Story Ascendant Inferno - an alternate history work

NicetiesLATER

The Cleanup Hitter
Hello again! I've decided to post my latest work, 'Ascendant Inferno,' to RPNation for all your (hopeful) viewing pleasure!

It's set in the Kaiserreich universe, from a mod of the game Hearts of Iron 4, where Germany won World War I, upsetting the balance of power in the world; this fic focuses on an American's observations about Japanese society during the 1930s amid several crises.

Here's the synopsis, if you'd like:

The year is 1936, and the Empire of Japan stands at a crossroads. Cultural, economic, and political clashes between Eastern and Western ideals draw out a murky future for the leading power in the Pacific, and a one Josephine Sampson, aspiring American novelist, seeks to document the tenor and fabric of a nation encapsulating the term 'amalgam' amid social upheaval and the road to war.

Follow both her rich journal entries and the reports of government officials surrounding the Emperor Hirohito on Japan's course of action after a series of crises, to understand the pivotal moment Kaiserreich Japan finds herself in, and how she will be led into greatness or ultimate defeat.

Enjoy!



5-15-36: AN OVERTURE TO THE ORIENT, AND MY INITIAL DISCOVERIES

Light bloomed in from the sunflower shade of the earth onto the wood-rimmed buildings, stone-cobbled pathways, and iron-lined manufactories. The blue hue of the sky hanging overhead became patterned by the long, fulsome expanse of clouds that billowed across the heavens, these gobs of white that loomed over the crown jewel of East Asia urbanity. Narrow streets curdled throngs of pedestrians into each other, forcing an assemblage of so many shades, flags, and ideologies to walk amongst each other, this long grove of identities:

There were members of the Metropolitan Police Department combing the perimeters, their eyes checking each alleyway and cranny for suspicious activities, the doused grey on their uniforms glowing in the sunlight, offering a crystalline candor. Occasionally passersby could hear the cracking of batons and blaring whistles in the gulleys to the end of the streets, their victims usually drunken Westerners or sullen-faced gamblers, kicked out of the casinos and hotels in the Kabukicho pleasure district, bemoaning their fates for all the world to know. It seemed they were the chief agents of the Prefecture’s local policies, as so often was parliamentary procedure enforced at the end of a blunt implement, or two. But increasingly their autonomy grew as policymakers in their own right, toting a heavy hand in labor disputes, ransacking press outlets deemed immoral or anti-statist, and seeking to uphold traditional morality across the sinful streets of the city. Although, their influence was always hidden in plain sight, as they were discreet when it came to breaking out the batons, knowing the need to keep up appearances of a law-abiding unit.

There were also the suits the police harangued—and their fair share of ties, cards, corsages, and cravats of all colors—which cut a fine figure for the gentlemen going about their day-to-day business, stopping to wind up their golden watches and exude that most formally machismo presence while waiting for the Mitsubishis and Fuji bikes to pass on the thoroughfares. While foreign investment was unmistakable, with Volkswagens and Fords driving along the way, coins flowing into Coca-Cola machines and Belgian chocolate wrappers lying on the pavement, the supremacy of the Zaibatsu, the native corporations working hand-in-hand with the government, harnessed Western intellect for Japanese industriousness and became the undeniable powerhouse of the national economy. Much to the chagrin of the foreign onlookers, of course.

But what of the faces, then? Maligned or not? What were the smatterings of skin, hair, and teeth, festooned occasionally by the ocular (or even aural) accessory, which made up the disposition of men? Even this demographic was multifaceted, depending on the nationality and temperament of the soul that lay behind the visage: German austerity frayed as Berlin businessmen coming from the colonial ports at Hanoi and Singapore wore their profits with a less-than-prurient smile. Some Chinese and Indochinese students kept their heads down in the face of their Japanese counterparts, while others were stern-faced and glare-adjacent, not submitting to a sort of facial hierarchy. Korean students imported from Seoul and Busan were ‘cordially’ invited to experience the height of Japanese academia at the University of Tokyo and other such institutions, bred in the framework of Western-style teaching for a decidedly Eastern imperialist purpose—something that not all the foreign students had their fill with, their minds populated counteractively with visions of independence for the motherland.

Besides the brewing nationalist sentiments, and in spite of the growing Pan-Asian movement seeking to unite the peoples of the Far East in opposition to Europe-American incursions, capital interests from across the Pacific clouded the physiognomies of many a merchant: there was an American swagger that, even amid economic crisis, struck a certain emotion of arrogant power, with the wide-rimmed fedoras and thick jacket fabric offsetting the Western smirk.

