This is the follow up to the original story “Sorry, you’re on your own” The original story is 7 chapters and about 25 total pages. It introduces us to a rural family living off their physical and mental reserves after the lights go out – and stay out. When TSHTF they are on their own against hunger, weather, and a band of roving looters. In this follow up, the survivors of the first story begin to reach out to see who else is left alive.
Sorry, you’re on your own – part 2. Hope:
Chapter 1: Beginning again
Amanda Fleisher was not happy. She was warm, and safe, and well fed. The 16 year old orphan was welcome in the Adams’ home. But as the snow increased, the days shortened and the initial shock of losing both of her parents to violent deaths began to wear off. As days turned to weeks, she was increasingly restless. She snapped at Bob and Nancy, sulked, and generally resented the state that the world was in. Without television, email, school, or friends, she grudgingly helped prepare meals and wash dishes, but the rest of her time was spent staring into the fire, or drowning hours in crossword puzzles. She claimed that there was nothing in the dozens of books lining the family’s shelves that interested her.
When Nancy mentioned seeing whether any friends who lived nearby were still in the area, Amanda showed the first real smile in weeks. It was as if she suddenly realized that some small portion of the world from before the tragedy might still exist. It was quickly decided that the household should reach out to their nearest neighbors. Amanda wanted to immediately hike to Stagford. The village was only 12 miles away. It had over 100 residents including Amanda’s maternal aunt and uncle, and several of her friends from high school. To the lonely girl it sounded like paradise. Bob insisted that the first step would be for him to scout the route.
When Bob and Rob checked the trap line that evening, they collected the traps along with the red squirrel found in one. There was enough food in the house to last for some time and Bob wouldn’t have time to both scout and run the trap line. He did not even consider letting his ten year old son run the line by himself. Not in the state the world was in today.
The Adams’ home was at the end of a lane starting on the county road four miles to the south. At this crossroads a cluster of houses had accumulated in the past hundred years. This hamlet (called Haven) lay only four miles from the Adam’s cabin, eight miles from the village of Stagford to the south and twelve from Millersville to the north. Haven would be the first area to investigate. It had been three months since the lights went out. In all that time the family had not strayed more than three miles from home. Bob and Nancy had reasoned that they would be safer in isolation than dealing with others. The experience with the looters who killed Amanda’s parents seemed to confirm that. But now it was clear that the time was right for trying to contact the rest of Amanda’s family.
Dressing several hours before dawn in his combat gear, Bob’s mind was filled with flashback images of night combat, barking muzzle flashes and shadowed figures in motion. He hoped that he would never encounter that again. But he prepared for it anyway. It was well below freezing so he dressed as warmly as he could while still maintaining mobility. He planned to be outside all day.
Nancy, Rob, and Mandy each wished him luck as he filled his thermos with hot tea with lemon juice and his pockets with the last of the venison jerky. He made sure that Nancy’s SKS and two of the AR15s were loaded with full 30 round magazines and that each had a cartridge chambered. If the house needed defending before he returned, all they had to do was switch off the safety and start shooting. In addition, Nancy wore the Glock pistol found in the Fleisher’s yard with its full magazine of hollow points.
Bob would hear any shooting if he was within a few miles of home, and that would bring him running back too. But there had been no sign of trouble since the fateful night three weeks ago. No fresh foot prints had shown in the snow and Bob hadn’t spotted any signs of other human beings as he checked the trap lines, and tended the goat flock at what was left of the farm even though he had spent hours watching the roads and distant hillsides.
He made his way out of the house and traveled down the open road for the first quarter mile. He felt safe that far. But as the road dipped downhill and curved to the right, he continued straight into the trees bypassing the remains of the Fleisher’s home and the fresh graves in the yard. He stopped as soon as he could see the farm and watched the barns and pastures for several long minutes. He forced himself to check his watch and wait an additional fifteen minutes watching for any movement, lights, or sound. When there were none he moved out of the trees to the goat shed.
The goats bleated to him when they heard him enter their pasture. It was warm and sweet smelling inside the shed. They clustered around him seeking treats as he shut himself inside. With quick use of the flashlight to conserve batteries he found the cold stool and bucket and quickly milked the does. His own nanny goat was back here among the others now. That had eliminated the need to tether her. Instead he had been letting the flock out to browse the pastures during the day, calling them back with the lure of grain and hay and shutting them in the shed at night. He had a quick cup of the warm milk and left the rest of the pailful to freeze. He would pick it up on the way back to the house in the evening.
After turning the snorting, nuzzling goats into the pasture, Bob left the farm. He took a slight detour to glance at the big pine tree that had blown down. He had cached one of the looter’s AR15s and a full magazine of ammo under the trunk by scooping out the earth beneath it and reburying the plastic wrapped package. As far as he could tell by predawn light, it still looked undisturbed.
There were only two houses between the farm and the hamlet. Most of the roadside was occupied by the pastures and woodlots that had belonged to the Emmons. He would bypass the houses for now. He wanted to be watching the crossroads when the sun came up. He thought his time would be better spent watching several houses instead of just one at a time.
The hill top looking down at the crossroads was cold and windy. But by dropping over the crest and crawling under some pines, he found a sheltered nook where he could spread his ground cloth and drape his 3D leaf pattern poncho over himself as he looked down on the cluster of buildings. He put chemical heater packs into the toe of each boot and another inside his shirt collar. They were left over from supplies he had bought for hunting season. He knew that it would be a long cold vigil. It seemed like a good time to make use of them.
In the gathering light he could see seven houses, five garages, two barns and a shed. Three months ago they were occupied by two retired couples, a widow with her disabled son, a bachelor, a couple with grown children, and two young families with several children each. Only three of the seven homes showed smoke from their chimneys now.
Near one of the later, the morning parade began shortly after pink dawn as three children ages 5 through 10 in housecoats and oversized boots went in and out of a shed obviously serving as an outhouse. Their parents followed. This was the Hammond family. Virgil and Yolanda were a few years younger than the Adams. She had gone to the same school as Bob and Nancy. Virgil had grown up in the neighboring town but was a familiar face. He had been a truck driver, logger, and mechanic on and off for the last decade. Bob suspected that if he had any spare pay, he smoked it. But with three kids, Virgil hadn’t had much spare pay since Bob had known him. Yolanda was a year younger, always a bit on the heavy side and the wrong person to cross. But they had always seemed happy with each other and that’s about the best anyone could hope for in this world.
