Alternate History The Day The World Changed(Modern Nations ISOT to Alternate 1920)

Chapter 1: Prologue
  • Quickdraw101

    Beware My Power-Green Lantern's Light
    The nations here are being ISOT'd to the world in Robert Conroy's 1920: America's Great War, where history diverged significantly in 1914, where French timidness and incompetence results in the Germans winning the Battle of the Marne, capturing the British Expeditionary Force, and utterly routing the French Army. With a victorious German Empire, and Entente defeated, that left the United States as the only nation that could possibly rival Germany in power. Thus the Kaiser drafted plans for an invasion of the United States, annex California, and give Mexico back its lost territories in the Southwest.

    For those of you not familiar with Robert Conroy's works, I highly recommend reading his works, they are quite good.

    -------------------------

    There were many names for the events that happened on January 1st, 2020. Some thought it to be the precursor of an alien invasion. Some thought of it as The Rapture. Scientists said it was the result of unknown particles and antimatter striking multiple locations on Earth, and creating a fluctuation in time and space. But one thing was certain, was that when the clock struck midnight, and the people of the world were ready to usher in a new year, many were flung back one century in the past.

    It all started with a bright flash that was seen around the world. On every continent, bright walls of light appeared on the borders of various provinces, or in some cases, entire nations. Walls of light that went up for miles, and those on the outside couldn't make contact with those trapped, while those trapped couldn't either. Planes and cars collided with the walls of light, killing thousands in mere moments, while airports and roads became clogged with diverted planes, and stuck cars.

    For roughly half a day, the walls of light clung to the Earth, baffling scientists around the world, and throwing nearly every world government into panic. Then, suddenly, and without warning, a bright flash overtook everything in the vicinity of the bright walls of light, and faded, leaving no trace of the once present barriers.

    But when the walls finally fell, there was still no word from outside the affected areas. Highways and roads leading out of many areas terminated at the state or national boundaries. Uplink with nearly all satellites in orbit had been lost, barring the very few that happened to be overhead the select territories when it occurred. Underwater communication cables were now severed, and much of the world wide web was unavailable.

    In the regions that had experienced the event, radio operators, both private, and government, attempted to ascertain the situation that had befallen them. As dozens, and soon hundreds of reports flooded in, the scattered government and military commands listened to what was going on, and it became frighteningly clear on just what happened.

    Within the first day, the situation was made abundantly clear for those west of the Rocky Mountains. In the United States and Canada, all contact east of the Rocky Mountains was lost, and all infrastructure terminated at state borders, a fact which fascinated and horrified many scientists who observed the scene. Such details convinced many that either a supernatural, or extremely advanced source, was behind this.

    One thing was certain however, both the United States, and Canada, no longer had a national capital. In fact, most of both nations were now gone. Canada consisted of just British Columbia and the Yukon. In the United States, the West Coast, Hawaii, Alaska, Idaho, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada, were all that was left. Or at least, the 21st century versions were still there. Most of the airwaves were deathly silent, but a number of broadcasts were still on the air, the broadcasters just as terrified as those in the remains of the United States.


    That's also when they realized that the number of national capitals still broadcasting on the airwaves was depressingly small. Caracas, Managua, Havana, Buenos Aires, La Paz, Quito, Dublín, Stockholm, Lisbon, Madrid, Bern, Vaduz, Reykjavik, Amsterdam, Brussels, Luxembourg, Andorra, Nicosia, Antananarivo, Cairo, Rabat, Kigali, Dodoma, Lagos, Nairobi, Victoria, Moroni, Port Louis, Djibouti City, Tbilisi, Yerevan, Astana, Beirut, Colombo, Bangkok, Taipei, Jakarta, and Auckland, were the only national capitals still on the air. Meanwhile, broadcasts came in from places such as Victoria and Tasmania, Northern Ireland, Okinawa, Jeju, the Falkland Islands, Réunion and Mayotte islands, and New Caledonia, stating that no contact could be made with the capitals of their respective nations.

    But the reports that came over radio were those of fleets of ships off their coastlines, armies directly across their border, and unknown aircraft breaching their airspace. Other reports came in about a complete shift in the local environment, as well as neighboring cities and towns being entirely different, or nonexistent. In some cases, gunfire was exchanged with strangely uniformed men, or if reports from Taiwan were to be believed, naval gunfire from battleships off the coastline.

    In the United States and Canada, it was soon discovered that the countries they once knew, no longer existed. When mobilized units of the National Guard and police units along the border investigated, they were met with masses of civilians, police, militia, and US army soldiers. There was just one problem. The masses of life to their east were dressed, and in the case of the soldiers, equipped, a century out of date at the very least. After many confused, and oftentimes, tense exchanges of information, they had soon found out that the date was January 1st, 1920.

    There was no way to deny what had happened, the evidence was blatant, and in everyone's face. Whether they were a civilian, soldier, or national leader, the reality of the situation could not be ignored. Nor could the problems that began to arise as a result of "The Event".
     
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    Chapter 2
  • "While many things are still unclear as of this moment, one thing is for certain, the world we once knew, is gone."

    The words hit the recruits of Alpha Company, First Recruit Training Battalion, hard as they sat in the center highway of the squadbay, listening to the shocked and terrified newscaster report on the events that had just happened over the last half day.

    The day had begun like any other, 0400 wake up, Sergeant Hall waking them up, and ordering them to the sandpits outside, and IT'ing them in order to wake them up. Then they got dressed, turned to morning clean up, and once that was finished, were marched to chow. But just as they reached the First Battalion chow hall, the bright wall of light lit up the early morning sky from the south and west. Walls so large and so high that not even airlines could fly over them, a fact they learned when a passenger airline taking off from San Diego International, collided with the wall in a loud explosion that sent the entire recruit depot into complete lockdown.

    The Commanding General and Sergeant Major called an immediate halt to all training, official or unofficial, while the crisis was evaluated. MP's and infantry Marines from the range were patrolling the base armed, while additional runners went to every battalion and company, with orders from the Commanding General that every recruit was to be secured inside their respective squad bays, and that Drill Instructors were to be armed immediately. Before long, every on duty Drill Instructor where equipped with M9's, and those who were infantry or MARSOC, were given rifles, flaks, and helmets.

    Everyone was on edge, and it showed. The normally stoic and emotionless Drill Instructors who molded civilians to recruits, and then to United States Marines, were very visibly unnerved by what was happening. And when the news agencies finally began to report on what had happened, it did everything but put their minds at ease.

    "All contact with Washington D.C., and in fact every state east of the Rocky Mountains, is unable to be reached. In addition, radio communication with most nations in the world have been severed. Right now, units of the California National Guard have been called up by Governor Newsom, and has requested additional support from the United States military to assist in the crisis. And-"

    The newscaster paused as an aid ran up in front of the camera, and began whispering something in the man's ear. Whatever the aid said, it had only startled the man even further.

    "W-we're now going live to the border at Tijuana, where units of the California National Guard and San Diego Police Department have engaged in a standoff with…" he looked over at the aid, who was now out of camera shot. "This can't be real? German soldiers?"

    "Yes, Dave, it's true."
    the aid said.

    "We now go live to the San Ysidro Port of Entry, where a tense standoff exists between the California National Guard and the SDPD, against German soldiers on the border."

    "German soldiers?" Recruit Rodriguez murmured to another recruit, Davids, who sat next to him.

    "Quiet, bitches!" Sergeant Hall snapped, not taking his eyes off the TV.

    The live feed shifted, and when it did, the squadbay got so quiet that you couldn't even hear breathing. Senior Drill Instructor Staff Sergeant Miller stared at the TV in disbelief, while Sergeant Hall just shook his head.

    "Unbelievable," Hall muttered to himself. "How the fuck is this possible?"

    "Fuck if I know," Miller said. "When they said something about an army on the border, I thought they were smoking crack. Now though? I don't know what the fuck to think." As they continued to watch the TV, the Series Commander, Captain James O'Brian, entered through the back hatch, waving his arms, and said.

    "Sit the fuck down, and turn that shit off!" he ordered, standing in front of the rear hatch, and crossing his arms. "I got some bad news for all of you, and practically no good news."

    "What the fuck is going on sir?" Staff Sergeant Miller asked.

    "We're not in Kansas anymore, Toto!" O'Brian chuckled mirthlessly.

    "Sir?"

    "What I gotta say is gonna sound unbelievable, but at this point, I don't think it matters. To put it bluntly, the state of California, as well as all states west of the Rocky Mountains, as well as a number of other nations on the planet, have been flung back to January 1st, 1920." O'Brian said bluntly. "I know you were all watching the news when I came in, and you certainly saw the situation on the border. Imperial German cavalry with weapons a century out of date, isn't exactly something you'd find in 2020. And that's before we get into the rest of everything we've picked up so far."

    O'Brian began to pace back and forth from one stanchion to another, muttering a curse underneath his breath before continuing.

    "Reports from Taiwan and Okinawa are saying that Japanese naval ships are off the coast, bombarding certain sections of the coastline, and are being engaged by the Taiwanese Navy and Air Force on Okinawa. Battle is still raging last we heard. In Europe, Sweden and Switzerland are reporting German military units opposite their borders, and Armenia is reporting a mass of Ottoman soldiers that have begun shelling border towns, and have mobilized the army to deal with. And to top it all off, we're getting radio intercepts from out east, about President Woodrow Wilson authorizing the mobilization of National Guard and militia units to the Rocky Mountains, to investigate the strange occurrence that has severed the western states from the rest of the country."

    As O'Brian looked over the Drill Instructors and recruits alike, there was no mistaking the collective fear, shock, and uncertainty drawn across their faces as he spoke. He could imagine what was going through their heads right about now. MCRD San Diego took recruits from west of the Mississippi River, and those across the Pacific, and right now, a great many of these recruits, like many on the Depot, had no home to go back to. Hell, a great many of those who came from states not west of the Rockies had no home to go back to either.

    "As far as we can tell, the west coast, Alaska, Hawaii, Utah, Arizona, Idaho, and Nevada, are the only states from the 21st century that have been flung back with us. If any of you come from states other than those, you have no home to go back to. However, I will note that a few of you, who were in the process of becoming naturalized citizens," O'Brian's eyes flicked to three specific recruits present, who came from Venezuela, Kenya, and Kazakhstan. "Your homelands came back in this event, and all three of which are facing some unique problems, based on the few radio intercepts we're getting from them. A number of nations seemed to have come back with us in fact, but most are smaller nations, not any major powers, or whatnot. Everyone seems pretty terrified and confused right about now, and I can't say I blame them one bit. I'm very much in the same boat."

    "So where does this leave us, sir?" Sergeant Hall asked. "Not just in training recruits, but everything? If we're a century in the fucking past, we're cut off from the rest of the government, military, and everything. What does this mean for us going forward?"

    "Sergeant, I wish I could answer that, but I can't. About the only answer I can give is in regards to training. Maybe in a few days it'll get started again, but even now it's obvious some changes will have to be made in the schedule. Graduation dates for one thing, will have to be pushed forward, some things gotten rid of, others given more emphasis."

    "They decided that already?" Miller asked.

    "No, just me using my common sense when considering the situation. The West Coast alone has over 50 million people residing in it, so food and fuel is going to be a major concern."

    "And if we're really back in 1920, I don't think all the farmland in America is up to the task. Not to mention other various problems we'll have." Hall said. "You said Woodrow Wilson is the president in those radio broadcasts?"

    "Yep, which presents even more problems." O'Brian sighed.

    "Say, aren't you getting your bachelors in history, Sergeant Hall?" Staff Sergeant Miller asked, remembering the times he found the man studying late in the DI hut on his laptop.

    "Yeah, I am, and that's what's got me fucking worried. This ain't exactly a graceful time in American history, especially in regards to race relations." Hall replied. "Woodrow Wilson fought to keep America segregated, and led to the Second Klan rising to prominence throughout the United States!"

    "The man was, is, extremely fucking racist. Hell, 1920 America in itself is extremely racist. Jim Crow and segregation are the law of the land, something that has a lot of the higher ups concerned." O'Brian said.

    "I'd be fucking concerned too, sir! You think Wilson would allow me, or half the recruits in this room, into the military!?" Hall said pointedly. "He'd have no problem with my black ass hanging from a Klansman's noose, and would be disgusted at what he sees here!"

    "You're not wrong, Sergeant Hall," Miller sighed, running a hand down his tired face. "If we're well and truly a century in the past, and by all indications I believe we are, we're in for a very rough time indeed."

    They said nothing for a few moments, standing there in silence until one of the recruits, the platoon guide, raised his hand to speak.

    "Just go ahead and ask your question, son," Staff Sergeant Miller said tiredly, as he turned the TV back on, and faced his guide.

    "Where does this leave our training, sir? Will we graduate on time?" Recruit Watson asked. Normally a question like that would have him and the squad leader doing bends and thrusts on the quarter deck, but today wasn't a normal day. Nothing about this day was normal.

    "I honestly don't know, Watson," Miller replied, looking over at Captain O'Brian. "Are we graduating them on time, sir?" The Captain didn't answer, his gaze stuck on the TV hanging on the wall.

    "Very soon I believe," O'Brian answered as he turned up the volume of the TV, and moved out of the way of the recruits whose view was blocked.

    Gunfire, explosions, and panicked voices came through the TV as the border standoff turned violent, as American and German troops exchanged fire less than 20 miles away. Outside and overhead, the roar of jet aircraft could be heard heading south, and air raid sirens began to blare. In the distance, the faint sound of explosions could be heard as well, and Captain O'Brian's phone began to buzz incessantly.

    "Very soon."
     
    Chapter 3
  • Captain Rafael Perez was not having a good day. Admittedly, the day had started off fairly well, and it seemed to be shaping up to be just another routine patrol pattern. It would be the last week before the upcoming naval exercises with elements of the Russian, Chinese, and the Cuban navies, which were in port all around Venezuela, including in Maracaibo. But early in the morning, a bright wall of light completely cut Venezuela off from the rest of the world, and all communications with the outside world had ceased.

    When the wall had finally gone away, it had seemed as if the entire world had gone straight to hell. Barely any national capitals were still broadcasting on the air, and the Americans were screaming about half of their nation being gone. Others reported large, but outdated armies sitting on their borders. Even more strange were older styled radio intercepts coming in from Brazil, Colombia, and even Miami, in which they claimed the date was January 1st, 1920.

    Neither he nor his crew aboard the Patrol Boat Naiguatá could make heads or tails of what was happening. All they knew is that the coast in and around Venezuela was choked with ships, some of which were not responding to radio calls, and had no maritime transmitter to signify where they were. Much like the ship that was but mere kilometers away from his ship right now.

    Sailing at a distance of roughly 10 kilometers ahead, was a ship straight out of the previous century. The ship in question was at least a century out of date, probably older, and had the look of an old WW1 torpedo destroyer, instead of a ship one would expect to find on the seas today.

    And to make things even stranger, the ship was American. Only it wasn't. The flag, which was waving in the wind, wasn't the 50 stars configuration. There were only 48 stars, arranged differently than the American flags he knew. And why were there only two ships? If the United States wanted to saber rattle and threaten his nation, they'd send a whole carrier strike group, not two very outdated ships.

    "What the hell!?" Perez cursed to himself silently, looking at the ship ahead. "Have they responded to any of our hails?" Perez asked, turning to his communications officer.

    "No sir! But the bandwidth on all frequencies are clogged with static, almost like it's being jammed but…" Ensign Ruiz trailed off, his face shifting as he tried to figure out just what was going on. Then an idea struck him. "Is the Fire Control System picking it up as well?" He asked, turning to the weapons officer.

    "We very much are." Lieutenant Santos replied. "Those two American ships are both giving off the exact same signature. You have any idea what might be causing it?"

    "It'll sound crazy, and I doubt most of you will believe me if I do tell you." Ruiz said.

    "Son, we just witnessed a massive wall of light block our entire country off from the world, and then disappear." Perez replied as his lips curved upward in a slight smile. "Go ahead and tell me what you think." Ruiz sighed heavily before replying.

    "I think we've been sent back in time, sir." Ruiz said. "And those ships are using spark gap transmitters, sir. Ships used them until the early 1920's, and it would explain the interference we're experiencing, and why we can't get in contact with our other ships on most frequencies. It'll also explain why we can't communicate with those ships."

    "That…makes sense, honestly. Although I don't think that makes me feel any more at ease. Quite the opposite in fact."

    "But if what Ensign Ruiz says is correct, and those radio transmissions we heard before we set out to sea aren't bullshit," First Master Sergeant Miguel Castillo began. "Then we've been handed a wonderful opportunity. A world where the colonialist empires of Europe just fought the bloodiest war they've ever known. A world where the United States is not the imperialist juggernaut it was in the 21st century. A world where we can be the bulwark against western imperialism with our Latin American brothers, and African cousins. A world we can shape in our image!"

    Some of the bridge crew looked wearily at the grizzled Master Sergeant, his ambitions unnerving a few of them, while many others admired, and agreed with his ideas. Something that was confirmed as some of those present began voicing their agreement with him.

    "We could take the Panama Canal from the Americans, hell we could liberate Puerto Rico!" Petty Officer Alejandro said. "We could kick the Americans out of Latin America for good, and they won't be able to do a thing about it!"

    "I think the Americans have more battleships and armored cruisers than we have missiles, Petty Officer." Ensign Rivera added. "They could just throw their whole fleet at us until we run out of ammo."

    "Bah, even if they have enough ships, they have no way to harm our Air Force!" Castillo said with certainty. "If the Yankees wish to try something foolish, let them! Let those imperialists send their Sailors and Marines to die in their thousands, it will make them weaker, and us stronger! Especially with all of South America behind us!"

    "And there's the Russians, Chinese, and Cuban ships here as well! We could stroll up the American coast, all the way to Washington itself, and take a visit to the White House! The look on the American president's face would be glorious!" Rivera chuckled. "It would be too easy!"

    "Perhaps," Perez said, inwardly scowling at the foolishness of his subordinates. Even with a century of technological advantage, taking on the entire United States Navy would be a challenge, to say nothing of actually stepping foot on American territory. Sooner or later they would realize the feasibility, or lack thereof, of such an endeavor. "Ensign Ruiz, what is the status of the other American ship, the more heavily armed one?"

    "Sir, the Sucre and Warao are shadowing her and it seems she is-"

    "INCOMING!" the weapons officer shouted as glints of light, followed by the distant sound of thunder, sent everyone bracing for impact. Two large geysers of water erupted around the Naiguatá, rising higher than the superstructure of the ship.

    "ALL HANDS TO BATTLESTATIONS NOW!" Perez ordered, as everyone on the bridge scrambled to their stations, and the battle stations alarm was rung throughout the entire ship. "Damage report, how badly did we get hit!"

    "No damage sir!" one of the bridge crew called out. "But the shots landed close to our waterline! Another volley or two and they'll be able to hit us!"

    "Then we won't let that happen! Lieutenant Santos, plot a firing solution on that damn ship, and sink the son of a bitch!" Perez snarled as he heard yet more thunderous booms, albeit from his port and starboard sides, as the two Constitución class gunboats flanking the Naiguatá began to open fire on the ship. Then his own gun began to fire, and with their first shot, landed a direct hit on the enemy vessel.

