Monday, April 3, 2023

Hello It's me. Transmute, Episode #3





Hello it’s me. Transmute

Episode #3

Wednesday.

Me #2.



I arrived at the Trail head at 6am, cloudy with a slight chilly breeze signaling the coming fall into winter season. I pulled my windbreaker a little tighter and headed up the main trail. Walking past the signage explaining what you’ll encounter depending on which trail you take I had to wonder how my younger self faired 25 years in the past burying the money and then watching for our stalkers. I’m hoping (I) survived and in a day or so I’ll get the phone call or not telling me which way it went. Our histories are different now so if they got me in the past I won’t know and will just continue on with my timeline unchanged.

The two-mile hike was uneventful and I only saw one other person and he was hell bent on a fast hike even with the heavy pack meant for overnight camping. The three peak rock formation came into view on the left side of the trail and I for the second time turned off the trail and headed just to the West of the line. A week ago I made this hike early in the day looking for a good place my younger self could dig in a cache of money for me to find 25 years and a few days later. The thought made me smile, how crazy is it you can talk/text yourself 25 years in the past and have your earlier self-make a drop for you in the future; crazy stuff and just plain hard to comprehend. The real question I was hoping to have answered in a day or so is, how much have they managed to twist my number sequence that opened the door to the past? So far, I know they’ve weaponized it, they’ve sent beings back or contracted someone in the past to attempt to kill my past person; how can they not realize we are now two different people with second-by-second changing histories……. what I’m I missing?

Day dreaming, stuck in my thoughts not watching where I was going, I almost walked directly up to a deer just to my left not twenty feet away. I jumped stumbling over a small sage bush nearly falling. The deer didn’t move, just stared at me. I’m not a hunter and hiking isn’t really a thing for me, but I know deer don’t let you walk up to them and just stand there. We stood looking at one another for seconds when I realize the eyes were wrong, I’ve watched enough animal planet over the years to know deer eyes are brown not light colored with what looked like backlit highlights. I took off like demons where on my tail and they were. I put some distance between me and the “not a” deer as fast as I could until my lungs were bursting, it was either slow down or have a heart attack right there. I stopped by a small juniper tree looking in every direction at once. Nothing that I could see, hearing anything was drowned out by my heavy wet lungs sucking for air. Looking East I was lining up with the peaks and should be very near the outlying rock which was the last marker to where the money was suppose to be buried. I dug the GPS out of my bag and got it turned on while I shuffled West of the Volkswagen sized rock marking just a few feet to the stash. My head on a swivel I slow walked West away from the rock keeping in a direct line with the three peaks in the distance. The GPS read the correct numbers, I have to be standing on the money stash, pulling out a little garden spade I started digging. Hitting something hard I dropped the spade and dug like a dog on a beach using both hands and slinging sand and small rocks feet backwards between my legs. Grabbing the plastic case, I ran for the car.

As I screamed out of the parking lot tires smoking the deer was standing at the exact spot I came out of the woods into the lot. In some act of wasted defiance I gave the damn thing the bird as I flew past and down the access road, I didn’t stop for six hours winding and turning down highways heading one way and then another trying to be as random as could be, I have no idea what State I’m even in now. It’s 2am I’m done, pulling into a small Hotel, I get a room, throw the plastic money case on the table and I’m asleep in seconds. My last thought before I went out was, we’ve got a real problem here.

Me, the original:

The car was silent with the exception of my labored breath. I couldn’t take my eyes off the huge wolf as it tried to catch the car; if dad hadn’t floored it he would have been on us. The size and speed were incredible, he closed the fifty yards in seconds. Closer he got the bigger he seemed to get; this sucker was out for blood; mine.

Dad: “Holly shit! That thing is huge” His eyes were glued to the rearview mirror. How he stayed on the road I have no idea. The boy squirmed in my arms.

Me: “OH I’m so sorry son.” I release my death grip on him, he scooted forward against the dash. “I’m so sorry guys, I’d be dead right now if it wasn’t for you guys, thank you so much, sorry for scaring the crap out of you.”

Dad: “That was no normal wolf; I’ve seen wolves in the wild and that things had to be in the 500# area, there are no wolves in New Mexico even close to that!”

Me: “I ran into him in the trees and made a run for it.” “Can you drop me off in town? Again, I can’t thank you enough.”

We drove in near silence down Hwy 599 turning South on 84 towards town.

Me: “You can drop me off at that car lot on the left, please.”

Dad: “Your one lucky guy; are you sure we can’t take you home or someplace?”

Me: “No I’m good, it’s gonna take me a week to calm down, I’ll be good right here, thank you so much.”

We parted company with a quick hand shake; the boy wouldn’t take his eyes off me even after they drove off. I don’t think he’s going to forget that scare for years.