Wood smoke drifted up from the three chimneys and down the valley over the ribbon of snow covered pavement. There were tire tracks and drag marks in the road leading to a tractor near the center of the village. A chain ran from the tractor to the base of a dead tree lying in the middle of the road. Drag marks showed that it had been brought from the surrounding hillside whole after blowing down. An hour after the parade the bachelor Zack Frye and the much older Delbert Abbott came out of the Abbott house and began working together with hand saws to cut the limb wood to stove lengths. Stephen Baker (the other elderly man) and the entire Hammond family joined them in mid morning. Bob saw Yo and the girls bring full pails into one of the barns and emerge carrying empty pails later.
There was no sign of activity in the other homes. Bob concluded that at least three households were working together and keeping some sort of livestock. That was good to know. When the men were summoned inside at lunch time, Bob eased back over the ridge top. He had been nearly still for five hours. Despite good gear his feet were painfully cold and it was time to move. He decided to work his way home detouring to look at the houses that he had bypassed.
Sticking well within tree cover he made his way cross country toward the first house. He passed several sets of human tracks and two old sets of wheel tracks made by the tractor skidding out logs when he was within mile of Haven. Most of the fallen trees close to the crossroads had been skidded to the village as firewood. But the tracks from the hamlet had stopped well short of where the winding road reached the first house on the lane leading to Bob’s cabin. That rental house had been occupied by several tenants in the past few years. The latest had been a young couple with a lot of motorized toys. He recalled that a boat, an ATV, and a snowmobile had all been stored on trailers in the back yard the last time he had driven by. Peering between the bare trees he looked down on the house for a full hour as he quietly drank his still warm tea and chewed jerky. From 300 yards away, he saw no sign of movement, but the door to the back porch was stuck where someone or something had shoved it open against a snow drift. Since then, snow had blown in over the porch floor. No lights showed and there was no smoke from the chimney. The boat and snowmobile were still there, but the ATV and its trailer were gone. Bob couldn’t tell if there was a vehicle in the garage or not. But someone had opened that porch door since it had snowed.
Bob decided to check the other house first. Easing back into the woods, he crossed a fresh dog track, then another. He noted that he had not seen a deer track all day. The dogs could be the reason why. The second house lay a fair distance off the road. You would mistake the driveway for a seasonal logging road if you didn’t know that a dark shingled house lay up the slope. That was probably the intent of the Garrets. They were retirees who had built the place ten years ago. Bob had met them several times at town board meetings and social functions. He suspected that the fiery old couple was probably doing well hunkered down in their home with solar panels and indoor herb gardens.
He hit the driveway about halfway up the slope. Looking downhill toward the road he could see a fairly large tree limb had come down across the driveway close to the road. That would add to the illusion that the path was anything except a driveway. Nothing had disturbed the snow in the driveway except small squirrel feet hurrying across the break in the trees. Bob paralleled the track to within sight of the house rather than cross that open space himself. He could see a grey Volvo station wagon in the driveway with snow drifted against its wheels. There was more wind here than lower in the valley. Over the next hour he circled the house at 100 yards, stopping to peer into the windows with his binoculars. Then he circled it again from 75 yards away.
Finally he stepped into the head of the driveway and hollered to the house. He forced himself to stand there in the open for five full minutes by his watch. By now he had decided that the couple had headed south or moved in with other relatives elsewhere. But he felt that he had to make sure just in case they needed food or anything else that he could provide.
He saw no trip wire or other evidence of occupation as he approached the front door and knocked loudly. It occurred to him that they might be deaf and did not hear him from outside. Then with a sudden sense of anxiety, he wondered if the band who had killed the other neighbors had been here before moving on to the other houses. He tried the door and it swung open.
Chapter 2: House to house
The house was cold. It had been unheated for some time, but he hollered a greeting again anyway. Only damp echoes answered him as he stepped into the house with the rifle at ready. The downstairs was neatly ordered as if the owners had just stepped out for a few minutes. But it was filled with the cold smell of wet paneling and the clinging dampness of disuse. He anxiously peered into each room then made his way upstairs.
He found them in the bedroom. They were dead, but not in the way he had feared. This somehow seemed more wholesome than the fate of the other neighbors, but still not as peaceful as death should have been. Their surroundings told the story as well as any suicide note could have. She was in the bed with a dozen mostly empty bottles of pills on her night stand. She had exhausted her prescriptions a month after the lights went out and gone to her rest after days or weeks of decline.
Her husband of 30 years had sat at the bedside with her waiting for the end to come. Piles of books, a few dirty plates, and burnt out candle stubs surrounded the bedside chair. When her heart had failed, he laid the Bible he had been reading beside her, perhaps after saying a few words over her, then he had removed a well worn Colt 1911 from his bedside table, loaded three cartridges from the box he left open on top of the night stand and joined her. The magazine still held two cartridges. The carpet held an amazing amount of frozen blood. Taking only the Colt and ammunition away with him, Bob returned home.
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In the morning, the entire Adams household went to milk the goats and then cross lots through woods to the Garretts’ home. With Nancy’s help, Bob carried the corpses outside wrapped in the bed coverings and bedroom carpet. The rest of the day was spent busting through the frozen soil of the flower garden with a pick axe down to where a spade could be used to dig a common grave for the couple. It was back breaking work to get below the frost line, but necessary. While Bob did that, the others took turns keeping watch to make sure that no one approached unnoticed as he worked. When not on sentry duty, they searched the house for things they needed.
It might be called stealing, but with no known next of kin to inherit the goods, Bob considered it payment well earned in exchange for burial services. They decided to leave most of the limited food supply, clothing, and tools in the house. It had an ornamental fireplace which could be used for heat if necessary. It also had passive solar heating that had helped keep the pipes from freezing and the advantage of concealment which had already probably saved it from one band of looters. The house would make a good emergency retreat should the Adams ever need to flee their home. This house could serve as their shelter far better than a tent exposed to the weather.