    "Direct hit!" Lieutenant Santos cheered.

    "Sucre and Warao report multiple hits on the enemy ship sir!" Ensign Ruiz reported.

    Picking up his binoculars, he aimed them in the direction of the offending ship. Sure as hell, the American ship was burning. She had already taken multiple hits to her hull and deck, and white uniformed sailors were scurrying across her decks, running damage control, or arming weapon emplacements. The ship's guns were still firing though, and as he shifted his view a few degrees to starboard, he could see that one of the shots had even hit home.

    The Warao had taken a hit to its port side by the enemy's guns, but continued to fire on the enemy ship, which was now being bracketed by the combined fire from five ships, plus assorted naval helicopters that were in the air, and had begun to strafe the ship. Some gun emplacements on the ship attempted to fire on an Mi-17 coming for a strafing run, but was quickly silenced by the helicopter's rocket pods.

    He then shifted his gaze over to the other American ship, which was being swarmed by a UH-1 and Mi-17, both of which were firing onto the deck of the ship. Then, as soon as it began, the firing had ceased. The ship which had started the fight was leaning heavily to port, her hull covered in holes from cannon fire, and fires burned all over her. Lifeboats were lowered into the water, and the flag located at the stern of the ship was cut down by a sailor, who then jumped into one of the lowered boats.

    Returning his gaze to the other ship, its flag had been cut down, with a white flag flying atop the bridge, as multiple helicopters flew in a holding pattern around it. The ship's engines had been cut, and presumably had also shut its primitive, and destructive radio off as well. Perez could see fast boats filled with Marines rapidly approaching the ship, with the two smaller gunboats following close behind.

    "Well," Perez said, putting down his binoculars. "Looks like we won."

    "Anticlimactic if you ask me, sir." Lieutenant Santos said, right as a loud and bright explosion ripped through the battered American ship, sending the ship upward out of the water, splitting its hull in two, before splashing down hard into the water.

    "You were saying, Lieutenant," Perez said as he looked through his binoculars at the ship. The two halves were rapidly sinking, most of the lowered lifeboats were disintegrated by the blast, which included most of the survivors. What few he did see were desperately trying to get away from the burning wreck of the ship. "Must have been a fire in an ammunition magazine, didn't see any torpedoes in the water." he noted.

    "A torpedo would be a waste for a ship that small anyway." Santos said. "If a battleship or heavy cruiser comes around, then a torpedo would be perfect for killing them."

    "Our guns would reliably kill most ships that aren't dreadnaughts or battleships, just gotta hit them in the right place." Ruiz put in. "But we'd need missiles and torpedoes for anything bigger, especially if something like the Arizona or Nevada were to show up. I doubt they will though. If I remember correctly, the only other ships the Americans would have in the Caribbean around this time will be just like the ones we took down."

    "How do you know so much about American naval ships, Ensign?" Master Sergeant Castillo asked.

    "I'm a naval history enthusiast, Master Sergeant. It's my main hobby outside of work."

    "Looks like your hobby is about to become really important," Santos commented.

    "You think you can identify the ship class when they tug that piece of junk into port?" Captain Perez asked.

    "I should be able to, sir. If not, I have every copy of Jane's Fighting Ships from 1898 to the early cold war saved on my laptop, and I could find it then." Perez gave the young man a look that crossed over between amazement and surprise, which was mirrored by Santos as well.

    "Most men save porn on their laptops, and you save every copy of warships from the last century." Santos chuckled. "But I suppose I can't give you any shit over it, because that's about to be really important here soon. So what now, sir?" he asked his commanding officer.

    "Now we get out of the bay, and patrol our coast, to make sure no other warships show up trying to bully their way into our country, American or not." Perez said. "Remember what Ensign Ruiz said, the Americans have a whole fleet in the region, nothing says they didn't call for help before we kicked them in the ass. I suspect we'll have more company sooner or later, and I'll be damned if we get caught flat footed!"

    "Yes sir!" Came the chorus of affirmations from the bridge crew as the ship began making its way out of the bay, and into the open waters of the Caribbean, where they were being joined by other naval vessels on patrol patterns up and down the coast. Soon more reports came in talking of engagements off the coast in other sections of the country, and even a clash on the Colombian border against armed militia units. Captain Perez couldn't help but let out a tired sigh.

    It was going to be a very long day.
    ---------------------------------------
    The USS Lawrence was the 8th in the production line, and 1st of the subclass of the Bainbridge Class Destroyers of the United States Navy. Entering service in 1903, she began her service with the 2nd Torpedo Flotilla off the Atlantic Coast, participating in a myriad of training exercises up and down the coast before being decommissioned in 1906. She would later be reactivated the following year, and would eventually greet the Great White Fleet as it steamed into San Francisco Bay in 1908.

    The next 12 years would be fairly monotonous for the ships and its crew, spending most of its time patrolling the east coast of Mexico, down to the Panama Canal, protecting American interests with her sister ships. But now she was finally scheduled to be decommissioned, and this voyage along the coast of Colombia would be her last.

    For Lieutenant Daniel Barbey, the commanding officer of the Lawrence, it was the end of a boring assignment, in a navy that was suffering from years of neglect and mismanagement thanks to President Woodrow Wilson. Every branch was suffering from lack of manpower, funding, and modern weapons to fight a war. According to Wilson, there would be no war, so why have an army? He felt the same about the navy, which grated Barbey. It grated him every time they sailed down the Mexican coast and saw German battleships and destroyers anchored off the coast, as if they owned the place. They should have kicked the Germans out in 1916 when they first started arriving, but Wilson deemed it not important enough to fight Germany over.

    This voyage in particular had started with a major embarrassment when three German cruisers shadowed the Lawrence, and demanded she leave Mexican territorial waters, or be sunk. Even the USS Tacoma, the Denver Class Cruiser assigned to escort the Lawrence, would have been powerless against the German ships. It had been utterly humiliating for the Americans, and there was nothing they could do about it.

    She was on the last leg of her journey through the Caribbean, heading to the Venezuelan City of Maracaibo, before heading to Philadelphia, when the impossible happened. A bright wall of light shone over the whole Venezuelan coast, completely blocking it off from all outside contact. Even the wireless set couldn't get contact on any frequency, only panicked reports from other nearby ships, and the USS Tacoma.

    Then, the wall finally came down, everything seemed normal once more, and Lawrence and her escorting cruiser continued on, passing Aruba, and making their way towards their destination.

    "All ahead full, bring us into the bay," Lieutenant Barbey ordered, picking up his binoculars, and scanning the coastline.

    "What do you see, sir?" Ensign Abraham Thompson, the ship's resident Mormon, and Lieutenant Barbey's aide, asked. "Something doesn't seem right to me. The way that wall of light just vanished. It just don't make no sense, sir!"

    "You're not wrong, Ensign." Barbey replied as he scowled through his binoculars. "The coastline looks…different from what I remembered. Something is wrong here. Petty Officer Lewis!"

    "Yes sir!" the Petty Officer Third Class replied quickly.

    "Tell Dawson and his men to man the guns, I think we might need them soon enough." Barbery said. "And tell Gunnery Sergeant Easton to ready his Marines. We're going to need them."

    "Are you expecting trouble sir?" Ensign Thompson asked, a bit worried at his CO's orders.

    "Take a look through these binoculars, and you tell me, Thompson." Barbey said, handing the pair over to the Ensign, his gaze fixated ahead at the opening to the Gulf of Venezuela.

    Thompson took the binoculars, and pointed them due south, directly ahead of their current location. In the distance he could make out the silhouettes of dozens of ships, none of which he was able to recognize. Some appearing to be no bigger than the Lawrence, others of utterly massive size. The Gulf was absolutely choked with ships, like the ports of New York and New Orleans back home. But this was Venezuela, where could all these ships have come from?

    "Are those German ships?" Thompson asked no one in particular. "They can't be Venezuelan. They ain't even got a navy worth a damn!"

    "We expecting trouble, skipper?" Gunnery Sergeant Gregory Easton asked as he came onto the bridge. "I thought we left the Germans behind in Mexico?"

    "Those aren't German ships, Gunnery Sergeant," Barbey replied. "How are your Marines? Are they ready?"

    "All three of them, sir," Easton replied. "Mind telling me what's going on, skipper?"

    "Sir, the Tacoma is reporting two warships shadowing her starboard side!" the radio operator reported. "They can't identify the class of ship and have nothing over the wireless!"

    Wasting no time, Barbey grabbed the binoculars from Thompson, and turned to port side, where the Tacoma was steaming alongside them. Sure enough, two ships of unknown design and nationality were approaching Tacoma and Lawrence from between Aruba and Cabo San Roman. And the ships in question were fast, and had a very high profile.

    "What the hell is going on here?" Barbey muttered, lowering the binoculars as a distant, but ever growing sound got louder and louder, making the bridge crew turn towards the bow, and the source of the noise.

    "INCOMING AIRCRAFT!" the lookout shouted from his post as the roaring sound got almost deafening. As the bridge crew scrambled onto the deck, they were met with the strangest thing they had yet to lay their eyes on. A strange aircraft with green and gray splotches of paint, and propellers on top and to the rear, flew over the ship at great speed, and began to circle the Lawrence. Eventually, the strange craft came to a complete halt midair, and hovered just a few hundred meters away from the ship.

    The crew marveled at the strange craft as it seemed to defy the air around it, and whoever was inside continued to watch the American ship. Then, a loud booming voice came from the aircraft.

    "ATTENTION AMERICAN VESSEL, YOU ARE IN VENEZUELA TERRITORIAL WATERS! POWER DOWN ALL ENGINES IMMEDIATELY AND AWAIT FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS!

    "Bullshit!" Gunnery Sergeant Easton snarled.

    "The Venezuelans shouldn't have any planes." Barbey remarked to himself.

    "And those don't look like any planes I've ever seen before." Thompson added.

    "CEASE ALL RADIO TRANSMISSIONS IMMEDIATELY!" the voice from the aircraft boomed once more.

    "I don't care what planes they have, we ain't about to take orders from no dirty fucking spics!" he spat, turning on his heel, and exiting the bridge, racking the bolt of his Springfield rifle as he did so.

    "Gunnery Sergeant, get back in here!" Lieutenant Barbey all but yelled as he chased after the Marine NCO. Easton, along with his Corporal, and two privates, stood on the bow, all armed with Springfield rifles, and took aim at the hovering aircraft. Inside of it, three men could be seen aiming rifles of their own down at the Marines and Sailors aboard, and right before the situation could deteriorate, Lieutenant Barbey grabbed Easton's Springfield by the barrel, and forced it down.

    "ALL OF YOU PUT YOUR RIFLES DOWN, THAT'S AN ORDER!" He yelled as loud as he could, trying to be heard of the sound of the very loud chopping sounds made by the propellers. "What the hell do you think you're doing, Gunnery Sergeant!" Barbey hissed, glaring up at the much older Marine, who glared back.

    "What I'm doing, Lieutenant!" Easton snarled, putting heavy emphasis on Barbey's rank as he did so. "Is defending the ship, something you specifically ordered me and my Marines to do!"

    "I said to get you and your Marines ready, just as I ordered my sailors to man the guns! I did not give anyone permission to fire, especially since we haven't been shot at yet!"

    "They are demanding we shut down our engines and our radios! What comes next is them coming aboard and taking this ship! I don't plan on letting that happen!" Easton pushed Lieutenant Barbey aside, marching forward, and taking aim at the Venezuelans. Before Barbey could get back on his feet and attempt to stop the Marine, his rifle was already aimed towards his target.

    It was at that point many things happened, and time slowed to an utter crawl. The first was a loud boom that could be heard to port, in the direction of the USS Tacoma. The first was the booms of multiple five inch guns, as well as the more rapid booms of 6 pounder rapid fire cannons, firing at the ships approaching them. Both ships, they realized as a few shells flew past the Lawrence, and towards the ship ahead of them. The second was the crack of Easton's rifle as he fired on the Venezuelans, his shot hitting one of the soldiers in the strange aircraft which sent the man flying back.

    The third was the rapid fire crack of gunfire from the aircraft, which sweeped the deck of the Lawrence, cutting down both the Marines, as well as sailors on the deck. Fire that came from another of the strange aircraft which arrived in time to strafe the forward and starboard gun mounts. Splinters of wood flew about as the deck got torn up from the heavy machine gun fire, and screams of wounded men filled the air as the ship was racked from bow to stern. Then, as soon as it began, the barrage ended.

    As Lieutenant Barbey slowly got to his feet, he could see the full extent of the damage done to his ship, and more importantly, his crew. Gunnery Sergeant Easton and one of the privates was dead, while the other private and the Corporal were injured. At least a dozen sailors were dead, and many more screaming in agony from shrapnel or bullet wounds. Looking up, both the strange aircraft were still hovering above, the first with its side still facing the ship, the soldiers inside still focused intently on the ship. The second one, much larger than the first, with small wings bristling with cannon, and strange tubes he didn't recognize strapped to the small wings, hovered menacingly above them.

    "THIS IS YOUR FINAL WARNING! STAND DOWN OR YOU WILL BE SUNK!"

    Lieutenant Barbey did not doubt they would do just that if he didn't order his men down. As he looked back to the bow of the ship, he saw just how devastated the Lawrence was now. All seven of its 6 pounder cannons were out of action, either destroyed, or the gunners laying dead on the deck. Those who held rifles were either dead, wounded, or so terrified that they threw them down, or hid behind what cover they could.

    Barbey had a decision to make, one that he never thought he'd make. One that he dreaded the very idea of doing. But there was no victory to be had in this engagement, there was only surrender, or death. The two aircraft continued to hover above and to the sides, weapons still trained on the ship, when the countdown began.

    "FIVE!"

    "Fucking spic bastards!" the injured Marine Corporal hissed through pain and clenched teeth.

    "FOUR!"

    "What are we doing, sir?" Ensign Thompson asked, his eyes filled with fear as he looked up at the strange contraption in the sky above.

    "THREE!"

    "Tell the men to stand down. We aren't going to win this fight, and I won't condemn the whole crew to death for no reason." Lieutenant Barbey said as he raised his arms up in surrender. "Get to the bridge and relay that order to the rest of the ship. Now!"

    "Y-yes sir!" Thompson replied, heading back into the bridge, and transmitting orders via the phones and speaking tubes, ordering the ship to stand down. Barbey felt the rising feeling of bile begin to rise in his throat, but forced it back down. Looking up into the sky, more of the strange aircraft, alongwith small boats, made their way towards the Lawrence.

    Before long, the remaining sailors aboard the Lawrence came up to the deck, hands raised in surrender, as Venezuelan troops began boarding the ship, and detained the crew. A few sailors below decks refused to come up, holding up in the ship's small armory, and daring the Venezuelans to come get them. Muffled gunfire and a few explosions could be heard as the Venezuelans stormed the armory, and gave the sailors the fight they wanted.

    When they came back above deck, one of the soldiers was dead, but so too were all eight of the sailors who refused to surrender. Their uniforms were stained with blood, and bodies torn apart by shrapnel and gunfire. The Venezuelans merely tossed them in a pile with the other dead sailors and marines, before reporting to who they assumed was their commander.

    Off to port, Lieutenant Barbey and his crew could see the Tacoma. The cruiser was listing heavily to port, her hull riddled by bullets and shells, with flame and smoke pouring from them. Atop her decks, men trying to escape the stricken ship, whether in the lifeboats, or by testing their luck in the waters of the Caribbean. And then, without warning, the ship's bow exploded violently, lifting the already stricken ship into the air, and splitting her hull in two.

    They couldn't tell if it was an ammo magazine explosion, or a torpedo that hit the Tacoma, but it didn't matter. She was going to sink, and there was nothing that could be done about it. She carried just over 300 men with her, and only three of the lifeboats were in the water by the time of the explosion. Then the Venezuelans began to cheer as the Tacoma began sinking beneath the waves, as small craft began to approach, and pick up the survivors.

    They had just watched hundreds of men die in an instant, and they were cheering like mad men. It absolutely infuriated Lieutenant Barbey, and he could tell by a glance that the feeling was mutual among his sailors. What was left of them anyway. He had left port with 72 men under his command. By his last count, he had 40 men left alive. Barbey guessed he should consider himself lucky, as the Tacoma would be lucky to have that same number out of its entire crew alive.

    "What a fucking shitshow!" Petty Officer First Class Dawson said through clenched teeth as he held his injured left arm. "Fucking greasers will pay for this!"

    "Somehow I doubt that, American!" one of the Venezuelan soldiers said, one with a red cross on their shoulder, who knelt down next to Dawson, and began to check over his bloodied left arm. "You men don't seem to be caught up on world events if you think your government will be able to retaliate in any way."

    "Get the fuck off me!" Dawson hissed as the medic began to tend to his wounded arm.

    "Don't be a fucking idiot, Dawson!" Lieutenant Barbey snapped, much to the gunner's utter dismay. "No point in dying over bruised pride."

    "These bastards killed our men! They sank the Tacoma!" Dawson cried out, even as the Venezuelan medic worked on his arm.

    "After your ships refused our hails and refused to cut your engines, and that ugly ship of yours opened fire on our own!" A new voice said. Off to the right, a Venezuelan Marine Officer approached the gathered Americans, and looked them over. "Which one of you is the commanding officer?"

    "That would be me," Barbey replied. "Lieutenant Daniel Barbey, United States Navy, and this is my second in command, Ensign Abraham Thompson." he said, jerking his head towards the man. The Venezuelan nodded to the Ensign before turning his gaze back to Barbey.

    "Captain Antonio Delgado, Venezuela Marine Corps. I must inform you that you are now all prisoners of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, and will be treated accordingly as per the Geneva Conventions." Captain Delgado said.

    "I figured as much," Barbey muttered. "So what's going to happen to my men now?"

    "Once we make appropriate arrangements, you and your men will be taken to Maracaibo, and interned there. From there, you'll be questioned, and kept until arrangements for your repatriation can be made." He said. "But I do have one question that I would like answered before we start taking you off this ship, and hand you over to the Army. What is today's date, Lieutenant?"

    Barbey frowned. Shouldn't it be obvious? Or was this a trick question to insult him. Before he could answer however, PO1 Dawson answered for him.

    "It's New Years Day, Nineteen Twenty, you dumb fucking greaser!" Dawson said slowly, and insultingly, putting emphasis on the exact date. His insults, however, had earned him a kick to the ribs from one of the Venezuelan Marines. An act that in return had one of the medics manhandling the Marine away from the group of Americans, and Captain Delgado yelling abuse at the man.

    "I apologize for my subordinates actions, rest assured he will be dealt with accordingly." Delgado answered promptly, right as a loud roaring sound came from the south. Looking up in the sky, three American made F-16 Falcon fighters screamed overhead, heading out to see, while more helicopters followed close behind. Delgado watched with some amusement at how stunned and shocked the Americans were at the aircraft. It was as if they had never seen anything like it before.