I couldn’t keep from laughing when I looked up at the sign for the car lot, “Lucky seven” now that put a smile on my face. Sales man was on me in ten seconds; “You look like a man that needs a good car!”

Me: “You’ve got me pegged alright, what do you have that’s in real good condition, I’m going to be putting some miles on it.”

Hour later I’m pulling out of the lot with a 1997 Chevy Cavalier. Surprised the guy when I pulled out cash. Time to make sure I’m no longer leaving a trail.

Me #2: (Back to the future)

I woke in the cheesy Hotel to the sound of the third train going past in the night, six forty-five A.M. I felt like shit; finally finding the light switch on the cheap bedside lamp I pulled papers out of the drawer and found I’m in Colorado, Pagosa Springs to be exact.

Hotel breakfast with watery scrabbled eggs and sausage that had to have been frozen for decades left my stomach wishing I’d skipped the whole thing. Back in the room I scanned for questionable Official forms etc. and came up with one possibility. I called the number provided and we talked for a few minutes getting to know a little about each other and some background information. Then I just asked him point blank if he could make me some new I.D. to start a new life. Without saying anything in vague word salad language he said we should get together and talk about how I could get some I.D. that would be legal. Close enough; word salad: he could do it for a price. I told him I’d see him in a few days; I’m off for Aurora Colorado.

I think it’s Friday, driving nearly straight North to Aurora Colorado, I’m trying to get use to the idea that my younger self back in 2023 has been captured or killed, I’m not sure how I feel about it. I’m alive here in 2048, fall 2048 bumping into early October, the leaves are falling and the mornings are getting colder and colder, weather report on the radio say snow is forecasted for next week, maybe. The scare I got with the “Not a deer” isn’t going away. The thought of “them” being able to create or manipulate an animal to watch or attack me remotely is terrifying.

My phone explodes on the dash in light and sound, it must be turned to full volume, I jumped so bad I crossed the white line on the side of the road and hit tree limbs with the mirror. Hitting the brakes hard I stop along the highway; “Hello?” No number I know or seen before.

Me: “Holly shit, I’ve tried and tried to get you. I thought they’d got you; we’re as good as DEAD!”

Me #2: “Whoa, slow down, I thought you were dead, I’ve had zero way to contact you, just waiting for the phone to ring and when it hasn’t there wasn’t anything to think other than you were gone.” “Leaving the phone wasn’t the best idea I guess.”

Me: “No, no she came for it and then turned into a wolf right before my eyes. I just managed to jump into a car or I would be dead.”

Me #2: “Oh no it’s worse than I thought, they are manipulating time and space. When I picked up the money I ran into a deer that wasn’t a deer, it had crazy eyes. They are still having trouble keeping the system stable or I would have met your wolf for sure.”

Me: “I’ve picked up a car and some supplies, I talked a pawn shop into selling me a shotgun and a box of shells. For some reason I just couldn’t get through on the phone, I’m not sure what carrier this phone is using but it doesn’t have service everywhere.”

Me #2: “I’m headed to Aurora, Colorado to see a guy I think will make new I.D. for me, I’ll see where he was in 2023, hopefully he was doing I.D. back then. Where are you?”

Me: “I just pulled into Guymon, Oklahoma and found cell service.”

Me #2: “Good area, there are tons of small towns North of you. Can you slowly move around keeping to small towns for a few days while I go see if this guy is for real. Just keep an eye out for anything strange that’s out of place.”

Me #2 heading North for Aurora, Colorado.

I ran up Hwy 160 and jumped on the 285 North heading for Aurora. Sure enough it started snowing, light to begin with and then thicker and thicker. I finally had to give up in Poucha Springs and ride it out for a couple days. I got a first-floor room so I’d have at least so semblance of a chance to make a run for it if a killer deer showed up at the door. Not funny, but if you don’t laugh your brain will explode, these are not funny times.

The front Office assured me they had plowed and cleared the road up to the Morrison area and then it would be in town driving to Aurora. I took off after breakfast making good time. I got a Motel just across the street from Lava Island and could see the kids playing on the equipment. I made an appointment for the next day with Mr. I’ll help you get some legal I.D

I pulled into the little strip Mall, on the far end I found the Suite I was looking for, kind of run down and dingy. The door stood wide open since it was close to 60 with clear skies. He closed the door and looked me over real carefully. “Two thousand dollars and I’ll make you three pieces of perfect I.D.; Social Security card, Colorado Driver’s License and Military discharged I.D. I’ll take a couple pictures and they will be done this afternoon.”

Me #2: “Done.” I handed over the 2k. “How long have you been doing I. D’s?” He smiles and says “A long time, it’s been my career.” “Where were you in 2023? In this area?” I ask. “Colorado Springs in 2023, I moved up here in about 2030 or so. Did real good business down there, lots of people needing a new life in those days with the big break ups.” His eyes are fogging up with the good time memories. “That’s great, what was the business name you used back then, down in Colorado Springs.?” He even gave me the old address; we were in business for new I. D’s.

