Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #11 February 2015 | Page 46

had been very proud of him. Although they had assumed he would follow his father into his profession of fisherman, serving the Emperor and country in the Army was certainly an honourable option. It helped that his parents had been rather prolific, producing 8 children. Hiroshi’s brother Toshi was only a year younger and was already working on the family fishing boat. He would follow in his father’s soggy footsteps. Hiroshi had gone to the massive training complex in Yokohama and learned how to use a gun, dig a proper trench, wear a vacuum suit, and perform the thousand-and-one other tasks needed to be a proper soldier. He found the training to be relatively easy, accustomed as he was to physical labour. “Japan declares war on Imperial Russia; Russian Pacific Fleet sunk; Japanese spaceships rout Russian Lunar Task Force; Washington, London condemn” - Heading of the New York Times, 8 February 1904. The Lunar caverns echoed with screams and gunshots. Private Hiroshi Yoshinko crouched behind the body of a creature the men had dubbed a ‘Moon cow’ and winced at each sharp sound. He pressed against the chitinous flank of the 3-meter-long caterpillar, hoping that it would protect him. As he did so, he reflected on the series of events that had led to him being here. His reverie kept his mind off the more pressing concerns, namely, being killed by a Russian bullet or the razor sharp tip of a Lunarite spear. When he had joined the Imperial Army, his parents PAGE 46 He was assigned to the 4th Division, just in time to participate in one of the many short wars with China that had been fought during the last decade. His first taste of combat was against men who still used spears and 100-year-old guns. The Chinese never stood a chance against the modern armies of Japan. Although dangerous, it still felt like a grand adventure to Hiroshi. Nothing, not his upbringing, his training nor his experience in fighting on Earth, however, had prepared him for warfare off-world. A grenade, he thought. They’re still fighting. And here I am, hiding. Get up, you coward, get up! Hiroshi didn’t move. He sank below the bulk of the Moon cow. He tried to justify his immobility, telling himself that he was going to be able to block any advance by the Russians down the cavern. He knew it was a lie, even as he told himself; but, it worked, quieting the hec-toring voice in his head for the moment. He closed his eyes against the sickly purple light that permeated the habitable areas of the Lunar caverns. The Lunarites probably found the light as pleasant as a sunny day. But it made Hiroshi’s eyes hurt. He knew it wasn’t natural. His platoon commander, Captain Takahashi, had briefed them on what they would find in the caves when they arrived on the Moon. The light, the atmosphere, the Earth-like gravity, even the frequent shallow trenches filled with clear, cold water, were artificial, technological leftovers of a time when