    They had never seen anything like this, Delgado corrected himself. New Years Day, 1920. Just what the hell had that blinding wall of light done to his country? A flurry of ideas and scenarios ran through his head, and he didn't like any of them. He thought back to a book series he read some years back, called Island in the Sea of Time, where a small town in America was sent back thousands of years in the past, to the days of bronze swords and spear wielding savages. Had his entire nation been sent back in time? Or had some ships from that era? He did not know. Perhaps they would in a few days, maybe sooner.

    "What in God's name are those things?" One of the American sailors said, watching as one of the Falcon's doubled back, and streaked over the now sinking Tacoma, and headed eastward.

    "Lieutenant Barbey, I asked for the date because your ship, like the one now sinking, matches designs of ships made a century prior." Delgado said, watching as Barbey and a number of his men looked at him in confusion. "The date on our calendars is January 1st, 2020."
     
    Chapter 4
  • South of the San Diego Border, Mexico
    January 1st, 1920



    Captain Ludwig Steiner regarded the sight of American soldiers standing just a few hundred meters away, with great curiosity, and more than a little surprise. When the bright wall of light had severed the Mexican-American border, a great many people were justifiably terrified of what it could be. Most thought it an act of God against the sinful and despicable Americans. At least he and many of his fellow officers seemed to think so.

    He did not think very highly of Americans, most in the German military did not. They were a nation of illiterate farmers, immigrants, negroes, and playboys. They had an inept, pathetic president, and an even more pathetic excuse for an army. It had irked the Kaiser that the United States delegated a peace treaty between Germany and its enemies, before they could exact what they wanted out of them by occupying more of France.

    But that was something that would soon change. It had taken six years of hard work building up a military presence in Mexico, and the American president, Woodrow Wilson, was too weak, and too afraid to stand up to Germany to stop them. His unwillingness to go to war worked to Germany's advantage, and allowed them to station nearly a quarter of a million men all across Mexico. America was the last possible threat to German hegemony, and they would soon be cut down to size.

    So when Steiner heard reports about masses of American troops across the border in San Diego, he simply laughed them off. The American Army was a rabble with rifles, a disreputable joke compared to the great powers of the world. The wars they had fought in the past impressed no one but themselves, and when compared to the mighty Imperial German Army, they were no match.

    But that soon changed when those reports kept on flooding in, from California and Arizona, that large concentrations of American soldiers, wearing strange uniforms, and equipped with even stranger weapons and vehicles, were engaged in standoffs with German and Mexican army units sent to investigate the situation.

    Now as Steiner stared across the border, he understood how the initial scouts must have felt, facing down that many soldiers and vehicles. Soldiers, White, Black, Mexican, and from what he could tell, even Asiatic, stood among the ranks, wearing strange, but elaborate uniforms that would blend in very well with their surroundings. Vehicles of tan coloration, and even some in a mixture of green, black, and brown splotches, in configurations he'd never before seen.

    This was not the American Army he was familiar with, not by a long shot. They were better armed and equipped, and from a glance at least, looked far more trained and disciplined than the American Army. The only problem was they called themselves the United States Army, or more specifically, identified themselves as the California National Guard, and had set up a cordon around the Port of Entry, and all major roads leading to Mexico. Among their ranks were small contingents of the United States Marine Corps, as well as the San Diego Police Department, whose members seemed just as well armed and armored as the soldiers.

    Something wasn't right about all of this, he could feel it in his bones. He had felt victory in his bones during the Battle of the Marne in 1914, and the same when they laid siege to Paris. But now? He felt despair and dread.

    "Well Captain, what do you make of all this?" a voice said from behind him. Turning, Steiner was met by the imposing figure of Major Wolfram Von Richthofen, member of the 2nd Guards Uhlan Regiment, and decorated hero of the 1914 War.

    "I don't quite know, sir." Steiner replied. "By all accounts, they are nothing like the American Army we know of. These aren't the poorly equipped or trained militia and soldiers we've seen on the border, or watched on maneuvers in the past. These soldiers are very different.

    "Even the police officers are wearing armor similar to these soldiers," Richthofen noted, his eyes drifting from the checkpoint ahead, and wandered over the surrounding area. Absolutely nothing looked as it did the last time he was here but a month ago. "This is not the San Diego I remember. There was none of…this!" he said, gesturing to the construction all around the border, and the very much new checkpoint where the American soldiers stood watch.

    "Agreed. It makes me wonder just what purpose that wall of light had, and what it did." Steiner said. "We've picked up some odd radio intercepts from up north, as well as some from Ecuador of all places. The operators keep hearing 'New Years Day, 2020' over the wireless, and are confused. What have you heard, sir?" Richthofen's face grew sour as he took in what Steiner had to say, before replying.

    "My cousin is a member of the Imperial Air Service, and was the first pilot to go across the border when the wall of light disappeared. What he reported to us made no sense. Downtown San Diego, according to his reports, was filled with buildings of immense height and size, and was far larger than was possible. More pilots were sent up, and they reported the exact same thing. It wasn't until-"

    He was interrupted by a loud roaring sound in the air, as three dagger shaped aircraft without any propellers, flew overhead at great height and speed, and darted past the border. The two men, as well as a great many of the nearby German soldiers, looked up in astonishment at the strange planes. Some of them however, like Richthofen, looked up in fear. Fear of what these unknown and ungodly fast planes could do, would do, if the situation with the Americans wasn't resolved quickly.

    "Until those damned things chased our planes off, and scared our pilots half to death." Richthofen finished, his face slightly more pale than it had been previously. As the two men looked back up to the north, they saw yet more strange American aircraft, the ones with top and rear propellers, which allowed them to hover in midair, and perform aerial feats a Fokker couldn't hope to match. "Do you believe those radio reports, Captain? The ones proclaiming to be from a century in the future?" Steiner sighed deeply.

    "I don't know what to believe, sir. Logic says it's impossible, yet look where we are now." Steiner replied, gesturing to his north. "We're facing an American Army on the border to San Diego, that looks nothing like any army in the world! Driving strange armored vehicles and flying planes that move at incredible speeds! How else can one explain this?"

    "I completely agree, Captain." Richthofen said, nodding. "Which is why I believe that the Kaiser, and president Carranza, are about to be very unhappy men, really soon." Captain Steiner just nodded in agreement.

    While the Americans may have been blind as to Germany's intentions, the majority of German soldiers in Mexico knew they would be fighting the United States at some point. The Kaiser wanted California and its oil, and Mexico wanted its old territory back. But if this California, as well as Arizona, was from a century in the future, those plans were completely rubbish now. Modern Germany, if sent back to 1820, would dominate the entire world with trivial ease!

    Muskets and black powder cannon versus Mauser rifles and large howitzers was not a fair fight, and he tried to imagine the disparity in technology a century from now. The thought didn't form in his head, something he supposed he was thankful for.

    "I don't suppose we should at least try and talk to the Yanks, right?" Steiner suggested. "Maybe a few of our questions can be answered." Richthofen grunted in response.

    "Do as you see fit, Captain. I am going to contact headquarters, and tell them what we've found out so far. Once you have useful information, bring it to me, and I will relay it to them as well." With that, the man strode off back to his horse, and his detachment of men, and made their way back to the rear. Once they were gone, Captain Steiner called out.

    "Sergeant Major!" he bellowed in the direction of his company, and within seconds, Sergeant Major Gunther was standing before him.

    "Yes sir!?" The nearly 40 year old senior NCO stood erect before him, awaiting his orders.

    "Grab a dozen of the best men in the company, and tell them to meet me over here at once! Also, find me a white cloth I can use to flag down the Americans so they don't shoot me the moment I walk over to them!"

    "Yes, Herr Captain, right away!" Sergeant Major Gunther turned on his heels and began barking orders at the company. "Alright you sorry lugs, I want a dozen of the best shooters over here right this second! Captain's got a use for you sorry lot, so you better fucking move! And grab a white cloth to use as well! Do not disappoint the Captain or make him wait!"

    It didn't take long for the company to do what they were told, and in less than a minute, he had a dozen men, and a giant white table cloth tied around one of the men's rifles. They were well disciplined German soldiers, and they knew the consequences of dallying around. Sergeant Major Gunther could become a very angry and unpleasant man if given a reason to.

    "What is next, sir?" Sergeant Karl Fiehler asked, an MP-18 submachine gun in his right hand, and rifle draped with the tablecloth in his left.

    "It's time we find out just who these people are."

    —------------------------------
    "Anyone else have time traveling to the past on their 2020 bingo card?" Corporal Charles Danforth asked as he looked in astonishment at the sight before him.

    At the San Ysidro Port of Entry, on the Mexican side of the border, hundreds of German soldiers stood menacingly just a few hundred meters away from the border checkpoint. But they weren't the German soldiers of the Heer, but of the German Empire. Their weapons, their uniforms, and even their vehicles, were at least a century out of date. Among those soldiers were a large group of cavalry. But they weren't any regular cavalry, they were the distinguished German Uhlans, the Elite Cavalry of the Imperial German Army.

    "I had a great many things on my list, but this wasn't on it." Specialist Kowalski answered, deadpanned as he aimed his M249 at a cluster of Uhlans that were eyeing him intently. "Come on you bastards, give me a reason!"

    "No idea, Kowalski, just keep your eyes peeled." Sergeant Mathew Abrams replied, eyeing his opposite number intently from the other side of the border.

    "I had a giant meteor or volcanic eruption on my bingo card, deadass." Private First Class Esmeralda Martinez answered from the cab of her M939 transport truck. The Marine cracked her neck before hopping out of the cab, and proceeded to stretch her legs, before grabbing her M16, and leaning against the truck. "So what the fuck are a bunch of ugly ass Germans doing in Mexico?"

    "A great question, one we don't have an answer to unfortunately." replied Captain Alex Kavanaugh. "Anything new to report, Sergeant Abrams?"

    "Not yet, sir," Abrams replied. "The Germans are just as jumpy as when this standoff first started, and it doesn't look to be ending anytime soon. But if something does happen, we finally have them outnumbered, sir." he said.

    When the standoff first began, there was at least a whole company of German infantry, with assorted armored cars, a unit of cavalry, and even some artillery pieces, aimed directly towards the platoon and assorted police officers who had been on the American side of the border. Now the situation was reversed, with more than a company of infantry, backed up by multiple humvees, two Bradley's, plus the additional forces being brought in by the Marines from further north. As it stood, the US Army and Marines had a 3-1 advantage over their German opposite number, in both men and vehicles. But despite this, the Germans on the other side of the border didn't back down, and didn't try to open contact with the Americans. In fact, they seemed even more aggravated by the continuous arrival of American troops to the border.

    "Yall see those cannons over there, right?" A Marine Lieutenant by the name of Maxwell asked, pointing to the German lines.

    "Yeah, they got me pretty worried, all things considered." Kavanaugh replied. "They only had two when this showdown started, now they got five. Looks like they want to bring in more too."

    "Well we best not let them do that," Maxwell replied, in a now noticeable Louisiana drawl. "Them's the only guns that got a chance of doing us real harm. Those are FK 96 field guns, 77 millimeter type. They might not do much to a tank, but we ain't got any tanks here yet."

    "It's a good thing I got men watching those gunners in case shit pops off then."

    "Smart move," Maxwell said. "They might be a century out of date, but they clearly know what targets to hit first. Not that it'll help them now." as he finished speaking, the sound of helicopter blades tearing through the air got closer and closer.

    As the two officers turned, a flight of three AH-1Z Viper attack helicopters roared in from the north, taking up positions in the sky around the border, and their weapons aimed directly at the German lines. This, combined with the continued arrival of more Marines from up north, the buzzing of news helicopters overhead, only served to make the Germans even more nervous.

    In response, trucks with anti aircraft guns mounted on the back began moving forward, their guns aiming at the strange aircraft hovering above them, defying all they knew about what airplanes were supposed to do.

    However, right as the situation seemed to be deteriorating, a group of German soldiers began to make their way over to the American lines at the Port of Entry. A man, waving a rifle with a giant white cloth draped around it, flanked by a dozen men. Half of them took up positions to cover the other half, who steadily advanced forward, stopping roughly a few dozen feet away.

    "Who is in charge here?" The German called out in heavily accented, but understandable English.

    The Army Captain and Marine Lieutenant glanced at each other for a few moments, nodding in understanding to each other, before turning to their respective units, and calling out for volunteers. Three Marines and Three Guardsmen made their way forward, standing beside their respective leaders.

    "Well, let's go see what Herr Kraut has to say." Kavanaugh said, advancing forward with his rifle down in his right hand, and his left arm up. Lieutenant Maxwell repeated the gesture.

    "That would be the two of us!" Lieutenant Maxwell called out. "And who might you be?" The German smiled proudly at the question, and stiffened before answering.

    "Captain Ludwig Steiner, of the Imperial German Army's 3rd Division, Second Army Corp! Who am I speaking to?"

    Again, the two Americans glanced at each other, each raising an eyebrow at the other. The German was certainly pompous and full of himself, and considered himself higher status than those before him.

    "Captain Alex Kavanaugh, 160th Infantry Regiment, California National Guard." He replied coolly.

    "1st Lieutenant Elijah Maxwell, 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines. Now might we inquire as to why you and your men are sitting opposite the border in Mexico?" Maxwell asked, getting straight to the point. " And more importantly, why the hell yall are rocking uniforms and weapons a century out of date?"

    The Marine lieutenant was certainly blunt, no way around that. It was something Kavanaugh found amusing, and Steiner seemed irritated by.

    "I'll excuse your rudeness given the circumstances, as I doubt events of late have any of us thinking straight," Steiner said sternly. "That said however, I have a feeling there's some mutual ignorance here, as we haven't seen your kind before."

    "Likewise, Captain Steiner," Kavanaugh said. "But that still doesn't explain why you're here, in Mexico, with an army staring down the American border, and once again, your weapons and uniforms." Steiner's brow furrowed, and he took a deep breath before replying, and asking a question he dreaded the answer to.

    "My dear Captain, what year is it?" Steiner asked bluntly, watching as the Americans looked at him in confusion, before turning back to him.

    "Captain Steiner, it's New Years Day, 2020." Kavanaugh said, gears in his head turning, and putting the last pieces to the puzzle he was piecing together in his head. Steiner's face drained of color ever so slightly to the point it was almost unnoticeable. Almost.

    "And I'm guessing he's about to tell us it's 1914, right?" one of the Marine Privates joked from behind.

    "Quiet, Feldman!" Lieutenant Maxwell snapped.

    "Juden?" One of the German soldiers said, gazing over at the Marine who made the comment.

    "Oh hell no!" another Marine said, watching as the gazes of the various soldiers turned rather disdainful or outright hostile towards the young private.

    "Yeah, he's Jewish, is that a fucking problem?" Maxwell challenged the German who spoke earlier, who was now glaring at the Lieutenant.

    "Yes, I do!" The German snarled, stepping forward a pace before Steiner thumped his arm, stopping the man in his tracks.

    "That's enough Corporal! Get back in line, now!" Steiner barked towards the young man, who reluctantly obeyed the command, and stepped behind his commanding officer.

    Steiner had no love for Jews, in fact he despised them. But he realized that despite their skeeviness and greediness, they were a necessary evil required for certain fields such as finance and the like. Some in Germany even put forth the idea of deporting them to somewhere in Africa, despite how utterly impractical it'd be. If situations were different, he'd let his corporal say what he wanted to.

    But not now, the situation wasn't right for such a move. Steiner's worst fears, in fact the fears of a number of officers, had just been confirmed by what the American had just told them, and he'd now need to act accordingly.

    "Forgive my subordinate, he can be a bit brash at times!" Steiner said quickly, before turning back to Lieutenant Maxwell. "But I unfortunately have to say your subordinate is incorrect, but not by much. It is New Year's Day, 1920, Lieutenant."

    Now, it was the turn of the Americans to turn pale in the face, while a few of them began muttering softly enough that he couldn't make out what they were saying.

    "Jesus Fucking Christ!" Maxwell cursed, looking over at Kavanaugh, whose expression wasn't much different than.

    "That still doesn't explain what you're doing here, Captain Steiner." Kavanaugh pressed. "In our 1920, Germany never had troops in Mexico. Hell, the German Empire was dead for two years at that point.

    Steiner blinked a few times at the statement from the American. The German Empire not existing in 1920? What had happened in 1918 that resulted in such a thing? Steiner had questions, and he planned on getting as much information out of the American as he possibly could.

    "Forgive me, Captain, but what you just said makes no sense to me. What exactly happened in…your world that precipitated the fall of my country?" Steiner inquired, noting the change of facial expression of the American, which seemed a cross between annoyed and curious.

    "The end of the First World War," Kavanaugh said. "Germany was ground down by the Entente, which had been bolstered by the United States in 1917, and by mid 1918 Germany was on the backfoot, and eventually signed an armistice that ended the war, and utterly humiliated Germany. But I'll take a guess and assume that never happened here, did it?"

    Kavanaugh couldn't help but enjoy the looks of absolute disbelief and horror on the faces of the German soldiers who understood English, especially Captain Steiner.

    "Dear God, no! The War of 1914 ended that year! Some peripheral fighting lasted until 1915, but major fighting was over with, and the Treaty of Princeton was signed that same year! It sure as hell didn't last four damn years!" Steiner replied, obvious horror on his face at the thought of a four year long war. "Good lord, how many men were killed in that god forsaken war?!"

    "40 million casualties total, half of them dead," Lieutenant Maxwell answered. "Although it paled in comparison to World War Two, where the death toll alone was four times that number, with half the world lying in ruin by the end." He smiled innocently as he finished speaking, no doubt getting a kick out of the little white lie he told the German, and how startled the man was.

    "I see," Steiner replied hoarsely, doing his best not to show what he felt on his face. If even half of what the Americans were saying was true, the German soldiers in Mexico, and Germany's plans for the United States, were in very serious danger. "I believe we both have much to report back to our superiors with, Captain Kavanaugh. Perhaps we could continue this conversation at a different time, one where both our men aren't pointing rifles and cannons at each other."

    "That much we can agree on, Captain Steiner." Kavanaugh agreed. "Although I can't say my superiors will be any less thrilled about your men across the border, Captain Steiner."

    "And the same to you, Captain Kavanaugh." Steiner barked something to his troops, and they began to turn around and head back towards their positions. "Good day, Captain." he said as he left with his men.

    —---------------------

    "It is confirmed, sir." Captain Steiner said as he walked into the command tent, and saluted. Major Richthofen and the other officers and senior enlisted in the command tent turned to face him, grim expressions on many of their faces.

    "We know, Herr Captain," Richthofen replied darkly. "More reports are coming in from Germany about Sweden and Switzerland having undergone the same situation as the Americans have. And more than that, Admiral Hipper reported an attack on his fleet in Indochina from an unknown submarine, and has sighted multiple unknown vessels in the waters of the South China Sea."

    "The reports are quite disturbing, and have since removed any doubts as to what is going on up north in California and Arizona." Colonel Konrad Balck said. "And what's even more disturbing is that these aren't isolated incidents either. We have just received word we lost contact with most of our East African colonies. Only a small portion, which thankfully was home to the headquarters of the local garrison and radio tower, of the territory is still in contact with Berlin. But the latest news we received paints a dire picture indeed."

