Chosen Frozen - Cover

Chosen Frozen

Copyright© 2011 by lordshipmayhem

Chapter 25: Children's Crusade

Science Fiction Sex Story: Chapter 25: Children's Crusade - Welcome to Thule, the ice planet - home of the 12th Marine Brigade, the Chosen Frozen. (Sequel to Power Play.)

Caution: This Science Fiction Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa   Ma/ft   ft/ft   Fa/ft   Consensual   Romantic   Reluctant   Science Fiction   Space   Incest   Mother   Daughter   Niece   Aunt   Polygamy/Polyamory   First   Oral Sex   Petting   Exhibitionism   Voyeurism   Slow   Violence   School   Nudism   Military  

Four A-20 Warthogs clawed their way skyward, desperate to get to their assigned posting as soon as possible. Ahead, the badly damaged Venti arced somewhat gracefully toward its destination, a flat plain at the bottom of a steep-walled but wide crevasse. Just before it would have dashed itself to bits, the engines blasted the Sa'arm destroyer to a survivable terminal velocity – survivable for its organic cargo, if not for the ship itself.

As the tripedal beings inside bailed out of the now permanently immobile spacecraft, the attack aircraft barrelled down to lay severe punishment. Unfortunately the surviving Sa'arm managed to escape the doomed vessel before the bombs started to fall. The Venti was turned into so much scrap, but by that time the only thing organic in the ship were the bodies of a mere handful of already deceased Sa'arm and the contents of the food tanks.

As they struggled down the valley, the Sa'arm discovered two things about this world: it was cold, and it was covered in snow and ice. They had no warm covering for their bodies, and they had no vehicles that could cope with the slippery conditions. Soon they were floundering through the snow on foot, heading to the point where the valley bisected toward the previously detected sources of food and warmth. Their machines were left behind uselessly stuck in the snow.

The Warthogs were quickly back at a Martello some distance away, getting re-armed with fragmentation bombs by a scratch crew of Fleet Auxiliary. At a much closer Martello Captain (Cadet) Hollister was busy preparing the weapons there for the purpose the tower was originally intended for: an artillery fire base.

From the northwest, six enormous turreted vehicles were barrelling on extra-wide tracks across the tundra at impressive speed.

And from the southwest, a shiny white vehicle with gold piping and extra-wide balloon tires raced as fast as it could to the scene of the upcoming battle. A concubine in an ill-fitting, armoured, heated suit at the controls – Sergeant-Major Blondell's Greg being the only person on the entire planet who knew how to drive a stick.


Out in space, the four crewmen aboard the surviving pair of Star Arrows cursed impotently. They were weaponless and, thanks partially to their inexperience and partially to their excitement, had mismanaged their fuel consumption and couldn't make it to the fuel depot without a long period of slow coasting. They were now debating whether to continue coasting, or whether to bail out and head for Thule through the transporter nexuses built into their craft.

Suddenly, a trickle of a voice sounded unexpectedly in their ears. "Out of pickles and low on gas d'er, b'ye?"

"Who?" asked one pilot, but the other hushed him immediately.

"We could use a hand. ID yourself."

Suddenly all four men gave a shout of surprise at once. The silhouette of an Archerfish-class Patrol Combatant flashed dimly and briefly – and was less than 10 metres from the nearest Star Arrow's starboard side, looking long, lean and lethal. In the brief flash of navigational lights before the form rejoined the inky blackness of space, they spotted "PC-022 CSS HALIBUT". "Seein' as you lot needs some gas, yer jes' stays where you're to, side by each d'ere, an' I'll comes where you're at," advised the anonymous Newfoundland-accented voice.


At the primary defence line, a scattering of kids all between 11 and 13 years of age held nervously onto their RLI-1's and tried to aim through the visors of their armoured battle suits as behind them adults frantically dug trenches with ice augers, entrenching tools and literally anything they could get their insulated, heated mitts on. Ensign Greg Andrews fretted and shouted encouragement to the diggers, pausing to look up the valley from whence the enemy would be coming.

