A Soldier's Life
  • Reads 110
  • Votes 10
  • Parts 1
  • Time <5 mins
  • Reads 110
  • Votes 10
  • Parts 1
  • Time <5 mins
Complete, First published May 25, 2016
Through everything they have fought for us, we throw them off to the side as if we're ashamed of them protecting us. What is life like for our military veterans? Sadly, for some not too good.
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"Almost Green" by NUmaker
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Strands of your mind cling together like web to a slippery leaf bathed in the morning dew. You have seen both heaven and hell, witnessed the atrocities of war firsthand, and imagined a better life in the deepest, most intimate corners of your dreaming spirit. The wishes for peace and certainty you have once so desperately longed for, now lay trampled underneath the might of your mind's vivid horrors. What was once so bright and lively, now cowers in fear, clinging to gone memories like a shipwreck survivor to some lowly piece of driftwood. From the depths of hell, you arrived victorious, grasping the laurel wreath high above your head. Unrecognizable, with your empty eyes telling a story of innocence brutally taken away from the child curling in shame in the depths of your empty soul. Almost green you are, curly head, having grown up with a rifle by your bedside table, never knowing peace and quiet. Out of the pan that was the Kazdel Civil War and into the scorching flames of Lungmen, where life flows by on its own accord, here, you must learn to live once more. So put on your best facade, Let the reuniting trumpets ring a wild, And allow the city to swallow you whole. Here we are, a continuation of my previous work "Goodbye Curly Head", which sprawled into quite the epistle (but it wasn't really a letter, it's just long :P). Summarized in the most basic way possible, it's a story about a twenty-year-old Kazdel Civil War veteran who goes to Lungmen and has some troubles acclimating to the steady life presented before him. Sprinkle in a too-good-to-be-true offer and a freshly established logistics company, and you get Andy trying to make it big for as long as his deteriorating mental state lets him. I'd say it works as a standalone story for anyone who doesn't want to bother reading the first part. For now, at least. As always, please, pwwease leave a comment, positive, negative, I LOOOVE reading and replying to comments!!
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You're Not Alone

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Linda Reagan was pretty sure life had finally settled for her. Her husband was back from Iraq, they had a healthy baby boy, and an energetic toddler running around. She was aware of the baggage soldiers came home with, she just wasn't prepared for it to crash into her. He was okay, right? He was functioning, eating enough, working out- all normal things, right? So why did he feel defeated, lonely, inadequate? Why was there constantly a black cloud over his head... if he was completely fine? **TRIGGER WARNING: MATURE NIGHTMARE MATERIAL**