Introductions

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                                                                                                                                                                                                       Part One: Fortress                                                                 Chapter One                                                                                                                                          It’s gone…all of it.      America, once the most powerful country in the history of the world, forever changed, forever broken.        It happened subtly, while we were mesmerized by our cell phones, notebooks, lap tops, desk tops, flat screens, Play Stations and X-Boxes; global banks and corporations took control through corrupt politicians that the non-informed American voters put in to power.       America… the land of the free, the most bad- ass country on the face of the planet, that once believed in the reverent words ‘In God We Trust’, turned its back on God, and his son, and his people, until finally… he turned his back on us.  The government started listening, and watching Americans through all their hopelessly addictive devices.        They militarized law enforcement, confiscated firearms, set up road blocks, charged people to drive, and fined them for not being able to afford health-care.     Next, the U.S.A was graced with the presence of tens of thousands of One World “peace keepers”, bolstering the numbers of pro- government forces.        Then came the re-education camps, for all the veterans and all the soldiers and law enforcement that didn’t want the old America to go away, and all of the people that dared to confront the government and ask questions, and try and show what they were doing to the rest of oblivious America.            And that was that…without firing a shot, martial law, was law. The government took over, selling America to the highest paying world globalist.  The once great United States of America was re-named, World 112. Anyone bold enough not to call it that was given a one-way ticket to the re-education camps.        Then they changed our flag and that’s when things really hit the s**t-stained fan.      The true American soldiers and law enforcement army rose up and fought back.      Just as it seemed they would be wiped out by overwhelming odds, the true American peoples’ army rose up to stand beside them. Together, they fought for America, side by side, state by state, paying for the blood soaked sacred ground with their lives and the lives of their children.      Finally, it began to look as if they would win, and that America would be restored to the shining beacon of the world that she used to be. That’s when the sirens went off.      The lucky people made it into the domes beneath the earth before the nuclear bombs starting falling like piano sized rain.  The earth caught on fire, shifting on its axis. Hundreds of millions of unlucky people- not in the domes under the earth- died horrible deaths.      For years the people in the underground domes waited to see the light of the sun again… and to breathe open air.  Then the food ran out.  People started eating other people.      As if that wasn’t bad enough, after the people came out of the underground domes, they realized that the radiation had done strange things to the animals and that some of the people that survived the bombs- outside of the domes- looked less like people and more like creatures from childhood nightmares.      Towns and cities were re-established by the government. Cannibalism and anti-religion was the law of the land. Anybody that didn’t go along was captured and used for food or slave labor.  Finally, the people that wanted to live free, rebelled and escaped, out into the desolate wastelands.      The One World forces had enough problems to deal with in the cities. They’d lost a lot of soldiers in the war for America and the subsequent nuclear downpour.  They decided to unleash radiation induced experimental monsters they called snogs- half snakes/half dogs- and blood eyes; roaming bands of radiation mutated cannibals- into the wastelands to hunt down the rebels and exterminate them.        The true American rebels soon realized they were no longer at the top of the food chain. They had little to give them comfort, except for one thing that united them in their cause for survival.        It started… one listener at a time.  Every evening, between eight and nine pm. the government controlled radio waves would be interrupted by a rebel DJ who called himself, the Red Robin.  At first, the true American rebel’s thought it was a prank, a trick by the One World officials to lure them into annihilation and s*****y.        But the Red Robin turned out to be a straight shooter who remembered the way things were, before it rained nuclear bombs, and the lights went out, and people started eating each other, and monsters roamed the earth.       The gravel voiced, rebel DJ’s surly style was like a rock-n-roll jack hammer, right in your face.  His heart- felt broadcast woke the rebels up, uniting them. He reminded the people that there’s strength in unity.  He let them know its’ okay to still love their country, the old country, that was once free America.        He gave them something they’d long since forgotten about.  He gave them hope.      Now you know what’s going on, and why it’s going on.  