    "Might I inquire as to what that picture is, sir?" Steiner asked, dreading the answer.

    "The garrison has reported themselves under attack by African soldiers of unknown origin, fielding weapons and vehicles never before seen. Before the station finally went off the air, they said something about 'Giant Metal Monsters' that were immune to gunfire and cannon shells, before the signal was lost." Colonel Balck replied. "And that's not even the worst part. When the Königsberg received the distress message from General Vorbeck, they attempted to offer assistance alongside the Pillau and Elbing. However when they got to the coast, they were attacked by multiple fast attack craft. Königsberg and Pillau took light damage, while the Elbing was sunk."

    Steiner and his escort looked downright appalled at the news, while the officers in the command tent wore crestfallen expressions on their faces.

    "Did we even sink any of the enemy ships?" Steiner asked, dreading the answer.

    "Reports say they sunk one small ship before our fleet was forced to withdraw," a communications Lieutenant replied. "Reports also say Captain Raedar was severely injured in the attack."

    "Dear God!" Steiner said. "It's been eight hours since those walls came down. Eight hours and everything seems to be going to hell!"

    "Nine and a half hours, sir." the same Lieutenant corrected, earning a glare from Steiner.

    "My point still stands, Lieutenant," he growled. "Everything we've worked so hard to accomplish, to say nothing of what we have yet to accomplish, has gone up in smoke!" Steiner exclaimed, just as a series of explosions boomed in the distance. Everyone in the tent turned northward and froze, before screams and yells broke out throughout the camp, and they all sprinted outside.

    Once they got outside, what they saw made their hearts sink. A dozen miles north, at the border crossing with San Diego, smoke billowed up into the sky from multiple locations. The chattering of machine gun fire and cannon could be heard, before being silenced at a frighteningly fast pace. They all recognized what their own guns sounded like, and the ones they heard continue to fire, were most certainly not their own. Then a series of explosions rippled through the sky, all in a tight grouping together. Some had surmised it was the Fokker 7's that had been deployed at the border to investigate, and prevent American aircraft from violating Mexican airspace.

    Above them, another flight of five Fokker 7's raced towards the front, followed by a single Gotha bomber. Some of the men cheered at the sight of German airpower going north to fight the upstart Americans. Others, like Captain Steiner and the men who had accompanied him back from the border, knew better. Those pilots were being sent to their death.

    A thought that was proven right as two small objects appeared on the horizon, accompanied by an ever growing roaring sound. The objects moved extremely fast, and before anyone could react, slammed into the Fokker 7's leading the bomber. All five of the bombers, even those not directly hit, either disintegrated upon impact, or tumbled apart as they fell from the sky. The lone Gotha bomber banked hard to the right, attempting to pull back from the unseen force that was attacking them.

    Then, another of the objects was seen, again racing down south towards the lone bomber. But this time, the men on the ground watching noticed something frightening. The Fokker's were all in a tight and straight moving formation when they were attacked, which meant their path could be predicted. The bomber however, pulled away from the fight, and off of its course north. The deadly object followed the bomber nonetheless, guiding itself towards the bomber, before slamming into it, and obliterating the aircraft.

    "Impossible." a nearby Sergeant muttered in disbelief. "The Americans shouldn't be able to do this."

    "What in God's name just happened? Sergeant Fiehler asked no one in particular.

    "Our plans for the United States going up in smoke, Sergeant. That's what we just saw." Colonel Balck said with a heavy sigh. "The Kaiser is not going to be a happy man."
    ---------------------------------------------
    "As you can see, Dave, there is a large, if outdated force, seemingly of German origin, just opposite the Mexican-American border, and by all accounts, they do not seem very happy. Even as we speak, more and more of them keep arriving, bringing more and more men, trucks, and pieces of artillery to the border. They are also-"

    The helicopter jerked hard to the left as the pilot noticed the AA gun focusing in on them, forcing the cameraman to lose his shot on the German soldiers as he flew back in his seat. As the helicopter regained stability, and the cameraman was able to refocus his camera on the scene below, a number of shapes in the distant sky caught his attention.

    A dozen small, fast approaching fighters were making their way towards the border, breaking off into three separate formations each, and splitting off. Behind the helicopter, the roar of jet engines was heard, followed by three California Air National Guard F-15 Eagles streaking past, and towards the German planes, which were now identified as Fokker 7's.

    They watched as the Eagles kept a respectable distance from the Fokkers, as to ensure the backwash from jets didn't send the fragile biplanes careening to the ground. But despite the incredible speed of the Eagles, the German pilots refused to back down, and tried to chase the jets. Something the Eagle pilots noted rather quickly, and began toying with the German flyers. Each F-15 banked sharply upward, and began climbing at a rate of acceleration no biplane could even dream of. Two Fokkers attempted to repeat the maneuver, arching themselves vertically, and trying to climb after them.

    Tried, and failed. The two Fokkers quickly began to stall out, and plummet to the ground. One of the Fokkers, whose paint scheme looked exactly like that of the Red Baron, pulled itself out of the stall and subsequent fall, with literal feet to spare as it skimmed across the ground, and banked upward. The second pilot wasn't so lucky. He was unable to recover from his stall, and spiraled out of control towards the ground, right towards a convoy of German trucks that was approaching the border.

    The Fokker slammed into a truck which was carrying an artillery gun behind it, which exploded in a shower of flame and shrapnel which tore into nearby trucks, and forced many off of the roads to avoid the wreckage ahead.
    —------------------------------

    Time slowed to a crawl as soldiers on both sides saw the whole incident unfold, as a simple aerial accident due to pilot error. But not everyone was paying attention. Many German soldiers kept their focus on what was in front of them, including the AA gunners, the armored trucks, and machine gunners. When they heard the explosion behind them, all they saw was a fire burning in the middle of the convoy, and three F-15's flying back across the American border, which were turning back for another pass.

    That's all it took for some of the more nervous German soldiers to begin firing on the Americans. First an AA truck opened fire on a news helicopter, scoring multiple hits through the fuselage, killing the news crew instantly, before being silenced by one of the newly arrived Marine Corps AH-1Z Vipers from Miramar. Its 20mm gun tore through the offending truck, as well as the ones near it.

    "CONTACT FRONT!" Sergeant Danforth screamed as he began squeezing off shots towards his German opposite number. A fusillade of bullets from the encamped Germans made the National Guardsmen, Marines, and San Diego police officers duck for whatever cover they could find. Many however, weren't so lucky. The rifles the Germans had might have been old, but they would still kill you. Judging from the bodies he could already see sprawled across the ground, the Germans had gotten lucky at least a dozen times, half of which were the local police.

    Even their cannons, which were sighted in by the Bradley's, LAV's, and snipers earlier in the day, had managed a few shots off before being silenced. A blown apart humvee and severely damaged Bradley were proof of such.

    But the return fire against the Germans was far more devastating.

    "The hills are alive with the sounds of," Kowalski let out a long burst of his M249, tearing through a group of German Uhlans, who tried an ineffectual charge against the American lines, and paid for it in blood.

    "Even in a fucking battle, you never lose that sense of humor you got, Kowalski," Captain Kavanaugh said as he returned fire with his M4 Carbine.

    "That bastard's never gonna lose his sense of humor," Corporal Danforth laughed as he returned fire as well. "I think we're gonna need it a lot more now!"

    "Finally, someone who appreciates me for my lovely sense of humor." Kowalski said dramatically as he swapped his empty magazine for a fresh one. He'd burned through 200 rounds like they were nothing, but the rounds spent weren't wasted. The sprawled bodies of dead and dying Germans, and German horses, was proof enough of that. But the majority of dead Germans wasn't due to Kavanaugh's squad.

    The armored vehicles brought by the Army and Marines had torn bloody swathes through the Germans like a scythe through wheat. What few armored cars the Germans had, if they could even be called that, fared no better.

    "2 O'CLOCK HIGH!" one of the Marines yelled out as a group of Fokker 7 fighters appeared in the distance, and came in fast. The fighters flew towards the Americans, firing their machine guns towards targets on the ground. A few unlucky soldiers and police were hit, and a few humvees and trucks were strafed, albeit to little effect.

    Then, they began to explode, one after the other. The Vipers raced forward, as nimble as a grasshopper compared to the slow, fragile biplanes. The 7.92 machine guns on the Fokkers were little threat to the Vipers, whose armor easily shrugged off the rounds. The same could not be said in reverse, as the Fire Control System of the Vipers allowed their 20mm cannons to traverse wider and more accurately than the German planes. One quick burst was all that was needed, and the planes were sent tumbling to the ground.

    In less than a minute, the 11 Fokker 7's were reduced to three, who were fleeing at full speed back across the border, including the one with the Red Baron's paint scheme, who tried to get away, climbing as fast as they could, hoping to escape the Vipers. The Red Baron's wings were clipped by chaingun fire, forcing its pilot to bail out, and parachute to safety. The other two were sent spiraling downwards after an F-15 made a close pass at near supersonic speed. Neither pilot had a chance to react before they made contact with the ground.

    The rest of the battle didn't last much longer. The LAV-25's 25mm chain guns, the assortment of 7.62 and .50 machine guns on the humvees, and rocket pods on the AH-1's, tore through the German ranks. All that, in addition with the assortment of infantrymen on the ground, made quick work of the German troops on the Mexican side of the border.

    In only a few minutes, the entire German force facing them was either dead, wounded, or retreating rapidly, many without weapons. They were desperate to get away from the American defenders who chewed up their forces. Even the mighty Uhlans, which tried a desperate charge against the Americans, were cut to ribbons by massed machine gun fire. Not a single of them had survived after their suicidal charge against American lines.

    Afterward, the area smelled of blood, shit, cordite, gunpowder, and burning rubber and metal. Many Germans lay wounded, crying out for someone, anyone to help them. Many were dead, torn to bloody rags by indifferent machine gun rounds. The rest were retreating, not looking back to see if the Americans were following them. But they weren't.

    The Guardsmen and Marines had to hold the border until the situation was assessed, and the higher ups could figure out just what was going on. There was more ground to secure, wounded to get medical treatment, and the dead to be given proper rights.

    "So what the fuck do we do now?" PFC Martinez asked as she finally got up from her squatting position behind her truck, and looked it over for any damage. She frowned when she found a few bullet holes in her baby, but took solace in the fact that the men who did it were very likely dead. "LT?"

    "I reckon I ain't got much of an answer for you, tell you the truth," Lieutenant Maxwell replied, his native Bayou accent creeping out more and more. "What I can say is that ain't none of us ever going back home. And those of us that still got a home ain't going back no time soon."

    "What makes you say that sir?" Martinez asked, making Maxwell turn to her and raise an eyebrow.

    "PFC, I know for a fact you ain't stupid. I also know for a fact at least half my platoon ain't from out west, including myself. I also know half my platoon would run the risk of being lynched in the 1920's era United States, for many reasons. There might be a United States here, but it sure as hell ain't one we'll be welcome in."

    "With an accent like that, you'll fit in well with the local Klan chapter." one of the San Diego SWAT officers chuckled.

    "Disrespectfully officer, go fuck yourself, and the horse you rode in on." Maxwell said without hesitation. "I'm a fairly backwood motherfucker by most standards, I have a black fiance with a kid on the way, black in laws, a Jewish mother, and a whole host of views and beliefs that'd land my ass in jail, or hanging from a fucking tree in the Jim Crow south. So once again, fuck you." as he finished, he fished a pack of cigarettes from his pocket. Pulling one of them out, he returned the pack to its proper place, took a lighter from that same pocket, lit his cigarette, and took a long, deep drag. "Thank fuck my family came to visit for New Years." he said as he puffed out a cloud of smoke, which he followed up with another drag.

    "Can I get one of those, sir?" Martinez asked, to which Maxwell replied by grabbing the pack from his pocket, and tossing it toward the sound of her voice.

    "Shit's about to get real interesting, Lance Corporal Martinez." Maxwell said with another puff, and still staring south of the border, towards the ever shrinking form of retreating German soldiers. "Really fucking interesting."
     
    Maps of the World and Disposition of ISOT'd military units.
  • 0EbrD6Y.png

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    ---------------------------------


    Russia:
    Admiral Grigorovich Class Frigate Admiral Essen(Transiting Gibraltar Straits during Event)
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    Russian Military in Kazakhstan:
    Gepard Class Frigate Tatarstan
    Buyan Class Frigate Astrakhan and Buyan M-Class Uglich
    Dyugon Class Landing Craft Ataman Platov
    Raptor Class Patrol Boat P-434
    Serna-Class Landing Craft
    177th Naval Infantry Regiment:

    11th Composite Aviation Regiment: Two Squadrons of SU-24's.
    3rd Guards Baranovichi Red Banner Fighter Aviation Regiment: Two Squadrons of SU-27's.
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Russian Military in Venezuela:

    Slava Class Cruiser Marshal Ustinov
    Udaloy Class Destroyer Vice-Admiral Kulakov
    Neustrashimy-Class Frigate Yaroslav Mudry
    Vishnya-class intelligence ship Kareliya
    Kilo Class Submarine Alrosa
    Tapir Class Landing Ship Saratov and Orks
    Ropucha Class Landing Ship Novocherkassk
    Ivan-Gren Class landing Ship Petr Morgunov

    877th Naval Infantry Battalion
    112th Tank Battalion
    1618th Anti-Aircraft Missile Battalion
    887th Reconnaissance Battalion
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Russian Forces in Armenia:

    102nd Military Base and 3624th Airbase: 3,000-5,000 Personnel.
    ----------------------------------
    Russian Forces in Georgia:

    4th and 7th Military Base in Georgia: 8,000 Personnel
    Atlant Class Cruiser Moskva(Off the coast of Abkhazia)
    —--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    China Fleet near or in Taiwanese Waters during Event:

    Type 094 Ballistic Missile Submarine Long March 20
    Type 093A Nuclear Attack Submarines Long March 9 and Long March 10
    Type 002 Aircraft Carrier Shandong
    Type 052D Destroyers Hohhot, Yinchuan, and Kunming
    Type 052C Destroyers Lanzhou and Haikou
    Type 054A Frigates Xianning and Xuchang
    Type 056A Corvette Zhuzhou
    Type 815A Mizar and Megrez
    Type 071 Amphibious Transport Changbai Shan
    Type 082 II Mine Countermeasure Vessels Rongcheng and Donggang
    -------------------------------------------------
    Chinese Support Base Djibouti: 2,000 personnel.
    Type 903 Replenishment Ship Taihu
    —------------------------
    Chinese Forces in Venezuela:
    Type 052D Destroyer Guiyang
    Type 054A Frigates Handan and Daqing
    Type 071 Amphibious Transports Longhu Shan and Yimeng Shan
    Type 072A Landing Dock ships Tianzhu Shan and Daqing Shan
    Type 920 Hospital Ship
    6th Marine Brigade
    ------‐-----------------
    Great Britain:
    Trafalgar Class Submarine HMS Trenchant
    Damen Stan 5009 patrol ship MV Lilibet
    River Class Patrol Vessels HMS Forth and HMS Clyde

    RAF Mount Pleasant:
    British Army: 1,200 Personnel, including 16th Regiment Royal Artillery.
    No. 905 Expeditionary Air Wing
    No. 1435 Flight – 6 Eurofighter Typhoons(Two flew in as replacements before The Event)
    No. 1312 Flight – 1 Voyager KC2, two Airbus A400M Atlas'(Second flew in before The event)

    British International Helicopters:
    2 Sikorsky S-61N, 2 AgustaWestland AW189

    Royal Gibraltar Regiment
    Scimitar Class Patrol Vessels HMS Scimitar and HMS Saber
    Two RAF A400M Atlas C1's and one USAF C-17 were in RAF Gibraltar when The event happened, which were ferrying American and British troops on deployments, along with multiple civilian airliners.

    British Forces Cyprus; RAF Akrotiri:
    No. 2 Group (Air Combat Support) RAF

    No. 84 Squadron – Puma HC Mk.2

    No. 903 Expeditionary Air Wing
    Detachment of 9 x Eurofighter Typhoon FGR.4
    Detachment of 1 x Airbus Voyager KC.2/3
    Detachment of 2 x Lockheed Hercules C.5
    1 x Boeing Sentry AEW1
    1 x Sentinel R1

    2nd Battalion, The Yorkshire Regiment
    1st Battalion, Princess of Wales' Royal Regiment

    Type 23 Class Frigate HMS Montrose, HMS Northumberland, and HMS Argyll
    Type 45 Destroyer HMS Dragon and HMS Diamond
    Echo Class Survey Vessel HMS Enterprise
    Bay Class Landing Ship RFA Lyme Bay
    Albion Class Assault Ship HMS Bulwark

    Joint Helicopter Command Flying Station Aldergrove
    Alexander Barracks
    Palace Barracks
    Thiepval Barracks

    British Army Training Unit Kenya: 1,500 troops, including 3 PARA, and 300 permanent personnel.
    —---------------------------------------
    Brazil: Niterói-Class Frigate Independência
    Barroso-Class Corvette Cv Barroso
    Niterói-Class Frigate União
    —-----------------------
    Peru: Pohang Class Corvette BAP Ferre
    —------------------------
    Algeria: Adhafer Class Corvette El Fatih
    —-----------------
    Germany: Brandenburg Class Frigate Schleswig-Holstein and Bayern
    —-------------
    Greece: Elli CLass Frigate HS Kanaris
    Hellenic Force in Cyprus
    —-----------------------------
    Norway: Fridtjof Nansen-Class Frigate Helge Ingstad
    —----------------------------------
    Denmark: Thetis Class Frigates HDMS Triton and Thetis
    —---------------------------
    Italy: Maestrale-Class Frigate Espero
    Base Militare Nazionale di Supporto Djibouti: Operates MQ-9 Predators
    —------------
    Turkey:
    Barbaros Class Frigate TCG Barbaros, TCG Orucreis(Part of Barbaros Turkish Navy Task Force in Nigeria), TCG Salihreis
    G-Class Frigate TCG Gaziantep(In port in Cartagena, Spain), TCG Gediz(Barbaros Task Force)
    Ada Class ASW Corvette TCG Heybeliada(Barbaros Task Force), TCG  Burgazada
    Akar Class Fleet Support Ship Yarbay Kudret(Barbaros Task Force)

    Turkish Forces Cyprus
    —------------------------------------------------
    France: 1,650 on Réunion, 1,400 on New Caledonia, French Foreign Legion Detachment Mayotte
    2nd Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment

    Air Detachment 181
    Four CASA CN 235
    Two Dassault Falcon 20's
    Eurocopter AS565 Panthers
    Floréal-class frigates, Floréal, Nivôse, and Vendémiaire
    P-400 Class Patrol Vessel La Glorieuse
    Icebreaker L'Astrolabe
    D'Entrecasteaux-class patrol ship Champlain
    Coast Guard ship Le Malin

    French Forces Djibouti:
    5th Overseas Interarms Regiment: 1,500 soldiers

    The 1st Infantry Company Acute Mission, equipped with VAB and antitank missiles.
    The 3rd Armoured Squadron equipped with AMX-10 RC.
    The 6th Land Battery Unit Artillery equipped with TRF1 and mortar 120 mm.