I headed back to the Motel and called the younger me.

Me #2: “Okay we are in business, he’s charging $2000 for three pieces of I.D at todays prices, so it should be a little less in your time frame. He’s easy to get along with and I just went right to the point. Here write down the information so our I. D’s match in case I need you to sent up accounts or anything for my use.

“Have you seen anything strange or redundant that caught your eye?”

Me: “No, not much movement in these little towns, I’d think I would notice anything that wasn’t normal or expected. I’m moving again tomorrow; I’ll wait to head to Colorado Springs until after you’ve got the I.D. and it looks good. Then I’ll go see him.”

Me #2: “Okay take care and keep your eyes peeled, they must have people everywhere.”

Me: “Well there was one thing that caught my eye earlier today, a car pulled into the Motel parking lot up to the Office area. The license plate was off, it was a Oregon plate but Oregon doesn’t have plates like that. I thought that was a little strange but I dismissed it and forgot about it.”

Me #2: “Get out of there fast, make sure you aren’t being followed, go go now!”

From the Ramblings

t

Sunday, April 2, 2023

Hello it's me. Chase Episode #2

 



Hello, it’s me.

Chase. Episode #2



Me. Text: I’m in Vegas, what ’cha got? Phone rings in my hand.

Me #2: “Caesars Palace, Lucky run in the fifth to win, all in, loud click in my ear. No small talk, I guess.”

Drove the strip until I saw Caesars, pulled into a nearby parking garage, short walk in the sun and right to the betting window. Guy looked at me like I was crazy when I handed over $500 for Lucky run to win. I’d better win, I don’t have money for lunch now. “Race is in two hours.” He tells me with a smirky face.

Well, what to do for two hours. So, I’m supposed to be a numbers guy, let’s go see. I wondered over to the blackjack tables and stood back and watched for a few minutes. The guy closest to me I can see his cards; he’s got a queen and a two, hit, eighteen, he stands. This goes on for a few minutes and I step up a little closer so I can see the cards as they hit the table. I’m starting to see a nice pattern, I’m calling the cards in my head before they hit the table, eight, next is a King, ten, I missed one but I’m getting better. Guy in front of me has had enough. He gets off his stood and nearly runs into me. “Sorry, you can have my chair I’m not winning today.” “Oh… not me I’m outta money I’m just watching now.” I say kind of with an eye roll. He hands me two chips. “Here, it’s only ten bucks but maybe you can do better than I’ve been doing.”

I take his chair.

“Bet?” the dealer says.

“Let it go around a couple times, I need to get my head in the game.”

“Bet”

I lay down my two chips, Jack and a two. Hit, six, hold.

My two hours are up and I’m packing $250 worth of chips to the window to cash and my Lucky run ticket comes to $2750 bucks. They take 25% out for taxes and I’m out the door looking for a nice lunch spot.

Me, Text: $2750 less tax.

Me #2, Text: $2750? Should have been $2500?

Me, Text: Blackjack.

Me #2, Text: Good with numbers all of a sudden huh? Get out of town, head South and then East to New Mexico.

Two days later.

Me, Text: I’m in Gallup, New Mexico. Phone rings.

Me #2. “Hi, nice work on Blackjack. Go to the nearest liquor store. On the New Mexico Lottery play 24,18,5,32 and 9 as the power ball. Buy a good GPS after placing your numbers and head for Santa Fe, get a place along Hwy 84 and 599.”

Me: “Okay I’m on my way. When is the lottery being called?”

Me #2. “This Saturday and you can cash out Monday. Lay low, I’ll bet with having to give up tax information they are out looking hard. I’m pretty sure they will put most assets in Utah, but we need to be very careful. When you pick up the cash they will know where to look.”

Me: “Why the GPS?”

Me #2: “I need you to do a money drop for me, I’m cashed out also. I’ll give you the coordinates and you bury me some money.”

Me: “Will that work? I’ll pick up a small waterproof container, how do we know it will be there in your time 25 years from me in the future?”

Me #2: “I’m heading to Santa Fe also, I’ll go out and find a place that hasn’t been touched for years. I’ll pick a place with a good landmark and get the coordinates a couple hundred yards out from it, where there are no tire marks or trails. Should be safe enough, no one just goes out and tears up an area out in the open up for no good reason.”

Sitting in a crappy little Hotel isn’t what I’m good at. Bored to death with the TV and sick of order out I can’t wait for Monday to cash out.

Monday.

Me, Text: Holly shit, $40,000 less tax! No one’s going to notice?