That’s where this story begins… after it’s gone…everything and all that’s left is a small force of true American rebel’s, trying to survive, and rebuild, and live free… and stay off the menu.   Chapter 2      “This is the Red Robin.        Wake up all you wasteland walkers and Blood-eye stalkers. You better listen up…I got something to say, and a short time to say it.      Pay attention Fortress Fighters… check your weapons, because it’s time to dance, and Magnus and the Blood-eyes are leading.  In the meantime, here’s a song all you wasteland warriors can sink your teeth into… if you have any left that is.   Goodnight true Americans, hold on, stay strong, and fight on!”         It was silent a few seconds, then the unforgettable “Won’t Back Down” by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers came drifting out from the dented speaker of Daniel’s ancient, hand-cranked radio.  The song took him back to when he was a teenager, fooling around in the back of his dad’s Cadillac with his first high-school crush. Things had been good back then, so simple and wonderfully new.       Daniel turned off the radio, stoking a modest fire while looking around the well- provisioned cave he’d taken from some Blood-eyes earlier in the day. He’d been forced to kill all of them, except for a woman he’d found hiding naked in the back of the cave with her hands bound behind her, and a rope around her neck.        She sat across from him now, putting her raw, bleeding wrist close to the fire.  It was hard to tell, because she was so filthy, but Daniel thought that she might be around forty, maybe younger, but not much.  The woman had been leery of him, staying in the back of the cave until she’d heard the ominous radio broadcast.       He reached deep into the cargo pocket of his battle-stained, camouflage pants, pulling out his Zippo lighter.  “My name’s Daniel Brady,” he informed her.        The filthy women looked at him with frightened eyes; as if she were trying to decide whether or not she could trust him. “Chloe,” she murmured.      Daniel nodded at her, trying to smile reassuringly. “Okay Chloe, you get some sleep. I’ll make sure we’re not disturbed.”        The woman jerked a little when he put another piece of wood on the fire.  She looked at him for a moment, then, lowering her gaze, started to shrug out from under the wool blanket he’d put over her when he’d first found her. “I belong to you now,” she offered dismally.        Daniel looked at her for a moment, smiling grimly before shaking his head no.    “That won’t be necessary,” he replied.         She stared at him curiously for a moment, before curling up into a ball next to the fire.      Several moments of warm, not uncomfortable silence passed. Daniel pulled out a rare, new pack of Marlboroughs he’d taken off one of the dead Blood-eyes. He took his time opening them and pulling one out.  Flipping back the cover of his lighter, he thumbed the flint expertly, watching the glow from the flame dance around his battle scarred hand before lighting the rare treat.        “Thank you,” the women said; a little louder than she meant to.        Daniel studied her for a moment, savoring the first puff on the smoke. “You’re welcome. Get some sleep… things will look better in the morning,” he lied.      A few minutes passed.        “How did you do that?” she asked suddenly.      He stared hard at her again before answering and decided that she was pretty under all of the filth. He took another pull off the smoke, holding it in. “Do what?”      “You know… kill all of them. There were four of them.”       Daniel paused, blowing the cigarette smoke out of the corner of his mouth before speaking. “Some people build things, some people bake things…I kill things,” he answered, stirring the edge of the fire with the toe of his bloodstained combat boot.        “You were military… weren’t you?” she pried carefully, chancing a glance at him, while he was looking around the cave.        He was tall, built like a soldier, lean and chiseled, his spiky, crew cut hair, silver and perfect. He was not hard to look at she noticed, but something about him scared the hell out of her. Perhaps it was the savage way he’d killed the four cannibals, or maybe it was the simmering rage in his cobalt eyes.      “Tell you what, you don’t ask me about me… I won’t ask you about you,” he suggested.        Again, the cave was filled with not uncomfortable silence.        “I thought all the true American soldiers were killed in the Freedom war?”      Daniel’s first thought was to tell her to leave it be but the truth was, it’d been a while since he’d shared his campfire with anyone.      “They didn’t kill all of us. Some of us escaped… fought back.” He was staring at something far away that only he could see.      Chloe propped herself up on one elbow. The wool blanket slipped off of her shoulder, revealing one, well- shaped breast to him.        He turned his head modestly, forcing himself not to look, while she rearranged the blanket.        “I knew you were military, even before you killed those guys,” she said smugly.     She turned her back to him and the fire, before he could respond; promptly falling asleep.        Daniel sat in silence, enjoying the precious cigarette, staring hungrily at the swell of her hip.  It had been a long time since he’d laid with a woman and it weighed heavy on him.  