One couldn’t go around the city without noticing the contingents of helmets swimming in the sea of civilian life, however. The light brown fatigues of the Imperial Army units stationed throughout the capital reminded the observer of the militaristic undercurrents underpinning much of Japanese history—as it was for many European stories, no matter how much democracy and Westernness put a ’civilized’ gauze on wars and conquest—with the officers seeming to wear their epaulets and tight fabric caps solely out of pragmatism, not love for the Western style. In fact, they appeared to not really be ‘worn’ but rather enchained, sartorial shackles that suffocated the bloodstream and reddened the skin. For the most part, though, they paid the foreign pedestrians no mind, save for the occasional burning glare here or ‘accidental’ kick to the shin there, just to remind them who ruled the country.

It was precisely this tension that defined a new era of Japan, as encapsulated by the nation’s gleaming capital: the nucleus of progress and order that was Tokyo. For every wooden wharf laced across the Pacific shore and kabuki theatre standing proudly before the main streets, there were two roars of the subways burrowing underneath and the bombastic percussion of the movie scores percolating out from the motion picture theatres surrounding the U.S. and German embassy buildings. At once, newspapers and tabloids flooded Japanese presses, infecting the native script with the literary spell of Roman letters, this Eastern-Western intermingling of words and ways. You had your Portrait of a Lady and Age of Innocence translations making top dollar at the novel bookstores popping up across the arts districts, at the same time as military theory from the core of the German Generalstab made its way into the Japanese mind. Never before had mass publications of the Kojiki myths and Zen Buddhist tracts sat side-by-side against the Book of Deuteronomy and Wealth of Nations so jarringly, and yet so seamlessly, the connexions between Atlantic and Pacific worldviews straining to some but inspiring to others.

That’s precisely why I arrived on these sandy shores, shorn of pragmatism as much as I was spurred by artistic ardor. To see the point where East and West interlock, sometimes violently, sometimes fruitfully, and inspect the craters of culture that erupt from this fault line of exchange.

The white curlicues marking my bonnet imparted afresh the American spirit I embodied, slanted up towards the horizons, with a peak taller than Mt. Fuji in all its snow-tipped glory. The sapphire of my dress matched the gemstone nestled within the chic brooches of the local women, glazing outward like the spill of the San Francisco River. Little frills along my skirt nipped at the air as I swayed across the streets, nimble and swift, wishing to be at one with the motion of the city, the urban friction that Tokyo emanated. A notebook at my side anchored me while I languished on the sidewalk, occasionally jotting down my observations onto the charred pages, my hand a flourish of cursive that could only dream to reach the heights of the calligraphic genius which affirmed the Kanto script. My earrings were a duo of pearls hanging from my ears, swishing with every step, adding that silver accent to my glimmering disposition, bought at a local jeweler in the Ginza shopping district.

I remember what the jeweler said when she spoke to me, her voice eliciting a sage aura:

“Western pearls for Western girls. The business is appreciated!”

In the last seventy years, it seemed that the foreigner had undertaken a special status of his or her own. Investments into the Japanese economy had borne fruit a thousand times over as the mills crooned in the Keiyo Industrial Zone, the light smog pouring out a banner for Japanese progress; the plates, silverware, and clothing produced the prizes of that progress. And yet, there was always that distance between the West and the heart of the East which secured the Japanese a unique identity: the rakugo storytellers and ukiyo art installations were not dispersed by Sophocles and Manet, instead integrated side-by-side. The wood harvested from the Sakura trees along the Kanto Plain to build Tokyo’s edifices was not burned to make way for the new crop of steel and concrete filling the expanding areas of the city, even as the latter constructs became increasingly common. Even the Emperor himself, donning the epaulets and the medals like a bona fide Hohenzollern, still retained his godlike status, inured from Western conceptions about secular rule.

Perhaps Japan desperately wished not to be absorbed into the European fold, to lay down her arms in a cultural sense, though her armies reigned supreme in the Pacific arena. At the same time, the Rising Sun knew that to disregard the way of life and war that had dominated the entire world would be ritual suicide, and so a compromise had to be struck between the exotic and the native.

It appeared that Japan empowered itself as the ‘New Europe’ in Asia, the rising threat to the chokehold of power the white man possessed, all fueled by the white man’s technology and culture, but all the more driven by the Japanese spirit, all the same. That’s how captivating this place is to me: this surly mixture of ancient and modern, of the rice paddies and the steel mills, of the Katana blades and the Karabiner rifles, of the Nobunaga engravings and the Hirohito murals. Japan—the proud amalgam.