Me #2, Text: Oh, they are going to notice. Go about three miles on Hwy 599 to Camino de loss Montoyas Rd. Head to Calabasas Trail head, it’s about eight miles. Take the main trail out two miles, there is a rock formation to the left with three little peaks, go west in a direct line with the three peaks, exactly one hundred yards out from the peaks is a lone rock about the size of a Volkswagen bug. Go another sixty feet west of it and bury the money. 35.72356, -105.96278 make sure you are standing on those coordinates.

Me, Text: How much do you want?

Me #2, Text: Give me 10k, that will keep me going for a while. You need a decent car, first pick up anything else you need in town, pay cash. Then pick up a car next week. I’ll talk to you after I pick up the money probably Wednesday so you have time to get out there. I’m going to be looking for a guy to get some new ID, I’ll find out if he was doing ID’s back in 2023 and where he was.

Me, Text: Okay got it.

I hiked the two miles from the Trail head parking lot, there as it should be where the three peaks. I headed to the West end and lined them up in a row down looking down the towards the East. Walking as straight as I could around the little juniper trees, I was close to a hundred yard and found the lone rock sitting in a small clearing, nearest tree was about fifteen to twenty yards out. Checking the GPS for the coordinates I walked very slowly letting the device catch up as I moved pretty straight away from the rock West bound. The GPS read 35.72356 – 105.96278. I stood still for a few minutes making sure the unit was satisfied with the reading. Dumping my little backpack, more a day pack I scrapped the top needles and sand away to one side and dug down about ten inches, flattened out the bottom and laid the clear waterproof plastic Tupperware type container in the bottom, you could clearly see the hundred dollar bills inside as I pushed mixed sand and small stones over the top. I packed the soil down every couple inches and finished off with the twigs and needles that cover the ground in this area. Checking the GPS coordinates again it still read the correct numbers. I thought ran through my mind that this would sit here for 25 years just to be dug up by myself in the future; funny thought and extremely hard to get my head around.

I cut cross country back towards the parking lot. I was coming to the lot at an odd angle since I was off trail and could just start to make out cars parked through the juniper trees. Winding the last few yards between trees I saw something strange; alarms were going off in my head, something wasn’t right. I stepped in close to the trunk of the nearest tree hopefully I hadn’t been seen. I climbed up about three limbs where I could see out of the tree towards the parking lot. In the back row of the little Trail head parking was a woman in a wheelchair wearing a blue dress. My hair was standing straight up; I’ve seen her before. She was lined up where she could see down the trail as it left the parking lot, anyone keeping to the Trail would be visible for minutes before they got to the Trail head.

Me: “Shit pick up, I’m in big trouble. Come on.” Five rings, nine rings, twelve rings.

Me #2: “Hello”

Me: “OH FUCK, there’s a woman in a wheelchair I’ve seen before, she watching for me!”

Me #2: “Are you safe now?”

Me: “I think so, I buried the cash and headed back cross country and when I got to the parking lot, I saw her sitting looking down the trail. She didn’t see me, but I’ve seen her before in Vegas, she sticks out like a sore thumb in that blue dress and wheelchair.”

Me #2: Okay, that’s a glitch in the number system we made. They are pushing it way past it’s limits and are having problems keeping it stable. You’ve seen the Movie “The Matrix” haven’t you, I’m sure I watched the first two, then got bored and didn’t watch three or four or however many they made.”

Me: “You’ve got to be kidding, we made this and now they are after me using our system like in the Matrix?”

Me #2: “They’ve got to be tracking you on the phone again. Head back out to the three peaks and dump the phone where you can see it from a good distance and wait. I need to know just how far they’ve pushed this; we both could be in some real trouble if I’m right on what’s possible. Did you leave the money in the car? I don’t think you can go back without walking into their trap.”

Me: “No I’ve got it with me, I bought pre-paid VISA cards so they are in my pocket.”

Me #2: “Damn I didn’t think of that at all, your already better at this than me. Hurry out and drop the phone where you can see it, make sure you are as far off as you can get and still see it. Don’t get spotted. Your going to have to make it back to town and start off at zero again. Get another drop phone and call me. Good luck.”

Me: “I’m not sure how much longer my luck is going to hold out.”

I turned on my heel and jogged in the sand back to the three peaks. I climbed the most Western peak and found a spot I could run out the backside in a hurry. Out from the main trail I see and nice wide-open spot clearly from about two hundred yards from my hide. I made a wide approach to that spot and dropped the phone in the middle of the clearing. I did everything I could think of to hide my tracks but I’m no back woods guy so if they worked at it they could track me to this exact spot with little trouble.

It's been a long day, two miles out, two miles back and a killer jog back two miles, rock climbing and dumping the phone, I’m beat. I’m hopeful I can stay awake long enough to watch the phone.

Two hours; my eyes are blurred, dry and I can’t stay awake much longer with the sun starting to go down and the temperature is dropping.