Although not her fashion, there were several coats and sets of boots that Amanda could use. Mrs. Garrett surely didn’t need them any longer. At the least they would serve Amanda well on the walk to Stagford. She also expressed an interest in the currency and jewelry found in the house. Seeing as she had lost all of her own worldly possessions and any inheritance that might have come from her parents when their home had burned, the Adams allowed her to take what she pleased. Should she ever have the opportunity to use currency again Mandy would have $276 from the Garretts. She also selected several pieces of jewelry from a lacquered jewelry box on a bedroom dresser. Bob had already told her that a pair of the AR15 rifles and half the ammunition that fit them were hers. He had not mentioned that he and Nancy had decided that once things got back to normal Amanda should get the $25,000 in cash recovered from the looters too.
Bob claimed the .45 and the remaining 49 rounds of ammunition. Nancy appropriated a set of copper bottom cookware, and Rob being inspired by a recent reading of Treasure Island, turned up a large steel carving knife and a wall display of antique silver coins which was probably worth more than the paper currency Mandy happily tucked into the pocket of her new baby blue down filled parka.
It seemed strange to her. A few weeks ago she couldn’t have imagined wandering around someone else’s house and just helping herself to their belongings. Maybe they would haunt her, but somehow she knew that the old couple had no use for their belongings any more. It only made sense for those in need to use them. Yet it was bizarre even if it wasn’t wrong. “Weird” was the word for it. It was all just so weird. She stood outside holding a gun while a man buried the dead people who owned these things. And that man had shot the men who murdered her parents. That thought made her burn with anger. She wanted to shoot them herself, not run away again like a frightened rabbit. But she had been so different then.
The very first thing that Bob Adams had done the morning after her parents had been killed – before they were even buried – was hand her a gun and show her how to make it shoot. The idea had terrified her until he had taken her by the shoulders and firmly but gently explained that some of the men who had killed her parents might come back. If they did, she would need to know how to kill them. That had turned off her tears like shutting off a faucet and she listened like she had never listened before.
She knew now that when the little lever blocked the SKS trigger from being pulled back that it was “Safe” and that she needed to move that safety out of the way to make it shoot. That, and to never point the end where the bullet came out at anybody that she didn’t want to kill was all that Mr. Adams had tried to teach her the first day. Since then, Mrs. Adams had taught her to load and aim not only the SKS but the AR15 rifle she now carried. She knew that she could hit a man sized target 50 long steps away and how to safely carry her rifle. She knew that her rifle carried 30 cartridges and that one would shoot each time she pulled the trigger when the safety was off. But she also knew that she might need every one of them because this new world was a dangerous place.
It was a place she didn’t want to be in. She just wanted to be with her friends. To get back to the normal world where parents were alive and the lights came on. The Adams were nice enough but the boy was half her age, and his parents were literally twice her age. They didn’t understand her. She just knew that if she could get to the village that school would still be going on. She never thought she’d miss school! But just spending an hour chatting with Tammie and Vicky or even her cousin Brenda and her Aunt and Uncle Carter would help the world make sense again. She was sure of it. She just had to get to Stagford.
The next day found Bob sore from the digging. His palms were bruised from slamming the pick into frozen ground, and his shoulders ached from shoveling as he made his way to milk the goat and then on to the rental house between Garrett’s and Haven. Approaching just at dawn he settled behind a fallen tree and put in the last of his boot heaters. It was colder today. The snow was squeaking so he knew that the temperature was down in the single digits or below. Even with the last of the boot heaters, he was too cold to sit for long. He was glad for his balaclava and camo stocking cap. He flexed his fingers inside his mittens and tucked his hands under his armpits as dawn washed into the valley waking the trees from their huddled sleep. As sunlight warmed their branches the trees thawed sending pops and creaks through the frozen woods. It made him think of Tolkien’s Ents waking from slumber. Small birds flitted among the branches searching for seeds or buds. A red squirrel clambered noisily over rough bark and leapt from still branch to still branch leaving crazily swaying motion behind him.
After an hour the cold made Bob move. He had seen no light or motion from within the house. He had seen no sign of human life this far from Haven. He began his walk around the house retracing his footsteps from two days before. He crossed dog tracks going in the opposite direction from that he had seen yesterday. This time there were four large sets of canine tracks. Moving closer he could see where those tracks went down to the house and through the open door of the back porch.
Walking slowly Bob circled the house at +/- 75 yard distance. No tracks except those of dogs came or went in the snow. It was possible that other tracks had blown full of snow, but as far as he could tell no humans had entered or left the tenant house since it had snowed a week ago. Bob entered the road and walked down to the driveway.
He shouted “Hello!” and forced himself to stay in the open for 5 minutes by his watch to allow anyone inside to see him and know that he was not attacking them.
When the time ran out, Bob walked around the house to the back door, half expecting to meet a timber wolf coming out. What he found was dog tracks coming and going through the half open door to what remained of a couple big trash cans with the contents scattered all over the interior of the enclosed porch. Stepping over the shredded trash Bob knocked on the back door and peered into the empty house. The inside looked much like the porch. He let the door swing open on silent hinges. “Anybody home?”
No one answered him as he stepped inside with his finger on the trigger. The door opened into a dining area. It was heaped with the remains of a meal where every bit of food had been consumed but the plates not cleared. A pan with a crust of dried mashed potatoes frozen to the bottom sat in the center of the table. The kitchen was worse. The sink was full of dirty dishes and cooking utensils. Four pots occupied the burners of the stove. Each held the remains of soup or gravy or vegetables that had been warmed, served, and left empty. The kitchen trash can overflowed and the counter was covered with a couple dozen empty cans. The cupboards were open, and bare. Whoever had eaten here had either consumed every crumb or taken it away with them. The bedrooms were in similar disarray with beds slept in but not remade. Dried muddy boot tracks filled the floors. A toilet had frozen and split its bowl sending water and worse over the bathroom floor to refreeze. Whether the mess was the handiwork of the last renters, the band of murderers, or other looters, Bob never found out. But there was little of value left behind. The place had been stripped almost bare. There was still propane in the cook stove’s tanks and a kitchen broom closet revealed a partial bag of cat food. Bob took that away to supplement the feed of his dog Cooper and chickens with a handful per day in addition to the scraps they lived on. He closed both doors behind him when he left, stopping just long enough to confirm that the fuel tanks in the boat and snowmobile were empty.
As he milked the goats in the evening he decided it was time to make contact with the people in the valley below.
