fools say that they learn by experience. I prefer to profit by others experience."

Otto von Bismarck

USS Birmingham SSBN-588, McMurdo Station, Antarctica, 27 weeks Post-Apocalypse

The antarctic wind still howled around the conning tower of the USS Birmingham. Subject to the whims of the Antarctic and its punishing weather, the crew of the Birmingham and the October Revolution had to hole up in their respective submarines to keep from freezing to death.

Commander Sturgis Turner lay holed up in his bunk wondering just where his life had taken this unannounced left turn. The missiles had flown as per ordered and he had not thought anything of it until he realized the jolts from the Trident II missiles leaving their launch tubes were actually the precursor to irreversible nuclear annihilation. When he had realized that the missiles had reached their targets and the ELF and VLF transmitters on shore had gone silent, he'd realized that there was nothing to return to. Now their entire way of life was gone; nothing would ever return to normal. Nations were ashes because fools in government decided that they would go ahead and press the launch button.

Wondering if life down at the bottom of the Earth; at the Antarctic was just delaying the inevitable, he looked up at the bunk above his and pondered just how life itself would get out of the mess that had been inflicted by those in power. Anything on the surface north of the 40 degrees latitude south, was permeated with radiation that was beyond survivability for more than a few hours at a time…and it would remain so for more years than he had on this Earth.

He shook his head. "Well, humanity, you really screwed yourself over this time." Turner muttered to himself. They were going to need to leave this planet in order to find themselves a home, but whatever rocket scientists ended up being blown up in the 5MT blast that destroyed Cape Canaveral. The Chinese had wanted to make damned sure that NASA was completely obliterated; and that US space exploration wasn't going to be possible.

A light knock on the hatch interrupted his musings as a MT1 poked his head in and asked. "Sir, I was wondering if you would be able to go see Captain Van Buren. He wants to know if anything came about of that VLF signal that the ST3 picked up on.

Turner got up and grabbed his ballcap and went down the hallway to the Captain's quarters. When he got there, Captain Van Buren looked over at him. "It's been several weeks since we've heard anything. There was a conversation. But as far as we know, it could have just been static. The conversation was unintelligible and we weren't able to decode it. It is possible that it could have been two vaults communicating, however at this range and with the transmission so garbled, I wouldn't stake my bets on it, considering the amount of devastation."

"Do you think that the transmissions are genuine or do you think its just environment static resulting from high radiation count?" CAPT. Van Buren asked sitting up at the chair beside his stateroom desk. In a sub even the captain's cabin was cramped. Aside from a foldaway bunk which allowed the captain to seat two more people at a ad hoc desk, the cabin was still considered small by most Navy standards.

"I wouldn't venture a guess, sir" Sturgis replied. "We're here at the safest location on the planet; we don't want to risk our fuel rods and go travelling looking for survivors unless we have absolute proof."

The CO of the Birmingham sat for a long moment while he rationalized the situation they found themselves in. It was the age-old dilemma: save survivors versus saving themselves. A voyage of several months to an irradiated coastal city was not a feasible or rational journey.

"Do we believe it's morally right to leave potential survivors to their fate?" The CO's tone was torn as he turned a look to Turner and continued."I could say that we have a moral obligation to rescue those in need." He had to play devil's advocate before he'd feel comfortable with this choice.

"Well, sir, keep in mind that those uncontaminated by radiation sickness are secure in vaults and not out in the elements. The rest are out in the elements and are either suffering radiation sickness or are dying or dead." Turner replied, his stance indicating that he was dead-set against sailing on what he thought was a fool's errand. "Considering that we'd be undergoing a long overland journey if we find out that the signals are coming from someplace farther inland, and inflicting unnecessary radiation exposure from the environment while trying to locate the source of those VLF and ELF transmissions. No, sir. It's not worth it."

Captain Van Buren let out a heavy sigh. "I don't like it, Sturgis. I feel like I'm letting those people die without any hope of rescue. But goddamnit. I hate it when you're right." Slapping the palm of his hand down on the desk, he looked Turner straight in the face. "You're right in that there is no justification in risking lives for those who we don't know are alive or not, or whether we are just hearing the residual from radiation." He paused for a long moment. "You know something, Sturgis, In 25 years of being a Naval Officer, working my way up from Officer of the Boat all the way up, I never thought I'm come across the day when I had to do this duty that this ship was designed to carry out. We just traded gratification of being victorious for lives. Sturgis."

Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Cheyenne Mountain, CO, NORAD Command, 27 Weeks Post-Apocalypse

"Lieutenant Commander Hawkes, a moment with you?" General Horner said as he looked over at the young Navy officer. "General Stafford and I would have a moment of your time."

"Yes, sir." A request by a general officer was an order that could not be refused. Beth was cautious. She didn't let her ties to those at Mount Storm be known. And all files of her former postings were now radioactive carbon. As far as she knew Cheyenne Mountain didn't keep records of their military personnel, they just retrieved files from the Central Records at the Pentagon. But alarm bells were going off in her head wondering why the higher ups were thinking of her. And to know that her little O5 ass had their attention had her scared. But CDR Elizabeth Hawkes bit down her fear and clamped a poker face on. Hopefully those two don't play cards because they would have seen right through it, she thought as she got up and headed for General Stafford's office accompanied by the taciturn looking General Horner.

"Are you aware of the scuttlebutt going around NORAD Command, Lieutenant Commander?" Skates looked surprised at being addressed by Horner on the way up. Usually, the reserved General was a silent spectre looming over the vault; not saying much verbally, but in his silence, enough to get his point across to those who were listening not with their ears but their minds.

"Not that I've personally heard, sir." Beth responded unsure of what to make of the rhetorical question from Horner. A little voice in the back of her head warned her that he was fishing for information and that she should keep her connections to those who she knew at Mount Storm to herself; and she decided to do a little fishing herself. "Sir, are you saying that there's something to be aware of?" Years of being in a fighter squadron where many of her squadron-mates gossiped worse than a bunch of old housefraus; like they had anything better to do when they were not on duty; had inured Beth to squelch down the urge to talk about herself. A girl had to keep secrets and girls in a fighter squadron knew that if they didn't keep things to themselves, they'd be the topic of conversation for the rest of the deployment.

Horner gave her a penetrating stare and was silent the rest of the way up to Stafford's office. Beth kept her own silence and just continued to stare quietly at the back of Horner's head. As they reached General Stafford's door, Horner looked at her and said. "None of what's talked about in this meeting goes past these doors. Do you understand? Lieutenant Commander Hawkes?" The unspoken threat hung over Beth unspoken, but obvious.

"Yes, sir; understood, sir." Beth's mind nearly froze in fear looking into Horner's cold blue eyes.

"I hope I've made myself absolutely clear on this."

"Yes, sir." She said as Horner opened the door and ushered her in to the presence of General Stafford. She squared off at attention in front of him. Stafford, his steely expression never wavering, looked her up and down and nodded, assessing her quietly in a calculating manner more akin to a serpent eyeing a rat that it intended to make into a tasty morsel. "Lieutenant Commander Beth Hawkes, United States Navy; sir, reporting as ordered."

"Ah, Lieutenant Commander," General Stafford quietly commented, his voice honeyed with cunning intent. "I needed to get your take on the matter of Mount Storm and their continued refusal to accede to Cheyenne authority. You are aware that they have declared independence and have told Cheyenne Mountain and Crow Rock to in their words Go fuck ourselves. The problematic part of allowing them independence is that out of all the vaults, they have put themselves in a position of being the only nuclear superpower left. All launch and control systems in both Russian and friendly forces control are all eliminated. The only thing that they have now are the gravity bombs located in the shelter that they control."

Beth looked surprised, "…and you believe they pose a threat to the rest of us?"