    3/11 Corsican Fighter Squadron: 4 x Mirage 2000-5F and 3 x Mirage 2000 D
    Overseas Transport Squadron 88 Larzac: CASA CN-235 and three SA330 Puma.
    1 x Breguet BR.1150 Atlantique 2

    Light Aviation of the Army (DETALAT): 4 x Puma Helicopters and 2 x Gazelle Hot Helicopters

    1x CTM Landing Craft

    Georges Leygues Class Destroyer Latouche-Tréville
    La Fayette Class Frigate La Fayette
    Durance Class Tanker Var
    —---------------------------------------
    Australia:

    Hobart Class Destroyer HMAS Hobart
    ANZAC Class Frigate HMAS Anzac and HMS Arunta
    Collins Class Submarine HMS Collins
    Bay Class Landing Ship HMS Choules
    Armidale Class Patrol Craft HMS Broome and HMS Larrakia
    Paluma Class Survey Ship HMAS Paluma
    Australian Defense Vessel (ADV) Ocean Protector
    Cape Class Patrol Boats AFBC Cape St. George, Cape Nelson, and ADV Cape Peron
    —----------------------------
    South Korea: Ulsan Class Frigate ROKS Busan
    Pohang Class Corvette ROKS Wonju
    Maritime Task Flotilla Seven
    Submarine Squadron 93

    21st Marine Battalion
    22nd Marine Battalion
    1st Assault Amphibian Vehicle Battalion
    2nd Marine Artillery Battalion

    301st Aviation Battalion
    1st Aviation Brigade
    153rd Fighter Squadron
    —-----------------------------
    India:
    Sindhughosh Class Submarine INS Sindhuratna Brahmaputra Class Frigate INS Betwa
    Rajput Class Destroyer INS Rajput
    Sujanya Class Offshore Patrol Vessel INS Suvarna
    Abhay Class Corvette INS Ajay and INS Abhay
    Veer Class Corvette INS Nishank
    Khukri Class Corvette INS Khukri
    Trinkat Class Patrol Vessel INS Trinkat
    Shardul Class Tank Landing Ship INS Shardul(Madagascar)
    Nicobar Class Troopship INS Nicobar
    Kumbhir Class Landing Ship INS Cheetah
    Mk IV LCU's L51 and L52

    Samar Class Patrol Vessel ICGS Samar
    Vishwast Class Patrol Vessel ICGS Vaibhav
    Aadesh Class Patrol Vessels ICGS Ayush and Atulya
    -----------
    Bangladesh: Castle Class Corvette BNS Bijoy
    —---------
    Malaysia: Kasturi Class Corvettes KD Lekir and KD Kasturi
    —--------------
    Singapore: Challenger Class Submarine RSS Conqueror
    Victory Class Corvette RSS Vengeance
    —----------------
    Philippines Forces in and around Okinawa during Event:
    Pohang Class Corvette Conrado Yap
    Peacock Class Corvette Apolinario Mabini
    Bacolod City-Class LSV Bacolod City and Dagupan City

    Units of the Philippine Army's 2nd Division:
    201st Infantry Brigade
    202nd Infantry Brigade
    1st Infantry Battalion
    4th Infantry Battalion

    206th Tactical Helicopter Squadron
    4 x UH-1H Huey Helicopters
    2 x S-70I Black Hawk Helicopters

    20th Attack Squadron
    4 x MD-500MG Defenders

    17th Attack Squadron
    4 x OV-10 Broncos
    —----------------------
    Japan Self Defense Force Units on or around Okinawa during Event:
    15th Brigade
    15th helicopter Squadron
    2nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade
    2nd Engineer Group
    303rd Amphibious Company
    5th Surface-to-Surface Missile Regiment
    10th Rapid Deployment Regiment
    11th Tank Battalion
    1st Artillery Battalion
    6th Reconnaissance Company
    22nd Rapid Deployment Regiment
    44th Infantry Regiment
    5th Engineer Brigade
    6th NBC Protection Company
    6th Logistic Support Regiment

    9th Air Wing
    603rd Squadron
    5th Air Fleet Squadron
    Naha Base Squadron
    3rd Tactical Air Squadron
    401st Tactical Airlift Squadron
    Kasuga Helicopter Airlift Squadron

    Oyashio class submarines JS Yaeshio and JS Takashio
    Hyūga-Class Helicopter Destroyer JS Ise
    Ōsumi-class tank landing ship JS Kunisaki
    Atago Class Destroyer JS Ashigara
    Asahi-Class Destroyer JS Asahi
    Akizuki Class Destroyer JS Akizuki
    Uraga Class Mine Countermeasure Vessel JS Uraga
    Awaji Class Minesweeper JS Hirado
    Hayabusa Class Patrol Boat JS Shirataka
    Mashū Class Oiler JS Ōmi
    —-----------------------
    JSDF Base Djibouti: 600 Personnel
    2 x P-3 Orion Aircraft
    —-------------
    Nigeria: 15,000 members of the Multinational Joint Task Force against Boko Haram. The soldiers are from the nations of Nigeria, Chad, Niger, Benin, and Cameroon, and include armor and aircraft.
    —--------------------------------
    United Nations Peacekeepers: Over 12,500 Peacekeepers from a multitude of nations were present in the Sinai Peninsula, Lebanon, Cyprus, Western Sahara, and those transiting by air or ground through territories affected by The Event.
     
    Last edited:
    Analysis of Significant Events in Recent History and Their Impact on the Western States of America: 1925 Edition
  • Since 2016, the world had become a steadily less stable place. 2016 marked the year that was the start of the Second Korean War, the Saudi-Iran War, and heralded the 4th Taiwan Strait Crisis in late 2018 that nearly plunged the United States and China into World War Three. Those three crises, and the aftershocks created by them, had tested the United States, and pushed it to become even more active on the world stage, especially militarily. And now there was this, the "Event" as it had been called, which tossed a third of the United States into a completely separate universe, and a century back in time.

    When one looked at the situation logically, the Western United States was best suited to pull through "The Event", and all the chaos it had brought with it. When the Second Korean War had begun, the United States, Japan, South Korea, The Philippines, Australia, and New Zealand, formed the backbone of the western coalition to finally rid the world of the rogue nuclear state of North Korea. On the other side was China, and to a much smaller degree, Russia. Both sides wanted to be rid of them, and in a move unprecedented in history, West and East worked together to bring the Kim Regime tumbling to the ground. Intel shared between both sides lead to the first strike, and destruction of nearly every ground based ICBM and IRBM launcher. In the end, only 10 missiles had gotten into the air, and all ten were shot down.

    The Aegis system of the United States Navy, as well as those on the Japanese Maritime Self Defense Force, had proved themselves. Two Destroyers, one American, and one Japanese, had downed all ten within the space of a few minutes. The results had proven to be far more than what even the most optimistic defense analysts ever dreamed of, and had terrified Russian and Chinese military leaders. Two destroyers had knocked down 10 missiles, and reports had shown that the engagement wasn't even close. In the end however, West and East once again prevailed over a mutual enemy. In the city of Hamhung, American and South Korean troops linked up with Chinese forces, celebrating their defeat of a mutual enemy.

    But the subsequent occupation of former North Korea, and the guerilla warfare that had sprouted up, had required a massive surge in combat troops, which meant a subsequent recruiting drive, and lowering of standards held by MEPS facilities that held back tens of thousands of qualified candidates for small reasons. But just as it seemed that many of those enlisting would arrive too late, the Saudi-Iran War broke out, and threw the entire Middle East into turmoil. One war had ended, just for another to start, and the United States military found itself fighting in two theaters, and an active duty numbers had swelled to the two million mark, with no sign of stopping.

    Then in November 2018, after what appeared to have been an attempted coup in Taiwan, which was put down by the military, the People's Republic of China announced the deployment of an aircraft carrier and other naval assets to the Taiwan Straits. A task force that had spent months beforehand being built up, in full view of the United States and its allies. When the PLAN left port, they were met with a blocking force of the US Seventh Fleet, two carrier strike groups, and assets from Japan, Korea, Singapore, and Australia.

    The next month become the most tense in modern history, surpassing even the Cuban Missile Crisis, as United States Marines landed in Taiwan to reinforce the ROCA, and in the skies over the Strait, PLAN and US Navy aircraft exchanged fire, which was followed shortly by naval action between the opposing fleets. For the first time since the Falklands War, modern ships from nations more equal in capability than Britain and Argentina, fought one another. The cost was staggering for both sides, but also very telling in capabilities between the United States and the People's Republic of China. On December 7th, 2018, a date which was remembered as the day when the world breathed a sigh of relief, arbitrators from every continent except Antarctica, had brokered a cease fire between the United States and its allies, and the People's Republic of China.

    If not for the actions of so many nations, using every diplomatic channel, pulling as many strings and favors as possible, and outright begging both superpowers to back down, the United States and China would likely have escalated to nuclear conflict. Something that was evident by silos, submarines, and bombers on all sides being at the highest possible readiness, and according to some rumor, nuclear armed B-2's flying just a few hundred miles from the Chinese border.

    With over ten thousand dead on both sides, the United States and China both felt humiliated. The United States wanted to kick China out of the South China Sea, and secure Taiwan's Independence. China wanted to invade and completely annex Taiwan, and build forward bases on the island. In the end, the main goal of protecting Taiwan had been achieved, but at a heavy price. Between the Second Korean War, the Saudi-Iran War, which would drag on until late 2018, nearly resulting in an allied invasion of Iran, and now the 4th Taiwan Strait Crisis, roughly 25,000 coffins with flags draped over them had been brought back to the United States.

    In two years, 25,000 American servicemen had paid with their lives, with three times that number wounded to varying degrees. All the while the the reconstruction and occupation of Korea was underway, a costly, but fragile peace had been achieved in the Middle East, at the cost of a nuclear exchange which wiped Riyadh and Tehran off the map. An invasion of Iran was considered, but the subsequent peace negotiations put paid to those plans. With how thinly stretched the US military and its allies were, an occupation of Iran would be massive and bloody.

    Then in early 2019, when it had seemed as if the world was just starting to once again know peace, Russian military forces began mobilizing and massing all along its western border, from the Baltics to Ukraine. Intelligence intercepts had made it perfectly clear what was planned. Having watched the United States bloody itself against North Korea, China, and Iran, and having suffered nearly 28,000 total dead by January of 2019, and its forces still spread thin, they assumed they would have a free hand in Europe. Despite the rearmament of Britain, France, Poland, Italy, and especially the United States, they assumed the Baltics, Ukraine, and Moldova were capable of being taken.

    But just as China assumed it would have a free hand in Taiwan, Russia assumed it had a free hand in Eastern Europe. With the United States military now numbering at just shy of 2.5 million personnel, with massive rearmament drives, and procurement of new equipment, the US military deployed to Europe. Tens of thousands of soldiers arrived within the first months, and by November of 2019, over 100k US military personnel were stationed across the Baltics, Poland, Germany, Britain, Italy, Turkey, Norway, and the Benelux region.

    For the first time in decades, the vast majority of the United States' combat and offensive might was stationed overseas. Every unit east of the Rockies was focusing on Europe, while those west of it were finally starting to come home, with fresh troops taking their place, and many units getting much needed reprieve. By December of 2019, hundreds of thousands of recently EAS'd personnel were situated across the United States, with a great many in the western half. Puget Sound and Pearl Harbor were filled with ships in need of maintenance, and airports and air bases filled with transports and liners going to and from bases overseas. All the while, China once again seemed to be making a move against Taiwan, with the US and its Pacific allies answering the call.

    So when one thought about it, if the Eastern portion of the United States, whether East of the Rockies, or East of the Mississippi, had been taken, they'd be stripped of the majority of their combat units, with limited means of affecting events near them. And while "The Event" had brought back Spain, Portugal, and the Benelux nations, which had tens of thousands of American and NATO troops in them, U.S. military forces out west were concentrated heavily in or near regions affected by "The Event", to say nothing of various allied troops who had come back. That is not to say however, that all allied forces out west came back. Forces in mainland Japan and Korea, as well as much of the 3rd and 7th Fleets, did not come back. Those that did were anchored in harbors, or close to the coast lines of affected nations during "The Event".

    However, due to the last four years, units in places such as Okinawa, Iceland, Iberia, and the Benelux nations, have increased in size, to the tune of 25% to over 50%, with American Forces on Okinawa numbering nearly 50,000 total, and the recently established "Marine Force Taiwan", and deployment of combat aircraft to Iceland, has further increased the number of American servicemen available to defend the Western States. The number of naval ships, which while not as large as some may have liked, was considerable.

    One carrier strike group was in and around Taiwan during "The Event", to act as a blocking force for the Chinese Strike Group, one undergoing refit at Bremerton Naval Yard, and another which off the Icelandic coast when the event happened. The two remaining West Coast carriers were either returning to the West Coast for maintenance and rest, or had just been sent back out to sea, heading to assist the JMSDF and Korean navy against Chinese aggression against the Philippines. Three aircraft carriers, along with a number of frigates, destroyers, submarines, and other assorted vessels, gave the Western States of America the most powerful navy in the world, and secured uptime nation dominance across the Pacific Ocean.

    While some lamented that the uptime United States would basically be at a severe disadvantage to the Chinese because of "The Event", and aren't entirely wrong in doing so, Chinese naval efforts uptime were curtailed after the 4th Taiwan Strait Crisis, and would be doubly so after "The Event". China lost one carrier written off in the Straits of Taiwan, which was later scuttled. Their second came back with the entire array of force around Taiwan during the chaos. Most of their experienced crews are either dead or back in time with us, so that third carrier under construction will have completely green crews. While the scoreboard for carriers lost uptime can be seen as; China - 2, America - 3, the United States still forward deploys at least one carrier out of Yokosuka, and had two more Pacific carriers unaffected by the shift. While it would take time to make the 1920 West Coast infrastructure up to spec, the knowledge and experienced crews are still there. China's on the other hand, would be completely gutted.

    It's funny in a way, since "The Event" brought reconciliation between Taiwan and the PRC remnants, the Chinese Republic boasts the second most powerful navy in the world, with its collection of Taiwanese and former PLAN vessel being more powerful than any other regional navy. In another, the transfer of so many Japanese, Indian, Korean, Filipino, and other military assets helped kickstart the creation of new nations, and the removal of colonial European rule from Asia. A Japanese Republic led by a liberal government that nipped the ambitions of the IJN and IJA in the bud, the creation of a Republic of Korea, a Philippine Republic, the Free City of Singapore, Republic of Vietnam, and a budding Republic of India. While "The Event" was and still is a tragedy, one that even the author of this article wishes would reverse, there is no disputing the fact that the world made from January 1st, 1920, will be a far better one than the world so many of us left behind.
     
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    Chapter 5
  • Before yall read this next chapter, just wanted to give an announcement I got another ISOT story in the works, maybe two if I can manage it. Won't be for some time until they get written down, but I'll get to it eventually. First one, which I'm engaged in research for, involves the states of Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, and New Mexico, being sent back to the 19th century, either in early 1859, while Buchanan is still in office, and before the raid on Harpers Ferry, or the more likely, and much easier to write idea, of in 1861, one week before the First Battle of Bull Run.

    Second story, the one farthest down the line, is a story that in a sense pays homage to the story that kicked off the ISOT genre in the first place. If you've read Island in the Sea of Time by S.M. Stirling, you know what I'm talking about. Instead of Nantucket going it alone in 1450, the entirety of modern New England, as well as the Atlantic Canada, circa modern day arrives not long after William Walker betrays the town, the makes off with most of Nantucket's weapons, and one of its ships alongside Isketerol. I'd love to hear yalls thoughts on both ideas I got before I start actually writing.

    That out of the way, here's the next chapter, showcasing just one of many encounters along the continental divide. Canadian encounters will be more tame though. Nothing to be aggressive aboot in Mooseland. On another note, it seems that "Republic of Japan" is the wrong term to use to describe the government of Japan that I have planned out in the story. For me, a Republic would be a government before the May 15th Incident that sent Japan into the era of control and assassinations by the IJN and IJA against politicians who tried to rein them in. I have no plans on removing the Emperor from power, and doing so would not be a good idea. Over on Althistory.com, this name convention was pointed out, so I believe "Kingdom of Japan" is a better name for what I meant to get across.
    -----------------------------

    Utah-Wyoming Border
    West of Evanston, Wyoming
    January 1st, 1920



    1st Lieutenant Brian Miller of the Utah National Guard stood in shock and disbelief at what he saw on the other side of the Utah-Wyoming border. He and his platoon of 30 men had been sent to the Port of Entry on the border, to reinforce the Utah Highway Patrol officers who had set up a cordon around the road. They had arrived and found the wall still standing, blocking off the western United States from the rest of the world. Some of the men had tried in vain to cross the barrier, and in the case of a Wyoming State Trooper who had been on this side of the wall, and wanted to go home, shot it. Suffice to say, the barrier wasn't harmed in the slightest.

    When it had finally gone down however, he and the platoon breathed a collective sigh of relief. That was, until they saw what awaited them on the other side. Interstate 80 as they knew it, was severed cleanly, and completely, right on the border. The Port of Entry, which was scarcely half a mile away, wasn't there. But that wasn't what made their breath catch in their throats, and grips on rifles tighten.

    "CONTACT FRONT!" Corporal David Matherson yelled out, taking a knee, and pointing his rifle out east. Within moments, the rest of the platoon was doing exactly the same. On the other side of the border, on what used to be Interstate 80, stood at least a dozen men on horseback, with another dozen on foot, and they were all armed. Safeties flicked off, and the mounted M240 and M2 .50 caliber machine guns swiveled towards the armed men.

    "Where the fuck did they come from?" Private First Class Zachary Davids cried out as he ducked behind a nearby humvee, and aimed his M4 carbine towards the armed men.

    "STANDFAST, MEN!" an officer shouted as he leveled his rifle at Matherson, while the rest of the men around him hastily took aim with their own rifles. Both sides were uneasy about the situation, but those on the eastern side of the border even more so due to the presence of the armored humvees and trucks, with their turreted machine guns aimed at them.

    "IDENTIFY YOURSELVES!" Lieutenant Miller called out, moving forward ever so slightly, rifle still raised, with his left hand up, palm facing outward. Looking over at the presumbled leader, he continued. "Who are you people?"

    "Captain James Fleet, 3rd Infantry Regiment, now who in the hell are you?" the man responded, lowering his Springfield rifle slightly. "And just what in the hell is going on around here? Where have you people come from?"

    "I think we oughta be asking where the hell you guys came from, instead of the other way around." Private First Class Alec Jefferson said as he looked back at the assortment of old trucks and cars on the road behind Captain Fleet and his men. Among the vehicles was an old Packard painted in police colors, with two sheriffs standing by it, staring intently at the exchange.

    "Can it, Jefferson!" Miller glared at the PFC, before turning back to Captain Fleet. "1st Lieutenant Brian Miller, Utah Army National Guard!"

    "Last I checked, they don't let negroes join the Army." Fleet commented as he looked over the Utah National Guardsmen, who were now staring at him as if he had grown a second head.

