Military Sci-Fi Story for Sleep

The Ants Kept the Dead Alive Inside the Hive | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

45 min · 21. maj 2026
episode The Ants Kept the Dead Alive Inside the Hive | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep cover

Description

On a hostile volcanic badlands colony, geothermal processing stacks — ceramic and alloy filtration towers — dot the ash plain. They were designed to filter sulfuric particulates, but when a hygiene protocol error lets unchecked containers reach the surface, an aggressive species of fist-sized alien ants attacks the colony. The stack-towers are warm, sealed, and perfect places to breed. Our story begins when the ants have already invaded half the colony, and the situation is no longer classified as a biological hazard, but as a biological infestation consuming critical infrastructure. A sapper team enters Stack 7 to recover a tactical datastore and stop the ants before they reach the next filtration stacks. But the ants do not only kill people — they convert machines, weapons, wounded soldiers, and living bodies into hive material. This is “The Wax Ants of Stack 7” by Sascha Schmidt.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Military Sci-Fi Story for Sleep community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

91 episodes

episode It Needed Rank, Not Rage, to Kill Us | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

It Needed Rank, Not Rage, to Kill Us | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

Above a gas giant, a failing orbital station is tumbling toward atmospheric burn-up with its decks overrun by the Slick, a colonial biofilm spread through fuel, condensation, blood, and rebreather vapor. Twenty-four orbital salvage marines and engineers board because the cruiser needs the antimatter bottle secured inside Reactor Four. They breach the forward airlock and move through the habitation ring toward the reactor, using dry catwalks, plasma cutters, and mag-clamps to avoid the deepest pools. The Slick eats suit seals, weapon lubricants, and fuel, turning every contaminated passage into a fire trap. Worse, it leaves infected crewmen coherent and trusted, quietly bending their judgment until engineers, medics, and officers direct entire squads into saturated compartments. It does not need rage. It needs rank. This is "The Slick" by Sascha Schmidt

27. juni 202633 min
episode They Waited Until Mercy Made Us Reach | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

They Waited Until Mercy Made Us Reach | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

In the black flooded reclamation trench below the upstream agri-colonies, acid mist hangs over Meridian Recovery Authority drainage works that have been sealed by Grout Hounds. A three-man engineering detail enters Complex 7 to cut open three cemented drainage gates and clear a corridor for an armor push into the reclamation zone. The Grout Hounds do not simply attack soldiers. They weep quick-hardening slime that turns ladders, culverts, and extraction routes into white cement, then hunt in coordinated packs through chest-high water, biting suit joints, weapon cables, tendons, and seals. Their worst weapon is mercy: when a wounded man is helped, the swarm triggers, and every bite can turn triage into a contamination hub. This is "Where the Hounds Hunt" by Sascha Schmidt

22. juni 202640 min
episode They Used Our Mercy as Bait | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep artwork

They Used Our Mercy as Bait | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

On Vargas-9, the streets around Canal 7 have been digested after six months of siege, and the last starport is nearly inside the growth zone. A three-man sapper detail enters the ruined city to plant seismic charges beneath a Siren-Pillar and buy the evacuation another forty-eight hours. The Siren-Pillars do not hunt like animals. They digest roads and buildings, vent spore-mist that gums armor and filters, and keep missing soldiers alive inside honeycomb pockets so their heat, transponders, and distress calls lure rescue teams deeper into the city. The team moves through breathing mist with seismic mauls and a low-yield plasma cutter, scraping growth from their suits as the streets close behind them. When a secondary pillar blocks exfil and the target’s root chamber reveals the missing Third Battalion still warm above the charges, the mission turns into a choice no soldier was meant to make. This is "The Fortress Always Grows Back" by Sascha Schmidt

20. juni 202638 min