"Certainly," Horner commented, "You have nuclear weapons, naturally, you're tempted to use them."

Beth's opinion of that statement was that it was utter horse rubbish. Anyone having gone through the complete and utter devastation of their world by nuclear war would not for a second consider utilizing them on another human being. It was the same as when Japan was visited with the two atomic bombs that rendered Hiroshima and Nagasaki into radioactive rubble. It was only the victors who thought they had carte blanche to utilize those weapons of mass terror and destruction. But Beth knew that vocalizing those thoughts would put her directly in the cross-hairs of suspicion and any suspect behavior would be thoroughly rooted out and removed from existence. Her scalp was tingling with the warnings Horner was giving off through his body language.

"Lieutenant Commander, do you really think that they won't realize that they have a power-advantage and won't try for a power-play gambit, using their nukes as a means of threatening other vault alliances to come to their umbrella of protection? Just remember that the B83 has a 1.2 Megaton yield. And they also have others of that megaton yield in their bunker." Stafford put both hands on the table and leaned towards her, his eyes holding her gaze captive.

"It wouldn't put a scratch on our blast door with all due respect, sir." Beth had heard that it would take at least a Tsar Bomba on top of a guided munition tail dropped through the opening in Cheyenne Mountain that would blow the blast door off its hinges. And if that happened, they were all screwed anyway.

"You willing to stake our lives on it, Lieutenant Commander?" Stafford gave her a probing stare.

Beth returned the stare, "I'm willing to gamble that they won't be able to lop a B83 down the tunnel and explode it within the confines of Cheyenne Mountain, sir. The B83 is for all intents, a gravity system. It doesn't have a guidance system."

"Could they possibly detach the tail of the B83 and attach a JDAM control fins to the assembly?" Horner asked. "That way, they could potentially GPS the bomb directly into the tunnel and fry us where we stand."

Beth looked at both Horner and Stafford. Both were starting to looked as though they were paranoid. Her internal warning system alerted her to stay sharp and play along. She figured that the best bet would be to have a support system in place. "Are our GPS satellites working still?" She asked unwilling to even consider a lapse in nuclear strategic strategy of not utilizing an EMP blast to destroy all working components within the GPS satellites orbiting the earth. Leaving those satellites still operational was a lapse in judgement. "Do we have control over them?"

The two generals unanimously looked at each other and then said, "Commander, come with us." Walking swiftly towards the Strategic Command Display in the control room, where they kept track of their spy satellites and other space vehicles in geo-synchronous orbit around the Earth, Horner and Stafford motioned to Beth to look at the screen. "The radiation is dissipating and we're getting a clearer read on what we still have."

Beth asked gauging her words carefully. "Can we shut down those satellites to prevent use by hostile vaults?"

"No, they are fully autonomous. They send out a signal every two seconds for GPS receivers to home in on." Horner informed her. "But we have nothing; not even aircraft to mount an assault. Everything would have to be done on foot."

"…and you are implying that Mount Storm has aircraft, sir?" Beth's tone was incredulous; her mouth dropping open in surprise.

"There's a lot of things that went into Mount Storm from what we learned about building this bunker." Stafford clarified. "We aren't sure of the exact numbers, but we know that Mt. Storm has nuclear capable fighter aircraft. We know that the bunker is blast-shielded by doors able to withstand twice the blast pressure of the Tsar Bomba."

"…and we have no weapons that will penetrate their blast doors." Hunter opined dryly as he looked first as General Stafford then at Beth.

"At least nothing that provides the impetus of a nuclear munition hurled at near speed of sound." Stafford commented. "I flew F-4Es in Nam and F-15Es afterwards. The B83 isn't hardened tip to be a true bunker buster though."

Horner snorted derisively,"I wouldn't put it past Boone to have his engineers work on a bunker-buster 1MT to start dealing with the problem of having to take out a vault or two."

Beth shuddered as a look of horror dawned on her face. She had served under Boone on the USS Seahawk and also with Boone as both of them had transferred to the VF-41 Black Aces. Boone had always struck Beth as a no-nonsense hard-ass. She wasn't fond of Stafford or Horner either. But while she lived under Cheyenne Mountain's protective roof, she intended to abide by their laws; at least until the first chance to get out became available. But having to figure out how long it would take for the environment to be safe enough to make a trek from one point on the surface to the other would take a lot of research. Beth didn't let her thoughts slip but when Horner and Stafford dismissed her, she breathed a sigh of relief. The research would take a lot of time, but what else did she have but time?

Crow Rock, Blue Mountain Ridge, Pennsylvania, 27 weeks Post-Apocalypse

Edward Sheffield was looking over at Commander Tracy Manetti. He quietly looked over and said, "Tracy, I know that this isn't something that I would normally talk about." He had tried to find an out of the way corner of the shelter that they were in to discuss matters. He knew that Tracy had friends in Mt. Storm. If he hadn't needed her at the meeting they were at, she could have been at Mount Storm amongst friends. "You didn't hear it from me, but they're planning to attack Mt. Storm." He whispered quietly in Manetti's ear.

Tracy's eyes widened in horror. "You've got to be kidding me? Why?"

"Because Boone won't accede to demands to hand over control of special weapons to Cheyenne Mountain's control." He didn't bother mentioning that Moreland, Stafford and Horner were paranoid megalomaniacs. It was well enough apparent that their actions spoke for themselves. "They want to take out Mount Storm and put it under their control. They don't trust Mt. Storm to secede and not take them out."

"They are maniacs!" Tracy replied. "This is asking for certain annihilation. If Mt. Storm has special weapons; if attacked, they will use them."

"I'm sorry for getting you into this…" Sheffield looked saddened as he lay his hand on his god-daughter's shoulder. "I could have sent you to Mt. Storm instead of following me."

Tracy nodded. "Well, all that is could have: should have." She said. "We're stuck here for the next god knows how long." There was no way out of this situation. Even if some left the vault, the residual radiation would kill them slowly and painfully. And considering a 5MT Dong Feng had landed on top of Crow Rock, the residual radiation within the area would kill them before they could make their escape. So escape was no longer an option, nor an exposed walk towards another bunker. They would die of radiation poisoning before they got there. But there were other options.

"We need to assess our situation very carefully; make careful in-roads to determine who is safe to talk to and who reports to Moreland." Her god-father replied looking carefully up and down the corridor to make certain that there were no ears listening in on the conversation.

"I'll meet you in my quarters." Manetti replied. "Perhaps we won't be overheard there."

They parted; each knowing that they needed to keep quiet and keep their heads down. Any unwarranted attention on the part of others as to their plans would sink their plans surely as though the words came from their own lips and any attention from those higher up in the pay of Moreland would surely doom them all.

Mt. Storm Emergency Facility; Somewhere in the Blue Mountains. 27 weeks Post-Apocalypse

There were still rats in the tunnels. How they got there was unknown; where they came from was an equal mystery. But the scratching and scampering of little rodent feet were still heard no matter where one went in the tunnels. How they tolerated the dank, damp cold that permeated the rock, it wasn't understood; it was assumed that they had been there since before the Apocalypse and thus would remain so for as long as they were able to survive scrounging little bits of food.

How she hated rats. They were disgusting creatures, not like the rats that were sold in pet-shops before the Apocalypse. These were brown, filthy rats; vermin: carriers of disease and infestation and not to be trifled with. Their bites were full of sickness and there were no other animals that they knew of to hold off the horde. If they were to be rid of those things, they would have to do one of two options: Option One was to form teams of eradicators to go up and down the tunnels to find the hiding spots and set poison baited traps for them. The other was to just shoot them on sight. And Lieutenant Colonel Sarah Mackenzie, United States Marine Corps, didn't have a weapon to do so. All the weapons were locked up tight in the Armory. And there was a serious problem with rats in the Armory, Mackenzie thought to herself. If anyone needed a good extermination, starting with the Armory would probably be the best bet. But she knew for a fact that she was powerless to do anything with regards to dealing with the human rats that she knew as the Privileged.

