Blood of My Enemies

Blood of my Enemies
 

 

A dystopian little Halloween Tale with absolutely NO SEX…
 

© 2020 Unity Mitford. All rights reserved. The author asserts the right, from beyond the grave, to be identified as the author of this story. This story or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a review. If you see this story on any website other than Literotica.com, it’s been copied without the author’s permission, and if that happens, well, the 1911’s loaded, and the backhoe’s ready….

And that obligatory (but short) little intro from you might know who, but you may not, so don’t worry about it if you don’t: Here it is. Another little alternate history “Unity Mitford” story, written especially for the Literotica Halloween 2020 Story Contest, and following on from “Illegal Alien” and “And the Snow Fell,” although chronologically, it falls between the two. I’ve had the idea in my head for a while, after reading an old David Drake story, “Rescue Mission” — so the plot’s not entirely original, but I hope you enjoy the story, which is. And yep, sorry guys, no sex at all in this one. It’s much more dystopian military Sci-Fi, and I do hope I’m getting better at it, and yeah, I know, Literotica… erotica… sex… But hey, a girl has aspirations…. “Unity”

 

Kill without warning, for blood now I lust
 

Strong wind, magic mist

To Asgard the Valkries fly

High overhead, they carry the dead

Where blood of my enemies lies

Blood of my Enemies, Manowar

 

* * *
 

“You taking the mission or not, Wong?” The Colonel didn’t give a fuck. That’s what it sounded like to me, anyways.

“Short notice,” I said, thinking it through, looking across the room at Maddock, strip-cleaning her M4, and I figured I better clean my own soon. I’d put more than a few rounds down the barrel this morning. Pour encourager les autres, Brad used to say, except none of us needed much in the way of encouragement. Hadn’t since the early days, and speaking for myself, I needed reining in now, not encouraging.

I wasn’t the only one.

“We’re not exactly trained for rescue missions,” I added.

“Captain Wong,” the Colonel said, because I was a frigging Captain for my sins, or maybe it was because of what’d happened back at the Pass, and now he did sound pissed. “The entire Army of the Second American Republic is a rescue mission. Adjust your frigging attitude.”

“Yes, Sir, Colonel, Sir!” I snapped, and Montoya glanced across, M4 ready, the way it always was when he was with me, and he wasn’t the only one, because he had Frazer with him, and Frazer was faster and meaner than a mongoose on crystal meth.

“For fucks sake, cut the crap, Wong. Just give me a yes or a no,” the Colonel said. “I know your unit’s not trained for this. No-one in our Army is, not the units available, anyhow, but you’re my best Clearance Unit. Your call. If you can’t take it on…”

Well, we all knew what was gonna happen to them if we didn’t. Wasn’t like we didn’t do it ourselves. We did, and we were better at it, too, and I’d known what I was gonna say the moment he’d laid it out for me. No one in my Task Force was gonna disagree, and I knew that, too.

“We’ll take it,” I said, voice clear and flat. This was gonna suck, but we’d done it before, a time or two. Weren’t good at it, not like the old professional guys that used to train for this sorta shit day in, day out, but those guys, the ones that were left, they were all with the front-line units. Brad, he’d done this sorta shit back when he was in. He’d have known how to do it, professionally. Me? I’d have to rely on the old guys to tell me how to do it, but we’d done that before too, learnt on the job, and most of us were still alive.

Most of us. Not all of us. Learning on the job had a price, but we paid it.

“Choppers are already on their way,” the Colonel said, and suddenly he was all business, his voice as clear and flat as mine. “They’ll be landing in thirty minutes. Four Blackhawks. Seven old Huey’s. Everything they could spare. You’ll use the Huey’s to move the survivors out. All we got for this one. Anyone you can’t pack in is shit out of luck. Give ’em whatever guns and ammo and anything else you can, ‘n tell ’em to run for the hills, and keep their heads down until we break through. Avgas tankers with JP-4 should be at your location in half an hour or so. Maybe sooner. Birds are gonna need the tanks topped up going in and coming out, it’s on the edge of their range for the Hueys. You’re gonna have about an hour to put this one together, Wong.”

“I’ve got Kratman and Reilly, Sir,” I said. “If they can’t put a plan together in an hour, no-one can.”

“It’s yours, Wong,” the Colonel said. “Don’t fuck it up, and don’t kill too many of ours getting them back. Not if you can help it.”

“Fuck,” I said, swinging my feet of the desk, and sitting upright. Montoya was there, instantly. Him and Frazer both, and their safeties sure weren’t on. “What were you gonna do if I didn’t say yes, Sir?”

“I knew you’d say yes, Wong,” the Colonel said, still clear and flat, all business, and I didn’t have to think about it. Not really. He was right. I might bitch, but I’d never leave anyone to the ratdogs. Not if they were still breathing. I knew that. The Colonel knew that. “You know as well as I do what’ll happen to those poor bastards if we don’t go in when we can, and I’d go in with you if it’d help. One other thing.”

“What’s that?” I asked.

“Some asshole from the Head Shed’s coming in with the Blackhawks. Real brown-noser. Personal briefing for the officer commanding. Need to know and all that crap, so I got no idea what the fuck he’s gonna ask, and it won’t be an order, or it would’ve come through me. Make nice to the fucker, Wong,” the Colonel said. “He’s only a Major, but he’s speaking for someone high up in Headquarters. Not our head shed, the guys right at the top, and I got a call, telling me that and to stay out of it. Ignore him if you want, your call, I’ve got your ass on this one, but make nice to his face, okay. Higher up is why we got the birds to extract those poor bastards.”

“Okay, okay,” I said, tiredly. “I won’t blow his head off, if that’s what’s worrying you.”

“Good, because it was,” the Colonel said. “And Wong…”

“Yeah?”