    "Then again, Mormons are awfully accepting of most folk!" one of the cavalry soldiers said, getting a few chuckles from his fellow soldiers. "Still, awful strange seeing niggers in uniform. Doesn't seem right to me."

    "Doesn't seem right seeing hicks like you around here, but here we are." Jefferson shot back. The cavalryman snarled and shifted his carbine towards Jefferson, who held his gaze, and pointed his M4 right back at him.

    "I ain't about to take shit from no nigger-

    "And we aren't taking shit from a backwood hick like yourself." Specialist Louis Chang shot back as he too aimed his rifle towards the cavalryman in question.

    "You got chinks here too?" The cavalryman said with surprise as. "What kinda fucked up outfit is this? You got niggers, chinks, and greasers mixed in with white men! And you saying youse is National Guard? Yeah, and I'm the president of the United States!"

    "Believe it or not, our weapons are very much real!" Jefferson said, his rifle still trained on the man whose Krag Carbine was pointed at his chest only moments before. "Now put the rifle down now!"

    "Any nigger talks like that to a white man outta be hanged!" another cavalryman, this one a Sergeant, interrupted, his own rifle now aimed at Jefferson. But a few clicking sounds and movement out of the corner of his eye said that was a mistake. Three other Guardsmen had their weapons aimed at the Cavalry Sergeant, which made him go red in the face from sheer anger. Anger at the fact that only one of the men was white, and the one that was, was a woman!

    "You gotta be one dumb motherfucker to say that shit when you got this many guns pointed at you!" a gunner on one of the humvees called out, a wide smile across his face as he patted his beloved M249. "Now I suggest you lower that rifle, before I fill you full of holes!" He pulled back the charging handle, and put the cavalryman directly in his sights.

    "Put the goddamn rifle down, now!" Miller ordered, his red dot aligned perfectly with the cavalryman's head.

    "The day I take orders from a nigger!" The Sergeant snarled, his free hand slowly reaching for his pistol holster.

    "Five,"

    "Sergeant Bixler, put the damn rifle down! All of you, put your rifles down!" Captain Fleet commanded, hoping to diffuse the situation that was rapidly deteriorating in front of him.

    "Four-" Miller didn't get any further from that.

    The Sergeant, whose face looked more like a tomato with how red he was, made his last mistake. He fired his Krag Carbine, while simultaneously pulling his Colt 1892 revolver from its holster. The shot fired from his Krag hit Jefferson square in the vest, failing to penetrate, but making the Guardsman wince as he stumbled back a pace. The Sergeant meanwhile, had his brains blown out the back of his head by a single round fired from Miller's M4, while a multitude of rounds tore through his chest, and sent the man flying back in the saddle.

    It was at that point all hell broke loose, and both sides exchanged fire.

    The first cavalryman from earlier, whose carbine was also pointed at Jefferson, took a round through the shoulder courtesy of Specialist Chang, and fell off his horse. At this point half of the cavalrymen had dismounted their horses, including Captain Fleet. However, that did not mean they were spared from the quick, but devastating hailstorm of bullets sent their way. Guardsmen and police opened up on the mix of cavalry and infantry, few of which managed to return fire on their own. Most were either cut down or had taken cover behind whatever they could. The horses, whose owners had either dismounted, or been shot off, were startled by the cacophony of gunfire, and took off running. A few had even been killed.

    "CEASE FIRE, CEASE FIRE!" Lieutenant Miller bellowed, as he looked ahead at the now decimated force of cavalry and infantry in front of him. Most of the two dozen men who once stood in front of them, were either dead, wounded, or were still hiding behind the few cars and trucks that were on their side of the road. But that didn't mean he and his platoon escaped unscathed.

    "GET A DAMN MEDIC UP HERE!" Staff Sergeant Garcia called out, as he and two others sprinted over to one of their fellow soldiers.

    Miller let out a tired sigh. This is not how he envisioned spending his New Years. He'd already been in Korea, why did he have to get shot at again?

    "1st Squad, on me!" he said as he began to slowly advance forward, stepping over the burn mark left in the ground by the barrier, and into the state of Wyoming. All around, he saw dead and wounded soldiers. The scent of gunpowder, voided bowels, and freshly dead men filled the air. A scent Miller was all too familiar with. He saw men writhing on the ground in pain, or like most of them men, dead and unmoving on the ground.

    Not even Captain Fleet, who tried to be the voice of reason in the standoff, was spared from the onslaught. He lay in a pool of his own blood, three bullet holes in a tight grouping center mass of his chest. Despite trying to defuse the situation, when the firing had started, he had a rifle in his hands, and raised it in defense.

    "SURRENDER GODDAMMIT! WE HAVE YOU SURROUNDED!" Lieutenant Miller called out to the few infantrymen who were hiding behind the cars and trucks on the highway.

    "FUCK YOU NIGGER!" one of the men shouted, before popping up with his rifle at the ready. Guardsmen fired and the man dropped before he even had time to aim his rifle.

    "FOR FUCK SAKE, STAND DOWN YOU IDIOTS!" Corporal Matherson called out. "Connolly, Harper, take left, Scott, with me." he ordered, gesturing to the points he wanted his fireteam to go. They advanced slowly, going around the flanks to get eyes on the men hiding behind the trucks.

    "LAST WARNING!" Miller shouted. "DROP YOUR WEAPONS AND SURRENDER!"

    "You ain't gonna kill us?" a voice called from behind one of the trucks.

    "Not unless you try to kill us!" Miller replied. "We got medics on the way, we can treat your wounded." he said, noting the sound of approaching sirens growing even louder. Turning around, a small convoy of police cars, ambulances, and Utah National Guard Humvees were rapidly approaching from the west. Turning back, he awaited a reply from the remaining soldiers, and listened to a not so quiet argument between them.

    "You trust em, Boyd?" one of the soldiers said.

    "I don't trust any nigger, much less a nigger with a rifle. You give them a rifle, they might think they-"

    Lieutenant Miller and his squad stood and listened to the debate between the survivors, a few of them chuckling in disbelief at the casualness of the racism on display.

    "And some people say this level of racism is only a caricature," Private First Class Scott said, shaking his head. "Those inbred fucks really believe what their saying too."

    "Be quiet dammit!" Miller hissed. "You boys done thinking? You still got wounded men out here, and they need help!" The conversations ceased and there was a few seconds of silence. Then a voice, from the one called Boyd, came back in reply.

    "Alright boy, we're comin on out! Just don't shoot us!" he said, as what few rifles they had left were tossed to the ground, and the men stood up, arms raised high in the air. Even the two sheriffs did the same, their hands raised high, with looks of sheer terror on their faces.

    Two of the cavalrymen, six infantrymen, and the two police officers, were the only survivors of the firefight. Ten men in total, and half of them were wounded to varying degrees. All their officers were dead, and only one of their NCO's was left alive. The same one who said he didn't trust Miller, for no other reason than he was black.

    "Jesus fucking Christ, LT, the fuck is going on here?" Sergeant Avery Holmes said, looking over the assortment of men in front of their squad. "These assholes are straight out of the last century!"

    "Yeah, I can see that," Miller replied, turning around and watching the convoy of reinforcements roll up to the border. "Doesn't look like any of us will be looking at retiring any time soon."

    Within seconds, more Guardsmen dismounted from trucks and humvees, while paramedics rushed from ambulances, and made their way to the wounded soldiers. More armed and armored Humvees positioned themselves on the road, and their turrets faced east. They assisted in cuffing and restraining the surrendered soldiers, and those who were wounded received medical attention.

    Those who weren't wounded, were marched over to Lieutenant Miller and the newly arrived Captain Grant, the latter of which looked at the scene in front of him in absolute disbelief.

    "Miller, just what in the fuck happened here?" he asked as the uninjured prisoners were brought over to the two of them.

    "When the wall of light went down sir, we found these guys on the other side. All armed, all jumpy, and none too kind." he replied.

    "And how'd that turn into this?" Grant asked, gesturing to the assortment of dead bodies littering the road. "Didn't you try to de-escalate this?"

    "We tried, sir," Sergeant Holmes interrupted. The rest of Miller's squad nodded their heads behind Sergeant Holmes.

    "He's telling the truth, man," one of the Highway Patrolmen said. "Most of them didn't like the fact that your Lieutenant and his men weren't all white."

    "That's the politest way to put it at any rate." Another officer said, tapping his chest. "Got it all on our body cams as well in case yall try raking him over the coals for self defense."

    Captain Grant raised a curious eyebrow at that latter comment, which made the officers laugh.

    "A few of us served too, ya know. Hell, me and Jackson here both served in the Army when Korea popped off. We know how things go these days." The officers laughed again, and Grant just stared blankly at them for a few moments before turning back to Miller.

    "So, who are these ones?" Grant asked, staring at the three soldiers brought before the officers.

    "About time we find a white man in charge," the soldier in the middle said, making Captain Grant raise a quizzical eyebrow in response. "These damn niggers-"

    "Shut the fuck up!" Grant snarled, his scowl deepening at the man. "I don't know where the fuck you came from, but your going to show me, and my fellow officer, some damn respect! Do you understand me, Sergeant!?"

    "Y-yes sir!" Sergeant Boyd stammered.

    "Now who the hell are you people, and why did you fire on my men!?" he demanded, and the Sergeant began stuttering once more.

    "I'm Sergeant Jeffery Boyd, and this here is Corporal Bedford Cunningham and Private Anthony Marino. We were sent to investigate that big wall of light, and ordered to get through it if possible. We spent hours out here before it went down, and then we saw you people."

    "Which doesn't explain why you shot at my men, men who've fought for their country, only to be shot at by fellow Americans! So I'll ask one last time, why did you shoot at my men!"

    "Because the Sergeant, like most of the men here are from the South, sir," Private Marino interrupted. "Some of the others started making fun at and insulting your men because they were colored, or Mexican, or Chinese. Mainly at that Jefferson fellow you have who took a bullet to the chest. Your Lieutenant and my Captain tried to defuse the situation, but another Sergeant refused to take any orders from your Lieutenant or his Sergeants, and shot first. Most of the men didn't want to take orders from them sir, and it was us that fired first."

    Sergeant Boyd and Corporal Cunningham glared angrily at the Private, who did his best to pretend he couldn't see them looking at him, while Captain Grant just let out a tired sigh.

    "I assume by the looks of impotent rage on your faces that your Private here is telling the truth, ain't he?" Grant said, shaking the two men back to reality, and making them look at him once more. Now, it was Corporal Cunningham who spoke.

    "But sir, since when does The Army allow nig- I mean colored folks to join? I know there's them Buffalo Soldiers that fought in the Spanish and Indian Wars, but I ain't ever seen a unit like yours, sir."

    "Where the hell are you men from? And more to the point, what fucking year is it that you think you can say half of what you've been saying since I've been here?" Grant's patience was wearing thin, and everyone could see as much.

    "I'm from Alabama sir, and Sergeant Boyd is from Mississippi. That fucking dago over there is from New York." Cunningham said.

    "And frankly sir, this is just getting insulting to us. It is the year of the Lord, 1920, and I don't appreciate the way we are being treated here! We are white men doing our duty to-" Sergeant Boyd stopped as he looked past Captain Grant and up into the sky behind them.

    A flight of four Blackhawk helicopters, escorted by two AH-64 Apaches approached from out west, dispersed in a wide pattern, with the Apaches taking up both flanks. Red crosses were painted on the rearmost of the Blackhawks, which landed in a clearing just north of the highway, and troops poured out, and made their way over to the assortment of dead and wounded men who littered the road.

    "What the fuck?" Boyd muttered, unable to take his eyes off the spectacle in front of him. The man had probably never seen any type of aircraft before in his life, much less six helicopters landing in a tight formation. His expression was mirrored on the faces of every soldier they had in custody, wounded or not.

    But while they were fixated on that, Grant took the opportunity to grab Lieutenant Miller and Sergeant Holmes, and pull them aside privately.

    "You boys wouldn't believe the shit we've been hearing over the radio back at base," he began. "Every transmission we keep getting from out east talks about President Wilson mobilizing the National Guard in every state to investigate a mysterious occurrence at the Rocky Mountains. And that's not even mentioning the shit going on in California, or up in Canada."

    "And these assholes said it was 1920," Sergeant Holmes said. "You know, I had a creeping suspicion in my mind, I just didn't want to lend it any credence because it sounds fucking crazy."

    "Crazy or not, the Pacific Fleet is reporting contact with honest to god battleships flying the naval ensign of the Imperial Japanese Navy, and reporting cruisers on the Mexican coast flying the German Naval Ensign." Grant said. "I don't think there's any rational answer for this, or one that doesn't make you sound like a loon. But then again, what we're looking at sure as shit ain't normal."

    "Sent back in time, I presume," Miller began. "But even then, it doesn't explain why there's German ships off the Mexican coast in 1920."

    "No it doesn't, but the various reports we've been getting since the wall went down has made it clear we're not alone in this. Guantanamo Bay, Keflavik, Okinawa, Rota, Brussels, and many others are on the net, reporting contact against one force or another. NATO forces in Belgium and the Netherlands report attacks from Germans, while a German battleship tried to dock in fucking Belfast of all places." Grant let out a tired sigh. "All the radio traffic we're getting is frantic and quite frankly horrifying."

    "So we've been sent back in time somehow," Sergeant Holmes said, nodding his head up and down. "But how does that explain the Germans?"

    "An alternate universe, maybe?" Miller suggested. "Infinite universe theory and all that. Perhaps this is a universe where the Central Powers won the First World War."

    "Better than if we ended up in an Axis Victory world." Holmes added. "Imagine if we ended up in The Man in the High Castle world."

    "That show sucked ass, and the last season was utter garbage." Miller said, making Grant and Holmes chuckle.

    "Yeah, they shoehorned that Black Communist Rebellion thing in too hard."

    "Man, it's not even that," Miller snorted, a look of genuine amusement on his face. "Like, what kinda name is Black Communist Rebellion? Shit sounds stupid. They could have called it the African Liberation Front and it'd make more sense. But no, they completely fuck the last season to hell, and rush it, and give us a shitty ending."

    "I don't know, I kinda liked the action scenes," Holmes said, getting a raised eyebrow from Grant and Miller.

    "Holmes, I knew you had shit taste in TV's and movies when you said you enjoyed The Force Awakens."

    Again, all three of the men laughed, enjoying some much needed humor in what has been an otherwise busy and stressful day. A day that they hoped to spend with their families or otherwise relaxing after the events of the last four years. But what little humor they shared was short lived, as their attention was soon shifted to the east as multiple voices called out to approaching aircraft.

    "INCOMING AIRCRAFT!" one of the gunners on a nearby Humvee called out, his turret shifting, and gun elevating upward to aim at the aircraft. Above them, the two Apaches broke off from their holding pattern, and began to climb rapidly while picking up speed.

    Five aircraft, a Curtiss JN-4, with four Sopwith Pop's flying in close formation to protect it, approached their position at an altitude of barely 1,000 feet.

    "Mako 1-1 on approach to aircraft, standby!" The radio from a nearby Humvee squawked. One of the Apaches held itself at a distance, using its superior speed, maneuverability, and degree of fire to track the group, while the other gained altitude, and caught up with the biplanes. "It's a damn shame you grunts can't see the looks on their faces right now." the pilot said again.

    A few moments later, all four of the Pups broke formation, two turning to get behind the first Apache, the second going for the second Apache, and the third going for the Blackhawks sitting on the field, which were loading the various wounded, and were vulnerable.

    "Either of you two know what those planes are packing?" Grant asked, turning to the gunner of his Humvee, and nodding at him. The gunner pulled back on the charging handle, the other gunners in nearby humvees following suit.

    "Rifle caliber machine guns. Won't do shit to an Apache or upgunned Humvee, but Blackhawks don't have armor." Holmes answered right as the Pup diving in on the Blackhawks opened fire.

    "GET DOWN!" Grant screamed as soldiers ducked for cover, and three different Humvees opened fire with their .50 caliber machine guns. The 7.7mm rounds from the Pup tore up the ground around one of the Blackhawks, hitting two of the medics, and one of the wounded soldiers on a gurney. But that's all the damage it was able to do as three separate streams of .50 caliber rounds tore through the wings and fuselage, causing the aircraft to tumble from the air, and crash to the ground. The wreckage skidded just far enough to force the pilots of one of the Blackhawks to pull up in a hurry, lest they too become casualties of this battle.

    Further up in the sky, the 30mm chain guns on the Apaches roared to life, sweeping the Pups out of the sky with frightening ease. The first to go down was the one who tried to directly attack the second Apache, and whose pilot's head was blown apart by an accurately placed 30mm round, and sent the plane tumbling to the ground.

    The last two who attempted to get on the flank of the first Apache didn't fare any better. The helicopter turned on a dime, and pulled maneuvers that the pilots in the Pups could only dream of. Before they even had time to turn around on their opponent, the Apache already had them in its sights. One quick burst from the chain gun, and the third Pup went down in flames.

    "I'm gonna give this bastard a chance to run!" the pilot said, bringing the Apache to turn and follow the lone Pup.

    "Here's hoping he'll take the mercy we're giving him." the copilot chuckled. The aerial bout lasted for a minute, with the pilot of the Pup trying, and failing to outmaneuver the Apache. Realizing that he couldn't outmaneuver, or get behind the helicopter, he finally turned out, and flew up towards the Jenny, waggling his wings to signal the pilot, and turning back east. Within seconds, the Jenny was hot on the heels of the Pup, and the two planes flew away from the two Apaches that made it explicitly clear what would happen to them if they stayed.

    "First cavalry, then some planes, what's next, a couple of tanks? Maybe a mass artillery barrage?" One of the gunners of a nearby Humvee said humorlessly.

    "Hey, Spisak?" Captain Grant said deadpanned, still staring up at the retreating planes.

    "Yes sir?"

    "Shut up."

    "Yes sir." Spisak slumped slightly in the turret at the order from his CO, and those within earshot chuckled.

    "Well, this just got a lot more complicated." Miller said, turning to face Grant and Holmes. "I just thought about something. If the United States out East is some strange 1920's version, we're gonna deal with a lot more of this." He said, thumbing his finger to the soldiers being loaded into the back of a truck.

    "Segregation, Jim Crow, the KKK, and Woodrow Wilson as president," Holmes replied. "Meaning that until Washington truly figures out what's going on, we'll be facing hostile militia and army units all over the border."

    "Not just that. Wilson takes one look at half the people serving, he'll lose his shit." Miller explained. Most Americans of this time period would lose their shit."

    "And that's not even half the problems we got." Grant said, shaking his head. "But that won't be our problem. Not yet anyway. I'm gonna report this in, let command know what's going on, and see if we can't get some more reinforcements out here." With that, Grant walked over to his Humvee, and got on the radio. When he was out of earshot, Lieutenant Miller said,

    "Holmes, check with Staff Sergeant Garcia about our wounded. I pray to god that the soldier on the stretcher wasn't one of ours."

    "Yes sir," Sergeant Holmes said, who proceeded to jog over to where the wounded were being treated.

    "GET A BURN KIT! HE'S STILL ALIVE!" one of the medics yelled out from the wreckage of the downed Sopwith Pup.