They had lost one of their own in Simone while the Privileged's own Danny Zhou was in a irreversible coma from a rebar blow to the head. Mackenzie thought that it was deserved. The Privileged were walking around as if they owned the place and that new Zhou was an enlisted man; walking around like he owned the tunnels. He deserved it. She thought: if anything she was the one that deserved to be one of the Privileged. She would take away their weapons and force them all into the killing cold.

But thoughts of killing them all and instigating the thought into action were two separate things. She pondered how she and her allies would manage to attack the Armory considering that the place was guarded 24/7 by guards: armed Privileged who rarely if ever ventured from their fortified refuge. In fact, she had heard from someone that the Armory was suspected to be so large that all the Privileged could reside within the fortified walls and not venture out at all. There was actually talk that the Privileged planned to move the Armory to the floor of the shelter that Boone was on to cocoon him within their umbrella of protection. There would be no access other than by specialized scan-cards and body temp/fingerprint biometrics scanners. It would be a no-go area for anyone but the Privileged. After Zhou had been hurt; Boone was far less forgiving of any transgressions and was fast-tracking the Privileged Protection Area. And if Boone managed to accomplish that task then obtaining weapons would be much harder if not impossible.

Almost 15 years in the Marine Corps had taught her one thing: you don't bring a knife to a gunfight and right now; all they had were knives and clubs.

She wandered up and down the tunnel, arms crossed; her mind hashing and rehashing her plan of getting her hands on a weapon. There had to be a weak link somewhere. The newest Privileged were too covetous of their newly exalted position and would be wary of those seeking them out for favors. And she knew that the Nakamuras didn't trust her. Neither did Harm any more. The blonde bitch Austin and that enlisted slut Petty Officer were too busy fucking Nakamura or Rabb at any given moment to enlist the help of, in getting a weapon.

But what to do to make them believe that her life was in mortal danger enough to warrant them handing over a weapon just like that. There were bound to be questions asked. At the very least those questions would be uncomfortable; at the other end of the scale: life threatening. She looked up at the rock ceiling of the cavernous tunnel. She would have to plan this so the Privileged didn't take notice that she was now carrying around a weapon. Oh, she was carrying one currently for defensive protection, a Marine K-Bar but she would feel much safer with a 9mm sidearm that she could conceal on her person. Mac preferred being the aggressor in a fight to the death.

But the problem of obtaining such a weapon still taunted her and she couldn't very well go up to those she rejected and tell them that she was needing a weapon for self-protection. They would be suspicious of her motives.

Ballistic Missile Submarine October Revolution; McMurdo Station, 27 weeks Post-Apocalypse

The Antarctic winds howled a spiteful dirge around the conning tower of the Oktyabr'skaya revolyutsiya battering the superstructure and the ice pellets hurled by the winds snapped against tower like bullets shot from a rifle. It was cold enough to freeze one solid if one stepped out for any length of time. With the world average mean temperature dropping to below freezing, the hothouses were death-traps and they had to hope against hope that the weather would turn back to something more hospitable or they would all starve to death.

Captain Semyanov turned to see his XO Captain Second Rank Viktor Ivanovich Gruschev standing beside him, "Comrade Captain, our men are getting hungry and weak. It has been a week and a half since this blizzard has blown in and they are not doing well under quarter-rations. We are still making dire inroads into our stock of canned food. The Americans are stuck in their ship too, and I am certain that they are starving too. But we cannot even set foot outside our ship to help them or we will freeze to death."

"Mother Nature is a mean mistress." Captain Semyanov affirmed simply looking at the gauges watching the temperature readings. He had lowered all the antennae; communications, navigation as well as the periscope. It was not going to do the October Revolution any good if during this blizzard, the antennae were snapped off. That would mean that the October Revolution wouldn't be able to submerge. He looked over at Gruschev. "We can do nothing but wait out the storm. And hope that our rations hold out until this storm passes."

"If it passes, Comrade Captain."

"Yesli budet na to volya Bozh'ya. (If it be God's Will)" was Semyanov's reply. He took a deep breath. He hoped that it wouldn't come to exhausting the food sources that they had or they would have to make an attempt to get the seeds and seedlings from the hot houses and try to save what they could. For this trying time would be the sifter that would weed out those who couldn't survive or were just hanging on by a thread.

Since mankind was stupid enough to let fly the birds of destruction, they would have to resort to the olden days of survival. Those who were mentally and physically hardy enough to survive would, those who weren't wouldn't. In this time of hardship, life wouldn't get any easier and those who had the stamina to persevere would inherit the earth. Semyanov gazed into the monitor that told of the dropping temperatures; the churchmen would talk of God and His magnanimous blessings upon those who eked out their living. Semyanov knew better.

Australian High Command Nuclear Bunker, Alice Springs, Australia – 27 weeks Post-Apocalypse

Captain Mic Brumby, RAN, glowered at the USN Lieutenant who had just given him a report of the radiation inspections. The counts had gone down but they were still in the dangerous level, considering the level of devastation that Alice Springs was impacted with. It was only the fact that they were well below 200 feet below the surface of the earth that Australian High Command Nuclear Bunker was saved. But the fact that Alice Springs itself was the epicenter of six nuclear blasts of 1 MT yield. The other four Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicle (MIRV) landed on the other two sites that were designated military targets, two a piece. However the airbursts hadn't done much except to tear up the soil a bit, leaving the bunker intact. "Fair enough. The rads are dropping but no where near enough to step outside. We're going to be in here a bit." He didn't particularly like the Seppos that he was assigned here to be with. There were too many bad memories in the mix. What he'd give for a rollie right now. But he'd quit that habit. Sarah hadn't liked it so he'd stopped cold-turkey. What was it that the Seppos say to tell someone to rack off? "Uh…Dismissed, Lieutenant."

"Yes, sir." The American Navy Lieutenant snapped to attention and about-faced. It was still a surprise when Mic looked in the mirror to see the four stripes of a RAN Captain on each shoulder, but he knew that the Royal Australian Navy needed him in command.

When the US Navy Lieutenant had left, Mic leaned back in his chair, staring up at the ceiling and sighed. His thoughts had been on Sarah Mackenzie lately. He wondered what she was doing in this post-nuclear holocaust world. At least he hoped she was surviving, even though there was no chance in hell of ever meeting again. The radiation that encircled the globe at least in the lower 49 of the pole and the upper half of the upper hemisphere that kept anyone from utilizing any mode of transportation not affected by the nuclear blasts. The radiation was still intense enough to kill anyone. Figures the Seppos and the Commie bastards had nuked the whole planet. Brumby thought to himself. At least he wouldn't have to see that smiling yobbo Rabb. He vowed that the next time he ever came across Rabb if the radiation had come down enough to travel, he'd shirtfront the whacker and feed him a knuckle sandwich.

Maybe considering that he'd have to spend a lot of time in this miserable place, he'd better start getting to know some of the people that he was going to be sharing this shelter with for the next who knew how long. They would be tripping over each other and it wouldn't make for a good situation if the next bugger was at odds with another.

Mt. Storm Emergency Facility; Somewhere in the Blue Mountains. Medical Ward, 27 weeks Post-Apocalypse

The ward was white-walled and smelled of floor cleaner. The caretakers in the shelter that were specified workers had made it their mission to keep the medical ward hygienically clean. Bacteria build-up could mean disease and death. The research team was coming up with a new solution for treating the floor when the cleaning chemicals ran out but right now, the floor was cleaned sparingly. Just enough to keep a hygienic place for treating illnesses and wounds.