“Don’t go fucking it up and getting yourself killed, okay. Your Task Force needs you.” He hesitated, and he sounded tired now. Exhausted. “You’re good, Wong, and I know you like leading from the front, but just… be careful, huh. Don’t do anything stupid, okay.” He sounded like he cared, and for a moment, the ice threatened to crack, but then it froze again.

“I won’t, Sir,” I said. And I wouldn’t. I had the baby to think of. Brad’s and my baby, and yeah, it was only two months, but I knew, and I knew Montoya wouldn’t let me get myself killed either. He’d die before he’d let that happen, and I didn’t want Montoya to die. I didn’t want any of my people to die. Some of them were going to, but I didn’t want them to.

They always did, though.

My hand put the old field phone down, real slow, and I watched. It wasn’t shaking. Not this time. Never did, when push came to shove, but that was about the only time it didn’t, now. Looked at Maddock, and she looked at me.

“Well, fuck, Sergeant-Major,” I said, and now I was smiling, but it sure wasn’t the sorta smile I’d have liked to see smiling at me. Guess Maddock was used to it. She didn’t flinch. “Got a dozen choppers landing in half an hour. Four Blackhawks, seven Hueys out of a museum or something. They’re gonna need to refuel. There’s avgas tankers on their way. Be here soon. We got an hour to put together a fifty man team and come up with a plan for a rescue mission.” And now it wasn’t a smile. It was a rictus, a baring of the teeth. A snarl.

“Ratdogs got a bunch of our people down the road, their side of the front, locked up in some old High School, and they’re working their way through interrogating them, and putting them down. Intelligence has a lock on them, and there’s someone in there they wanna get out, and guess what…”

“We’re the ones getting him out?” Montoya said, and they were all looking at me.

“Yeah,” I said. “Him, and everyone else there that we can, and that’s it in a nutshell.” And now I looked at him. “Go round up forty eight of the guys, will ‘ya. Gear up for an extraction, and put out a call for Kratman on your way.” My eyes met his. “I’m leading this one, Sergeant. Forty eight guys, me, and Maddock, coz I know she won’t stay behind if I go.”

“Right you are, ma’am.” Montoya left, and I knew he’d be picking the best. Knew he’d be one of them. Him and Frazer, both. One or the other of them never left my side, these days.

“You know what it is today?” I said to Maddock.

“No,” she said. “What?”

“October Thirty First,” I said. “Halloween.” And now I smiled an almost happy smile. “Send a couple of the guys shopping in the Walmart, will ‘ya. I want fifty of the most god awful Halloween masks they can find. We’re gonna fuck up someone’s Halloween Party so frigging bad.”

“Fifty? Combat load for a Blackhawk’s eleven each.” Maddock didn’t look too happy.

“We’re gonna overload them,” I said. “I want twelve in each, and you and me. Two six man teams in each bird. We won’t be carrying anything except weapons and ammo. They build those things with plenty of margin.” There’d be more margin coming back.

There always was.

 

* * *
 

“Gimme a break, Kratman,” I said, eleven minutes later, coz it’d taken the old guy ten minutes to get his ass over. His knees. Wasn’t much of a runner these days. “You’re too fucking old for this. What I want from you is a plan. Just tell me how to fucking do it, and keep it simple.”

Because Kratman was a pro. Been in the regular army for fucking years before he retired. Been in the Rangers, Lieutenant-Colonel, knew his stuff, and he was an old fucker, but he’d walked in one day, and signed up. Why he wanted to sign up with us, I had no fucking idea.

Brad, he’d laughed, ‘n about a nanosecond later he was staring down the barrel of a 1911, and neither of them were laughing, and neither was I, ‘coz my 1911 was pressed up real hard against the side of Kratman’s head, and my safety was off, unlike Kratman’s. Hell of a way to get yourself recruited, coz I nearly blew his head off, but Kratman was a persuasive bastard, ‘n fuck, he was hard as nails. Harder.

I thought I was crazy, now and then, after Brad had died, and I probably was. Shit, I knew I was, and it was most of the time, really, not now and then, Yeah, I was bugnuts, I knew that, but Kratman made me look sane, ‘n I never asked what his story was. Scared me that it might be worse than mine, and mine was bad enough. Didn’t matter, he was with us, and after Brad left me, ‘n the Colonel put me in charge, Kratman was the guy I went to for advice. And plans. Like now.

I wished it was Brad, but Brad was a hundred fifty miles north and six feet down, and I really couldn’t think of anything better than joining him there, except I knew he wouldn’t want that, and that was just about the only thing stopping me. That, and the baby, but no-one else knew about that. Only me.

“Shit!” Kratman said, and I sat there, ‘coz we both knew I was right. His heart was in the right place, and there wasn’t a thing wrong with his brain, but the fucker was old. “Shit! Fuck! Damn!”

“I know you wanna go,” I said, and I knew he did. Just like I did, and that I did, that almost scared me too, because I knew why I wanted to go, and what I wanted. “But…”

“I know, I know,” he said, ‘n he knocked back that cup of Joe he’d walked in with. “Now what you’re gonna do is something like this,” he said. “Place is a High School, right?”

“Right,” I said, ‘n I flipped him the plans the headshed had faxed, coz some of those old frigging fax machines still worked, and we had one of them.

“Now we’re talking,” he said, going over them. “Eight six-man teams, right?”

“Right,” I said, and he got down to it, and yep, thirty minutes later, we had a plan, and I could hear choppers coming in, out on the Walmart parking lot, coz this week, an old Walmart was the base, and the field back of the Walmart wasn’t gonna be much good for farming for a couple of decades. Not unless you wanted to do something about what was buried deep down there, because we’d had to do a big cleanup around here.

Maddock walked in with Sanders, and a couple of boxes of Halloween masks.

 

* * *
 

“Captain Wong?” the Major said, and he was real smooth looking. Sorta like you expected a head shed brown-noser to look. All shiny uniform and polished boots, probably ironed creases in his boxers. He looked real outta place out here, because until we finished clearing house, this was still Indian country, and there were a few rats still hiding out, here and there. We’d get them though. Already got most of them, and what good were fish without a sea to swim in. “May I have a moment of your time?”

