Red Sky Dawn
Copyright© 2026 by Pete Fox
Prologue
Fiction Sex Story: Prologue - Guadalcanal. In a muddy slit trench, Airman Kathy Wilkins watched delta-winged drones falling from the blood-red sky, as they dove with their explosive payloads, while cruise missiles streaked overhead. The ground shook with each hit. She held the other airman in her arms; both were hurt. They kissed. Wilkins was supposed to be going home today. Was this war? A Stinger missile streaked into the air. Two Chapter short story. Illustrated.
Caution: This Fiction Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa Fa/Fa Fiction War Big Breasts Illustrated
“It was a darkness without time. It was an impenetrable darkness. To the right and left of me rose those terrible formless things of my imagination, which I could not see because there was no light.” – Helmet for My Pillow— Robert Leckie, US Marine Corps veteran of Guadalcanal.
“A red sun rises. Blood has been spilled this night.” — Legolas (The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers).
Guadalcanal - 2028
The Solomon Islands were much like they were in August of 1942 when the US Navy dropped a division of US Marines on Guadalcanal, except with more roads and people now. “ ... From the air, the island has striking beauty with blue-green mountains towering into a brilliant tropical sky...,” * masking a hellish jungle landscape on the ground.
United States Air Force Detachment 1, 36th Air Task Force (Expeditionary), is located approximately 8 miles (13 km) east of Honiara International Airport (former Henderson Field), near Koli Point on Guadalcanal’s north coast, between the Metapona and Naumbu Rivers. The 6,000 ft × 150 ft aluminum-matted runway is oriented northwest to southeast, parallel to the coastline, and can support C-17 Globemaster IIIs and a limited number of tactical aircraft like the short-takeoff F-35B if needed.
Since September, the site has functioned as an alternate airfield used to disperse and receive aircraft in the event of a conflict while maintaining a small footprint in the region—roughly 1–1.5 km long × 0.5 km wide—using the natural jungle canopy for cover.
The roughly 200 military personnel that make up Det 1 live in modular barracks consisting of 40–60 elevated composite tube pods arranged in irregular clusters along elevated walkways at the edges of the jungle clearing. The dining hall and kitchen occupied a large pod roughly in the middle of the living quarters. A limited number of Air Force Security Forces patrol the perimeter and provide access control at key locations, such as the operations building and the Tactical Mobile Over-the-Horizon Radar (TACMOR) that is dispersed within the base, able to detect ships, aircraft, and hypersonic missiles at very long ranges.
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