Doctor Ellen Parkman looked over at her patient, former Army Lieutenant Sandra Cashman who at 19 weeks was showing. "Your baby's the size of a mango right now." Ellen reassured her as she readied the ultrasound machine to check on the baby's progress. Spreading the gel on Sandra's belly, Ellen grabbed the ultrasound wand and looked around for the baby.

"Oh…there's the heartbeat." a watery thub-dub sound came through the auditory speakers of the ultrasound machine. Ellen reassured Sandra that the baby was doing fine for 19 weeks, the heartbeat was strong and that the bloating and gas that she felt in her tummy was normal for the developmental stage that the fetus was at.

Ellen pondered for a long time after she was finished with Sandra Cashman and her unborn baby. The world had gone to hell in a handbasket, but they were all still alive. But what sort of life were they bringing babies into? The radiation was still present like an ever-looming spectre. If they were even able to get back to the surface within this millennia, the radiation would still cause birth defects in any future generations. What kind of world would they be living in? What trials would they end up having to overcome? And in the end, was it all worth it? Ellen didn't have the answer for that and no matter how much she thought about it; in the end it all came down to the basic instinct for survival and her sworn Hippocratic oath. So she girded her heart and went slowly about her business trying to help the rest of the shelter survive no matter what.

Crow Rock, Blue Mountain Ridge, Pennsylvania, 27 weeks Post-Apocalypse

When Commander Tracy Manetti returned to her room after her shift at the radar (for which she had been trained through the past ten weeks); she found her godfather sitting on the chair as she walked in.

"Tracy…" he said quietly. "If Moreland controlling this bunker isn't bad enough, it will be even worse when he gets into cahoots with Stafford and Horner. Those two are going to cause a war…" He paused ominously and Tracy sat down on the foot of her bed looking at him.

"Do you think they'd be so stupid to hash things out in open combat with Mt. Storm?" Tracy asked her godfather who shrugged his shoulders. "They have to know that they don't have a chance in hell of succeeding."

"Moreland reminds me of a spoilt child." The former SECNAV stated quietly. "If he wants something, he'll throw a temper-tantrum until he gets it and what he wants is those nuclear weapons. He wants to wield them like a spear at any other nation who still has a shelter and threaten them with annihilation unless they acquiesce to being controlled by our two shelters. There is no democracy any more, Tracy. What I need you to do is lay low and try to ferret out information of what's going on. We need to be very calculating. But we also need to look unassuming and innocent to those who gaze our direction. Be very cautious about who you befriend in this vault, Tracy, and always watch your back." He warned.

Tracy knew that her god-father was giving her good advice. Their continued existence was paramount and Tracy would do anything to keep her godfather alive. Even if that meant stomaching the loathsome presence of General Alexander Moreland, United States Army, West Point class of 67 and officer extraordinaire of the Quartermaster Corps. Tracy Manetti was certain that the Quartermaster General had always felt second best to his late friend General Isaac Carruthers who was a decorated combat veteran and he was taking his chance to vet himself in what he considered the forge of blood.

Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Cheyenne Mountain, CO, NORAD Command, 27 Weeks Post-Apocalypse

Beth after that traumatic grilling from Horner and Stafford wasn't sure who to trust any more. She stumbled into her room, her thoughts spinning haphazardly around inside her mind. The problem was that she felt alone and uncertain and the fact that Stafford and Horner had indicated their intentions to go after Mount Storm made her wonder if the leadership in the Cheyenne Mountain Complex was actually sane. If the leadership went after Mount Storm, they would retaliate with nuclear weapons.

With that disturbing thought in her mind, she opted to go to sleep. But that didn't prove for a restful sleep; what dreams that came.

As a radar intercept officer, Lieutenant Commander Beth Hawkes was assigned to a radar position within the Cheyenne Mountain Complex. The higher ups had told her to monitor a second strike capability of the Russians after this current attack. And she was wondering if the Russians did have the capability to attack a second time after the US retaliatory secondary strikes.

Colonel Shawn Hanson was at his post. "Keep an eye on the monitors. We're showing strikes of mission critical targets in Tyumin, Omsk and Novokuznetsk. All military refineries. We hit them with sub-launched W88 tipped Trident II missiles. Three independently targeted re-entry vehicles per target plus an extra one for Omsk targeted at their airport.

Beth monitored the radar by rote. After seeing the birds fly from their nest, she had shut down mentally and existed just by following orders. There was too much to consider; that eventually her mind couldn't take all of it and coped by just waiting for orders to follow. Despite the nuclear devastation wreaked on his wife's home city in Canada, Royal Canadian Air Force Colonel Shawn Hanson steadfastly continued to monitor the radar and gave out orders to his subordinates. Almost two hours later there were still no further tracks emanating from the Russian hinterland and Horner reluctantly told Colonel Hanson to shut 'er down but keep monitoring the situation. It appeared that Russia was not about to use their remaining Tsar Bomba (the full 100MT yield weapon) to destroy Cheyenne Mountain and raze it to the ground. Beth remembered that clearly, but the next twist of fate would cause her to wake up in a cold sweat.

An alarm sounded on her radar monitor. She was instantly on the horn, "Attention, radar track bearing east 090 towards us; four hundred fifty miles. Judging from speed and track it appears to be a four engined turboprop."

The colonel yelled, "Bring up cameras five and seven. I want to see what's coming at us." When the static cleared on the camera, they zoomed it in to see a lumbering heavily modified Tupolev Tu-95 Bear. As they zeroed in on the belly of the aircraft, they could see a large object hanging from the belly.

"Oh…shit…" The bomber was unassailed…surprising for the situation at hand, but evidently, the attacks must have been so severe that the air to air interceptors of the USAF were unable to respond to this gross incursion of national airspace.

Beth started crossing herself as she saw the object separate from the bomber, then the bomber just disappeared and the bomb or whatever it was started falling towards their shelter. The only thing that kept running through her mind was a Russian phrase uttered by Khrushchev; that much she knew from history. "Ya Pokazhy tebye Kuzkinu mat!" A parachute deployed from the back of the bomb to slow it down enough for the now non-existent bomber to get away. But like a bad dream the bomb was still there and it still kept falling…and falling… and falling.

It wasn't long before the TV monitors shone impossibly white and then a vibrating rumble as the shelter shook and dust rained from the ceilings. And in the brief second of a painfully white light and being ripped apart in the shock of an exploding 105.7MT nuclear explosion, she heard the words, "Kuskinu Mat…" in a ghostly echo.

Kuzka's Mother.

Chapter Seven

Author's Note: This is a dark story. In RL we have Putin and Obama on opposite sides of a confrontation in Ukraine and I don't have high hopes of either of them having the common sense not to antagonize each other. It is ironic that after all the work that Carter, Gorbachev and Reagan put into the SALT arms talks to reduce nuclear arms, we are on the verge of armed conflict that could easily go nuclear if cooler heads do not prevail. In a nuclear war, everyone loses - there are no happy endings. In 45 1/2 years on this planet, this is probably the worst situation I have seen so far, especially when two hotheads have their fingers on the nuclear trigger. In this story as we are seeing in real life; there are no happy endings. If the nuclear button is pushed, humanity will eventually suffer the same fate as the dinosaurs.


Mt. Storm Emergency Facility, Somewhere in the Blue Mountains of Virginia, 25 weeks Post-Apocalypse, Tunnel 8

Sarah Mackenzie glared at Hambly, her brown eyes devoid of any warmth as Hambly stood in front of her; his teeth clenched.

"What do you mean? He was innocent?" Hambly growled, his heart clenching in his chest.