“Park your ass, Sir,” I said, enjoying the wince. “Mugga joe?”

Because mine was black and strong enough to strip the enamel of your teeth, and Jesus, I was going in as wired as I could, and who needed those drugs. I just jacked myself up on joe. That, and adrenaline. Did it every time, and when it didn’t, I wouldn’t be worrying about it, would I?

“No thank you,” he said, real polite, on the surface anyhow, ‘n I shook my head. What sorta officer didn’t drink joe, but I knew the answer to that already. Frigging head-shed brown-noser who’d never been out on the pointy end getting shot at, not that I was out there at the tip of the spear myself, but I’d been there, that night, holding the Pass, and this job wasn’t exactly back office, was it?

“Out, everyone,” I said, and they outed. Didn’t need creases in their boxers to know when an order was an order.

“Tell me, Sir,” I said, when they were gone, and the door’d closed behind them. Didn’t matter. The office was wired, and they’d all be listening anyhow. Way I worked. Didn’t keep anything from them. We’d been together too long. What I knew, they knew, and they all knew that, ‘n sometimes they’d tell me what I didn’t know.

“This isn’t an order, Captain Wong,” the Major said. “It’s a request from someone senior in Supreme Command whom I’m not at liberty to name. The Rebels…” Yeah, he called them ‘The Rebels.’ Capitalized, and you could hear those caps. Everyone else called ’em ratdogs, and fuck ’em. “…The Rebels in that Interrogation and Holding Facility are holding the son of a Very Important Person, and we’d like to retrieve him.” He held out a photo.”This is him.”

Guy in his thirties. Young looking. The sorta young look that says plastic surgery, and excess drugs, and all that shit you used to see in the Fake Media instead of, you know, actual news that never made it into the “news,” because the assholes didn’t want you to know. That look you used to see on the faces of those Hollywood actors and celebs. Used to. You don’t see them now. We got a lot of them early on. The ones that didn’t run fast or far enough. And yeah, over the border in Borelia wasn’t far enough. They found that out, ‘n most of them didn’t get the chance to learn from that mistake.

Anyhow, this dude, he had that kinda look.

I recognized the motherfucker. Tagg Yenmor. He’d been in the old fake news off and on. Knew who his dad was too. Tim Yenmor. Ran one of those frigging “global business consultancy’s” that specialized in buying up companies, selling the assets and outsourcing the jobs overseas. He made billions. Thousands of people had their jobs and their lives destroyed. Ran for President once, when I was a rugrat. Sure I knew that fucker.

Bought up the healthcare company that owned the hospital I used to work in, and look what happened to my frigging job. Went from something we could halfway live on to minimum wage, no benefits, and I’d only kept it coz I’d gone all ching chong chow on them, made it by the skin of my teeth into the diversity quota, which was pretty much every position that wasn’t affirmative fucking action, unless you were were chinese or korean or japanese, and then you were almost as screwed. Almost, but I squeaked in. God help you if you actually got sick or needed, you know, realmedical care. You might have got lucky. If you were lucky.

“Yeah, so?” I said. “He’s on our side these days, is he? You want him back or something?”

“It isn’t an order, Captain Wong,” the Major said. “His father’s connected, he’s doing things for us, and he’d like him back, and…”

“…and we got four Blackhawks and seven Huey’s that we wouldn’t have got otherwise,” I said, and I was a bit surprised about the Hueys. Never knew we even had them, but Blackhawks, they were like hens teeth, and we must’a been real hard up for special forces units if they were tasking me with the mission, and giving me four Blackhawks for it.

“Yes.” The Major nodded, and he didn’t even look embarrassed, and I knew his type too. Wondered why he wasn’t on the other side, but his type, they always landed on their feet.

Took a sip of my cup of joe. “Let me tell you something, Major. Every man and woman in my unit has lost people near and dear to them to the ratdogs. I don’t take ’em unless they have. Ratdogs killed my parents, gutted them with knives, and did a few other things to them that’d have you puking your guts out if I told you, and left them to die on the floor of their house, and I was the one that found their bodies. They killed my husband, and some good friends too. Every man and woman in my unit could tell you their story.”

I stopped, took another sip, feeling my tongue stripped clean, the enamel lifting off my teeth, and my mind was white fire, and every word was clear as crystal ice.

“You don’t need to ask us to do this as a favor. Major. Every single person in this unit would volunteer to rescue prisoners from the ratdogs. We know what the ratdogs do.” My smile was mirthless, and it wasn’t really a smile, either. “We know that really well, Major, because that’s what we do, for our side, Major, and we’re good at it. We’re very very good, Major, and we’ll go in, we’ll get those people back, Major. We’ll get your man back as well, and we’ll thank you for the opportunity to take it to them.”

I thought about it. “Nobody in this unit objects to a few strings being pulled, if it helps us do our job. You can tell your friend that, back wherever he is. Now, why don’t you kick back for a few hours. We’re lifting off in thirty minutes, and you’re only gonna get in the way. I’ll make sure my men know this guy, Yenmor, is who we’re going in to retrieve, and we’ll see if we can snaffle you a couple of prisoners to go with him. No promises on that one, though.”

“Thank you, Captain,” the Major said, and I knew the prisoners he’d said they wanted, and the poor bastards in that ratdog hellhole for that matter, they were just an excuse for the mission.

The real mission was to spring this Yenmor, and that was fine by me, because we’d get to rescue a few of our people who would die otherwise. The Major, he was looking at me like he was a rabbit looking at a fox, which was when I realized I was sharpening one of my knives, and I hadn’t even noticed. Kind of a nervous reaction I guess, because I didn’t really need to sharpen it.

It was already razor sharp.