Chapter 3: Haven
When Bob asked her if she thought he should try to make contact with the residents of Haven, Nancy Adams was hesitant. Contact would alert others to their presence. She didn’t know the people in the village as well as she had known the nearer neighbors. There was not only the danger of inviting an attack by thieves and looters, but also of contracting some contagious disease. A bout of flu could be deadly with no clinic or drug store available.
It was when she thought of the children that Nancy realized that they would have to make contact. Her family was probably far better off than anyone within miles. She had stocked extra groceries away against hard times for years. Bob felt safe with a closet full of ammo. But it was a pantry full of canned goods that did it for her. It was true that they were feeding an extra person now that Mandy had joined them, but most folks would be worse off. Not only would contact with the village give Rob other children to play with for the first time in months, but they might be able to help someone in need. Amanda really needed contact outside the household too. She just wasn’t content playing board games and taking care of the homestead. Months with just a few people since the lights went out was a lot harder for the popular cheerleader to take than it might be for even other girls her own age. If any doubts remained, they vanished when Bob pointed out that anyone approaching by road would have to pass through Haven before reaching their home. If the residents were friendly, a neighborhood watch could be organized for early warning or even mutual defense.
As Bob test fired the .45, he couldn’t help but feel that he had been lucky. He knew that he had killed at least five men in the shootout a month before. He knew that the odds of coming out unharmed against odds like that again were slim to none. So he figured anything that he could do to tip the odds in his favor was well worth doing. He had resisted getting a handgun for years because having a pistol permit would have put him on a list of gun owners. But no one was keeping a list now. It gave him some comfort to wear the old Colt on his hip without having to carry a long arm every time he moved from room to room.
He had come home after exploring the second house. He had planned to spend the next day grazing the goats, but when it began to snow Nancy decided that they should go to the Garretts’ and proceed to Haven in the morning. That way even if they ran into trouble in Haven, anyone backtracking them would not be able to follow their foot prints to their home since the falling snow would cover their tracks.
Amanda wanted no part of spending a cold dark night at the Garretts’.
“That’s just creepy!”
So with solemn instructions to stay indoors, keep the doors locked, and shoot anyone forcing entry. Bob and Nancy decided to leave Rob and Amanda snug and warm, while they set out to make contact with the village the next day. Both of the children knew how to shoot, the rifles were loaded, and they both knew the way to the Garrett house if they needed help before morning. In addition, Cooper the Great Dane mix would make a formidable foe to anyone seeking unauthorized entry.
Walking away in the softly falling snow, the couple was torn with mixed emotions. There was the added security of knowing that if they ran into trouble from the settlement, the children would not be part of it. So while there was fear at leaving their home, they also felt a guilty bit of giddy escapism to be child free for an evening.
Despite the circumstance, soft candlelight in an interior room and a shared sleeping bag made the chilly getaway a romantic rendezvous complete with a bottle of wine from the Garrett’s rack.
They woke late in the morning to bright sunlight on new snow. The happy couple set out for the town hand-in-hand wearing solid colored clothing and carrying a basket of barter goods gathered from the house where they had spent the night. The basket including wheat crackers and a jar of jam, a couple cans of sardines packed in oil, and a few new candles.
Bob had seen no sentries or weapons in Haven. But he could not imagine living in a village without some plan for community defense. He had planned to walk into the town carrying a white flag while Nancy covered him. But she had argued against that and convinced him with two good points. First, she probably appeared less threatening than he did; and second, he was a better long distance shot. So Bob found himself watching anxiously through his scope while Nancy walked down the center of the road toward the men using a two-man saw to cut 24 inch chunks from the trunk of the dead tree.
Nancy’s SKS was slung on her right shoulder where it was out of her hands, but well within quick reach. Bob knew that she had a round in the chamber and the safety was off. Her hands were filled with a picnic basket of barter items. She was just beginning to wonder if she should call out to the men 70 yards away when Virgil Hammond heard her footsteps and shouted “STRANGER!”
The children who had been scattered about the open area between houses ran for the doors. Two of those doors opened before the children reached them as women with firearms came out. Virgil produced a sawed off single shot shotgun from beneath his coat and trained it on Nancy who prudently stopped walking.
“It’s just Nancy Adams, Virgil. Please point that away from me.”
The muzzle of the shotgun wavered. Virgil looked at, and behind Nancy, nervously searching for a threat. Bob pressed his eye tight into his scope and leaned hard against the tree he had selected as a rest to steady his crosshairs on Virgil Hammond’s chest. Both men were momentarily out of breath. Nancy’s heart was racing, but she held her ground.
“Nancy, are you alone?”
“Bob’s in the trees, Virge. I told him that you’d be less likely to shoot me.”
She forced a smile. Thinking “My God, what happened to him.” She had known Virgil Hammond for 20 years as kids growing up in the same neighborhood. But she barely recognized him. Was it just the new beard or had his jaw changed shape? A crimson scar ran across the bridge of his nose, and when he spoke she could see that he was missing front teeth.
The shotgun muzzle dropped a few inches. Yolanda Hammond took a few steps forward momentarily forgetting that she was supposed to be watching for an ambush. Virgil scanned the tree line seeing absolutely no one. For all he knew there were a dozen cut throats waiting to rush in. But he saw nothing to give any indication of danger. So he let his shotgun muzzle point to the ground and smiled a bearded gap toothed smile.
“O.k. tell him to come on in.”
Nancy breathed a sigh of relief with a genuine smile and waved Bob in. He waved back as he saw Yo Hammond hand the Winchester lever gun to her husband, and begin to talk excitedly with Nancy. The two women had known each other in high school although a few years separated them.
In minutes, everyone was inside the Hammond’s house seated around a table in the old Victorian’s formal dining room. Clotheslines full of drying laundry zigzagged back and forth across the ceiling around the edges of the room. The old fireplace of white painted bricks was blazing with two foot sections of log, and a blackened kettle hung on an iron hook that swung over the fire. Everyone had a cup of tea which Yo declared that she had been saving for a special occasion. No one seemed to mind that it was an herb and orange peel flavor that none of them would have drank a few months ago.