“Josephine! Watch where you’re going!”

A charming voice broke my geopolitical ponderings like shrapnel through skin, saving me from running headfirst into an assortment of rice bowls at a nearby strip-stand. Muttering apologies to the lady behind the stand, and quiet words of thanks to my friend for preventing me from being damned to pick the rice bits out of the seams of my dress, I puffed my cheeks, staring over at her presence.

She chuckled, a hand coming to her chin, amused at my American brashness, I could only guess.

“If you keep up your theatrics, you’ll have to write your novel behind bars, I’m afraid. Tokyo may be a city open to the whims of the West, but there is such a thing as exceeding the hospitality we grant you.”

“It’s your fault!” I battered back, laughing myself a moment, before stepping to the side to let another battalion of soldiers and German merchants through the walkway.

“Your enchanting tales about life through the streets here simply made me rapt with enthusiasm to explore! Next voyage, be sure to act as droll and dry as possible, Arakawa.”

“Duly noted. I’ll have to avoid stimulating you like the plague.”

We kept along, an easy silence passing between us, and as I peered to my side, I could see that the wry smile never quite left her lips. Arakawa-san indeed cut a handsome figure, her face filled with youthful dimples and the lushness only a woman of high society could fully portray, like a blooming cherry tree sapling in the meadows. While her hair was curled up in a traditional Kanzashi bow, the raven reams forming a moon-shaped ensemble above her temple, her dress was rather a mix of styles, the pink-red contours and floral patterns reminding the eyes of the archetypal Kimono, even as its long-flowing flares represented the Western opening of fashion and country alike—like the Commodore himself willed the flares to flow outward.

“You know, Josephine,” she looked back, and my eyes returned to hers, a guilty look on my cheeks for staring.

“You might be floored yourself at the sights, but it’s not so easy to return after lounging in the stiff dorms of Berkeley, either. It feels as if America has branded me with its underplayed boorishness,” she smirked.

“And ever still has Japan embossed me with the spirit of wonder,” I retorted, playing her little games of drama as I always did.

Our friendship had brought us to a new old land, from a new old school. It was both an emotional and intellectual decision that spurred us to arrive back on the shores of the Sea of Japan, one that saw us marinate in a multicultural fabric that granted us the context of a turbulent, yet fascinating time.

Before Tokyo and Japan, there was Berkeley, and the sands of the California desert offering an oasis of thought for us all.

You’d be surprised where excitement can roost, and a character can flourish.
 
I've published chapter two! Here's my summary:

"Josephine discourses on her relationship with Arakawa, her formative years at Berkeley University, and the feuding nationalities and ideologies inherent to the Pacific landscape in the 1930s, in her usual dramatic script."

Enjoy!


It was true fortune that Arakawa and I met one night on a brisk, late summer day on the campus of Berkeley University. The Harvard of the West had retained its prestigious allure even through the grave economic challenges America faced in the 20s and 30s, becoming a beacon of Western intellectualism from shore to shore of the Pacific’s breadth, receiving ample exchange in both professors and students from the universities of Tokyo and Beijing. For eighty years, the States had been both earnest ally and foremost rival to the Empire of Japan, and while the ascension of the Germans in the Far East had tempered relations some as the Tiger looked towards the Krauts, even cocooned within Berkeley’s oaken walls and doors did I notice tension rising between the students of adversarial nationalities.

There was one place, however, where such conflict could subside, if only for the mollifying aura of quiet: Bancroft Library. There, with azure beams of light shuttling down through the tall glass panes hanging overhead, and the polished, varnished planks of wood making up the shelves, did the tranquility soften the imperial rivalries brewing over the horizon between us like storm clouds over a clear plain. It was within the library that silent conversations loudened in our minds, arguing about surplus labor theory with Marx or military economics with Sun Tzu; on the worth of man did we drabble on with Hegel, and on the intransigence of the familial hierarchy too did we unearth and undermine with Confucius. The passing of the pages became a ritual act of purification each night, like each sentence was a prayer, each chapter a hymn, and no more dedicated a disciple of print did I find than a one Aoi Arakawa.