 

* * *
 

“Well ladies and gentlemen, I’m Snoopy, and I’ll be your pilot this afternoon. My side-kick here, Mushie, will now serve the drinks. All seats are smoking, you may now light-up. For those of you who haven’t previously flown with Death Dealer Airlines, the air sickness bags are located in the seat back in front of you. Oh… wait… there’s no seats? Well, fuck. You puke, don’t worry about it. Mushie will clean up when we get back. We ready, Mushie?”

“Fuck’s sake, Snoopy. Will you quit with the Mushie shit?”

Couldn’t help grinning. I’d flown with Snoopy a couple times before, and he always fucked around with his co-pilots. He’d been riding Mushie’s ass since we’d done the briefing.

“Are we clear left and right?” Snoopy dropped the act, and he was sounding all professional now.

“Crew Chief. Clear on left.” The chief was standing up front, off to my right, and I could hear him through my headset. Could hear the turbines winding up too.

“Door Gunner. Clear on right.”

“Rotor speed all in the green. Engine instruments all in the green.” Mushie’s voice, and I’d heard them go through the routine. Different from ours. Just as professional.

“Chock One is on the go.” Snoopy’s voice again, and we were rotating into translation lift, rising into the air, slowly. Lifting in a whirling storm of dust, nose angling down, moving forward, staying low, and there was more chatter on the radio.

“Chock Two is on the go… Chock Three is on the go… Chock Four is on the go…” Other voices on the radio. The drivers of the other three Blackhawks. The Huey’s were ahead of us, a little. Slower, they’d lifted off earlier, but we’d overtake them, and they’d catch us up. Hopefully, by the time we were ready to exit the objective.

“Chock One. Trail formation, follow my lead. Chock One over and out.”

“Chock Two in formation… Chock Three… Chock Four…” I couldn’t see them as we raced across the houses, into the countryside, straight towards the range ahead of us, but I knew they were there, in a line behind us, low and tight.

“Okay, gonna teach you to fly now, Mushie. See, that there tells us our airspeed…”

“Asshole.” Yep, Mushie was back to being real pissy now.

The chit-chat was background noise now, all about birds ahead, power lines, trees, because we were going in low, up one of the valley’s into the small mountain range, racing above the river flats, rising as the mountains rose to either side of us, climbing towards a saddle, and for a minute, I managed to lose myself in the rush of the wind, the whining of the huge twin turbine engines, busy converting JP-4 avgas into noise.

Sitting in the doorway of the lead Blackhawk as we climbed that narrowing valley, feet hanging out, just about brushing the treetops, because low and fast, and Montoya was on one side of me, Frazer on the other, and I didn’t know if they liked it or not, but I did. The wind in your face, the noise from the turbines and the blades, that scent of avgas that was always there, the clean mountain air, away from the scent of death, the rushing speed as Snoopy took us low through the pass and down the canyon on the other side.

Snoopy, our driver, I knew him. Done a couple of in and outs with him before, and he was an old guy, like Kratman. Way too old for this shit, but here he was, and he knew his stuff. Mushie did too, but he didn’t have that same smooth finesse that Snoopy did. We crossed the frontline low, real low, so low we had to lift to get over trees, brushing the scrub at the top of the pass, dropping down the other side, nose down, in a blur of speed, radio silent now.

The ratdogs had tried a few shots, I’d seen the tracers, but this part of the front, in the mountains, there wasn’t much on their side or ours, and we were through and heading down. Four Blackhawks, weaving and banking down the canyon, and one minute I’d be looking up at the sky, next I’d be looking straight down at the ground, and someone behind me was puking, and then we were out of the foothills, banking hard, howling down a long valley, just above the power lines and the trees. Sometimes.

“Five minutes out.” Mushie’s voice came over my headset, calm and clear, like we were heading out for a burger or something, not riding into hell’s Halloween party at a hundred and eighty miles an hour, ‘n I patted myself down. Everything there, and Montoya and Frazer were doing the same on either side of me, and I was breathing slow and deep.

Getting myself in the zone, and I smiled, because soon, real soon, there’d be blood and death, and the adrenaline was kicking in now… wired, baby. I was wired, and I wanted the blood. I wanted the death, and everything was crystal clear, and the white fire was there, but I was riding it now. Riding the adrenaline rush, and everything around me was bright and clear, and when I moved, it was fast and precise, without thought, and I was completely in the zone.

The killing zone.

“One minute out.” Mushie’s voice was cool and calm, and we were flashing across rooftops, lifting up occasionally to jump trees, and in the streets below, pale faces were looking up, people were pointing, running, but they weren’t who we were coming for. Not yet.

Soon we’d come, and if they could’ve seen my smile, the ratdog symps woulda run, screaming in fear, and they’d find that out, that they should’ve run. They’d find that out soon enough.

Soon, but not yet.

Playing fields, and I knew we were close as the Blackhawk flared and dropped, and the High School roof was right below me, and I was off in an instant, dropping ten feet, first out, and landing like a cat. Either side of me, Montoya and Frazer thumped down, ‘n the rest of my team, and the other team, they were coming down around me as the Blackhawk lifted, and down below I could already hear explosions, shooting. Short tight bursts. Six teams blowing their way in through the doors and windows, and the other three Blackhawks were lifting, adding the whining syncopation of their turbines to the wall of sound accompanying us.

“Cover,” Fujimoto yelled, and I ducked and tucked. We all ducked, and the crashing explosion was almost mild as the door of the rooftop service entrance blew in. Mack and Standish ripped it off it’s shattered hinges, tossed it to the side, and I went in first, fast, riding the white fire in my head. In, and down, sprinting, cannoning off the walls on the corners, my body armor absorbing the impacts, M4 tucked in tight, cocked and ready, finger on the trigger, safety off, Frazer and Montoya tucked tight on my ass, and the rest close behind us.

Through the door, first through, and we were clearing the top floor. Door wasn’t locked, ‘n I guess this was a holding and interrogation center, bit like ours, except their security sucked, and I was in, eyes seeing half a dozen confused looking ratdogs fucking around in the hallway, ‘n I liked these old high school hallways. Concrete block walls, you couldn’t shoot through them. You could shoot through ratdogs though, and I was aiming for center of body mass.