As Bob had surmised, the other families in the village had moved away shortly after the lights went out. Zack Frye, the village bachelor, had moved in with the Abbotts who lived next door to conserve firewood. The Bakers and the Hammonds had also stayed when their neighbors relocated. They had no idea that a band of looters had killed the Emmons and Fleishers less than 3 miles away. Although they said that a stranger had walked through the town about a month ago. He had said that he was trying to work his way to family who lived to the south. Virgil said that he didn’t trust the fellow and had kept his 12 gauge within reach at all times. Bob said that probably had saved the lives of everyone in the village. He thought to himself that the lack of anything worth looting probably had helped keep them alive too. The risk-to-return ratio was just not right for the attackers. Who knew? Maybe they even had a standard operation procedure to bypass settled areas and attack isolated homes. In any case, the families in Haven seemed in good health except for minor sniffles.
The only serious injury that they had encountered was when Virgil had lost 5 teeth coming home two nights after the lights went out. Without traffic lights people were generally ignoring traffic laws. Someone had run the red light in Stagford and hit him head on as he turned onto Main Street. The airbag had failed to deploy and he had literally taken the impact on his chin. The steering wheel had knocked two teeth out and loosened three so that they eventually fell out too. He had walked the eight miles home despite blood and bruises. They had borrowed the Abbott’s a car to get to the hospital the next day. The hospital still had power from a generator at that point and sent him home with pain killers, antibiotics, and an appointment with a dentist 50 miles away. The dentist had told him to stay on soft food and said to come back when the lights came on so he could use his equipment. That was three months ago and the lights weren’t on yet.
The medicine was long gone, and the family was low on just about everything else. The hamlet was entirely out of gasoline, but still had lots of home heating kerosene they could use in the diesel tractor. It had only been 90 days since the lights went out. They were using woodstoves, outhouses, and ice boxes. It had taken just 90 days to slip back in time 90 years. Food was getting scarce and would get scarcer until the spring harvest, but the kids insisted on showing Bob and Nancy the batch of fat piglets growing in the barn. A gaunt sow looked up mournfully from amid four squealing shoats. The Hammonds had just brought home 300 pounds of hog feed the week before the lights went out. That was almost gone but the sleek half grown hogs crowding each other in the pen were 200 pounds of high protein that would see this community through until spring. One of the five was destined for slaughter as a Christmas feast next week and the Adam’s were eagerly invited to come and eat their fill. Nancy figured that was as generous an offer as anyone could be expected to make in times like these.
She did not even try to barter the box of crackers and jar of raspberry jam she had brought from the Garrett’s place. Instead she just opened them and began to pass them out. Skipping herself and Bob she handed two to each adult and four to each child leaving half the box behind when they left. She left the canned goods and candles with the Hammonds too. She asked if they needed anything else. Virgil said no. But his wife said they were stretching their last few books of matches because they didn’t know when they could get more. Bob knew that he had thousands of matches at home. He couldn’t understand why everyone hadn’t bought a thousand for a few dollars before the crunch. But, he knew that he had plenty so he left two of the three books of matches he had in his pockets.
Bob and Nancy suddenly realized that they had been chatting like a gaggle of geese for at least two hours and decide that they needed to check on the children at home as soon as they could. That’s when everyone seemed to start talking at once with just one more thing to say before the excitement of a visit from outside the community came to an end. It took another 40 minutes and a promise to return the next day to say their goodbyes.
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As Virgil watched the pair walk away he gave a long look at the rifles they carried. He would dearly love to have them in his hands. The old single barrel Steven’s he had cut down to handgun length (cutting off a bulged barrel) only held one shell at a time. And he was none too certain that the old paper hulled shells he had would even fire.
As Bob and Nancy set out back up their road they kept watch on their back trail. A mile from where they had left their hosts, Bob had intended to send Nancy on while he hid himself and watched the road behind for 30 minutes. They had just halted standing hand in hand to look back, when the faint echoes of distant popping sounds from up the mountain reached them.
Before Bob even realized that it was the sound of distant gunfire Nancy had dropped the picnic basket in the snow and begun to run.
Chapter 4: The Attack
Experience told Bob that he could move faster with less gear too. He stripped off his coat as he ran. Nancy raced up the road as Bob cut toward the house through the woods. Steep embankments and fallen trees hindered him. They had over two miles to cover before reaching home. As they ran they heard the sound of Rob’s 22 fire several times and the fast crack-crack-crack of the AR15.
Nancy traveled faster than Bob but had to cover more ground as the road curved over the hills. She felt tears well up inside her that she refused to let fall. If anyone was hurting her baby, they were not going to find her with blurry vision when she shot them down. Bob’s heart pounded and his breath hurt his throat as he pushed through slapping limbs and scratching brush. They arrived within sight of the house almost simultaneously.
The first thing Bob saw as he ran upslope toward the edge of his yard was a grey shape bounding through the yard. His mind immediately flashed “deer” but he knew that was wrong. The shape was moving in short bounds. He heard the “CRACK-CRACK-CRACK!” of 223 cartridges fired close by and heard the bullets snap through the air to his left.
As Nancy came up the driveway, she saw Amanda Fleisher step out the front door and deliberately take aim at something in the front yard “CRACK-CRACK-CRACK!” The AR15’s muzzle flashed and Amanda’s hair swung forward as her thin frame rocked back with the slight recoil. She shifted her footing and fired again “CRACK-CRACK-CRACK!”
A sharp “KIY!” cut the air.
Bob saw the dog pile up face first in the snow 50 yards inside the tree line. As he and Nancy came into full view of the house they saw that the yard of freshly fallen white snow had been churned to a bloody froth of red sprinkled with feathers. The girl stood on the porch with the AR-15 at the ready, scanning for targets. When she saw Bob and Nancy she wasn’t sure whether she should be proud or embarrassed, but brought pointed the muzzle up in a safe direction. Rob came out the door behind Amanda carrying spare magazines
“Dad! Mom! Wolves attacked the chickens!”
The children had been inside when Cooper had begun to bark and put his feet against the door. Going to the windows, the children had seen “at least 10 or 20 dogs” running down the flock of chickens. The dogs had forced their way through the hen yard’s wire fence. Some were running around and around inside the enclosure chasing the panicked birds. Others ran down the hens who had managed to escape the through the rent in the wire the dogs made. Blood and feathers seemed to be everywhere. Unwilling to let the slaughter continue, the children had let Cooper out only to see him attacked by overwhelming odds. That’s when they had started shooting. They had emptied the magazines of both their rifles. Two dogs lay dead inside the hen yard and one inside the tree line. Only a single hen had survived the slaughter. Her white feathers had given her the camouflage she needed to survive the slaughter.