He snubbed out the half -finished cigarette and slid it back in the pack, leaning his broad, aching back against a small rock formation behind him, trying to get comfortable, but not too comfortable.        He didn’t know what to do about the woman. He couldn’t leave her in the mountains.  He thought briefly about putting her out of her misery while she slept. She damn sure couldn’t go with him.  He pulled his grand-father’s stag handled Bowie knife out from behind his back, watching the reflection from the fire dance across the razor sharp, blood-stained steel.        She turned over, facing the fire; still asleep.  The wool blanket fell from her hip, revealing her to him.      His throat thickened. His pulse began to race. Shaking his head, he put his knife away before gingerly reaching over and pulling the blanket back over her nakedness.     He couldn’t be sure, but he thought that she almost smiled.        What the hell, I can drop her off at Fortress when I stop to re-supply…she might not be that bad to have around. He smiled to himself, taking out the other half of the cigarette and lighting it.            It was going to be a long ass night.       Chapter 3           Before it rained nuclear bombs… Magnus’s name was Albert Penny Wise Chesterfield.           He’d been named Albert, because that was his great grand-father’s name. His middle name, Penny Wise, was bestowed on him in honor of Stephen King, the murdering clown that made almost everyone afraid of clowns.      In some families, athletic ability is genetically passed down from one generation to another.  Some families are great craftsman, some masterful chefs, some lawmen, others writers and so on.  Unfortunately, Albert’s genetic hand me downs, consisted of, insanity, and murder.        Albert was seven when he watched his uncle Siros methodically kill and dismember somebody with a blunt axe in their basement, while he puked and cried like a newborn baby in the corner. That seemed like an eternity ago to him now, as he sat on his throne made out of human bone in the center of a massive cavern, deep within his Keep, pretending to listen to the general of his Army.      General Blood was telling him that Fortress was well fortified, and would not be easily taken.      Magnus shushed him with an outstretched hand, taking a hand-sized, blood-red bell from one of the inside pockets of his black, floor length, leather duster.  He smiled and raised his eyebrows at him, before winking and ringing the bell.      For a moment, nothing happened. Then, off to his right, the biggest snog the general had ever seen came lumbering up and began to hiss at the ground at Magnus’s feet.  General Blood was shocked. He gripped the handle of his well- used broadsword, watching the massive creature nervously.         The snog paid him no mind.         “You see, they belong to me now, all of them. Our army has just gotten an upgrade,” exclaimed Magnus.      The general stared at the snog in disgust, shaking his head. “How is this possible?”      Magnus’s psychotic, blood red eyes bored into him.  General Blood could see him toying with the idea of letting the giant, half snake, half pre-historic dog loose on him.      But Magnus didn’t. Instead he wagged his index finger at him, shaking his head. “Oh no… you don’t get to know about that General. Just know that they are under my command…. and your command… as long as you do what I command.”         The general licked his razor-sharp teeth. “I will do as you order, but if they turn on us… I’ll kill every last one of them.”      Magnus got a kick out of that. He laughed loud and long; the sound echoing off the cavern walls ominously.      General Blood tried not to let Magnus see his disappointment, but it was evident on his broad, sweating face. He’d been patiently planning to takeover Magnus’ territory for years.  There were countless, government-placed snogs roaming the free lands in the territory. If they were all united under Magnus, it would make him so powerful that no one would be able to stand against him.        Magnus smiled at him. He knew what his backstabbing general was thinking, and he liked it, like he liked a good human brain pie.        “We’ll attack Fortress first light,” growled the general.        Magnus nodded, “Of course you will…send in your berserkers first, then attack them with the main force. Wait until Fortress has spent all of their resources, then send in the snogs.”       Blood frowned and nodded. “How many snogs will be at Fortress?”        Magnus looked at the giant at his feet and the snog looked up at him. The General shuddered while he watched them communicating somehow. “My new friend says for you to worry about your own numbers.”        Blood’s hand tightened around the hilt of his sword.        The snog sensed his anger and coiled its five-foot-long neck tightly to strike.        Magnus let the impromptu pissing match play out. Just before it exploded into violence, he snapped his fingers. Instantly, the alpha snog relaxed, licking its hundreds of needle like fangs with its foot-long, barbed tongue at Blood, before settling down at Magnus’s feet.        “The berserkers are impossible to control. Last battle they started eating our own soldiers before we could get them contained,” General Blood argued.      Magnus looked at him and chuckled. “Your berserkers are under the same spell as the snogs. I control them now. They will do as you say, as long as you do what I say. Send them in first, then send in the troops. Fortress will be easily taken.”         