Blat-blat. Blat-blat. Blat-blat. Double tapping, moving forward fast as I fired, fast as I could pull the trigger, every round on target, and behind me, Montoya and Frazer had peeled off to either side and those half dozen ratdogs were down, a couple of them moving, kicking, clutching at holes, thrashing around on the floor, and I left one of the others to finish them off. I was on point, running down the hallway, and fuck, they were holding the prisoners up here, not on the ground floor like Intelligence had said, ‘n they’d got that wrong.

Wondered what the fuck else they’d got wrong, but we’d find that out soon enough, ‘n all I hoped was, it wasn’t gonna be a complete cluster-fuck. Didn’t matter. Even if it was, we were here.

“All Teams, all Teams,” I said, waving the others past me, except Montoya, who stuck to me like glue. That was his job. Sticking to me. Taking anything meant for me. If he could. “All Teams, this is Mouse. Prisoners are on the top floor. Repeat, prisoners are being held on the top floor. Exercise care. Mouse out.”

Frazer was exercising care all fucking right. I could hear him carefully servicing targets inside that first classroom, fast as he could pull that trigger, with Standish covering him. Mack and the Canuck were crashing through the next door, ‘n I could hear the screams and the shooting, and there was way more shooting than my guys could put out going on back behind us, and downstairs as well, and yeah, well, fucked up, but shit happens and you adapt the plan.

My plan was simple. Kill them all.

Wasn’t much else we could do now, anyhow, except kill ratdogs as fast as we could, and we were doing that as I sprinted past Frazer and the Canuck, Montoya on my ass, ‘n my first shot took the lock right outa the frame of the next to last classroom, my boot kicked the door open, and I was in and shooting, coz someone on our side inside that room had got their shit together, and most of the prisoners were down on the floor, half of them screaming, and the other half yelling.

Ratdogs were in their uniforms, stood out like shit on a restaurant table, four of them, the only ones standing, confused as fuck, dropping their batons, bringing their handguns out, coz I guess they weren’t expecting gatecrashers to their Halloween party, and I took three down, Montoya got one, and I put another couple of rounds through each of their heads to make sure. Nothing like a double tap to tap them out, ‘n as soon as I had, dropped the mag, did a fast reload, ‘n covered the door.

“Keys keys keys which of them has the fucking keys,” Montoya yelled, dropping to his knees, starting to pat the bodies, except one of them wasn’t, but Montoya’s knife changed that real quick.

“The fat bitch with the orange hair,” an old guy on the floor yelled, and yeah, the poor bastards were all handcuffed to those frigging school chairs, except it’s pretty fucking difficult to tell if the hair’s orange after two rounds of 5.56 have gone through their skull from about four feet away. Fucking impossible, really.

They were all redheads now.

But you could tell the fat part. She was.

Made Porky the Pig look like a Weight Watchers winner.

“Got it,” Montoya snarled, ripping a set of keys out of the fat bitch’s pocket, ‘n he unlocked those cuffs, gave the old guy the keys. “Unlock them all, anyone with military experience or balls, take a gun. We’ll be back to get you outa here soon as we clear an exit.”

“Who the fuck are you?” the old guy said, looking up from the handcuffs next to him that he’d started to unfasten.

“Army of the Second Republic, we’re getting you all outa here,” I said, real loud, without looking, wondering if we could, coz we’d been told sixty, maybe eighty max, and there were twenty here in this one classroom, plus a few kids, and I fished out that photo of the Yenmor dude. “Anyone seen this asshole. We’re supposed to get him outta here too.”

“Him?” Woman lying on the floor still cuffed to a chair spat. “That McCain, he’s one of them. Don’t trust him.”

“Come on,” I said to Montoya, and we left them to it, leapfrogging Frazer and Standish, and that last room, fuck, I wanted to puke, coz the ratdogs had emptied their mags into the prisoners, they were reloading clumsily, the way rear echelon motherfuckers with fuck all in the way of combat experience did, and there were bodies everywhere, and right in the middle of them, standing by herself, the only one standing, there was this young Filipina girl, screaming, covered in blood, and one of the ratdogs was looking at her, fumbling reloading his old M16, and I took him out with a headshot.

Blew his brains out in a spray of grey and red and white, ‘n he went down in a rush of blood and shit, and the other two’s eyes were round and white, and they knew there was no surrendering here, and there wasn’t. Montoya took one, I took the other, and Jesus, some of the prisoners were still alive.

“Medic. We need a medic in Room Two Five,” I broadcast, and I wasn’t the only one asking. “Medic in Two Five. Civilian casualties.”

“On it,” Gomez answered, and she was through the door thirty seconds later, ‘n then she was on her knees, triaging the poor bastards, one of her and twenty of them, looking for the ones she could save, ripping open a packet of tampons, jamming them into the holes the bullets had left as they tore through flesh and bone at point blank range, fastening tourniquets, slapping on gauze pads and taping them up, hands flying, working on the ones that might make it if we could get them plugged, and outa here and onto the Huey’s, and the Filipina girl was stumbling towards me, her eyes wide.

“Please, my sister,” she said. “My sister… he took my sister…” She saw the photo I’d jammed in my harness. “Him… that one… the evil one… he took my sister a few minutes ago… he took my little sister.”

“Fuck,” I said, and then. “Mouse to All Teams… Mouse to All Teams… Warning warning warning… Yenmor may be a McCain… Yenmor may be a McCain. Exercise caution. Exercise caution. Mouse out.”

From the sound of all the shooting, wasn’t too much caution being exercised downstairs, and when I got back out into the hallway, half a dozen ratdogs were bolting up the stairs, running from death. Running to me, and that didn’t worry me, because I was the frigging Angel of Death, there to meet and greet, and after that room, all I wanted was blood.