Cooper returned after long minutes of calling him. His black hide was streaked with saliva and blood. Most of it proved to be from others but he had received several deep punctures around the throat. His heavy leather collar was scored deeply by claws and fangs. But he had received no life threatening injury so long as the wounds did not get infected. Over the next few days Bob poured hydrogen peroxide into the wounds several times a day to prevent that. The gashes eventually healed into bald scars on his big black hide.
After making sure that he children were safe. Bob had made sure that the three feral dogs on the yard were dead by shooting each once in the head with the 22. One still held a leg torn from a hen in its mouth. None of the dogs wore collars or tags but they had all obviously once been domestic dogs. The children said that some of the pack had been smaller – looking more like coyotes. But one was an enormous German shepherd. The three dead canines looked like some type of shepherd / husky mix, perhaps from the same litter.
Unwilling to eat what was left of the dead chickens for fear of contracting something from the dog saliva, Bob stripped off the feathers and hung the remaining portions of the dead birds in a feed bag high in a tree by throwing a line over a branch and hoisting the bag up. The carcasses would be out of reach if the pack returned, but would freeze solid to store until distributed to Cooper, a piece at a time. The lone surviving hen could not be coaxed from her perch high in a Beech tree that night.
After the long run home and the shock of the event Bob just didn’t have the energy to dispose of the dog carcasses immediately. He made up his mind to leave them where they lay until morning. Instead he took the remainder of the afternoon to walk with Rob to retrieve his coat. It and the picnic basket still lay where they had fallen. Bob was glad to note that as far as he could tell, no one from the hamlet had made any attempt to follow him and Nancy.
About half way back home they saw dog tracks over their own in the road. It gave Bob a momentary chill to think that the pack might be shadowing them. Rob felt that the wolves (in his mind they were wolves) were stalking them. The rest of the walk home was an anxious trip for the boy. But they made it home without incident to find a pot of chili simmering on the stove top. After supper and scanning the shortwave stations, the family blew out their candles and went to bed. They had a hard time hearing anything in English on the shortwave. Bob didn’t understand why he couldn’t pick up the Voice of America or military transmission if nothing else. It made him wonder if the power outage really had been caused by a coordinated terrorist attack. He realized that unless the BBC or similar station covered it, he would have no way of knowing if the nation were at war. For all he knew DC had been nuked and a news blackout put in place to cover it up….
They were awakened by Cooper’s barking. The big dog paced the house going door to door and bellowing his deep-chested, window-shaking alarm.
Bob rolled out of bed scooping up the .45 before putting his feet into the boots waiting at bedside. In T-shirt and sweat pants he hardly felt ready to venture outside, but after assuring himself that the house was secure he used the flashlight to peer into the darkness where snarls and growling filled the shadows. The pack was back, but amid the shadows there wasn’t enough light to accurately shoot inside the tree line. Stepping onto the front porch, he sent a quick double tap toward eyes reflecting back the weak flashlight beam from the hen yard.
The animals dispersed for a moment but were soon back. He decided not to waste his ammunition. He couldn’t think of anything that would be in danger from them anyway as the hen was safely out of reach and the cats had been absent for days. He would rather have the pack here than trying to get in the goat shed more than a mile away. When the light of predawn began to lessen the gray, Bob was waiting with rifle in hand. But the pack had departed. The morning light revealed what his ears had told him was happening in the night. Little of the fallen pack members remained. Only fur and bloody snow showed where each of the three dogs had fallen. My God, thought Bob. If they can do that to three carcasses in a night, what would they do to a child if they caught them outside?
Chapter 5: The Visit
Bob and Nancy both regretted telling the people in Haven that they would return the next day. Now they were obligated to leave home. But Amanda and Rob might have mutinied had they been denied a visit “to the outside world” any longer too.
The family decided to go to Haven together. It would mean leaving their home unguarded. But the only alternative would be for someone to stay behind and everyone agreed that no one should be left alone. No one should go outside alone even to get snow for melting or firewood while the danger from the pack remained. No one would go unarmed when they did venture out either. In addition, the goats could not be turned out to pasture unless guarded. They were simply too valuable to risk having them torn to pieces.
After a hearty breakfast of oatmeal, each family member packed a backpack of goods to share or barter in Haven. They locked the house leaving Cooper inside to pull sentry duty and proceeded down the road to the goat barn. Amanda took a long look at the blackened foundation of her former home as they passed.
When they reached the farm, they let the goats out to pasture after morning milking and stayed with them for an hour. That gave the herd time to drink at the still flowing stream and browse a little before getting shut back in the shed with a full hay rack. The weather was warm as they made their way quickly down the road to Haven. The snow was beginning to melt and drip from the trees. By the time they returned home the roadside ditches carried a noisy trickle of running snow melt.
The visit was an unqualified success. Everyone was in good spirits as the family had a supper of hot soup when they returned home. The soup and a kettle of hot water were waiting for them simmering on the top of the woodstove when they arrived. All was well in the house and Cooper was very glad to see them.
Rob had spent the day playing with the Hammond children. He was a happy kid. He had exchanged two of his toys for a pair of action figures from twelve year old Billy Hammond. So he was delighted not only with the play date, but with new toys to bring home.
Nancy’s gift of a fresh box of tea bags, and a quart jar of fresh goat milk was enjoyed by all. The children quickly disposed of the milk at lunch time. They might not have cared for goat’s milk before the crunch, but after months with no milk at all, it tasted just fine to everyone. The mid-day meal was shared by almost everyone. Yolanda had prepared a kettle of cabbage and potatoes boiled with ham bones. The Abbott/Frye household contributed a can of creamed corn. Stephen Baker carried in a dish of baked beans for the communal table, and carried a plate back to his wife at home. After the meal everyone went to the Bakers’ house for tea.
Emily Baker was nearly bedridden with feet and ankles swollen to double their normal size. She showed all the typical signs of progressive heart failure and confided that she had taken several of her hoarded nitro pills for angina pain in the past few days. In Nancy’s opinion, no one should be surprised when she passed away, but no one in Haven had given up hope for her recovery either. They had wrapped her feet with elastic bandages and encouraged her to rest with her feet up, but there wasn’t much else they could do. Nancy gave her the small bottle of aspirin from the first aide kit she carried in her daypack but knew that she needed medication to help release the fluid from her tissues soon.