Eyes popping wide open, I drop so only my eyes can see over the rocks I’m hidden in. The woman in the blue dress is searching for the phone, no wheelchair as her long dress drags the sandy ground like she’s floating with no feet. She’s swinging right then left like a blood hound trying to find the scent. Five yards out she spots the phone in the little clearing; slowly she approaches it, drops down on her knees she crawls up to it and I can see she’s smelling the phone in long deep breathes.

Two hundred yards is a long ways away, but I feel like I’m five feet away as she comes up on her knees head swaying left and right looking for the scent in the air. My head is wavering, I might faint as I watch her shake and twitch molding into another form. She’s now a wolf.

My shin skips off a rock outcrop as I run in shear panic. My only thought is to get away, how fast the now wolf can catch me has to be short. I’m hyper ventilating as I run away. I head North West as I remember the road snakes up towards the Trail head from that direction, my only hope is to make the road and somehow get in a vehicle, on foot I’m dead.

I can hear the road as one lone car passes somewhere a short distance a head. I can see the black top, down a ten-foot embankment I’m on the pavement. Sitting fifty yards down the road a car is parked in a small pullout with a small boy standing with the front passenger door open peeing. I can hear the dad in my head “Why didn’t you pee before we left the Trail head?” I sprint to the car grabbing the boy under my arm and jumping into the front seat. Screaming in Dad’s face behind the wheel “Go go there’s a wolf chasing me GOOOOOOOO…..” I slam the door “Please go or we’re all dead!” I’m holding the boy tight and twisting to look out the back window. Down the embankment only fifty yards behind where I came out of the woods the wolf makes the jump and lands in the center of the two lane road a good forty foot jump. Dad is looking now in the mirror “What the hell?” He floors it.

From the Ramblings

t

Sunday, January 29, 2023

Taum Lee. The beginning; One

Taum Lee

The beginnings, one.

 Attention passenger Taum Lee, white courtesy telephone, Taum Lee white courtesy telephone.

 “Hello Taum Lee”

 “You’re a dead man”

 “Ahhhh…… Grigoriy how nice to hear from you; you’re calling early I thought I ‘d be hearing from you in a few minutes my friend.”

 “I have men covering the entire airport, you will not get out alive.”

 “I’ve seen a few of them, even talked to a nice pair…… the big guy with the beard? Nikolay something if I’m not mistaken?”

 “Rodion Pavlinko, he will kill you very slowly.”

 “Oh…… my memory of names is so poor, anyway, it looks like time to start the count down; five, four, three, two, one…. I hope you have your SAT phone; it should ring shortly. The good ship Yegor Vsevolod seems to have sprung a leak.”

 “The ship Yegor Vsevolod is in international waters you can’t touch it.”

 “Well, that’s kind of what you said with the last shipment and we both know how that turned out. You still blaming me for that load going over the side.”

 “You threw a million dollars’ worth of rifles and ammo over the side of the ship; you will pay with your life.”

 “You’re starting to repeat yourself and frankly I’ve got a plane to catch. Yegor Vsevolod in international waters without a manifest or any paperwork, not registered or insured. This is going to hurt, a loaded down freighter with someone else’s illegal weapon cargo and a ship that’s going to need to be paid for. Dang. I hear your phone ringing, good bye.”

 Walking quickly to catch up with Grigoriy’s two thugs.

 “Rodion Pavlinko? телефон, Grigoriy Rostislav для тебя. (Rodion Pavlinko? Telephone, Grigoriy Rostislav for you.)

 Placing the cell phone in the killer’s hand I turned and walked away.

 “Привет” (Hello) 

I pressed the detonator.


 Four hours later.

 Pressing the speaker button next to the elevator. “Yes.”

 “Taum Lee”

 Silently the elevator doors slid opened. Stepping in and allowing the doors to close. Pressing both the up, down arrows and floor 5 the elevator lowered two full floors down, stopping with a faint hiss of air.

 “I.D. code please.”

 “Taum Lee 4,5, Delta 0, 8,4 Lima Lima 6.”

 “Thank you, Mr. Lee.”

 Again sliding on silent rollers the doors slid open revealing a long corridor brightly lit, white tile, white walls. Only distinguishing feature was a fortified cubical about ten yards away taking most of the right side of the corridor. Stepping out of the elevator I was greeted by an armed guard.

 “Mr. Lee, how good to see you again. Weapons?”

 “Yes, the normal.”

 Handing me a large Folger Adams key. “Number four please.”

 The gun locker was huge; 18” square and over 40” long. I placed my little .45ACP in the center of the locker and spun the heavy key to the left until it stopped with a loud click.

 “I’ll notify Mr. Spencer that you are here. Room 7.”

 “Thank you, Corporal?”

 “Greer Sir.”

 “Thank you, Corporal Greer, sorry, your day almost done?”