Mac snorted in derision. The pathetic fool didn't realize that she had done the group a favor in singling out Simone and planning his downfall. If she hadn't, the Privileged would have looked further into the group's dealings because of Simone's inability to keep his mouth shut. Perhaps his continued survival would have resulted in their entire group's resultant exposure. Surely the idiot realized the long-term benefits of removing a loudmouth like Simone. "Surely you don't think I'm going to reveal the perpetrator, do you?" She stared at him with cold eyes piercing him to the core. "I'd be a fool if I were to do that and I can assure you that I'm no fool."

Hambly eyed Mac with no small amount of malice as his thoughts churned through his head like the devastation of an F5 tornado. She set him up to take the fall? Did she have something to do with pissing off the Privileged? Who set up that Zhou kid to take a hit like that? He knew Mackenzie was on his side but his suspicions warred with his ability to reconcile the new information he had received from his cohort.

Mac didn't say a word as she saw him come to terms with the information he had been given and was coldly making her own assessments about him. If he became a detriment to her plans; then all bets were off.

Hambly was making his own assessments. She was a former Marine (there was no USMC anymore) and he gauged that her mental stability had gone off-kilter when the bombs went off. Evidently he wasn't as good a bluffer as he thought because the next second later, he was up against a wall with a K-Bar against his throat; the edge of it scraped perilously close to his carotid artery.

"Don't even think about notifying any of the Privileged about anything we've discussed. I can make you disappear in a manner that can make it look like an accident." She hissed pressing the edge of her combat knife into his neck and the warm sting made Hambly well aware that she had broken skin. He wondered just what he had gotten himself into.

Mt. Storm Emergency Facility, Somewhere in the Blue Mountains of Virginia, 25 weeks Post-Apocalypse, Shelter Medical Facility

"Danny isn't going to wake up. Animal". Harm said looking at the still comatose Danny Zhou. Harm knew the longer Danny stayed in a coma, there could only be two outcomes: one; he would revive and regain consciousness or two; Danny would continue to remain in a coma, unconscious of his surroundings, whereupon a decision would have to be made. Did one continue to hope against hope that the young man would regain his awareness of the world around him or let him pass on into the void to free up the life-support equipment for someone who had a fighting chance.

Animal took a deep breath. He hadn't known the young, injured Navy man for very long. But there was a sense of loss and a deep burgeoning anger that roiled deep inside him. Whoever helped Simone was going to pay; and pay with their lives. Animal looked at Harm and what Harm could see in Animal's eyes scared him. Harm could see the stiffening of Animal's posture; the clenched fists and tightly gritted jaw; the glint of deep-seated rage in his body and knew that whoever was responsible for opposing them was in deep trouble. He figured that it was lucky Simone had suffered a quick execution by exposure or the man would be in serious risk of being dismembered limb from limb. He barely heard Animal snarl under his breath "Those who oppose us will pay..." as his blood chilled. Animal's voice sounded inhuman, almost the growl of an enraged beast.

"We can't break the code..." Harm ventured, hoping that what he said didn't light Animal's fuse off.

"What code." Animal whirled on him, his face contorted in barely contained anger. "The code between fighting men died in the inferno of nuclear hellfire!" He slammed a fist against the wall with a resounding ring of metal that left a slight indentation in the metal structure. It stung with the pain of skinned knuckles.

Harm looked at him for a long moment. "What about the code of survivors? The first tenet is to help each other survive. You're one of the most stable individuals I know. If you lose your humanity, what chance have I? What chance has Lia or Meg or Jen?" He raised his hand palm up to Animal in a gesture of pleading. "We need each other to survive."

Animal closed his eyes and took a deep breath, then another...and another and the tenseness left the room; Danny, unconscious and unaware of the war that had just taken place in Animal's soul, still lay in the hospital bed, the monitor denoting the lack of brain activity.

Harm took a deep calming breath; his hands shaking. He had almost thought Animal would go off his rocker and go after the remaining occupants of the shelter in a blind homicidal rage. The war had done a lot of psychological damage to all of them and Tom's policies weren't helping matters much at all. It appeared as though Tom Boone was running this place like his own little fiefdom and that was actually starting to piss Harm off a little. Whatever Boone wanted he got. And the fact that the sanctity of marriage was not respected was causing more than a little bit of jealousy amongst the shelter occupants. Even though the institution of marriage was a social construct, (according to John Boswell in the context of of historical evidence of same-sex unions), it was still an important part of human makeup. On the dispassionate flip-side, it was argued by the doctors in the shelter that pairing off was not a natural human evolutionary pattern - it was a code enforced by a now destroyed Church on the basis of another social construct - the idea of morality which ultimately lent credence to Boone's assertion that marriage was a dead institution. These deep thoughts were giving Harm a headache as he watched Animal work himself back to some semblance of sanity. What the hell was this world becoming?

Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Cheyenne Mountain, CO, NORAD Command, 25 Weeks Post-Apocalypse

The general staff supporting General Stafford advocated leaving Mt. Storm alone. If they didn't want to join with the North American Coalition of Allied States then that was their choice to make.

Former RCAF LGEN Parenteau was of the opinion that free will should be a factor in decisions made by allies to join NACAS. "Canada and the USA are no more. What we do with the North American Coalition of Allied States is dependent on whether we have willing states freely accepting our overtures of cooperation in return for alliance in a mutually beneficial manner."

GEN Horner replied casually "Mt. Storm having a base of operations would have helped immensely. All we are is a tunnel underground with a complex of a few dozen buildings in a hollowed out cave. Mt. Storm is the crucial linchpin in making NACAS work because we need a strong base of operations. I don't know to what extent they developed the complex but from intelligence reports, Boone hardened the site using fifteen percent of military budget allowed for black projects." Horner turned to his aide who whispered something to him and then stated in a tone that brooked no dissent. "Latest intelligence indicates that 1.5B was used to place large scale environmentally sealed sliding blast doors on a section of mountain facing a large flat valley. Those sliding doors when open would have plenty of space with clearance wide enough to admit a flying aircraft."

"Are you thinking what I'm thinking?" GEN Stafford asked Horner as his face paled measurably.

The general nodded. "They, like the Chinese, have moved air operations inside the mountain to keep it safe from nuclear attack and the flip side is that they can attack others with impunity."

Stafford stated calmly but no less urgently, "Aircraft, B83 tactical/strategic nuclear weapons: this puts a whole new spin on things." He looked over at the members of the staff in the meeting-room. "Mt. Storm's facility and assets make it a potent threat if they decide to go rogue. As I see it there is only two options. Entice it to join NACAS or take it over by military force."

Mt. Storm Emergency Facility, Somewhere in the Blue Mountains of Virginia, Tom Boone's Office, 26 weeks Post-Apocalypse,

The Communications Radio Tech notified Boone as soon as he heard the ominous transmissions between Cheyenne Mountain and Crow Rock. "It looks as though they want Mount Storm facility, sir." Boone nodded at the unwelcome information. In this post apocalyptic world one didn't trust anyone and his viewpoint had borne fruit. The gall of Stafford to all but render a join us or die edict pissed Tom Boone off to no end. It wasn't that Mt. Storm needed Cheyenne Mountain, it was because Cheyenne Mountain wanted to exert their power base over the entire world. And how better to do that than with air power. It appeared that Cheyenne Mountain wanted outright capitulation rather than a coalition and with things so divided in the shelter at Mt. Storm, Boone contemplated silently while the Comms tech waited for him to reply, there was absolutely no way of making a cohesive defense unless he could band all of them together.

"So they're advocating taking us over by force if we're unwilling to come to the negotiating table." Boone snorted. "That's a quick one-eighty from letting us come to terms with our situation. Do they really think a threat of military force is going to make me come crawling on bended knee like a dog to heel?"