Their blood, ‘n I smiled as I greeted them on behalf of the Army of the Second Republic. I smiled as the bullets impacted, smiled as I watched their eyes widening in sudden surprise, smiled as I drank in the sight of red blood gouting from their bodies, smiled as I sent them spinning with the shock of those high velocity blows, sending them back down the stairs, and I smiled as Montoya put head shots past me, and turned the ones that weren’t already into bodies.

“Wilson here, we got him… we got Yenmor… back of the gym. Wilson out.”

“Mouse here… on my way… Mouse out,” and I was, Montoya with me, and that Filipina girl was on my ass, and she’d picked up an old M16 of one of the ratdogs. Didn’t look like she knew how to shoot it, but if it made her feel better… and I didn’t have time to fuck around.

“Don’t point it at anyone, and stay on my ass,” I snapped over my shoulder. “What’s your name?”

“Eva,” she said.

Me, I didn’t say anything else after that, because I was already halfway down the stairs, Eva following, and Montoya was sprinting past me, down, using gravity to move faster, and there were bodies everywhere down there. Mostly ratdogs from the uniforms, but two of mine, sprawled with that limp finality that death gave, and we all knew death. Death was something we lived with, every minute of every day, and there was a lotta shooting, and the sudden crash and flash of grenades from the far end. The Admin offices, and yeah, that figured.

“This way,” Montoya said, ‘n I followed him without question, because if he said it like that, he knew, and I’d a had to stop and think, and there wasn’t time for thinking, so I followed, because you led, you followed, or you got outta the fucking way. If you didn’t do one of those, likely you died, and the ones that didn’t learn, they’d died.

Me, I was alive.

I guess.

“In here… he’s in here,” and Wilson was there, down on one knee, covering a doorway, waving.

Yeah, well, one step into that gym and it was sorta obvious this was where the ratdogs had their fun. Not interrogations. Fun. Dozen bodies piled in the corner. Literally. Tossed in a pile, any old way. Couple more cuffed to the gym equipment, ‘n just hanging there, and they weren’t ratdogs, not the way they’d been finished off. One glance, and I knew they’d taken a long time to die, and the only reason I didn’t puke was because I’d seen it all before. We all had.

LaPlanche had half a dozen prisoners lined up against the wall. Ratdogs. These ones were wearing gray overalls, gray, but they were stained with blood, ‘n there were two girls behind LaPlanche. Not ours, but both of them were holding guns now. Old M16’s. Real old. Holding them like they wanted to use them, but didn’t know how. Holding them like Eva was.

“They… they… they…,” one of them stuttered, looking at me. “They… they…” ‘n she was crying silently, ‘n shaking, and that look on those two girls faces, you knew what’d happened. One look at the bodies, and you knew they’d been lucky we came calling when we did, coz you could see what woulda come next, and they sure looked like they knew that themselves. Probably had to watch what happened to the ones before them, because the ratdogs did shit like that.

“Gimme,” I said, holding out my hand, letting my harness take my M4.

She gave me. Old M16, and I checked the mag, reloaded. Pulled my spare ear-plugs outa the pocket they were tucked into and passed them to her, pointed, and she got it. Cocked that M16 for her. Flicked to single shot. Smiled, and gave it back to her. “Point it at them, tuck the butt into your shoulder, tight, and pull the trigger,” I said, guiding the barrel to where it should be pointing.

At a ratdog.

She did.

“Blaaaam.” She jolted and winced as one of them slammed back against the wall, screamed and doubled over, then sank to his knees, eyes wide, mouth working, blood trickling through his fingers. Gut shot, ‘n I smiled. She looked at me through the tears, and she smiled back, and that was the nice thing about 5.56. Sometimes. Moments like now. Unless you hit something vital, or an artery so that they bled out, it took a few hits to finish someone off.

These ones, they’d know they were being finished off, and I liked that they did.

“Good therapy,” I said. “You’ll feel better after you shoot them all.” I knew I always did. Feel better, that is. Good enough for me, anyhow, and I smiled when she took another shot, and she hit the ratdog again, and he was screaming. I liked it, that he was screaming. So did the girls. The rest, they were pleading now. Begging. Crying. One of them crapped himself, ‘n that happened a lot. Barely noticed now.

“Walk them both through it, LaPlanche,” I said. “Don’t drag it out though. We gotta get them all outta here.”

He nodded, because most of us had been where these two were, one way or another, and who knew. We always needed new recruits. Had a lot of cleaning up to do, and the ones like this, they made the best recruits. Best for what we did, anyhow.

“All Teams, Mouse here. Don’t bother with prisoners,” I said on the Task Force frequency. “Mouse Out.” Everyone knew what that meant, and behind me, the shots started to ring out, and she sounded like she was really getting into it, and the other one joined in, and there weren’t as many people screaming, but they were louder. It’d get quieter soon, though. Always did.

“My sister. My little sister,” Eva said, and she wasn’t getting into it, which reminded me.

 

* * *
 

“Don’t shoot, don’t shoot, I’m a prisoner too,” the voice yelled from the back room, and Montoya had gone in before me, but I’d followed, and Eva had followed me, and Wilson was there, too, checking the room. “I’m unarmed… I’m coming out…”

He did, too, and it was him. I checked the photo, and it was, except there were scratches on his face. Deep ones, and they were fresh, because one of them was still trickling blood.

“It’s him,” Eva said. “He took her. It was him. Where is she?”

He saw her, he recognized her, and I saw him flinch, just a little, and I saw him take a breath.

“I’m a prisoner, like you. I had to do what they said.”

That was what he said, and I’d heard that one too. Any number of times. Sometimes it was even true. Sometimes I even believed them.

Not today, though. Not today.

“He stays here,” I said, and I glanced at Eva. “And her.” Wilson nodded, ‘n Montoya led the way into the back room.