    Miller had seen burn victims in Korea. The slog through Pyongyang was brutal, and white phosphorus was a nasty bitch of a weapon. Even the Scout Snipers and Rangers he'd fought alongside were horrified by what it did to tightly packed, and unprotected infantry. What it did to poor North Korean conscripts trapped in trucks and old BTR's? The ones who died were the lucky ones. Burn wounds were horrific, and the pilot of that downed Pup was probably wishing he was dead.

    Overhead, a flight of four F-16's roared overhead, heading eastward. Miller thought it was a damn shame that the F-35's weren't in Hill right now. So many of the F-22's and F-35's were overseas, with the older 15's and 16's being relegated to the States. The Falcons should have been phased out four years ago, but then Korea happened. Then Iran and Saudi Arabia. Then fucking China.

    "Fucking communists." Miller spat. He was no conservative, but his feelings towards them mirrored most conservatives in regards to them. If it wasn't for them, Korea and Taiwan wouldn't have seen the fighting they did. "C'est la vie," He said.

    That was life, and it couldn't be helped. For good or for worse, they would have to play the cards they were dealt this day.
     
    Chapter 6
  • January 4th, 1920
    Washington D.C.
    United States of America
    White House Oval Office
    0930 Hours

    ------------------------------------------

    Secretary of State Robert Lansing was not having a good day. In fact, he had not been having a good week. In fact, the United States had not been having a good week. Hell, the world had not been having a good week. It had been almost one week since mysterious walls of bright light appeared all over the world, including inside the United States. Many had called it an Act of God to punish the world for the wickedness of the new generation, to punish the world after the War of 1914, or as just a test of faith for Christians around the world.

    But what was really disturbing was the lack of communication from the Western half of the country. No radio transmissions or telegraph messages came from any of the nine states west of the continental divide. Not even the Navy in San Diego or Puget Sound. There was nothing. At least, at first there was nothing. Some radio transmissions were picked up, very strong ones, which blew out some of the receivers that picked them up. Reports saying that it was New Year's Day 2020, and that they could not contact the United States government in Washington.

    This was confusing to a great many people, Lansing included. Many were wondering just what was going on out west when the first reports of fighting came in. Military and militia units dispatched west, along with Army Signal Corps planes, reported a number of military units across Utah, Idaho, and Arizona. Military units that, upon closer inspection, and contact, claimed to belong to the National Guards of those states.

    But there was just one problem with that. Not only were the uniforms wrong, the racial makeup of the alleged units made everyone's head spin. Whites, Blacks, Chinese, Mexicans, and even women were present in the reports. Then there were the strange armored cars and aeroplanes these supposed National Guard units had. None of it made any sense.

    The first reports were chalked up to the excitedness of soldiers after the walls of light had finally disappeared, or being overcome with emotion at seeing loved ones trapped on the other side. But more reports started flooding in, and not just from out west. All over the world it was being reported that strange military units sat on the other side, and whole cities had seemingly been replaced with ones much larger, and far more extravagant.

    Then the reports of fighting came in. They were sporadic at first, with sheriffs and militia calling in saying they had been overrun and needed help. That mobs of Negroes, Asiatics, and Mexicans in strange uniforms and carrying even stranger weapons were slaughtering white men from Montana down to New Mexico. There was also a lack of response of any kind from units that were sent after reports of fighting began.

    It wasn't until an Army Signal Corps pilot, a 1st Lieutenant Jimmy Doolittle, who had been dispatched with escort to photograph the situation outside of Evanston, Wyoming, that the situation was taken seriously. He, and a single Sopwith Pup, out of an escort of four planes, were the only survivors to have come back from the scouting mission. When he gave his report to the commanding officer at Kelly Field, along with the photographs he had taken, was the situation fully realized.

    His testimony, as well as that of another pilot, a 1st Lieutenant Eddie Rickenbacker, and the photos they had taken, painted a grim picture indeed. The element of the 3rd Infantry Regiment that had been sent to Evanston, and later to the border where the wall of light had stood, had been wiped out. Multiple aircraft, dozens of vehicles, and hundreds of troops of unknown origin were on the Utah-Wyoming border, and had utterly routed the United States Army.

    So when more reports came in, Washington had to take them seriously, and that was a problem. With the crisis occurring on New Year's Day, most of the government wasn't even present in Washington, and had to be quickly recalled when the situation first started.

    Lansing, luckily, or rather unluckily enough, was the first one of significance to be brought in, and briefed of the situation. The Secret Service had gathered him, as well as Lieutenant General Peyton March, the commanding general of the United States Army, and brought them to the White House to brief the president on the situation.

    Due to President Wilson's failing health, his second wife, Edith Wilson, blocked all access to him, only allowing communication through written notes and questions she had in her hand. Initially, she had turned them all away, saying that Wilson wasn't seeing anyone, and that he was extremely sick. She had often been accused of running the country due to Wilson's condition, and was often called "The First Female President" of the United States because of the influence she held in her position. Her stonewalling and refusal to allow them to meet President Wilson had cost the United States valuable time in responding to the crisis.

    Not even the Secret Service could force their way into the president's room, especially given his condition. It had taken a full two days to recall most of the necessary individuals back to Washington, chief among them being Supreme Court Chief Justice Edward Douglas White, and Dr. Cary Grayson, the personal physician of President Wilson.

    Even then, the stubborn and aggravating Edith Wilson refused to let them speak to President Wilson. But Chief Justice White was prepared for this exact occasion. He had quickly drafted an order that required her to allow them access to President Wilson, otherwise she'd be held in contempt of court. It was late at night on the 3rd of January when they finally managed to reach the president, and inform him of the situation.

    Now it was early in the morning on the 4th of January, and everyone was present. Aside from President Wilson and his Vice President Thomas Marshall, was Dr Grayson, who stood beside Wilson, Secretary of State Robert Lansing, Secretary of War Newton Baker, Army Chief of Staff Peyton March, who in turn brought Major General's John J.Pershing and Leonard Wood along, Naval Secretary Josephus Daniels, and Admiral Robert Coontz, the Chief of Naval Operations. No aids or assistants were present in the room, as many of the things that were to be discussed in this room, needed to be kept private. Even in a city like Washington DC, which was a city of open secrets, there were some things that had yet to leak out yet.

    "Gentlemen, what brings you all here today?" President Wilson said hoarsely. A few of those in the room winced slightly upon hearing the president's voice. The stroke he'd had the year before had left him paralyzed on his right side, and his right eye with partial vision. Since his stroke, he'd been kept isolated from everyone who wasn't Dr Grayson, or his wife, Edith. Despite what the radio had said, Wilson himself hadn't ordered the National Guards of every state to mobilize when this all started. It was just an extension of his overprotective wife.

    As those in the room got a good look at him, many wondered if he was able to discharge the powers of his office properly. Physically he was feeble, and emotional state did not appear to be much better. But despite it being required by the Constitution, no one had been willing, or able to certify if he was indeed capable of these duties. Some, like Robert Lansing, wondered if the news of the recent events would be something he could take. And if he could, for how long?

    "Mr President," Lansing began, mentally preparing himself for what he was about to tell the president. "We are faced with a crisis west of the Rocky Mountains. A crisis the likes of which we have never seen before. And it...will be hard to believe, Mr President."

    "Don't waste my time, dammit, just tell me!" Wilson said in frustration.

    "Mr President, four days ago, bright walls of light appeared all over the world. Walls of light that cut off whole nations, and in the case of the United States, whole states, from the rest of the world, physically, as well as cutting off all avenues of communication with those inside. After roughly 12 hours, the walls went down, and everything seemed back to normal. But it soon turned out to be far from it."

    "What do you mean, Mr Lansing?" Vice President Marshall asked.

    "We think it best you all brace yourselves for what we're about to tell you next, gentlemen." General March began.

    "Just get on with it." Wilson demanded in a voice that was steadily growing weaker and weaker.

    "All the regions that were cut off from the world, were not, are not, the ones we knew. It has been confirmed that the states of California, Oregon, Washington, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Idaho, as well as the territories of Alaska, and Hawaii, as we knew them in 1919, have been replaced with their equivalent from the year 2020." Lansing said, finally letting it out, and allowing those in the room to fully take in what he said.

    No one said anything for half a minute, not even President Wilson, or Vice President Marshall, who seemed to be turning pale in the face.

    "If this is some kind of New Year's prank on us, this is-" Secretary of War Baker began, but was cut off by General March.

    "Secretary Baker, I assure you this isn't a joke. Those walls of light were as real as the walls of this office, and what we found behind them is just as real. In the days since it ended, we've gotten countless reports saying the same thing. Even the Canadians are saying the same thing about British Columbia, to say nothing of everywhere else in the world. This is real!" General March made sure to put emphasis behind his words when he said that, watching as Baker seemed to shrink inward, as his eyes went wide.

    "H-how is this possible?" Marshall asked, looking as if he was about to vomit in the Oval Office.

    "This can't be true…it can't be." Wilson said in a hoarse whisper. "Why God, why?"

    "I'm afraid it is, sir." General March began. "Army and National Guard units sent west to investigate and try to assist the locals with the crisis, reported that once the wall went down, they encountered towns, police, and military units that looked nothing like any they had ever seen. Many of those encounters, I'm afraid to say, ended poorly for our men."

    "What do you mean, poorly?" Secretary Baker asked, raising a quizzical eyebrow.

    "Ended with their defeat or retreat, poorly," March replied, and he watched even more color drain from the faces of those in the room. "The report that stands out the most is one that comes from the 3rd Infantry Regiment in Wyoming. Just west of the town of Evanston, they encountered soldiers who claimed to be members of the Utah National Guard. Aside from their weapons, vehicles, and uniforms, the makeup of the unit in question was strangest of all."

    "What is it, General?" Wilson asked.

    "The unit was made up of White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian men, as well as some women mixed in. And their officer was a black Lieutenant, later backed up by a white Captain." When the words left General March's mouth, Baker's face contorted into an ugly scowl.

    "Negro soldiers," Baker snarled, disgusted at the mere thought of blacks in uniform, much less black officers leading white men. "Negro officers leading white men. Disgusting!"

    General Pershing, like the other Generals in the room, mentally shook their heads. When he was commissioned as a 1st Lieutenant, he was given command of the all black 10th Cavalry Regiment, the "Buffalo Soldiers" as they had been called, out west during the Indian Wars. When the Spanish American War began, he had led the 10th Cavalry, alongside Teddy Roosevelt's 1st Volunteer Cavalry, in the battles of Kettle and San Juan Hills. Most believed that blacks were cowardly and incapable of being soldiers. Pershing knew for a fact that wasn't true. Most didn't give blacks a fair shake in the world. Pershing did. Because he had, he had earned the nickname "Nigger Jack" from southern officers who despised him for that.

    When Woodrow Wilson had taken office, he had relegated what few black officers there were in the Army and Navy to duties well below their station, and stonewalled promotions for more. He had deliberately kept the United States Federal Government segregated, and to keep blacks out of higher office, and going so low as to bar them from high positions in the post office. Secretary of War Baker and Postmaster General Albert S. Burleson had pushed for this as well, and Wilson granted their wishes.

    "There's far worse than that, sir." March said, hiding his annoyance with Secretary Baker. "From what the reports indicated, not long after making contact with these forces, a firefight broke out between them. The end result was…not in the favor of our men. The initial force was killed or captured, and most of the planes that were sent from Kelly Field were shot down, by planes of a type unlike any before seen.

    Now the men in the room looked horrified at the news they had been given. All except for the Generals, Admiral Coontz, and Secretary Lansing, who had been informed when the information first came through.

    "My God," Wilson began to shake slightly, and from what half of his face could still shift, shifted to an expression of anger. Pure, impotent anger. His fists balled, and he regained some of his color in his face, albeit the color was red. "Negroes killing good white men. No, no, NO!" he screamed, slamming his fists on his desk, shaking in impotent rage before breaking into a coughing fit.

    Dr Grayson wasted no time going to Wilson's side, trying to calm him down. It didn't work. President Wilson was sickly, but he was pissed.

    "Mr President, please-"

    "NO DAMMIT!" He screamed before entering another bout of coughing. His coughing had sounded as if his lungs were literally ripping themselves apart. When his coughing had finally subsided, he looked sharply over at General March. "General March, I want those damn niggers and mormons put down, you here me! You tell the army to put them down them damn traitors!"

    All the military men in the room looked uncertain when Wilson finished speaking, and it was Secretary Lansing who spoke up in reply.

    "Mr President, I believe you, and indeed the rest of the men in this room, need to listen to what the Generals and Admiral Coontz have to say. The situation is far worse than you've know, and I must insist you all listen." He explained, much to the anger of Wilson and Baker, who were glaring at him now. But they relented.

    "Go on then. General March, Admiral Coontz, tell me what I need to know." Wilson allowed, and General March let out a sigh.

    "After the first battle, which I would like to add wasn't the only one that occurred along the border of the states in question, the remainder of the 3rd Infantry Regiment, from Camp Eagle and Fort Sam Houston, were sent to Evanston with orders to put down what they thought were Mormon rebels. I regret to inform you that the 3rd Infantry was wiped out, with the majority of its men killed or captured, including its commanding officer, Colonel Julius Penn." General March explained. "However, scout planes we sent into the area often reported back intact, albeit with the pilots spooked from the planes they encountered. And the information they gathered, while of great importance, is very concerning."

    "A large buildup of troops all along the borders of Utah, Idaho, and Arizona, along every major road and border town." General Pershing added. "The Germans also reported even larger concentrations of troops in San Diego, and on the first day after The Event ended, resulted in the German Army on the border being put to rout by the California National Guard and United States Marines. The same was reported in Arizona as well."

    "And on the naval side of things, we have suffered defeats at sea as well." Naval Secretary Daniels said. "During The Event, the nations of Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua were also affected. This led to a battle off the coast of Northern Venezuela where we lost a cruiser and destroyer, and troops in Honduras reporting being attacked by Nicaraguan troops not long after the border was unobstructed. Then of course there's the issue with Cuba. Mr Lansing, would you care to explain?"

    "Of course," Lansing replied promptly, looking over the men in the room, and looking at the angry and terrified expressions of President Wilson, War Secretary Baker, and Dr Grayson. "Over the past few days, our encounters with these 'uptimers' as they call themselves, haven't all been hostile. In fact, some cordial encounters have and are happening as we speak, and some very important pieces of information have reached us regarding the nature of certain nations we now share the continent with."

    "Just get on with it, Secretary Lansing," Wilson croaked out, looking as if he were ready to pass out.

    "Yes Mr President." Lansing replied. "We have been informed that both the nations of Venezuela and Cuba, are both socialist nations, and who despised the United States in the 21st century. As such, they've stated the actions they took were purely in self defense, but will not allow the United States to dictate terms to them."

    "Reds!" Baker growled out. "God damned Reds in the Caribbean, right on our damn doorstep! How dare those Red bastards dare to sink our ships! I demand to know what you plan to do about it, Daniels!" the Navy Secretary glared at the man, a glare to remind him that his power over him was limited. Then, he turned to Admiral Coontz, whose expression was grim.

    "When the Tacoma sent her distress signal before sinking, it reached Naval Headquarters, and we ordered the closest ships to sortie together against the Venezuelans in response. However, the ships made it no further than the Cayman Islands, when they were ambushed by the Cuban and Venezuelan navies." Coontz paused, taking in a shaky breath before continuing. "The entire force, which consisted of two cruisers and five destroyers, were sunk with all hands. After that, we recalled the remaining ships back to Pensacola and Gulfport. We weren't going to risk the rest of the fleet."

    "My God," Baker gasped, his face temporarily overtaken by shock, before reverting back to rage. "Mr President, what do you want us to do? Mr President?"

    He turned to Wilson, who was silently shaking in his chair, hands gripping the desk so tight that they turned an even sicklier white than they were before. It seemed as if he were trying to say something, but no words left his mouth. None that were audible anyway. His hands lifted up, then slammed back down on his desk as he began to stand up. He was shaking terribly as he stood up, made as if to say something, but closed his mouth. He seemed as if he were going to be sick right there in the oval office.

    Then, without warning, he suddenly collapsed to the floor.
     
    Chapter 7
  • January 4th, 1920
    Washington D.C.
    United States of America
    White House Oval Office


    "This man is dead."

    Dr Grayson's words hit those in the room like a steam engine. They had called in doctors as soon as President Wilson had collapsed onto the floor, and had done everything they possibly could to revive him. But all their efforts were for naught, Woodrow Wilson was dead. At a time when the United States was facing a predicament and catastrophe the likes of which it had never before seen, the President of the United States was dead.

    In Robert Lansing's mind, the only thing worse than Woodrow Wilson dropping dead in the Oval Office, was that Thomas R. Marshall was next in line for the presidency, at least for the next ten months. That terrified him, and most others in the room. Thomas Marshall was perhaps the most incompetent Vice President in the history of the United States, and that was saying a lot. It was no secret that Wilson had despised the man, which made Lansing wonder why he'd even been picked in the first place.

    The man was shy and insecure, with the only quote ever attributed to him being "what this country needs is a good five-cent cigar."

    What the United States now needed was a competent Vice President to take charge and guide the nation, Lansing thought bitterly. A man that was qualified to lead the nation through the disaster it was faced with. Thomas Marshall was not that man.

    "Well, Mr Marshall, it seems that you are now the President," Lansing said, looking over at the man.

    "No, no, this can't be happening!" he said, shaking his head back and forth as doctors lifted the dead body of Woodrow Wilson onto a gurney, and lifted him out of the Oval Office. Lansing and Chief Justice White just looked at each other, both shrugging, before Lansing spoke up.

    "Chief Justice White is here to administer the oath so you can begin administering the affairs of state, and lead the nation through the crisis that now faces it." Lansing said.

    Marshall looked wild-eyed with shock and looked like he was about to cry. "I can't do it! I just can't do it! I don't know anything about handling a crisis and don't want to! And I most certainly don't want to be president."

    Half the men in the room stared unbelieving at the display put on by the Vice President, while General Pershing muttered,

    "Dear Lord," just loud enough for March and Wood to hear it.

    "You're the next in line," Justice White said sternly, as if talking to a schoolchild. "If you don't want to be president, you must formally step aside."

    Marshall took a seat in a nearby chair, taking a few deep breaths, and finally composing himself.

    "Gentlemen, I may not be a very smart man, but I consider myself to be an honest one, and know what I am and am not capable of doing. I am not capable of executing the duties of the President of the United States. I am wholly unqualified for the job, and if this crisis is as severe as I have so far been led to believe, I should not even be an interim president. In that case, wouldn't that make you next in line, Mr Lansing?"

    "That he will," Justice White answered. "With the elected president dead, the vice president elect will become the president and will be sworn to serve out the rest of the term, just over a year. Whoever he appoints as secretary of state will be the next in succession as there is no constitutional provision to appoint or elect a new vice president. Marshall, your term of office will be extremely brief, little over a year. Then you can retire with honor back to Indiana."

    Marshall shook his head.

    "I am not qualified to lead this country, not now, not ever, and not in this crisis." He let out a tired sigh. "What happens if I decline to take the oath?"