Nancy’s shrewd eye for details had shown her that while most in the community were clean and healthy they were on the verge of malnutrition. While she had helped prepare lunch she saw no evidence of food reserves to last more than a few days. She mentioned to Bob that Yolanda had been somewhat overweight before the lights went out. In the three months since she must have lost at least 30 pounds. In fact, every one of the adults showed signs of having slimmed down. Nancy decided that she would take a hard look at her pantry and see what could be spared before their next visit.
As they talked at home Bob brought up the idea of sharing the Emmons’ goat herd with the others. If the herd needed to be guarded each day, perhaps that duty and other care for the herd could be split among the households. Bob and Nancy agreed to discuss the option with the others on their next visit.
Amanda had enjoyed the prospect of seeing new people, but what she found was a far cry from what she had expected. The make up she had spent so much time putting on that morning was gaudily out of place among the hanging hand washed laundry and windows hung with blankets to keep drafts out. Zack Frye had done a double take when he first saw her. The sudden appearance of an unmarried near woman with jewelry, mascara, and eye shadow to the isolated, longtime bachelor must have been a shock even though he was nearly ten years older than she was.
Amanda had enjoyed listening to the conversations and had joined in an after tea game of scrabble at the Bakers’ in the afternoon, but it was a far cry from the reunion with friends and family she was looking forward to. It made her question just what she could expect to find in Stagford after all.
While the children played and the women cooked indoors, Bob had worked with the men of the community splitting the large chunks of wood with a maul and wedges. As they worked he told them about the pack of dogs and the need to protect the children. The men questioned Bob in detail about the pack and even more about the band of murderers. He told them everything he knew and when Zack expressed a desire to be better prepared and Virgil nodded assent, Bob brought up the subject of mutual defense and asked how well armed they were.
Virgil carried his sawed off 12 gauge and all eight shells he had for it everywhere he went. His wife used a 30-30 Winchester. There were two full twenty round boxes of ammunition on hand for the Model 94. The Abbotts and Bakers each had 30-06 bolt action hunting rifles that had 60+ years of deer hunting to their credit. One was a Winchester, the other a Remington. The men hotly debated the merits of each manufacturer. Between them they had “about twenty” 30-06 cartridges. So the six able bodied adults could wield a total of three rifles and the single shot scattergun. Based on his own ammunition expenditure a month ago, Bob figured they would be out of ammunition within the first minutes of a firefight. The good news was that he had the resources to resolve that particular short coming.
His own collection of rifles included a scoped 30-06 on a custom Mauser action. Despite only having one rifle chambered in the cartridge, Bob had 500 rounds of loaded ammunition and the capacity to reload 500 more when the cases were empty. He decided that on his next visit he would bring the older men 100 cartridges each. The relatively slow rate of fire for the bolt action rifles did not require a massive amount of ammunition. But by multiplying their supply, Bob hoped to give them the firepower needed to drive off all but the most determined attackers. They were not strangers who he needed to fear arming. They were an extension of his own defenses.
Bob owned a pair of 12 gauge shotguns. He had several boxes of number four shot shells and a few of buckshot as well. He’d donate a box of each to Virgil for bird hunting and defense respectively.
It was agreed that four rapid shots or more would act as a summons to everyone who heard them. All haste would be made to make an armed response with the assumption that 1-3 shots would be the norm for a hunting situation, but that four or more shots spaced closely together would be likely only from a need for self defense.
Christmas was only five days away. Everyone had agreed to get together again then to celebrate with a community pig roast.
As the family scanned the shortwave stations that evening they discussed next steps. Bob, Nancy, and Rob would have been content to stay home until Christmas, but as much as she was grateful for the Adams’ hospitality Amanda said that Christmas with her own family would be the best thing that she could hope for.
Bob thought that the 12 miles to Stagford could be accomplished in a single night, especially if they spent the night before in Haven. The girl had been through so much, Bob decided that he would do all he could to try to reunite her with her remaining family before Christmas.
Before going to sleep that night Amanda packed and repacked a backpack. It would be impractical to try to bring the suitcase she had brought from her own home. But most of her belongings would fit into an ALICE pack. After a day at home to rest up, everyone would return to Haven. If the residents of the Hamlet were agreeable, Bob and Amanda would press on from there trying to reach Stagford by daylight. Nancy would have come too, but she was unwilling to leave Rob alone again even if he was welcome to stay with the other children.
Chapter 6 The Walk:
The family spent the next day together, guarding the goats as they browsed and looking forward to the next visit to Haven. Bob separated the ammunition he intended to leave in Haven into a daypack. In addition, he repacked his backpack and a first aide kit for the walk to Stagford. His web-gear held four spare magazines and he packed an additional four in his backpack. That gave him 180 rounds of ammunition, plus the .45 and it’s 7 round magazine. He decided to bring the entire remaining box of ammunition for the pistol as well.
Nancy spent a considerable amount of time inventorying her pantry. She eventually selected a No. 10 can of alphabet soup mix, a three pound can of coffee creamer, a plastic quart bottle of lemon juice, a five pound bag of flour, two quarts of apple sauce, a large canister of oatmeal, and another of hot cocoa mix to donate to the community food stores. Bob felt warm and fuzzy when he stocked ammunition before the lights went out. She didn’t feel safe without a full pantry. It was pretty obvious to her that food was just as important as weapons, maybe more so. You always had to eat but might never need the weapons.
She estimated that what remained on the basement storage shelves was just enough to see the three of them through the six long months until they could count on early harvesting from their garden. Any foraging of wild plants like leeks and berries, or of fish and game would stretch those rations a little longer. After that, they would have to rely on the harvest and God’s mercy with the weather.
They heard the barks of the pack running prey that night but it was from down the valley. Well within earshot but a mile or more away. Cooper would have really liked to go chase the sound of those barks drifting eerily to him on the wind. But the pack did not come near.
The next day dawned warm and breezy with continued thawing. Bob insisted that everyone except Rob wear the body armor taken from the looters and carry extra ammunition. Without making mention of it to Amanda, he included half of the currency taken from the looters in his backpack as well. The walk to Haven and the morning stop at the farm were quickly accomplished, although everyone was feeling the additional weight in their packs before the full four miles were accomplished.