I followed, and yeah, musta been an old storeroom or something before, but now there was an old bed there, up against the wall, and some crap lying around, and smelt like him. Guess he really was a McCain, ‘n I looked around, but there wasn’t anything obvious, except maybe an old duvet on the bed, but when I flicked it back with the barrel of my M4, the mattress was kinda bloodstained, and some of it was fresh. Wet blood, warm blood, that kinda fresh.

Blood of My Enemies

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UnityMitford

UnityMitford

17 Followers

Montoya looked at me, and I looked at Montoya, and there was that sinking feeling as I got down on my knees, and checked under the bed, because people hid everywhere, and when you were doing clearances, you got good at looking, but the obvious place to start was always the obvious, and there weren’t too many places to hide anything in this room.

“Shit!” I said, kinda sadly, and I reached in with one hand and snagged the closest ankle and pulled, and when I had her out, I looked down at the body that I’d dragged out from under the bed, and she was still warm. Warm, naked, and younger than Eva, and he’d used a knife on her, the blood was wet and sticky, and there was a pool of it on the floor under the bed where she’d lain, and when I glanced at her face, I knew where Eva’s little sister was, and I knew what’d happened to her. Knew what’d been done to her before that, too.

Saw the blood under her fingernails, and the cuts on her hands and arms, and she was missing a coupla fingers. She’d fought hard, but she was just a kid, and you don’t get any prizes for trying. God knows, it looked like she’d tried. She’d really tried..

Sometimes that’s just not enough.

I looked up, and into Montoya’s eyes, and we both knew.

“Sleep, little one,” I said, closing her eyes for her, kissing her bloody forehead, crossing myself, and she was still wearing a crucifix on a chain, and I took it and folded it into her hands. “Sleep in peace now,” and I closed my eyes for a second, and I’d have said a prayer if I could’ve remembered one in the second that I took, and then I left her there, covered with that old duvet, because soon there’d be nothing here but ashes, but she shouldn’t lie there naked, and we couldn’t bring everyone that died back with us.

I stood, and I walked back out, into the office, and Montoya was with me. I looked at Eva, and she knew, but my hand was on hers, stopping her as she tried to bring that M16 up, and Montoya took her from me, and led her out.

“Out,” I said to Wilson, keeping my M4 trained on Yenmor, and I was smiling. He smiled back, and he wasn’t looking nervous now. He had that assured look, the confident one that said he knew we knew who he was, and that he’d get away with it, the way he’d probably gotten away with a lot of other shit before, and I did know who he was. He must’ve seen that on my face, and he took a step towards the door.

“Not you, Yenmor,” I said, smiling, my voice mild, and he stopped, looking at me, and he was still smiling at me as I stepped backwards towards the door, and Montoya had me covered.

“Don’t you know who I am?” he said, and he had one of those voices that always used to fuck me off. One of those I’m Entitled, Executive, Elitist fucking Power Suit voices, and I smiled, because Power Suit, meet M4, and guess where the real fucking power is. Mao knew. Stalin knew. Those old guys that wrote the First Republic’s constitution, they knew too, and thank God they had. A lotta other people were learning that now, as well. Yenmor was gonna learn, but the lesson wasn’t gonna be much fucking use to him.

“Oh, I know exactly who you are, Yenmor, and I saw the girl back there too, you fucking McCain,” I said, cold as ice, and this time he saw my real face, for a moment, and he recoiled backwards, and now he didn’t look confident and assured. He looked confused and a little worried, and then downright scared, and my smile grew, because soon he wouldn’t be confused or scared at all. Soon he’d be terrified, and after that… well, my smile wasn’t one I’d have liked smiling at me, and he didn’t like it smiling at him.

“Got a Halloween treat just for you,” I added, and now I wasn’t smiling at all, but my eyes met his as I stood in the doorway, and I knew what he saw there as I pulled the pin on the willy-pete grenade, counted to two, tossed it into the room real slow and easy… and slammed the door behind me, spinning to get my back to the wall, and there’d been that second or two where he’d seen me pull the pin, and he’d known.

I smiled, because he was in there, and he knew, and this door was the only way out, and for him, this door wasn’t opening. There’d be another doorway opening soon for him though, and it’d be one he didn’t want to take. He’d be taking it anyway, taking it the hard way, and if he thought it was getting hot here, he’d be in for an unwelcome surprise on the other side, if there was any justice in this world and the next.

The door shook, the handle rattled frantically, but Montoya held it closed real easily, and the screaming followed the low wumpf of the grenade almost immediately. Agonized screams, and the flames came a little later, under the gap between the steel door and the concrete floor, flickering at first, then roaring as the fire took, and the screaming didn’t last nearly long enough, but by then, I’d finished reloading, and Eva was standing there listening and smiling and crying, and holding that M16 like she really wanted to use it.

Montoya looked at me, raised one eyebrow. I nodded. “Keep moving.”

There were still a few more ratdogs to kill. More blood to spill. Always more blood.

The blood of my enemies, and this was gonna be their Halloween from Hell, because I really didn’t want any prisoners. Not after what I’d just seen.

 

* * *
 

The Huey’s were there, a line of them on the playing field, doing that low whop-whop-whop thing, and one of the Blackhawks was off in the distance, rippling rockets, doorguns on either side ripping out bursts, ‘n there was smoke everywhere, sirens in the distance, flames licking out the windows, and two more Blackhawks hovered overhead, and the fourth came in to land, flaring, settling on the brown grass.

“Move it… move it… move it…” My guys were grabbing the former prisoners, the ones we’d freed, our people now. Maybe not before, but after what they’d been through, they’d sure be our people now, a long line of them pouring out of the High School doors. Hurling them into the Huey’s, one after the other, fast as they could grab them, packing them in like sardines, and we were gonna be pushed. More of them than Intelligence had told us, and some of them weren’t in good shape. They were being dragged. Or carried. We weren’t leaving anyone behind though, not if they were still breathing, not after what we’d seen in there.

