Something different, but not so much...
Hi Everyone,
I'm writing some scenario introductions for a friend of mine. Something he'll use to prime the interest pump when folks look at his game. They are like mini-shorts. I thought you all might want to look at them. Here's the first. Tell me what you think.
Migs
Years later Private First Class Andy Migliore would remember
the zip. It came first—a cross between a passing mosquito and hot metal hissing
through cold water. Then the splat—the
sound a hand makes when slapping concrete, and finally the blood: hot and guilty.
Hot because a heartbeat previously it had been pumping in another human. Guilty
because that human was Corporal Matt Shank, Migliore’s best friend, and Migs, as
Shank liked to call him, was grateful the bullet had blown through Shank’s
head, not his.
Shank’s corpse flipped onto its
back, the blood from the shattered skull spreading across the room’s hard wood
floor. The lighter Shank had held to Migs’ cigarette but a second before, spun
across the room. Two more rounds ripped through the window, tearing chunks from
the opposite wall, showering the couch below with plaster and dust.
Migs tossed his cigarette into the
pool of blood, and crawled to the room’s other window. Below him, on the small
Italian house’s first floor, the squad’s BAR began hammering at their
assailants. On his knees now, Migs peered over the window’s sill. The squad’s
firing position looked over a small traffic circle. At least that’s what they
called them in Jersey . A fountain—as dry as
Migs’ mouth—adorned the center of the circle. Streets fanned from the circle
like spokes on a wheel. Across the way, a small café faced his building, and
from the lower window a German MG34 chattered, the bullets walking across the
stone facing below him.
Whoosh!
A stream of white smoke shot from the cemetery to his right. The stream
disappeared into the MG34’s window and erupted, dust belching from the opening.
Oh hell yeah! Migs grinned at the
silence. Fatman and Hillbilly were the best bazooka team in Italy .
Then he heard the sound all
infantrymen dreaded, heard it and his grin disappeared—the sound of squeaking
sprockets. Sarge had told them there were Tigers south of the village, but Migs
hoped the Tigers had had bigger fish to fry than a squad of riflemen and their
57mm anti-tank gun. The squeaking grew louder. Now the machine’s rumbling
diesel thrummed against the morning air. A pair of gray-uniformed German
infantry appeared at the end of the street. He didn’t fire. No one in the squad
fired. No one wanted the squeaking sprockets to know where they were. Migs
prayed, prayed hard. I’m sorry Matt died.
I’m sorry I lived. Please Lord let the squeaking be something the boys on the Fifty-seven
can handle.
It wasn’t.
First he saw the flash suppressor.
He knew that flash suppressor, knew it was bad news. The long barrel slid
inexorably into the street facing him, then the tracks, the fender, and finally
the monster, turned onto the street proper, facing Migs. The Fifty-seven crew
fired. It was hopeless. Migs knew that, the men on the Fifty-seven knew that,
but still they fired. The 57mm anti-tank gun popped impotently, the sound
seemingly no louder than Migs’ own Garand. The shell struck the Tiger dead on,
sparking bright on the gun mantle, ringing like a church bell.
Migs held his breath. Please, God, please. Migs didn’t know,
maybe the 57mm round might scare the tankers, maybe it might hurt something,
hurt someone.
It didn’t.
The motors whined as the massive
turret swung the gun toward the Fifty-seven. The eight-eight millimeter gun
spoke, and it was anything but impotent.


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