"Sir, they seem to be...excuse the expression, talking out their ass. The Navy and Air Force have joint facilities at Colorado Springs airport which was targeted with a 5MT Chinese nuke. So was Fort Carson. They will be risking their own lives and contaminating their troops to try and take us over." The tech said.

Boone knew that to concede his shelter would subject his people to the whims of the Air Force commanding general; Stafford, his name was, and Boone was not too enamored of the good general. Stafford was a ruthless son-of-a-bitch as far as Boone was concerned and it would take hell freezing over for Tom Boone to capitulate to giving up Mt. Storm.

"Call in Nakamura and Rabb." Tom said as he pigeonholed the comms tech with an unflinching stare. "I want them to know what's going on." He stated as he made sure the comm tech knew exactly how crucial the summons was that he was couriering to those being summoned.

"Yes, sir." The tech replied as he realized this was a dismissal.

Fifteen minutes later, Rabb and Nakamura were standing in front of him. Looking over at Nakamura, Boone notified him quietly. "What I have to say goes no further than this office. The information that I have been informed of by Communications has the ability to destabilize the cohesiveness of this installation and if this information gets out, we could end up in anarchy. The only stabilizing influence in this shelter is the assumption by the shelter occupants that we have matters well in hand." He paused for a long moment to let that information sink in as Harm and Animal looked quizzically at each other. When Boone felt he had let the information percolate enough, he continued, "Comms was monitoring radio communications and found that a rather aggressive communique was sent from Cheyenne Mountain Complex to Crow Rock. The subject of said communique was our shelter." Again another pause to let that information sink in. When Boone felt that was fully understood, he then dropped the bombshell. "Crow Rock and Cheyenne Mountain Complex: they're colluding to take our shelter over."

Animal and Harm stared at Boone in shock. This was just what they needed with the anarchists in the shelter causing problems. They looked at each other knowing that it would take a miracle to ensure cohesiveness of purpose in the defense of their shelter with the two factions they had currently. If they were to defend this shelter against those who would seek to take their shelter from them; they needed to find those responsible for causing dissent and weed them out of the population. In that regard, they would have to be ruthless.

And in the next instance; Tom Boone verified exactly what Animal and Harm thought. "I want all dissent quashed. Anybody who fosters dissent against the rules will be found guilty of treason against the shelter survivors and executed by exposure."

Mt Storm Emergency Facility; Somewhere in the Blue Mountains.

Mt. Storm was not a democracy. The rules were imposed by one person and enforced by a clique of the leader's chosen few. Those who opposed his rule were branded as outcasts and regarded suspiciously by the few who were in his favor. Those not in his favor felt ill-done by no matter how gentle the hand and rebelled against any form of yoke despite beneficial bounty to the well-being of the shelter community.

Most who rebelled felt that their grievances were justified and that rationalization was the firebrand to their cause. Whether it was lack of the food they liked due to the impossibility of growing said food in the conditions they found themselves in or the fact that the food source was a source of renewable food supply and was therefore off-limits; there were those who found the constraints unjust and fought it at every turn.

Such was the added grievances of one former Lieutenant Colonel of the United States Marine Corps. The rules and regulations that she had served under for many years had evaporated in the blink of an eye with the coming of what they all now referred to as The Apocalypse. Such was the psychological trauma that was inflicted on these survivors that many were barely managing to cope and some were mentally fragmenting. She wanted satisfaction whether it was by ridding the world of those she felt turned their backs against her; by ironically being of stronger moral character than she was when the world was intact; by colluding with the extremists in planning to rid the world of one Thomas Boone, former United States Navy Rear Admiral (upper half) because in her mind no tyrant had the right to life let alone the mantle of leadership and above all she felt that the Privileged were able to sacrifice one stinking cow just so that people would be able to have some meat. She wanted a goddamned hamburger and she couldn't just walk out and go get one from a Beltway Burgers now, could she?

Could they manage to overthrow the tyrannical yoke of the Privileged and their stranglehold on the food supply? Not with the Privileged living in the Armory. Anybody who wanted to rebel against the Privileged would have to do so with improvised weapons against actual firearms which the Privileged kept to themselves. And that was sheer suicide.

So how would they fight Boone and the Privileged? That was a problem Sarah Mackenzie intended to figure out.

Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Cheyenne Mountain, CO, NORAD Command, 26 Weeks Post-Apocalypse

Beth Hawkes sat in the mess building inside Cheyenne Mountain Complex in a corner by herself, a week after the fateful meeting held by Gen. Stafford and Gen. Horner where they decided that they were eventually going to take over Mount Storm to utilize its resources. The splitting of Vaults into factions to set up a new political structure was going to send the world to hell in a hand basket yet again. Because the old prejudices were still there. Each Vault wanted power. And this Vault's leadership was prepared to gain it by coercive means. At this point, Beth didn't want to talk to anyone. She had a feeling that Harm had survived and that he was in the bunker that Stafford had so casually inferred that he would target. She knew that Cheyenne Mountain Complex staff numbered in the thousands and would overwhelm the staff at Mount Storm. She had absolutely no idea why Mt. Storm needed to be attacked. Wouldn't it just be better to leave them alone if they had no interest in joining the North American Coalition of Allied States? Why cause a war if one didn't have to? But unfortunately, logic didn't matter in politics; only the power struggle between nation-states.

And not for the last time did she wish that she was at Mount Storm with those she knew rather than being a nameless face in the vast cavern that was Cheyenne Mountain Complex.

Mt. Storm Emergency Facility, Somewhere in the Blue Mountains of Virginia, 26 weeks Post-Apocalypse,

"It's not a situation that is going to resolve itself." Boone stated. "I'm going to have our comm-tech monitor the airwaves and see if there's any more intel that we can figure out as to which way Crow Rock and Cheyenne Mountain are leaning in terms of leaving us alone. If not; we may be at war." He watched the two's reactions. He hoped that it wouldn't come down to it; but if he had to repel an invasion force he would drop one of his specials and it would be dialled up at city destroying yield. If it was an invasion force he didn't want to leave any stragglers. Any survivors from the attacking force would be a danger to the shelter and the rest of their occupants. Boone surprised himself with the depth of savagery the measures he would take to ensure the security of his shelter occupants.

"War?" Harm asked rather stupidly, Boone thought. "You mean we'd attack and kill occupants of other shelters."

Boone leveled a cold stare at him. "I'm not looking for war. Harm. But by God, if those bastards from Cheyenne Mountain try anything, they'll wish they hadn't,".

"I don't think we should make an overt move..." Animal commented, "...unless they make an overt move of their own. No sense in wasting weapons that we need to repel an even greater invasion force. By the way, Tom. What do we have in the way of people knowledgeable in reloading cartridges and bullet-making; because we need to be able to reload our weapons and make new bullets that we can chamber into what weapons we have?"

"Already thought of..." Boone replied dismissively. "We thought of the eventuality of running out of ammunition and stocked a full cartridge reloading station in the armory as well as bullet molds for all the different calibres of weapons, the shelter stocks. Get Galindez to tutor all of you living in the armory to go over bullet-making procedures." He ordered, looking at the both of them. "All of you need to be proficient in cartridge making as well as firing caps." He looked pensive for a long moment. "If this war between shelters goes down, I want to keep it conventional for as long as possible and we can't run out of ammo."

Animal and Harm shrugged their shoulders hiding their personal thoughts on Boone's comments. It seemed that they would have to suppress the revolt with due prejudice. Unfortunately that would lessen the numbers of defenders for the shelter and cause them to resort to using their special weapons even sooner, Harm thought. But what else could they do? They couldn't risk weapons in the hands of those who would destabilize the shaky stability that the Mt. Storm shelter had. No matter which way Harm pondered the conundrum, there wasn't an adequate solution. It all boiled down to whether they were in accord with the idea of doing whatever it took for survival even if it came down to killing fellow human beings. The only way they would be able to repel an invasion from Cheyenne Mountain would be to launch an aircraft to drop a B83 tactical nuke with the yield dialed up to 1.2MT to make sure there were no survivors from the attacking forces.