They were eagerly welcomed back to Haven, especially when they unveiled their “Christmas gifts” and the freshly baked soda bread that Nancy had baked in the Dutch oven the night before. As they enjoyed the communal meal over more tea and cocoa, Bob broached his plan for sharing the goat flock duties and benefits.
Everyone agreed to communal ownership with each household having the responsibility to milk and guard the herd twice per week except for the Baker’s. That household only had one member able to participate in the animals’ care. Stephen Baker would assume responsibility for the herd each Sunday. Whoever cared for the goats earned the right to keep the milk gathered that day and they agreed that any slaughtering would be postponed until after kidding in the spring.
Virgil Hammond smiled with real warmth for the first time at the prospect of sharing ownership of the herd. Although an honest man, he had been nearly desperate. He knew that even if he slaughtered every pig in his barn, it would be barely enough food to carry his family through the winter and springtime. He hadn’t told anyone of his sleepless nights wondering how he would feed his family when the food was gone. He had wondered how he could turn his neighbors away so that his kids wouldn’t starve, and what he might have to do to keep food on the table after that.
Bob brought up the trip to Stagford next. Nancy and Rob were welcomed to spend the night in Haven. The Baker’s had an unused guest room they could sleep in. Zack decided to join Bob and Mandy in the long walk to Stagford. The tall blond man had people he’d like to see in the village too. In addition, there was or had been, a pharmacy in the village. If it was still in operation or even if it was closed but still had inventory on the shelves, Emily Baker needed prescription medicines to survive.
Besides the empty pill bottles, Zack was given a shopping wish list and all the cash that the community could muster: $500 in currency (which Bob felt was useless) and several pieces of jewelry including a gold plated pocket watch, chain and fob from the Bakers to barter with for the medication. If medicines were unavailable he was to bring back as much food as he could.
Nancy and Rob would show the Hammonds how to care for the goats in the morning. If all went according to plan, by noon the next day Amanda would be safely in Stagford with her Aunt and Uncle Carter. Bob and Zack would complete their trading and be back to Haven by dawn the following day. Then Bob could walk home with Nancy and Rob, stopping on the way to show Delbert Abbott and Steve Baker the routine care for the herd.
After a hot meal and best wishes, the three travelers set out shortly after 4 PM. The day had continued to be warm for December. But as the sun set, the temperature dropped toward freezing. The trio was glad to keep moving just to keep warm. Each carried a pair of baked potatoes in their jacket pockets – not only for food, but also as a heat source to stave off cold fingertips.
Bob took point. He instructed the others to watch for his hand signals and to stop when he did. He set out cross-country walking slowly and keeping to the shadows. Traveling by road would doubtlessly have been faster. But so too would traveling in the daylight and he didn’t think either was worth the risk. The ground was mostly bare now which made walking easier and would leave less obvious tracks than snow cover would have. By midnight they had covered over half the distance without incident. They had taken several breaks as none of them was used to walking more than a mile at a time. With only a few miles to go and seven hours before dawn Bob thought they deserved the luxury of 30 minutes rest. They were gathered together in a cluster of hardwoods near the top of the hill overlooking Stagford when they heard a distant throb and Zack spotted the light.
It was unmistakably an ELECTRIC light shining on a hillside a few miles away on the far side of the village. Bob asked the others if they wished to investigate. He was curious but also eager to avoid trouble. He reasoned that if they did run into trouble, Zack was unarmed and Amanda was a new shooter. While he would not rule out a cautious peak from a closer but still safe distance, he was inclined to leave the mystery alone until he had safely deposited Amanda under someone else’s care. He thought she was a good kid at heart. Her moodiness was understandable given the circumstance. Indeed her attitude had already markedly improved with the prospect of getting back among people she knew and loved, but Bob had concluded that the girl got on his nerves and he’d be happy to get rid of her as soon as possible. Zack saw no need to go looking for trouble, and Amanda was eager only to get to Stagford, so they decided to continue their quiet creeping along with an unaltered course. There was always the chance that people in Stagford would know what the light source was. Someone with enough gasoline to still be operating a generator was probably well known to everyone around them.
Fish Creek was the last natural barrier between them and the village. Bob preferred to keep off the road and avoid the bridge so they crossed the 5 yard wide stream on the ice. Bob offered a thankful prayer that there was no need to build a fire and dry anyone who had gone through the ice once they had completed the crossing. Clouds drifted across a crescent moon as they discussed where to go next. The generator quit and the light went out as they discussed their options. They could camp in the trees waiting for dawn before approaching the buildings, or advance to or into town. Bob discouraged going in under cover of darkness. He expected to be shot by town watchmen or nervous homeowners if they tried that. Zack and Amanda both wanted to get out of the wind and Bob refused to let them build a fire. So they compromised by circling the town to its southern edge. From here they could advance though the 200 year old cemetery to the fields owned by the volunteer fire company. There were several sheds here where the firemen held an annual fundraising fair. These were empty 364 days per year.
Bob slipped his knife blade through the crack of one shed’s door and lifted the hook and eye latch. The door on the opposite end of the shed had a padlock. But the hook on the inside of this door was considered security enough for an unused roulette wheel and assortment of milk cans for use as softball targets. The footsore travelers slipped inside out of the wind and waited miserably for the pink light of day to tinge the horizon. As they waited, the smell of the town hit them: sewage, urine, refuse, charcoal, burnt synthetics. If it smelled like this when everything was frozen, what would it smell like come spring?
As soon as it was light enough to see well, they saw the source of the odor. The fair grounds had become a dump, which had begun to spill over into the adjacent cemetery. The cemetery itself showed a row of new graves.
When the sun broke the horizon, the travelers left their imperfect refuge and drifted into the center of town. Under the dark traffic light in the center of the village was what remained of Virgil Hammond’s truck. It had been pushed to one side. The tires were gone and under the raised hood a gaping hole showed where the battery had been. Several storefronts were smashed. The fire station of all places, had burned to the ground taking town hall and library with it. The library would probably be missed much more than the town hall. Bob wondered idly what had become of the tax records stored there. The restaurant’s front window was boarded over with a sheet of plywood painted with large block letters spelling out “CLOSED.” A similar sign showed in the front window of the service station reading “NO GAS!”
Amanda hurriedly led the way toward her Uncle’s home. A woman stepped out on her porch to shake a rug, stopped and silently stared at the three of them as they walked down the center of Main Street. Vehicles lined the curbs. Some had windows smashed out. Others lac