Blood saw red for a moment, actually taking an unbidden step toward the throne, before catching himself.      Magnus raised his eyebrows, whistling softly. The snog lifted its stop sign sized, swaying head, preparing itself to strike.      The General managed to get himself under control and step back a few paces. He’d created the berserkers himself, by taking the blood of children and giving it to his mentally insane Blood- eyes. The results had been- as they say- off the charts. There were hundreds of them now, locked away, far down in the deepest caves.  The General had been saving them for his coup attempt and now that they were under Magnus’s control, he damned well didn’t like it, one damn little bit.        Magnus stared at him, smiling. “Are you displeased General Blood?”        The General stared back hard at Magnus for a moment before answering. He wanted to tell him, hell yes he was displeased, but he didn’t.  He was smart enough to realize when he was playing against a stacked deck.   “We’ll attack at first light,” he saluted and bowed slightly.       “Bon a petit,” Magnus chuckled, dismissing his General with a wave of his hand, watching him go with a gloating look on his face.         “He will try and rise against you, Magnus,” a reptilian sounding voice came from the darkness of the shadows.        Magnus smiled and nodded, settling back down on his throne. “I know, Uncle Siros. You’ll eventually have to put him and his loyal followers under the same spell you put the snogs and the berserkers under.”        “It doesn’t work that way Magnus!” his uncle Siros snapped. “The snogs and the berserkers don’t have the mental capacity to resist.”        Magnus watched the black and red robed wizard step out of the shadows and approach the throne.  He was short and hunched over with sallow skin and beady, blood-red eyes. He looked as if he’d crawled out of a radiation soaked coffin.     Magnus had lost track of how many times his uncle had used dark magic and human sacrifice to prolong his miserable life.      The snog perked up immediately.  His uncle looked past Magnus, smiling with his pointy, rotten green teeth, staring the hulking creature dead square in the kisser. Like it was his long lost friend… like they were going to swap spit or something.        Magnus watched his uncle stroke the hideous snog at the base of its great serpent head, while speaking to it softly in a language Magnus didn’t recognize. He stared at his uncle, smiling convincingly, while he pictured him struggling on the end of his broadsword.        Before the bombs went off, Albert Pennywise Chesterfield and his uncle Siros had been travelling killers with over thirty murdered and mutilated dead bodies to their credit. Serial killers, people used to call them. Now the territory was theirs and everything in it, because they were the first to be willing to kill for it, and eat anybody that got in their way.      Magnus had come on board with the One World government’s way of thinking right from the start. He liked the new way of things because it gave him license to kill and eat people without fear of reprisal. His orders had been to take Fortress first, then his unstoppable army of radiation mutated, insane Blood-eyes would march on Over Watch and the Cavern of the Light, until finally, he would take the ultimate prize, the Star Towers.        For all of his service and hard work he would be given Over Watch and the Cavern of the Light.  Magnus chuckled, stood and stretched.        His uncle watched him carefully, warily backing up out of his reach.        Magnus was extremely intimidating, and by far the more physically powerful. He stood well over seven feet tall and weighed close to four hundred pounds, with waist long, blood red hair and radiation scarred ashen skin.  Siros had once seen him rip a rock demon in half with his bare hands.        Magnus was the apex predator of the territory.             Chapter 4          Larry “Pops” Ford was listening for the sound of his middle son’s return to camp. He stood with his back to their cautious fire, scanning the tree line, while the other remaining members of his group scraped together enough provisions for a pot of hard luck stew.  Hearing a branch break, he smiled. Moments later, his middle son, Jesse, stepped out into the open.   Pop’s nodded at him as he came closer; proud of him but unable to say so.        The younger man came up beside him, turning his back to the fire as well; just like Pops had taught him. Stare into a fire at night and you lose your ability to see in the darkness. Only flatlanders made that mistake, and they usually didn’t get the chance to make it twice.      “It’s not good,” Jessie spoke quietly so that the rest of the group couldn’t hear him.      “How many…?” asked Pops.        “Too many to fight off… if they catch us here, out in the open,” answered Jessie.        Pops nodded, looking toward the distant mountain range longingly. “We’re still a day away from Fortress,” he calculated out loud.        “A day, if we push it,” added Jessie. He was looking at the mountains with the same longing look on his tired, young face.        “Might have to travel at night, make up some ground,” Pops reluctantly suggested.        For a moment, neither of them spoke.      “Damned if we do, damned if we don’t,’’ Jessie said finally.        They chuckled at that. It had become their mantra since the world burned.        “Get something to eat, make sure everybody’s ready to go.” Pops touched his son’s shoulder as he went by. “Glad your back,” he managed.         “Me too,” Jessie said. He touched his dad’s hand and turned toward the camp to get something to eat.        Pops breathed a long sigh of relief, looking up at the stars. “…thank you God…keep us safe tonight… and tell Maggie, I love her…amen”      The group’s battered transistor radio, crackled and sputtered to life. For a moment there was only a low tone, then the sounds of Pink Floyds “Dark Side of the Moon” filled the air of their meager campsite; holding them all in its melodic embrace as it played on into the vicious night.     Pops allowed himself to relax for a few brief moments, closing his grass green eyes, letting the music soothe his jaded soul.   He smiled; thinking of his three son’s mother, before the Blood-eyes took her from them.  They’d often danced to this song in the back of his pick-up, before making love, and falling asleep in each other’s arms with the stars as their blanket.   Pops grimaced as the pain of losing her swept over him without warning.        The song came to an end, followed by a few, reality drenched moments of silence.      “This is the Red Robin, all you night walkers and big talkers, listen up out there… Fortress needs fighter’s… I repeat… Fortress is in danger and needs fighters.         Just make sure you wait to leave till morning. Stay in your caves until daylight and keep the fires burning. The only creatures stirring out there are the ones that go bump in the night, the one’s you can’t see… until they’re eating your family.       If you’re thinking about wandering around out there in the darkness, think again, because the odds are stacked in their favor… stay holed up, and listen to some rock and roll instead… because, when it’s all said and done…only the music remains.        Goodnight true Americans. Hold on, stay strong, and fight on.”      Silence again, then, ‘Turn the Page’ performed by Metallica came on; playing into the lonely night wind.        Jessie looked at his dad. Pops shook his head. They had no choice and they both knew it.  They were sitting ducks out here on the open ground. They would have to do the very thing that the rebel DJ had warned against. They would have to travel at night.      “Damned if we do, damned if we don’t, right son?” Pops growled.        Jessie took a deep breath and blew it out before answering. “Damn straight…”  He knelt down, checking his pack and weapons while Lucas, his hulking younger brother, kicked dirt on the fire.      The ragged group of wanderers, stood huddled together in the faint glow of the eerie moon.  As ready as they could be; knowing that it was almost certain suicide moving in the darkness, knowing if they didn’t, they were already dead.             Chapter 5 Freedom sucked backwards through a jagged straw Ripped and shredded left to dangle in the wind. Pride and country gone to fail and despair hope is but a fleeting memory a whisper of the greatness that was once America                                                                                       Poet                                                                                                                                                                                                                  Poet and the old lady sat on top of one of Fortress’s lookout towers, smoking a joint while they looked out across the valley at the large force of Blood-eyes gathering for battle.      The old lady took the joint from Poet, taking a hit, while she tried to count the enemy below.   “How many, do you think?” she grunted, then coughed, handing the joint back to him.        “Bout five hundred…” he guessed, taking a quick hit before passing it back to her.      “More like a thousand… a lot more than last time…”        “Yes, a lot more indeed,” Poet replied; concern evident in his voice.  Snubbing the joint out, he put it back in the pocket of his ragged, grey fleece, North Face jacket for after the battle; if they were still alive.  He was visibly nervous.        The old lady looked at him and frowned. “We fought them off last time… we’ll fight them off again.”   Pulling a flask from her back pocket, she took a swig before handing it to him.        “Last time, all of us were here, and there wasn’t so many of them. This time they brought the berserkers with them, and there’s a lot more of them,” Poet pointed out.        The old lady didn’t argue with him. She knew he was right. She looked at the berserkers, at least a hundred strong, all with iron collars around their necks, attached to two, ten- foot- long steel poles held by two nervous, Blood-eyed soldiers a piece. When the order was given to attack, they would be released.        Frowning she pulled her waist length, straight silver hair back behind her ears, tying it there with a faded piece of green ribbon, before checking her long knives and her compound bow and arrows.  After she was satisfied everything was in order, she winked at Poet, before drawing an arrow and firing into the mass of berserkers below.        He watched her arrow sink half-way into a burly, Blood-eyed berserker’s chest. The mortally wounded cannibal grabbed the arrow, trying to stop the blood from squirting out.  The berserkers around him didn’t wait for him to fall before they started devouring him and the unfortunate guards in charge of holding him.  
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