“He’s one of them… he’s one of them,” someone screamed, pointing at a guy running with them. He pulled a gun, but not fast enough. Frazer didn’t stop to ask. He took him out, snap shot, and a booted foot stomped down on his head, hard, crushing his skull, grinding down, crunching bone as the body spasmed, and the line didn’t stop, and the last ones were bolting out the door, my guys behind them, dragging a couple of bodies, and I’d known them. My men.

“Building clear… building clear…” That was Maddock, counting them out. Dead or alive, we counted our own out, and we brought our own out. Dead or alive. Every time.

“Team Alpha, Team Bravo load up.” Cool and calm. Voice like ice, that was me.

“Team Charlie, Team Delta, load up,” I said, cool and calm as the old Huey’s began to stagger into the air, overloaded, using ground effect, tails lifting, rising slowly, and as they peeled away across the playing fields, the first Blackhawk peeled away with them, and the second was on the ground, my guys running for it, and Montoya had one of my tac webbing shoulder straps, and Frazer had the other, and they were running me towards the third Blackhawk as it flared and came down.

“Team Echo, Team Foxtrot, load up,” I said, cool and calm, feet barely touching the ground, and then I was thrown into the Blackhawk as she began to lift, and Montoya and Frazer were following me in, and the doorgun on the other side was ripping out short bursts.

“Team Golf, Team Hotel, load up and get the fuck outta there,” and I was leaning out, watching those last two teams piling into that Blackhawk in the ground, and they were the last. Below me, the High School was a roaring Halloween bonfire surrounded by bodies scattered like dead scarecrows across the green grass, and across the town, fires were flaring brightly, pillars of smoke rising into the sky. Those Blackhawk boy’s had had a busy time of it. Sucked to be a ratdog.

It was gonna suck worse when we arrived on the ground, and we were coming.

Oh yeah, believe me. We were coming. For blood.

The blood of our enemies.

 

* * *
 

“Do you have any prisoners, Captain Wong?” The head shed Major’s voice came over the headset real clear.

I looked at the two ratdogs next to me, the ones that Schmidt’s stick had brought in, because Schmidt was an old school sort of a guy who didn’t read between the lines too well, and I had said we wanted prisoners, back before we went in, during the briefing, so he’d got me a couple. I looked at them, and I thought about the bodies, and the people I’d left behind. My men that’d died, our people that’d died, those people in there, that girl, and she hadn’t been the only one had she, and how they’d died, and I shrugged.

“No,” I said, and I pushed the first one out the door, watched him drop, and he did his best to fly, but no dice, he didn’t have wings. He wasn’t going to grow them, either, and from five hundred feet, yeah well, that was him, done like a dog’s breakfast.

“Your turn,” I said, without looking, and the second one went out, with an assist from Montoya, because she didn’t want to go, but hey, equal opportunity, ‘n everything. She went, and I smiled as I heard her scream.

I was probably doing them a favor, not that I cared, one way or the other.

“No,” I repeated. “No prisoners, but I’ve got Yenmor.” What was left of him, anyhow, and I looked down and wondered if I could fly. It’d be so pure, flying through the clean air, looking down at the ground coming towards me, and I’d like that, the cold clean air washing my face, washing everything away. All care, all responsibility, all the blood and the death and the pain leaving as the ground drifted up to meet me, and Brad’d be there, waiting for me, and I leaned out, leaned forward, and started to…

“You stay right there, ma’am,” Montoya said, and his hand was firm on my shoulder, pulling me back, and Frazer had the other shoulder, and they didn’t let go until we’d landed.

 

* * *
 

“Where is he? Where’s Yenmor?” The Major was there, soon as I’d jumped down from the chopper, and he sounded real eager, but he really didn’t like my smile.

“Right here,” I said, and I nodded to Montoya, and yeah, I was smiling. “What was left after I was done with the McCain, anyhow,” and two of the guys tipped the crispy critter outa the body bag, and onto the ground in front of the Major, and the sweet-burnt smell of well-charred pork and the chemical scent of willy-pete filled the air.

“You… you… I’ll have you shot for this… you’re under arrest, you crazy bitch,” the Major snarled, and I saw his face, ‘n he meant it, and I remembered I’d promised the Colonel not to blow his head off, but he’d already seen my hand blur, and my 1911 was there, without thinking about it, the way it always was now, when I wanted it there, and he’d seen my face. He’d seen Montoya’s face, and his M4, and the others turning towards him, coz they’d heard what he’d said, and he musta seen the looks on their faces, coz he paled.

Maybe he’d just realized he’d made a mistake.

Maybe he didn’t, but it didn’t really matter. Not to me.

“Happy Halloween,” I said, real mild, and I turned and walked away.

Never did find out what happened to him. Didn’t particularly care much, either.

Accidents happen when these rear echelon motherfuckers come up near the areas that haven’t been cleaned out, that’s what I told the Colonel later, when he asked, and they never did find the body. Probably would’ve, if they’d dug up that field back of the Walmart, but it woulda been hard to tell him from the others without forensics, and there were a lotta others. That was my guess, anyhow, but it was just a guess, and it wasn’t like I really gave a flying fuck anymore, anyhow, and I didn’t have to tell the Colonel that.

He knew.

Back in the trailer we were using as our command post, I looked at the desk. Looked at the two boxes sitting there.

“Crap!” I said, looking from the boxes to Maddock. “We didn’t wear the Halloween masks.”

I mean, it was Halloween. The guys deserved some fun.

I felt really bad about that.

 

* * * The End * * *
 

I hope you “enjoyed,” if that’s the right word to use for this dystopian little futuristic alternative-history science-fiction story, and I do hope you had a somewhat intense and thought provoking read because really, like all my “Unity Mitford” stories, that was what I meant it to be. I apologize in advance for any mistakes with the military stuff — I’ve never been in the military and any mistakes are entirely on me. It’s not the usual Literotica hot and happy humping, is it, but I hope you enjoyed it, for all that. And seeing as it’s for the 2020 Halloween Competition, go on, give it a star or two… whatever you think it’s worth… “Unity”