A dozen sailors emerged from the Kitten transporters behind the lines, carrying with them strange-looking bundles of metal stakes and bales of long, extra-spiky barbed wire. The stakes had been designed on an old World War I barbed wire fence design someone had uncovered in a history book, and swiftly replicated. The grand plan: to recreate, using ice and snow rather than mud, muck and mire, the trenches of Flanders Fields.

The good news was that the Sa'arm were getting bogged down in the snow and could find no purchase on the ice, delaying them. As digging under the snow either hadn't yet occurred to them or was not an option, they were also still quite visible to their aerial pursuers.

It was not all good news, however. Navy Sergeant Peele had underestimated the level of training required to fly fixed-wing VSTOL aircraft when they were used to flying spacecraft. He had counted on using the same training technique that Orville and Wilbur Wright had used: give it the old college try. That meant that he and his three fellow pilots lacked the requisite amount of skill and practise required to efficiently operate their metal steeds against an enemy that was simultaneously firing back, moving and, at range, incredibly tiny. They'd taken out the remaining wreckage of the Venti and a handful of the Sa'arm, but could do no better without risking too much. They were reduced to taking potshots and providing Samantha with desperately needed aerial reconnaissance.

As the six Rommels dashed through the snow to the battle zone, Samantha received a call from orbit announcing the arrival of a tiny scratch fleet that Admiral Van De Graaf had dispatched from Hesperusat. The fleet consisted of a handful of corvettes, the PC CSS Halibut and the cruiser CSS Ajax. The conversation was brief, and from Samantha's end, biting.

"Thank God, Captain. How many Marines have you got?"

"None."

Samantha blinked. "What kind of shore bombardment can you give us?"

"Ah, none."

"If we could at least get some of the concubines off, that would help. What transports do you have?"

"None."

"How many of your men can use the RLI-1 blaster?"

"I doubt if anyone's even seen it from closer than 10 metres. Probably none."

Dammit, she thought, this Captain is far too fond of the word "none". "Can any of you fuck counter-clockwise?" she growled, her patience absolutely gone.

"No- what? What?"

"Never mind. You can't bombard the Swarm from space, you can't come down here and shoot, you can't even get more than a few of us off. You're more use to me in space, keeping these dickheads from getting reinforcements. Send a message back to Hesperus – we need at least a company of fully-trained, armed and equipped Marines right fucking now. Not now. Not right now. Right fucking now. Got it?"

"Aye, aye, Sir." The voice that snapped back was rich with respect for someone they knew to be both so young and yet so determined.

As she broke the connection, she muttered angrily to the unnamed captain, "Keep it up. I've got a bet on ya." She then added with considerable venom, "Hoser." Her tank crew chuckled.

At that point, her tanks crested the last hill, to find themselves on the top of the valley wall, where the slope was gentle enough that they'd enjoy a clear field of fire. "AI," she requested, "broadcast for all combatants."

"All combatants are on circuit, Optio Redburn."

"OK, the tanks are in position." She heard a general cheering. "We still have some time to prepare. They're not in sight yet. We're going to prepare a killing zone just up the valley from here. Hollister, start zeroing in your artillery on that flat spot of valley floor about 2,000 metres east of our present position."

"Aye aye, Optio Redburn."

She pointed to the cadet commanding the second tank troop with her pace stick. "Take your three tanks over to the far side of the valley. Get them dug in hull down and fire a ranging shot or two into the kill zone – then cease fire and wait for my word."

"Aye aye, Optio Redburn."

"Everyone, we're going to try what's called a time-on-target. When I give the word, we let fly timed so that our cannon and tank shots all arrive at the target at the exact same time. AI, what I need from you is a delay that means that when each gun fires, its round reaches the target at the same time as every other gun does. You won't be firing – you'll be inhibiting firing."

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