In a ruthless fascist dictatorship, the Director General commands all.

Controlled and Indoctrinated from birth, strengthened by an all-encompassing eugenics programme, and challenged by rigorous genetic, physical and mental tests, the Security Directorate’s elite enforcement arm unwaveringly supports the regime.

These are five of their stories.

  • Life in the Security Directorate – Eve struggles to come to terms with life in the Directorate and finds her own way out.
  • Love in the Security Directorate – while the Directorate might control who you marry, they can’t always control who you fall in love with.
  • Success at the Academy – Lieutenant Jemima Hunt discovers in the power over life or death is not always clear cut.
  • Payton’s Run – Can Payton survive her live fire physical assessment?
  • Minty and the Monster – Second Lieutenant Minty Hollister takes up her first post at Cabaret Cave.

These stories will challenge your sense of a good life.

Sample

Introduction

One thing writers have in common with children is the ability to construct whole new worlds with about five minutes of daydreaming,

Children imagine being a firefighter one day, and a ballet dancer the next. Life with different parents, and with more, or less, siblings.

One day they colour everything yellow, and the next blue. They might pull up a baby carrot and consider carrots that might grow as far as the other side of the planet.

Writers do the same, and our imaginations can be just as wild. Worlds governed by magic instead of physics? Worlds ruled by women? Ruled by lizards? No problems whatsoever.

I find I’m inspired by the books I read, and the tv shows I watch. Sometimes I might think it’s stupid and rewrite it, others I’ll use it as a launching pad.

The Security Directorate comes from a strange combination of old and new wars.

Starting with a bunch of documentaries about the Third Reich. How they came to power, how they ruled, how the ruling elite were so much better off than the ordinary people. Not to mention the assassination attempts on the leader.

And ghoulishly fascinating, the policies of eugenics with involuntary sterilisation, genocide and experimentation with breeding programs.

Meanwhile, the Syrian Civil War had reached its peak. It continues with an uneasy peace and sporadic outbreaks of tension and violence.

This “peace” is unchanged either by the condemnation of international leaders or, more recently, earthquakes.

Which got me thinking. What if something like the Third Reich erupted today?

The rest of the planet is reluctant to intervene in conflicts, even where it is possible to do so.

And more recently, we’ve seen a solid programme of propaganda and indoctrination could work.

So, what would life be like in today’s fascist dictatorship? One that included an Office of Public Enlightenment and a Genomics Bureau?

Where you were bred and indoctrinated to blindly follow orders.

These speculative stories attempt to explain how it might work. To take you through the potential stages of your life:

  • In Life in the Security Directorate, Eve struggles to come to terms with life in the Directorate, and finds her own way out.
  • While Love in the Security Directorate shows us while they might control who you marry, they can’t always control who you fall in love with.
  • Lieutenant Jemima Hunt discovers in Success at the Academy, the power over life or death is not always clear cut.
  • Moving on, in Payton’s Run, one student makes it through the live fire physical assessment.
  • And finally, in Minty and the Monster, we join Second Lieutenant Minty Hollister at her first post.

In the unlikely event a Security Directorate set itself up in Australia, I expect I’d find myself at death’s door in a desert re-education camp. Would that be lucky for me? I can’t say for sure.

Alexandria Blaelock
Melbourne, Australia
April 2023

The cover of Security Directorate Dossiers volume 1 by Alexandria Blaelock shows a graffiti skull on a wall.

OR

Security Directorate stories available separately

The cover of Life in the Security Directorate by Alexandria Blaelock shows a woman standing on a hill in front of a full moon.
In a ruthless fascist dictatorship, a eugenics programme ensures people are born with genetic superpowers. All Eve needs is a black Earl Grey tea with a thin slice of lemon. And when she needs something, she always gets it. One way or another.
The cover of Honoris Virilis Respectu shows a man in front of a street full of neon signs.
With his assistant hospitalised, and her replacement so inept, Major General John Simm thinks it can’t be coincidence. Can he get to the bottom of it?
The cover of Love in the Security Directorate by Alexandria Blaelock shows a man and a woman standing looking at each other.
The ruthless Security Directorate controls your birth, education, marriage and sometimes your death. Captain Seraphina Robinson is about to marry a man she barely knows. Not that it matters. The eugenics programme matters more.
the cover of calling it a day by alexandria Blaelock shows a cloaked figure.
Hard-arsed detective Captain Maeryn Prothero is on the case. Battling her fragmented memories. Can she save herself before the Security Directorate does?
the cover of minty and the monster by alexandria blaeock shows a street during a lantern festival.
New graduate Second Lieutenant Minty Hollister is in charge of the inaugural Security Directorate Distinguished Service Awards. More than her future’s at stake.
The cover of veni vidi vici by alexandria blaelock shows a person with a gun before lit up police cars.
Second Lieutenant Cora Meadows is alone when an unfamiliar alarm tone goes off. Does she have what it takes to deal with whatever it is?
The cover of Success at the Academy by Alexandria Blaelock shows a person in a cloak walking through wasteland.
From birth to death, citizens face grueling physical and mental testing. Lieutenant Jemima Hunt runs candidate 124 through his paces. And finds the over life and death is not always clear cut.
the cover of pursuit of power by alexandria blaelock shows  person holding a gun to their own head.
Captain Tara Cline forced to work with nemesis Captain Max Wade. Can she solve the crime before he does?
The cover of Payton's run by Alexandria Blaelock shows a person standing at a crossroads.
From birth to death, citizens face gruelling physical and mental testing. Lieutenant Jemima Hunt runs candidate 124 through his paces. And finds the over life and death is not always clear cut.