As if he had read their minds, Boone looked at them then spoke "and just in case one of the guys we train decides he can't drop...we have the scientists designing a remote trigger fail safe to detonate the bomb from a secondary location." Harm and Animal looked appalled. Boone's lips curled in a smirk. They'd come around to his way of thinking. Safety of the survivors at Mt. Storm was at stake.

Harm and Animal looked over at Boone. He had changed and it didn't seem as though it was for the better. The steeliness of his eyes; the determined set of his jaw showed someone not afraid to do whatever it took to defend his realm of influence. He was like a missile headed towards a target, Harm thought; but did Boone also remember that a missile generally blew itself up at the target. It was a self-defeating prospect? Harm realized that you couldn't maintain an iron-fisted grip over subordinates or rebellion would ensue. You could run down the roll-call of history to find tyrants who had been deposed from their self-indulgent thrones.

USS Birmingham SSBN-588, McMurdo Station, Antarctica, 26 weeks Post-Apocalypse

Captain Van Buren could hear the howling of the wind as the snowstorm pounded the hull of the USS Birmingham. The snowstorm had blown in rapidly and almost trapped a group of Russian and American sailors on an excursion to gather more foodstuffs from the Station buildings. The visibility had dropped to zero and it was only Captain Semyanov's foresight in making a rope chained from the subs to The Mcmurdo Station buildings that allowed the sailors to find their way back. Even then they came back half-frozen. The snowstorm had been howling for almost a week now with no sign of abating. He knew that the pole was pointed away from the sun and with the amount of radioactive soot still in the atmosphere, the earth had cooled several degrees. Right now their greenhouse project was working due to adequate supplies of fuel but the first crops were at least a month away from harvest. The food stores on both ships were rationed to feed the men. This polar winter extended by the nuclear fallout thrown into the atmosphere would make growing anything an onerous task.

The Russian and American crews' stores had rapidly dwindled since they had linked up at McMurdo Station and there would be no replenishment flights from the mainland. Tanker bases had been targeted in the first nuclear strike. Considering how thorough the annihilation had been, Van Buren had to presume there were no survivors at the tanker bases. Airborne fuel refuelling was a necessity to fly long distances and the unfortunate fact that had slowly sunk in was that they were so far away from any pockets of survivors that they might as well have been on another planet. They would have to utilize their nuclear power sparingly as the fuel rods may have had a lifetime of 15 years before needing to be replaced but utilizing the electrical power generated by the onboard nuclear reactors for anything other than heating the greenhouses and heating their shelter was a luxury the Antarctic Survivors couldn't afford if they wanted to survive the hostile frozen wasteland they had to call home. And if the radiation reached any further south, their oasis would turn into a trap. A knock on the hatch of the captain's quarters interrupted his further musings. "Enter!" He called out sharply.

"Sir. The comms officer just notified me that they have heard some low-band communications coming from the direction of what used to be the central United States. The transmission is being decoded to determine who sent the transmission and to whom. Sir." CDR Turner stated as he stepped into the quarters.

"Very well, Sturgis." Van Buren replied. "Make sure that I get a copy of what is transcribed and I will make the final decision on whether we contact or not."

"Aye, sir!" CDR Turner braced, excused himself from Capt. Van Buren's quarters to relay the captain's orders to the comms officer.

As the hatch closed, Van Buren sighed deeply. They were warriors, not gardeners. How were they to make an Eden out of such an inhospitable land? They had limited supplies and the stocks of food and seeds wouldn't last forever unless they were able to recover the seeds from the plants that grew and that cut down on the number of food that they could harvest if they had to continually replenish seed-stock. He wondered if they would have a string of luck that would help them because survival was a matter of luck in this environment they were in. Looking at the small painting of Admiral Arleigh Burke, Capt Van Buren muttered caustically, unheard by other ears. "What we didn't calculate upon was that those instruments of destruction would be wielded by idiots in high office."


"For in this modern world, the instruments of warfare are not solely for waging war. Far more importantly, they are the means for controlling peace. Naval officers must therefore understand not only how to fight a war, but how to use the tremendous power which they operate to sustain a world of liberty and justice, without unleashing the powerful instruments of destruction and chaos that they have at their command." ~ Admiral Arleigh Burke.


Ballistic Missile Submarine October Revolution; McMurdo Station, 22 weeks Post-Apocalypse.

Captain Semyanov listened to the wind howling past the sail of the October Revolution. It was a dangerous wind. One that could freeze exposed skin inside of four minutes exposure. If he had the skin of a Yakut, Semyanov thought as another chill blast buffeted the sail. The Yakuts were a Mongol tribe that lived in Siberia, a pagan tribe that did not believe in Marxism or Russian Orthodoxy, but their own shamanistic traditions. When Captain Third Rank Michil Oyunsky was in his cups, he would mutter about the Uliuiu Cherkechekh which roughly translated from Yakut was The Valley of Death. He was referring to a spot on the Upper Viliuy River where unknown spikes in background radiation caused lethal injury to inhabitants of the area. Semyanov had decided that the Antarctica was yet another Uliuiu Cherkechekh; one that they would all have to struggle to survive and they would survive it with the help of those agriculturally minded. The crew of the October Revolution had mostly come from farming communities back home, even more so than those from the Birmingham.

But both crews would be relying on the farming skills of those Russian farming boys. How ironic after being trained for many years to kill one another that they were in a position where they had to rely upon each other for survival.

Crow Rock, Blue Mountain Ridge, Pennsylvania, 26 weeks Post-Apocalypse

It had been a long twenty-six weeks since the bombs fell. Edward Sheffield, former United States Secretary of the Navy gazed down the long hallway that led to the entrance they had come in through so many months ago. Whether it was his mind's way of coping with the fact that politicians such as he were stupid enough to have pushed the button to cause the end of human civilization as they knew it. Shaking his head after a last long stare at the hallway he made his way to the communal eating area.

When he had sat down, the shelter head, General Alexander Moreland, sat down beside him, his convivial expression setting off warning bells in Sheffield's head. General Moreland was a West Point grad, the same class as General Isaac Carruthers who was supposed to take over command of Mt. Storm before Thomas Boone staged a coup and refused to allow entry to Carruthers. Right now the convoy carrying Carruthers and his retinue of politicos were blasted out melted hulks, their charred remains less than a half click away from Crow Rock when the bombs fell.

"We got a communique from Cheyenne Mountain." Was Moreland's opening comment. He leaned forward so that the SecNav could see him whether he wanted to or not.

"...and..."

Moreland almost looked beside himself with smug joy. "Stafford wants to attack Mt. Storm. He knows what's in that vault and he wants it for himself. If he can't have it he's going to make sure no-one gets a hold of it. He plans to turn the place into an irradiated hulk if Boone won't give it up. I've chosen to ally with Stafford."

Sheffield's insides clenched. "Are you nuts?" He finally exclaimed loud enough to cause several others at nearby tables to stare at them. "That place was built to be a fortress. You wouldn't be able to take it out with the Tsar Bomba - the one they originally designed let alone the ones the Soviets detonated. There has to be a way of negotiating a settlement."