    "Simply declining would precipitate a constitutional crisis," White said. "You would have to formally step aside, at which time the current secretary of state, Mr. Lansing, will become president until he is sworn in for a four-year term next March by virtue of the fact that he is also the vice president elect."

    "And Congress will not object?" Marshall inquired.

    "I do not believe they will," Lansing said. "The Constitution says that Congress has to appoint a president in the event that neither the president nor the vice president are able to serve. The most recent legislation has identified the secretary of state as the third in line."

    "Then I believe that problem has been solved, gentlemen," Marshall said, getting up from his seat, and walking over to a cabinet next to the Resolute Desk, opened it, pulled out a sheet of paper, and began to write. When he was done, he turned to Chief Justice White, and handed the paper to him.

    "I presume this is satisfactory."

    White glanced at it. "It is." He signed his name as a witness.

    Marshall nodded sadly, "Every little boy says he wants to grow up and be president of the United States, and here I am turning that great honor down. Perhaps the only man in the history of the United States that ever will." Marshall laughed harshly. "And the dove was quite cunning, wasn't he? Wilson probably knew he wouldn't live out his next term, so he selected someone far more qualified than me to be the next in line. The only thing he didn't count on was dying before the inauguration in March. Wilson was a stubborn, willful, hateful man who despised me and now he has given me this last insult to endure. Well, damn him, I will not play his game, dead or not."

    Lansing put his hand on Marshall's shoulder. "By resigning you will be honored in history as an example of an honest and virtuous man."

    Marshall smiled appreciatively. "And you will go down as the man who finagled himself into the most miserable job in the world while I go and smoke a good five-cent cigar."

    —--------------------------------------
    January 5th, 1920
    11:00 AM
    Oval Office


    It felt wrong for Lansing to sit down in the Oval Office the day after former President Wilson had died, but he had no choice. The United States was in a crisis, one that seemed to be getting worse with each passing minute, and there was still information he wasn't privy to yet, information that was being saved for the late Wilson. Information that was now saved for President Robert Lansing. Information that pertained to the state of the country, as well as the rest of the world.

    "Give it to me straight, gentlemen," Lansing said tiredly. "What were you going to tell President Wilson, that I need to know now. Just how bad is the situation here and abroad."

    "The situation is quite dire, Mr President," Admiral Coontz replied. "While you might have already guessed, most of the Pacific Fleet is now gone, which I'm sorry to say included a great many of our Battleships, old and new.

    A reluctant Coontz had been in charge of enforcing the peace economies mandated by Woodrow Wilson. A number of warships had been decommissioned and were awaiting sale as scrap, and several naval bases had been closed. It had been an utter humiliation to the Navy, and now the hopelessly naive policies of the late Woodrow Wilson were coming back to haunt the United States Navy.

    "Our entire battle force consisted of seven modern battleships and eight older ones before The Event." Naval Secretary Josephus Daniels added. "Six battleships alone were at Mare Island when The Event happened, three of which were the Nevada, Arizona, and Pennsylvania. They were the newest, while the older vessels were the Kansas, Minnesota, and Michigan. And that's just what was at Mare Island, Mr President. Once we put together the losses at San Diego, Puget Sound, and Pearl Harbor, as well as the loss of Admiral Rodman, has left the Pacific Fleet utterly gutted."

    "And while we've managed to make wireless contact or even confirmed the presence of some ships off the West Coast, the picture being painted is not a good one." Coontz said, letting out a sigh of his own as now President Lansing's gaze fell upon him. "Out of all the battleships stationed in the Pacific, we've only made contact with one, the USS Arkansas. The rest of the ships we have made contact with are a mixture of cruisers and destroyers, one of which was made before the Spanish War."

    President Lansing and Secretary of War Baker looked horrified at the news, while the others wore grim looks on their faces.

    "What about the Caribbean?" Baker asked, first to Admiral Coontz, then to President Lansing. "What do you intend to do about the Cubans and Venezuelans? We can't just let what they did go unanswered!"

    "There's nothing we can do at the moment, Mr Baker." Coontz replied, slightly aggravated. "Both times we engaged them we lost! We have to consolidate our forces and gather intelligence before we even think about trying to attack again!"

    "But this is an act of war! If we stand by and do nothing-" Baker began, before President Lansing cut him off.

    "There's nothing we can do, Secretary Baker. In fact, if you'd been listening, we did try something, and it failed! I will not throw away the lives of good American sailors until, and only when we have more information to go off of!" Lansing sighed. "What about the Philippines? You didn't mention the Philippines. Or Panama. Do we still control them?" Lansing asked, dreading the answer he'd receive. It was here that Admiral Coontz smiled slightly.

    "Thankfully I can report that both the Philippines and the Panama Canal Zone were both unaffected by the current crisis." Coontz replied. "However, most of the Asiatic Fleet is composed of a few cruisers, destroyers, and outdated submarines. There is also one Scout Cruiser in Balboa, but are unable to leave due to current events in the region."

    Admiral Coontz and Navy Secretary Daniels looked over to General March, who simply nodded in acknowledgement.

    "And our garrisons are on full alert in both places, and are as prepared as can be against any attack." March said.

    "And what about the rest of the Army? What shape are they in?" Lansing asked, and General March grimaced.

    "The situation for the Army is only marginally less severe." General March said. "Before The Event, the Army had just over 50,000 men on active duty, scattered across the country, Hawaii, Alaska, The Philippines, and elsewhere. Hell, half the Army was overseas when The Event occurred. In all, we estimate at least ten thousand active duty soldiers gone, mostly in California, Hawaii. And that's before getting into the National Guard and reserves, which were barely twice that of active duty, and are in even worse shape than those on active duty."

    "What are you saying, General March?" Baker asked, an angry look on his face.

    "What I'm saying, Mr Secretary, is that if the United States were to go to war with anyone right now, we'd have a devil of a time trying. We had a devil of a time fighting Pancho Villa when General Pershing crossed into Mexico, and nothing since has changed. Half the reservists called up to fight in Mexico never showed up. The Army was in no position to fight a war before this happened, and it certainly isn't now."

    "General March, is there any good news? Is there any good news at all, gentlemen?" Lansing asked. "We've lost seven states and two territories, with over six million Americans gone who for all we know are dead, the rest of the nation is in a state of chaos, and it seems as if we're at war with at least two nations. Is there anything good you can tell me?"

    "I think so," March replied, looking over at Major General Pershing.

    "Some old friends contacted me this morning with some interesting information. Elements of the 9th and 10th Cavalry in Montana and New Mexico made quite cordial contact with National Guard and Marine units in Arizona and Idaho. Contact that didn't end with shots being fired, and in some places, even traded beers with each other." Pershing said, which made some raise a curious eyebrow.

    "How is it that the 9th and 10th manage such friendly contact, whereas almost every other encounter has led to the Army being attacked, and routed?" President Lansing asked. General's March and Wood looked nervously at each other as Pershing cleared his throat, and continued.

    "Mr President, as you might recall, the 9th and 10th consist of mostly black soldiers, whereas units like the 3rd Infantry Regiment were all white. We've had problems in the past with white and black soldiers fighting together, and upon encountering the National Guard units out west, the all white units didn't take kindly to who and what they found. To put it bluntly, Mr President, the prejudices and racial beliefs of those units precipitated the engagements that occurred, especially when they refused to accept orders from black, Mexican, Chinese, or female soldiers of equal or greater rank."

    "But they-" Baker began, but was ignored by General Pershing, who acted as if he hadn't even spoken.

    "In the case of the 3rd Infantry Regiment, many of its members were from The South, and upon making contact with Guardsmen in Utah, harassed, insulted, and eventually opened fire on the Guardsmen, which resulted in their defeat, and eventual rout by said Guardsmen. These events were even recorded, and are in the process of being sent here for investigation."

    "Good white men died and you-" Baker began once more, only for President Lansing to rise from his chair, and fix the man with a lethal glare.

    "Secretary Baker, you will be quiet, and listen to what General Pershing has to tell us, do you understand me!" Lansing snapped. "We are facing a crisis unlike any this nation has ever seen, and we don't have time for your personal beliefs to interfere with it! Do you understand me!?"

    "Yes, Mr President." Baker replied with barely concealed rage.

    "General Pershing, please continue," Lansing prompted, to which Pershing merely nodded.

    "With the 9th and 10th Cavalry, they weren't met with the usual hatred and prejudice from the Marines and National Guard they encountered, which allowed for a stabilizing of multiple locations in New Mexico and Montana, and friendly exchanges of information. Information that I believe is very important to how we go forward in dealing with the nine states out west, as well as the rest of the problems we now face." Pershing explained.

    "Nine states?" Lansing asked, to which Pershing nodded.

    "Yes sir, it seems that in the 21st century, Alaska and Hawaii both had been states since the 1950's. Which brings up something I believe is very important, the population census. The states and territories we lost on New Year's Day totaled to just over six million people. The states in question which have replaced them, total just over 69 million total, not including Americans overseas in other nations brought back from 2020, which I'm told includes at least another few hundred thousand."

    As the words left Pershing's mouth, Lansing's eyes widened as his mouth fell open, while Secretary Baker blanched in shock, and even the other officers in the room looked at him as if he had just grown a second head. After a few seconds of silence, Lansing finally spoke up.

    "69 million people? That number can't be right?" Lansing said, to which Pershing replied by shaking his head.

    "No Mr President, it's not wrong. The reports are corroborated from units from Montana down to New Mexico, even by a unit in Colorado. They were all told the same thing when asked. In the year two thousand twenty, the United States had a population of over 330 million people, not counting immigrants, or those overseas. And one of the most populated regions was stated to be the West Coast, which holds the bulk of the population east of the Rocky Mountains." Pershing's answer did nothing to ease either Lansing or Baker's mind, or their reactions to such news.

    "The entire population of the United States was just over 100 million according to the last census!" Lansing said, thinking of the sheer mess of adding 69 million people would create for the House and Senate. All that power and influence out west would make Democrats and Republicans both absolutely furious! "A sixty nine percent increase in our population is…hard to imagine. That will create interesting times here in Washington."

    "I'm glad you brought that up, Mr President, because a number of Representatives and Governors in the western states are seeking to establish relations and trade with the United States, including military cooperation against Germany." Pershing said.

    "What do they mean 'establish relations and trade with the United States'? They are part of the United States?" Baker interjected. "And what's this nonsense about 'Military cooperation with Germany'? We aren't at war with Germany?"

    President Lansing glared over at Baker, whose repeated outbursts were annoying him, but allowed the outburst.

    "I agree with Secretary Baker, please explain what you mean by this, General Pershing." Pershing took in a deep breath, looked at those in the room, and said.

    "Sir, much of the information I've been handed is missing many details, and is fairly broad in its wording. For me to explain it completely, I will have to be blunt in telling you." Pershing explained, once again looking back at General March, and then to Admiral Coontz, both of which eyed him quizzically.

    "For God sake General Pershing, just tell us!" Lansing said impatiently. Sighing once more, Pershing continued.

    "I have been told that Woodrow Wilson's administration has gone down in history as one of the most hated in American history, due to his, and I'm merely repeating what I've been told, white supremacist policies and ideology. Especially his insistence on segregation of the government, and the refusal to allow black officers into higher rank or positions suited for their rank, plays a large role in how they see him, especially among their military."

    It was then that Pershing paused for a moment, surveying the room, and looking at the slight, but visible expressions of unease across the faces of most of the room, except for Secretary Baker, who was silently seething as his face turned red.

    "Moreover, in the time they come from, women and minorities of all races and colors, have and have had the right to vote for many decades. The Armed Forces especially have been desegregated for decades, since the end of what they referred to as the "Second World War", which saw the United States fight a two front war against Germany and Japan, which by the end saw over 12 million Americans under arms. As such, officers of any color, can lead men of any color. Hell, even women lead men, and the reverse is true. And one of the biggest things pointed out, is the marriage laws of the 21st century states. Interracial and homosexual marriage is completely legal in every state in the 21st century, and that includes the nine on our borders. Black men can marry white women, white men can marry white women, men marry men, and everything in between."

    "Disgusting!" Baker spat. "Utterly fucking disgusting. They are utter mongrels! Niggers with white women! Queers allowed to marry! What deep pit of degeneracy had the United States fallen into to succumb to such deviancy?" No one in the room said anything, most just sitting in stunned silence, except for Pershing, who continued where he left off, and completely ignored Baker.

    "Basically Mr President, they have made it explicitly clear they will not lose the rights they are accustomed to, or submit to what they perceive as a government led by people who'd gladly lynch most of them if given half a chance. Which is why they said none of their representatives will come to Washington, because they would be seen as nothing but what Secretary Baker sees them as." Pershing looked over to Baker as he said those words, daring him to say anything in reply, but he didn't. His face just turned an interesting shade of red, and Pershing continued. "They believe, and I believe said views have some merit, that it would be a repeat of the Caning of Charles Sumner in 1856."

    For a while, no one said anything. It was obvious that most of them were shocked and appalled at what they had been told. Some wanted to say something, but they didn't know what to say. President Lansing seemed as if he was trying to process what he'd been told, while Secretary Baker looked as if he'd explode at any moment. After a minute, it was President Lansing that spoke.

    "That certainly is interesting, General Pershing," Lansing said, an expression of disbelief still written on his face. "Albeit I'm left with many more questions than answers, and some of the previous questions asked are still unanswered, but one thing at a time. You said they wanted to meet?" he asked, and Pershing nodded.

    "Yes, Mr President, that's what my contacts have reported. While they have intention of coming to Washington, they have suggested the use of Denver as a halfway point for any possible meetings, as well as to coordinate against Germany."

    "Which brings me back to the same question from earlier, what's all this talk about war with Germany? We aren't at war with Germany, and I hope to God we never are!"

    "That's…where this gets rather confusing, Mr President." Pershing replied. "It seems that wherever these people have come from, they have a history far different from our own. One which diverged significantly in 1914. To sum it up quickly and efficiently, the War of 1914 lasted until 1918 for them, which resulted in the United States joining the war, and the surrender and collapse of the German Empire. The reason the United States joined was because Germany offered Mexico the territory we took in the Mexican-American War, if we joined the war."

    "WHAT!?" Lansing exclaimed.

    "Yes sir, and the build up of German forces just south of the border has outright appalled them, especially after the fights that have broken out between them and the Germans. That and the number of prisoners they've gathered, at least a hundred or so, have said some rather…interesting things about just why they are here." Pershing said. "At least now we understand why Mexican ports are filled with German cruisers and Battleships, and why they've been building an army across the border."

    "It doesn't make any sense!" Secretary Baker exclaimed. "We were not involved in the War of 1914, we helped broker the peace between the Entente and Germany! Why would the Germans seek a war with the United States? We've done nothing to wrong them!"

    "Because they are Germans, and that's what Germans do!" Pershing replied. "It shouldn't come as a surprise that the Kaiser felt the war had been brought to an end quickly, before he could extract even more from France and Britain than what he got. We all know what he did to Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and the Scandinavian countries. The Kaiser is a mad man intent on expanding his empire, there's no two ways about it."

    "I agree with you, General Pershing," Lansing said, recalling the horrors enacted in Belgium by German troops, and shivering at the thought of them doing the same to American cities, and American citizens. "The Kaiser's actions in the past few years have shown he's looking to expand his empire, at the expense of other nations. And it seems the United States might be next. Roosevelt would have loved something like this."

    "President Roosevelt is a warmongering barbarian! He urged us to get involved in the War of 1914, and look how it ended? His policies would have earned us Germany's ire!" President Lansing just glared at the man.

    "Sometimes I wonder just how you got this position, Secretary Baker," Lansing said, shaking his head. "Roosevelt helped propel our nation onto the world stage, and Wilson undid so much of that progress. It's a damn shame he's still alive to see all this."

    "Indeed sir," Pershing replied. "He's a fine man, finer soldier, and was an even finer president."

    "On that we can agree," Lansing said, letting out a tired sigh afterwards. He well and truly didn't understand how, what, or why this was happening, nor did any of them have a full picture of the situation yet. So much of what Pershing had told him had utterly confused him, and while answering a few questions, opened up many more besides. So many questions left unanswered, and so many problems created by this Event. Even the information brought forward by Pershing had been full of holes, and would require face to face meetings with those in the Western United States to gauge just what was going on, and how to move forward.

    "You said that the states out West want to open talks with us, General Pershing?" Lansing said tiredly.

    "Yes sir," he replied.

    "Very well." Lansing sighed. "General March?"

    "Yes, Mr President?" March replied.

    "I don't want any more of our boys dying uselessly. They are not to attack or antagonize any of the Army units out West. Hell, any units that aren't the 9th or 10th, pull them back from the border! I don't want a repeat of Evanston. Do you understand! The Army cannot take any more defeats like that!"

    March nodded.

    "Yes Mr President, I understand. Do you want the rest of the Army to mobilize in case of conflict elsewhere? To Florida and Texas perhaps?"

    "Yes. I want us to be as prepared as possible for a possible invasion of Texas and New Mexico by the Germans and Mexicans, and in Florida against the Cubans. I won't tolerate any incursion or invasion into American territory by a foreign power! Admiral Coontz?" Lansing said, looking over at the Admiral. "That means the Marines as well. As many as can be mobilized, and sent to Florida immediately."

    "Yes Mr President, I'll inform General Lejeune to commence immediately." Coontz replied.

    "And recall all our remaining ships back to American ports. Norfolk, Newport, Portsmouth, wherever they can fit. I do not want any of our ships being ambushed at sea."

    "What about the remnants of the Pacific Fleet, sir?" Coontz asked. "Nearly all the ships left in the Pacific Fleet that aren't in the Philippines, are off the coast of California or Hawaii, and most don't have the range to get from the West Coast to the Philippines."

    "I don't want any of our ships being caught out in the open sea by hostile forces. We've taken too heavy of losses as it is. Instruct all ships still in Asian waters to Subic Bay, the rest are to take refuge in whatever port they are closest to."

    "And if they are refused entry to said ports? Most of our ships will have nowhere to go." Coontz said. "The Arkansas could reach Subic Bay, but the cruisers and destroyers don't have the fuel."

    "We pray that they don't." Lansing said grimly. "Which is why I want to send an envoy as soon as physically possible to Denver, to get this situation sorted out, and request permission to dock our ships for the duration of this crisis. The only question left is figuring out who to send."

    "If I may, Mr President, I have an idea of who we could send as part of the envoy." General Pershing spoke up.

    "By all means General, please." Lansing replied.

    "I believe sending Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, would be a wise choice." Pershing said, which made Navy Secretary Daniels and Admiral Coontz stare incredulously at him. "In some of the transcripts sent to me, he's remembered extremely fondly in the eyes of 21st century America, and I believe he's the correct choice to send with any such mission to Denver."

    Lansing blinked.

    "Is there a mistake in the reports? Do they happen to mean Theodore Roosevelt?"

    "No Mr President, that much was made quite clear in the messages. Franklin Roosevelt, not Theodore Roosevelt."

    'Why in God's name would they want to speak with the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Christ Sake?' Lansing thought in puzzlement before continuing.

    "And why is he remembered so fondly?" Lansing asked.

    "According to the report, he's regarded as one of the best presidents of the United States."
     
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