Military Sci-Fi Story for Sleep

One Step Outside Could Plant the Grove | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

43 min · 8 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio One Step Outside Could Plant the Grove | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

Descripción

LZ Red Silo is an ammonia-soaked dead valley where a human colony’s terrain has been overtaken by Blood-Braid groves, buried cysts, acid guano, and nocturnal fliers. A sapper platoon is sent in to clear a two-hundred-meter landing circle for a medical evac shuttle from Research Station Kestrel. The job looks simple on paper: burn the pillars, cut the stems, grade the ground, and set charges before the shuttle arrives at dawn. But the Blood-Braids answer every tool with another kind of pressure — flame makes them grip harder, machines are crushed from below, severed chunks begin to regrow, and living mucilage clogs respirators from the inside. Then night opens the crowns. Silent fliers descend from the groves, shear scalps, open neck veins, and keep soldiers alive as blood farms while the roots close the escape route and the filters fail. This is "Red Silo" by Sascha Schmidt

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92 episodios

Portada del episodio They Still Knew Our Names After the Bugs Rewired Them | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

They Still Knew Our Names After the Bugs Rewired Them | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

On a dust-scoured colonial prospect, Complex 9-Alpha stands above glass flats where command has declared the Wire Scarab infestation dormant. A military garrison must hold the firebase beacon for seventy-two hours so an orbital extraction ship can lock coordinates for the next quarantine sweep, while its only medic sterilizes contaminated surfaces, inspects armor joints, and keeps twelve wounded soldiers alive. The Wire Scarabs hide inside boot seams and damaged suit hinges, then thread microscopic nerve-weave into the brainstem. Their hosts still remember names, access codes, and command procedure, pass biometric checks, and calmly redirect their own soldiers into kill-boxes while desiccated cysts spread through stretchers, weapons, and uniform seams. This is "The Wire Scarabs" by Sascha Schmidt.

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

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 de jun de 202633 min
Portada del episodio They Waited Until Mercy Made Us Reach | Military Sci-Fi Infantry Story for Sleep

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

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