Re: Blood and Iron - Chapter 769: Lord of the Flies

Chapter 769: Lord of the Flies
The village didn’t appear so much as reveal itself.
One moment Mallory and his men were fighting through a wall of wet green, soaked to the bone and half-blind from sweat and rain.
And the next, the jungle thinned into a clearing ringed with bamboo palisades, low huts perched on stilts like wooden herons watching intruders from above.
Smoke drifted up from clay chimneys, carrying the scent of boiled rice, coconut ash, and old oil.
The guide raised his hand.
“We’re here,” he said.
Mallory scanned the perimeter looking for movement. And there he found shadows behind slits in the bamboo wall. Rifles were aimed outward, Not German, nor American.
The guide stepped forward and shouted in Tagalog, and the tension broke. Rifles lowered and men emerged from behind the barricades, barefoot, lean, sun-browned, wearing nothing but shorts, sandals, and bandoliers crossed over their torsos.
Mallory recognized the patterns immediately.
American canvas pouches. Japanese Type 38 leather ammo belts. Spanish-made machetes older than most of the villagers.
And the guns…
M1 Garands, 1903 Springfields, Browning Automatic Rifles…
mixed with, Arisaka rifles, and belt fed light machine guns.
The guide waved Mallory forward, and the villagers parted just enough to let them through.
“First thing,” the guide said, “your clothes. Burn them.”
Mallory didn’t need convincing, American uniforms were a death sentence here, and he had deserted to avoid that fate.
He and his company stripped off what remained of their tattered frogskin uniforms. Jackets, trousers, caps, patches, anything that marked them as U.S. Army.
The villagers brought out clay firepits beneath a corrugated roof, already burning hot. Mallory was the first to toss what remained of his tunic in. The cloth hissed, blackened, and curled into ash.
One by one, his men followed, burning the last pieces of their old lives. The flames consumed rank insignias, name tapes, and unit patches.
Someone threw in a faded American flag that had been used as a tarp. Mallory didn’t ask where they’d gotten it.
Weapons however were not disposed of. The villagers nodded approvingly when Mallory kept his Thompson, his web gear, his ammo. The guide even handed him an oiled rag and a tin of grease.
“You’re gonna need that,” he said. “Rain gets inside everything.”
Once the last jacket had turned to ash, the villagers motioned them deeper into the settlement.
Children peeked around corners, dogs barked once, then hid, and women carrying baskets slowed their pace, giving the Americans cautious looks.
This wasn’t a welcoming ceremony, it was an evaluation.
At the village center, a cluster of old men sat beneath a nipa hut canopy, playing cards. All of them were armed. One had a Thompson older than Mallory. Another had an Arisaka with a bayonet rusted halfway through. One even wore a WW1 doughboy helmet with a bullet dent in the side.
This wasn’t a peaceful hamlet, these were a people perpetually preparing for the next war.
Mallory’s men watched with growing unease as the guide gestured to several long crates stacked near the central hut.
At first Mallory thought they were tools or supplies. But when a villager pried open a lid with a machete, he felt his stomach tighten.
Inside lay boxes of ammunition, neatly packed. Clean, oiled, and organized.
.30-06. 7.7mm Japanese, .45 ACP, hell there were even old black-powder blasting caps, and improvised explosives wrapped in torn American tarps.
And leaning against the crates were tripwire assemblies for locally made mines.
Bundles of sharpened stakes soaked in something Mallory didn’t want to identify.
“Jesus Christ…” Sergeant Hollis muttered behind him. “This ain’t a village. This is a goddamn arsenal.”
Mallory turned to the guide.
“You expecting visitors?”
The guide didn’t smile or blink.
“We prepare for whoever comes.”
Mallory folded his arms. Unsure of what to make of what he was witnessing.
“Americans or Germans?”
The guide shrugged as if the answer were obvious.
“We fight whoever tries to take our home. Yankees. Germans. Japanese. Any foreign uniform. Any ruler who forgets we are not his people.”
Behind them, villagers began stacking crates, covering them with palm leaves.
Others tended to rifles, cleaning them under the eaves to avoid the rain.
A group of women mixed black powder and fertilizer in clay bowls with frightening confidence.
Mallory looked around, it clicked.
These people weren’t rebels, no were they nationalists, communists or any other type of ideologue. They weren’t fighting for a flag. They were fighting for survival, pure and simple.
Every empire that had washed over these islands had spilled blood here, American, Spanish, even the Japanese who had tried to dig their claws in.
Every time, the villagers adapted, changed tactics, and stockpiled weapons from whoever lost the last time.
Mallory stepped closer to the guide.
“So what happens now? You take us in? Or we walk into the jungle again?”
The guide scratched his chin thoughtfully, then gestured for Mallory to follow him toward a raised hut with a tin roof.
Inside, an older woman sat cross-legged before a radio, American-made, 1920s, patched together with Japanese tubes and wires stripped from wrecked planes. She adjusted the dials and static filled the room.
The guide whispered:
“We know everything that happens. We hear the news before Manila did.”
Mallory leaned down.
A faint American broadcast crackled through the noise.
“…all units ordered to regroup at Leyte Gulf… repeat, regroup at Leyte Gulf… any personnel seen cooperating with local forces will be considered…”
The signal collapsed into static.
The guide clicked the radio off.
“You see? Your old commanders want to kill Americans now, just for surviving here. Just for breathing wrong.”
He paused.
“We do not care about their orders. But they care about killing you.”
Mallory exhaled slowly.
“This Roosevelt administration… what’s left of it… they’re not going to forgive deserters.”
“No,” the guide said. “But we don’t care what Roosevelt forgives.”
He stepped aside, revealing two long crates tucked beneath the radio table. He opened them.
Inside lay a pair of pristine Japanese Type 100 submachine guns, Mallory had only ever read about such weapons.
The Japanese had been one of the first nations to modernize, and in doing so they challenged the Germans, suffering a terrible fate.
But they had left behind a lot of great equipment. Equipment that the Filipinos still used in their struggle to survive whatever may come their way.
“These are yours,” the guide said. “Payment for what comes next.”
Mallory stiffened.
“What comes next?”
The guide didn’t look at him when he answered.
“War.”
A simple, unvarnished word, as if the village had no other destiny. Mallory knelt beside the crate and lifted one of the SMGs.
It was light, balanced, and freshly oiled.
“What do you want from us?” he asked quietly.
The guide met his eyes.
“To stay alive,” he said. “And to help us stay alive.”
A distant thump rolled through the jungle, artillery on another island. Someone, somewhere, was fighting and dying for a flag Mallory no longer recognized.
The guide continued:
“Your country and Germany will fight each other long after these islands are ash and bone.
We will still be here. Still fighting whoever comes next.”
His men gathered behind him, waiting, hungry, wounded, exhausted, stripped of identity and purpose. Every one of them looking for something to anchor their lives to.
Mallory slung the Type 100 over his shoulder.
“Well,” he said with a dry, humorless smile, “looks like we’re villagers now.”
The guide finally smiled.
“No, Captain Mallory.” He tapped the weapon on Mallory’s back. “You’re fighters again.”
Outside, rain began hammering the roofs. The villagers moved with practiced ease, covering ammunition caches, dragging tarps over supplies, posting sentries with American binoculars atop the bamboo walls.
Mallory stepped out onto the mud-packed path and watched them.
This wasn’t an insurgency.
It was a tribe preparing for the next empire.
And now he was part of it.