 “Pulling a double Sir, everyone seems to be sick.”

 “Ouch, Room 7.”

 “Room 7.”

 Another 15 yards the corridor came to a “T” turning left the doors were odd numbered. Stopping in front of door numbered 7 it clicked and hummed with a low growl. I’ve never been down this side of the lower level before; I’ve always been on the even side; I wondered if there was some meaning to now being on the odd side. As my hand touched the knob the floor vibrated “I hope that’s just the J line running.” I said to myself.

 Heavy door, must be solid steel. I don’t remember having that thought on the even side. A hiss of air as the door opened; positive pressure.

 Well, this was quite a surprise as I closed the door. The room was large, 20’ by 25’ give or take with high ceilings, must be 10 foot. Walls clad in medium dark wood, looks like Oak. Book selves along two walls, floor to ceiling stuffed with old looking hard copy books. Large desk at the far end, executive full height chair, two low backed chairs in front, paper strewed across the large leather top.

 There was a small door to the left of the desk, standing open. “I’ll be right there, take a seat if you’d like.”  From the open door.

 I read somewhere that you always choose the chair on the right if you have the choice.

 “Coffee?”  again from the open door.

 “Sure, black please.” A little loud so it would carry.

 Out comes a little old man must be in his late 70’s and to fit with the room wearing tweed and not having the best of luck keeping the two cups of coffee on their saucers. I took the one offered with both hands.

 Taking his seat in the large executive chair he struggled to pull the chair forward. “Damn thing must weight a hundred pounds.” As he hunched it to the edge of the desk.

 “I’m Theodore Spencer.”

 “Yes, nice to meet you, I’m Taum Lee.”

 “Yes, you are and one angry hornet nest we’ve created, haven’t we?”

 “Well, yes I’m sure the Airport was alarmed.”

 “Alarmed? You blew the head off a chap in the middle of a busy Airport, didn’t you?”

 “Rodion Pavlinko is, was an assassin, he’s killed a number of our agents over the years, I took the opportunity to end his career.”

 “And, you blew up and sank a Russian vessel in international waters.”

 “It was carrying a full load of weapons and explosives to a know terrorist group. Seemed like the right thing to do.”

 “The right thing to do?”

 “Yes. Now Mr. Spencer, before we go any further, who exactly are you?”

 “With your permission I’d like to be your new employer.”

 “I have an employer.”

 “You had. You’ve been fired.”

 “Fired?”

 “Yes yes, and they put up quite the fight to keep you, but they finally saw it my way and agreed to terminate you for cause.”

“For cause?”

 “Yes, the Airport.”

 “We’ve tried for years to neutralize Rodion Pavlinko, he was on the black list, if not on the top of the black list, meaning in any fashion available. He’s now off the black list.”

 “Yes, good show, very well done. But I, we need you. The firing is just words, meaningless. I’m offering you a new position where your skills can be put to more important work. I’m going to make you a very special offer, I don’t think you’re going to want to refuse it. So let me explain carefully what I have to offer. 

From the Ramblings

 t

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Graylings

Graylings
I don’t mind telling you I think I’m losing my mind. This issue has been slowly escalating for months and is starting to worry me.

 It started as far as I can remember in early spring, about March, I think. I was going to the local Walmart to pick up a couple of things I was running low on in the kitchen. Just a few things, in and out in a couple of minutes. I got out of the car, and something ran past me in a flash.  I jumped like I was shot and landed in the garbage-filled flower bed between rows of cars. I thought it had been a rat, but raising up on one elbow, I saw the thing make a quick circle and come right back at me. Crazy thing was it wasn’t a rat or anything like I’d ever seen before, I could see right through it, it was like a gray mist, no real shape like an animal or even having an outline, just gray mist and moving fast. I threw up my arm, covering my face as it hit; soft, sickly, moist, nasty smelling. I gagged. The attack lasted maybe fifteen seconds; maybe less. I was on my feet and in the car, slamming the door as fast as I could get up out of the dank flowerbed. Must have been ten people staring at me as I started the car and flew out of the parking lot. 

 I was shaking so hard I had to stop the car and calm down or risk crashing. I pulled into the parking lot of an auto parts store and just closed my eyes for a minute. A tap at the window. I screamed so loud it hurt my own ears; my eyes flew wide; I screamed again. A poor little old man was backing up from the car, waving his hands in front of him, making a quick escape. I looked in the mirror; what a mess, tears rolling down my face, makeup everywhere, I even had leaves and bark dust in my hair. No wonder the poor guy was trying to see if I was alright. I just sat there and bawled. Over the next few days, things calmed down. I decided I had a vivid imagination, and let it go as some strange thing that, now, with a little time passing, just didn’t seem like such a big deal. I was still shaken, but you have to get on with your life. I had work and a home to take care of, along with cooking, cleaning, and all that normal life stuff, so it just kind of slipped away.