Moreland narrowed his eyes at Sheffield for a long moment where Sheffield felt as though Moreland was taking a long measurement of him then stated "Stafford gave them a chance to join him." as if a demand to join them was a rational request which should be heeded. "They refused." He stated bluntly then rendered his verdict. "They had their chance; now they will be destroyed." Sheffield thought that all Moreland needed to cap off his image of being a sycophantic megalomaniac would have been the evil laughter. Getting up from the table Moreland gave Sheffield a long sizing up stare. "Don't make the same mistake. Sheffield." He warned the SecNav, "You know as you Navy boys like saying: Loose lips sink ships..." Smirking, Moreland walked away.

Sheffield sighed heavily as he eyed his untouched plate, all of a sudden not feeling hungry.

Mt. Storm Emergency Facility Maternity Ward, Somewhere in the Blue Mountains of Virginia, 26 weeks Post-Apocalypse,

Lia glared daggers at Animal. If there was something light and lethal, Animal was sure Lia would have brained him with it. "YOU did THIS to me!" She nearly screamed at him. "I look like the Goodyear Blimp! Goddamn you! Tosh!" Then she whirled on the doctor asking abruptly. "WHERE IS TOM BOONE?!" Her tone indignantly shrill.

"Why?" the doctor asked risking life and limb for asking a question for which the answer, what seemed to Lia, was blatantly obvious.

"BECAUSE I WANT TO RIP HIS GODDAMNED BALLS OFF AND FEED IT TO HIM PERSONALLY!" Yes, it was definitely a scream this time as Animal winced resisting the urge to cup himself because that would just make him a convenient target for her rage. He wondered if it was too late to change his mind about being in the birthing room when she went into labor.

Freedom Bunker, Somewhere in the Appalachian Mountains, 26 weeks Post-Apocalypse

Saul was skin and bones; he was only conscious a few times a day and every time he breathed in there was a chilling rattle on the inhale. They all knew he was going to die. Even though his exposure to the radiation had been minimal less than 100 rads, something with his body's reaction to radiation kept him from recovery.

The vote hadn't gone Billy Joe's way. They had opted to remain in the shelter for a while longer. He looked over at Rachel.

"Saul's not gonna recover." Rachel said suppressing a sob.

"So what do you suggest?" Billy Joe asked.

"I don't know. Billy Joe. I don't know. I see him gettin' weaker and weaker and I wanna do somethin' for him but he's jus' gonna die in the end." Rachel broke down clinging to Billy Joe. At that moment, Billy Joe came up with a plan. He'd wait for the rest of his shelter-mates to go to sleep then he'd take Saul out of the shelter and away.

The rest of the shelter occupants had turned in for the night and an ominous silence settled over the shelter as if in recognition to what Billy Joe was about to do. He had waited until the shelter had quieted into slumber; a steady even breathing from all the bunks. He quietly buckled his Colt .45 in its holster onto his belt. Then turned to Saul silently begging forgiveness for what he was about to do. Swiftly picking Saul up, surprised at how light he was, he moved silently towards the entrance. Only a brief metallic click that sounded inordinately loud marked his and Saul's exit from the shelter. The darkness of the overcast sky had darkened the bundle in his arms to a barely discernible shape. He knew that he needed to walk at least two miles to where he would lay Saul down.

The walk with Saul barely a weight on his arms took almost three hours. It brought them to a cliff overlooking the river. He stopped debating whether it would be easier to pick the other option; a swift plunge off the cliff into a rapidly flowing river which would carry Saul's body upon impact away down to a location no human would ever walk again.

Then he heard a brief whisper. "...don't...drop...me..." He looked down to the sick man in his arms to see Saul's gaze meeting his; his eyes inordinately clear. He coughed, a watery cough. "I never...liked heights..." Saul whispered. "I know..." He said briefly, so softly Billy Joe wondered if he actually heard correctly. "Bi-lly...Joe. Think about...the rest..." He fell silent for a long moment and lay still long enough that Billy Joe thought he may have passed. But a weak cough told him differently. "I know..." He said his voice barely audible. But his eyes turned towards the Colt that Billy Joe carried on his hip. "I don't...wanna..." Saul said haltingly, his voice barely hiding the pain of his failing organs inflicted on his body. "I'm dyin'." He said. "Don't...want...it...long..." Billy Joe put Saul down beside a tree and propped him up so he could see the brown river and the expanse of desolation beyond. Saul looked at him, nodding weakly in thanks. His voice barely a whisper, he said "do it..."

Billy Joe barely held back a choked sob as he drew his Colt .45 from his holster, jacked back the slide to chamber a round, and took aim at Saul's head. "I'm sorry..." The snapping report of the Colt firing echoed from the cliff, startling Billy Joe, as the .45ACP bullet exited the barrel of his semi-automatic at 830fps and travelled in less than a millisecond to impact with Saul's head putting a hole right in the right side of his head just underneath his earlobe and exiting out the other side in a grisly spray of brain matter and skull fragments. The point of impact severed his spinal cord at the base of Saul's skull and the momentum of the bullet exiting his skull impelled the body in that direction. What was left slumped over in a shapeless heap like a sack of flour; the neurons that fired instantly shut off.

Billy Joe slumped to the ground, his feet unable to support his weight as the full realization of what he had had to do hit him. He couldn't move for a long moment as the emotions swirled through him. Whether it was guilt at having to do this, he didn't know, but Billy Joe was a changed man.

Location that used to be the Pentagon, 26 weeks Post-Apocalypse

A flattened charred plain marked the spot where America's top military brass had worked planning America's next military campaigns and hypothetical conflicts as well as planning the technological direction of US forces. The central courtyard was the epicenter of a Dong Feng DF2 warhead detonation which hurled a twenty mile in diameter fireball which immolated everything nearby. Debris were hurled at near Category 5 hurricane speeds and millions were obliterated from existence in a split-second of temperatures exceeding the surface of the sun.

Twenty-five weeks into the new existence of a post-holocaust North America; scattered amongst the debris one could see (if anyone was still around to witness) dessicated remains of rodents lying sprawled amidst what remained of debris. They had dropped where their remains now lay, their bodies riddled with organ destroying radiation suffering with painful sickness which had only one eventuality: death.

The clouds, boiled away by nuclear blasts, had returned covering the planet in a thick almost impermeable shield dropping the temperature almost twenty full degrees causing a return to an average mean temperature closer to that of the ice ages. They were loaded with radiation and rained hot (radioactive) rain despite the fact that rainfall had decreased seventy-five percent. And the rain pushed the radiation count back above the lethal range.

There were no instruments left to be able to measure the extent of ozone layer depletion. But any survivors (if any had survived the intense radioactivity) were suffering blast related injuries and eventual organ failure from burns suffered by UV radiation from the brief periods that the sun was able to peek through the clouds. The earth had been scoured by winds seeped in radioactive particles with half-lives measuring in the thousands of years; a death sentence to any being that was forced to make an existence on the surface of the planet. Heavy clouds laden with radioactive moisture and frozen by the cold dumped freezing lethal snow on the ground in parts of North America that dropped below freezing. Touching this snow would leave radiation burns to the skin as well as killing by numbing cold.

Into this dreadful tableau staggered an unlikely survivor, covered in blood that seeped from a wound to the side of the head, coughing from lung damage from the radioactive dust inhaled, half crazed with starvation, on his last bits of strength. The horrific caricature of a human survivor, his lungs filled with fluid, sank to his knees, his strength giving out at the very last along with incipient organ failure, uttered a faint moan, unheard by any but his own fading hearing as black closed around the edges of his vision, finally pitching face first into the debris to never move again. His chest rose and fell once and stilled forever. Over the following weeks his body would lay desiccating in the elements, as stripped away as the bones on the rodents that lay near him. The wind that swirled over the scant remnants of the destroyed Pentagon building, left unburnt by the intense heat and fire of the detonation, endlessly distributed and redistributed the snow-covered debris around building up cold white breakwaters around the larger debris piles.