I still remember the way her glasses notched into her ears, and that, for the sake of respecting American customs, she traded in her fusion ensemble for a decidedly more Western-fitted and -formed brocade ensemble, the blue of its hem taken straight from the fabric of Old Glory. She was sitting at the same table as me, her nose stuck in Voltaire’s Candide, her eyes rapt with the Enlightenment zeal emanating from the pages. I put down my Emile and looked over towards her, sensing a kindred spirit but not quite knowing how to broach into her space.

“’So long as the people do not care to exercise their freedom, those who wish to tyrannize will do so; for tyrants are active and ardent, and will devote themselves in the name of any number of gods, religious and otherwise, to put shackles upon sleeping men.’”

“’I prefer liberty with danger than peace with slavery.’”

We chuckled. She gently put a hand on my hand, and smiled, affirming the intellectual bond we’d consummated.

“To think, you Americans boast about being all high and mighty and powerful yourself, and yet you so ape the traditions of your forebearers in Europe. How crass!”

“So says the woman whose nation molded itself on Chinese statehood and thought. Perhaps we share in the obsession over others; the copycat is our calling card,” I mused, the smile not leaving my lips.

From that point on, we persevered through the trials of academia together, as the whole of Berkeley joined in on the geopolitical discussion over the triad of various holdings in the Pacific, the student body letting their nationalities sing in heated arguments. By the trees on the campus green, at the geometric lines of tables in the cafeteria, in lecture halls within and without our professors’ knowledge, and even from the balconies overlooking the wide expanse of Alameda County our voices contested the crises of the day.

“America must assert herself! Domestic troubles mustn’t interfere with the prerogatives of foreign policy,” an acquaintance, James, always trammeled forth with patriotic zeal.

“If East Asia is to have any semblance of native stability, it will not come from Japanese domination! A strong, united China will counterbalance Japanese hegemony while providing the means for liberation elsewhere in the region,” Jingguo, an exchange student from the University of Beijing, argued with equal intensity but the geopolitical tact to match.

“It is German interests that have long kept wicked forces at bay in the Orient,” Hans, an import from the Berlin academy with a thick Prussian accent, tried his best to declaim. “You may not like the supremacy of the Kaiserreich, but with it, the balance of power remains untouched, and the allure of the West can make its full inroads into Asian cities.”

Arakawa and I always made insightful comments of our own, of course; when we had the floor, at least. Our ideology was never inflamed by national sympathies—at least, not consciously, though we’d read enough of Jung to know that there may very well be greater forces at play for us—as we set out to carve for ourselves a philosophical state, a mental property, where such disputes weren’t settled by borne guns or raised flags but rather what one took out of the world. Our books and essays became our anthems; our conversations, the laws of the land. Call it hyper-rationalism, call it cultural relativism, or any matter of expletive what-have-you, in the polarized powder keg that was life in our world, we found salvation in the abstractions of a literary universe, which could somehow douse the flames of our own. Expanding the realm of human experience, we thought, could lessen individual biases, and forge an understanding of the trials of others, not processed by screams and shouts alone.

When we all graduated, the quintet of us, despite lingering squabbles over matters of doctrine and principle, found a community resourceful in wit and lush with food for the mind. And, knowing that America was quickly becoming unsafe for our dignified kind, with the rioting of the Longists and the Red Guard pouring over into California’s cities and streets, we thought time away from our temporary home would do us best; not like Uncle Sam had the time to worry about us when he was off treating the political maladies that plagued him.

“Josephine! Have you gotten your tickets yet?”

Arakawa put a hand on my arm, brimming with vim, having accosted me outside the airport with our luggage already stuffed in enough dollies and briefcases to make the traders in Shanghai blush. It was the beginning of a new age of travel, the ‘30s, and with the silver shine of the planes waving in and out of the runway each day, their engines roaring into the stars like aerial lions, I thought it the perfect mode of transport to catalyze the passage of technology and ideas westward, in a flash.

“Indeed I have! Whom do you take me for, a loafing vagabond?”

I laughed then, even though I knew that there were likely to be several would-be expats onboard, looking for a way out of the country’s mounting troubles, even with no money to pay the safe haven’s fare. The women, men, and children would sneak in by hiding in large luggage containers and printing counterfeit plane passes, praying for their path to a sanctuary of work and goodwill.

I closed my mouth swiftly, sighing. Perhaps I too wanted to escape the foibles of economic exploitation, though not directed at me, rather the very discussion of it upsetting my dignified philosophical proclivities. ‘Practical application’ had its own ways of being manipulated for my own gains, I supposed, but still, I didn’t speak up, hoping to clear away the images of empty bellies and tattered clothes from my mind’s eye.