About mid-June, a Saturday, sunny and warm, I made a run down to the nursery at the bottom of the hill to pick up some seeds and a couple of flowering plants for the front porch. I parked and slowly wound my way towards the little Office area where garden tools and the seeds were stored. As I stepped out of the bright sunlight under the overhead lattice work surrounding the little building, I glanced back towards the parking lot.  Nothing, I could have sworn I’d seen movement around the back of the cars parked there. Nope, nothing, but as I turned my head back towards the Office door again, I saw movement, but at the very far corner of my side vision. I snapped my head back to the movement, gone. “Okay, this is getting crazy!” I said under my breath as a cold chill ran up my spine, “OH HELL no, not again.” This time, not so quiet. My Walmart fright exploded in my head; it was all I could do not to run into the Office screaming my head off. I took a deep breath and very slowly turned my head towards the parked cars, straining to see out of the corner of my eyes. Turning, turning, sure enough, I started being able to see moving objects, moving along right to left behind the cars down the little slope towards the street. They moved like a covey of quail, one after another, quickly with purpose. If I turned to use more of my normal center of the eye vision, they’d just fade away, and turning more, they’d disappear. Going back to more of the far side vision, gray puffs of smoke were clear and moving fast down the hill towards the street.

I hurried into the Office. I grabbed a few packets of seeds, not really knowing what they were, totally forgot to buy the plants for the porch, and threw money at the poor clerk. I slowly wound my way towards my car, sweeping my head side to side like a mine sweeper, only using my far side vision. I must have looked like a crazy woman; I jumped into my car and took the long way out of the parking lot away from the direction the little gray puffs had headed. “This is starting to get crazy,” I seem to be talking to myself often now. 

 I see the gray things now nearly everywhere I go, mostly around crowds of people, at the mall, supermarket, and bus stops. I'm getting to where I can nearly look right at them now, seems with practice they are getting clearer with my center vision, not quite in the center but close enough that now I can pretty much look just off to the side and see them if they are around. Creepy gray puffs of smoke darting this way and that, running up to people, then following others in little groups in the crazy quail covey way, one after another, tightly packed in a little line. Gives me a chill. I’ve found that if I watch them too closely, they become interested in me and I have to look away and become busy, hoping they find someone more to their liking, if not they come up to you and test you by climbing up next to you, bumping you, you can smell them. No matter how bad it gets, you have to ignore them; they’ve lost interest in me so far. I have to be more careful around them. 

 It's late August, and the weather is smoldering hot, not a breath of air. I parked my car just off downtown and have been enjoying the pedestrian area of the downtown area. It’s hot, so I take a seat in the shade and watch as people window shop. The gray puffs are everywhere in numbers I haven’t seen before. They aren’t hopping on people or following; they are massed in and around one business, and there must be a thousand of them. They are crawling up the sides of the building and pushing to get near the entrance. My mouth must be hanging open at the sight. “Graylings are wound tight,” I jump. “They get that way when something bad is going to happen.” I was so intent on watching the swarm, I didn’t notice a man had sat next to me, close. He was nearly whispering in my ear. I looked him in the eye, our faces close. “Graylings, that’s what they are called?” a moment. “You can see them too?” He turned and looked back at the Graylings. “Yep, I’ve been able to see them my whole life, it scares you as a kid.” “Careful, they know me and the swarm knows I can see them, they watch me very closely.” “They’ll kill you if you press them much.  I’ve had some close calls.” He turns his eyes back my way; I see they are filled with sadness. “What do they want at that store?” His tired eyes look at mine. “They are there for the pain and death that’s coming. They feed on it as far as I can tell.” His eyes turn back to the Graylings. “We have to go; I don’t want to see this, and we are way too close to what’s going to happen here. Nothing I or you can do.” 

 He stands and puts out his hand to me. “Please, I’d hate to have anything happen to you.  By their numbers, I’d say it’s going to be big and soon.” I take his hand, it’s hot but comforting, it’s been years since I held the hand of a man, and this man is special. We leave the downtown area walking slowly but with the intent to put distance between us and the downtown area, my car forgotten. 

 The blast was tremendous, shaking the ground, dust fell from the branches overhead. I screamed; he took my hand again and squeezed it tightly. “You’ll have to try to get used to it, I can’t, but I hope you have more luck than me, it’s the only way to survive this knowing.” We walked on. 

 From the Ramblings 
t

Thursday, May 5, 2022

The 22, Hopscotch. Episode 5

I’ve been on the run for nearly a year now and the weather is starting to turn; time to find a safe place to hole up for the winter.  The snow flurries have started in South Central Colorado and will turn to deep piles shortly; I can’t get caught out in the open in this weather.