“The plane’s almost gone already. Get your bonnet and your briefcases over here, lest we be forced to take the next cruiser line!”

I paled. She knew seasickness was my worst enemy, attacking my constitution and my vigor like the plague. Thank God for the Wright Brothers, I admitted to myself; the air would be our fiefdom over the next few days, our vassals the clouds and particles themselves.

And, looking out the window over the course of the trip many times, the Pacific Ocean blue became our muse. The sapphire hue of its complexion revealed trails of marine life scuttling and crawling below, with the occasional rocks jutting out from its surface like spears, and small islands filled with greenery populating the otherwise clean slate of water. The largest mass of water on the planet, it was now the nascent battleground of world powers, each jockeying for control over its wide expanse—this playground for the newest dreadnoughts and submarines alike.

In the West, the German East Asian General Administration had supplanted Anglo-French control in Indochina, Malaya, and Borneo, extracting huge reserves of rubber from the plantations to power their modern motorized military, with an astute level of German pragmatism that was as efficient as it was backbreaking on the native populations. German hegemony required that its colonial empire stretch from the jungles of Benin to the Solomon Islands deep into the ocean, for not only the exploitation of resources but also the power projection of German influence. The East Asia Squadron patrolled the South China Sea all the way to the captured ports of Tsingtao and Tianjin, offering them a foothold in the rich Chinese markets for German investment, as the ailing carcass that was the Qing Dynasty became resuscitated by German defibrillators. It was in China that the German industrial machine found its largest market and cemented its sway across the world, with Clausewitz’s classics and Faust volumes read alongside the Analects and Journey to the West in the Qing court. Universities at Nanjing and Chongqing taught tens of courses on German language and history, from the fall of Rome to Alaric’s armies to Bismarck’s proclamation of the German Empire, and the triumphant march into Paris of 1918 that ended with the black tricolor hoisted over the Tower.

In the South, meanwhile, the last remnants of the British Empire made base in Australasia: the wholly artificial union of Australia and New Zealand to consolidate British power in the region. There, authoritarian governor William Birdwood crushed Syndicalist revolutions and union uprisings with the force of the Dominion army, the dockworkers at Canberra and Sydney forced back into their labors at the end of a rifle. From its roots as a penal colony, Australasia became its own bastion of European civilization in the East, its extermination and subjugation of the native peoples the historical way-through for the establishment of a new dominant culture. Rather than Japan’s complementation of East and West, and Germany’s use of local nobles and royals to attain power, Australasia saw itself, however dimmed by general strikes and liberal denunciations of the Birdwood regime, as a white light in a sea of dark and yellow colors.

And in the East, taking a page from its former overlords across the pond, the Americans took stock of their most recent empire, ranging from the harbors at Manila to the naval bases at Guam and Pearl Harbor, reaching to the sandy shores of Los Angeles, where many a Japanese American had cultivated their lives. It was in the Pacific where America had its first true taste of empire: Commodore Perry fired American imperial ambitions out of his cannons, and through a brusqueness so well-endowed to his people, forever opened the doors to Japanese trade—and Japanese power.

Indeed, I could feel the ocean-wide tension thousands of feet above, like the seas were quaking the inner metal of the plane’s hull.

“Do you think it’ll ever happen?” Arakawa’s face turned from its place on the Book of Five Rings, and looked at me, puzzled.

“A war stretching the Pacific, I mean. Surely the economic interests of two industrial nations make it impossible? The markets that would be lost…”

“That much is true,” she responded, though with a finger to her chin; “as long as they wouldn’t outweigh the Arisaka and Garand sales, nor the profits made by the munitions companies.
And that’s not even considering conflict over access to China, Josephine.

Really, there aren’t many things men in this world won’t use as an excuse to kill each other.”

I smiled, in the same way a woman smiles when she hears the death of an estranged lover: with contempt as the veil for a sadness in the dignity of men.

Things were brewing back home. I worried for my family, and if the family business—a small yet liberally devoted publishing house—would get caught in the crossfire. Either by the propagandistic hijacking of the far right, or the outright destruction by my friends on the left, for the sake of the gains of nationalization. The election was growing nearer, the years feeling like decades, the months like years, the weeks like months, and it almost seemed to me that with this foreign incursion, I was saying goodbye in a way, and only hello to the tensions that lie in a place so divorced from my own personal constructs.

But nevertheless, flew I did, an American swan, looking down on the prey and predators below with such a keen interest—even as I thought myself protected from the seedy vultures circling around me.
 

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