 

The last couple years I’d managed to survive Covid 19 and then the slate cleaner Covid 22.  I was comfortable in my little house ready to make a good run at continued survival; But I was forced to run for my life by the gangs coming out of the Denver area rounding up people. 

Less than a couple weeks later I found out why. 

The gangs had decided to not only control the Metro area of Denver but to branch out and overrun any and all remaining pockets of survivors in the rural areas.  I thought I had made it to a relative safe area only to find a large Camp of what looked to be military personnel and other survivors.  To my horror I watched as the gangs used those captured people as human shields to attack the Camp.  I had to run for my life again.

I carefully moved South skirting the Metro areas and small towns staying well up on the sides of mountains and deep forested areas.  I’d had to break into some houses along the way to find canned goods and anything I could use; the risk of even small towns was too much to chance after what I’d seen since being forced from my home.  I’d been walking for months when I found a settlement of people along a deserted highway in the mountains.  I was lucky they invited me into their company and I was glad to spend sometime with happy survivors that seemed to be flourishing.

I’d spent a whole week with them and listened to nearly everyone of their stories on how they’d survived and how they ended up here in the isolated Campground.  The one key fact to every story was the kill rate in Central Colorado with the Covid 22.  As far as I can tell only one in a thousand survived and half of those either died or took their own lives because they just couldn’t cope with the new world.  They all told of driving or walking around the towns they lived in and couldn’t find anyone alive or willing to show themselves or being chased by crazy people.  They talked of stumbling into one another and then picking a remote spot to call home.  They felt safe together and could only look a day or so ahead in the future.

They had nearly everything they needed but lacked any plan to resupply their camp or how to cope with the coming winter.  The story of the Donner party would not leave my mind.  I’m going to be haunted forever as I leave them and resume heading South.  It pained me to look into the eyes of the women and those small children knowing that within a month at the best they’d be locked in by snow and without the small highway being plowed and kept clear as in better times, they’d never get out.  I’ve done everything I can to convince them they had to leave but I was voted down each time.

It's been a long two weeks and my supplies are gone; I’m sitting just outside of Florence Colorado hidden in brush along the fence of a High School.  Only a football field divides me from what I hope is a pantry full of canned goods in the school’s kitchen.  My only fear is that it will be huge cans like gallon sized not 12 to 16oz cans that fit easily in my back pack.  I’ve decided to wait until dark before trying to cross the field, there’s absolutely no cover between the fenced area of the school’s boundaries and the buildings.  This is going to be a wide-open run to the buildings.

Next problem is going to be getting inside unless I can find an unlocked door.  With people coming down sick early on with the Covid 19 schools weren’t even open and when the 22 came everyone went home and hid from the disease and died. I can’t put in too much effort getting in the school or take the chance of being heard or seen; an injury is a death sentence.

Time to go, not completely dark but snow is beginning to fall and the temperature is dropping fast, if I have to go up on the roof to get in, I don’t want to have to fight slippery snow, let alone leaving tracks all over.  This is a one-shot deal; much snow and I’ll be overnighting out in the cold rather than being in the school.

Over the six-foot fence and a quick dash across the open field to the flower beds outside of what looks to be the gym building.  I step into the landscaping bushes so I won’t leave footprints in the snow near the building until I can hop to the covered breezeways; landing the snow my shoes leave an exact outline of my shoes on the concrete, my mind jumps to ancient cave art of hand prints on walls.   I use my jacket to sweep the snow my shoes left and hopscotch from one clear patch to another around the side of the big building keeping to the snowless areas.  Next building is clearly the lunch room and kitchen; outdoor seating is spread out between the two buildings and I can see the lunch counter in the gloom through the windows.  Time to check the doors and hope for the best. 

No such luck as I figured; no telling how long since these breezeways had seen kids.  Around back at the loading zone every door sealed up tight with the exception of the trash door ten feet up above a huge empty garbage bin the size of a small truck.  I can see the flap is hanging open about an inch.  This is going to be tricky with snow covering the cold metal of the bin.  Dropping my backpack in the bottom of the bin and pulling out a length of cord from my pack, it’s quick work to tie my backpack with rifle and scurry up the side of the bin to the open flap.  Lifting the flap, I can see dim light about four feet inside the compartment.  Tough scramble getting the flap open enough to fit through and finding hand holds so I can pull up into the garbage shoot.  Bingo……. Nothing is locked here; the inside expanded metal garbage shoot door is standing half open and I’m inside with ease.  Sliding back down about half way I yard my backpack up with the rope and I’m in with all my gear.  This has been very lucky; my little voice whispers…. “It’s a trap.”  Oh please, not now…

The dry panty is full to the ceiling with everything and anything you could possibly need to feed an army.  Canned goods of all sizes from 12oz to gallon and bigger in the hundreds.  I move along row after row of canned food grabbing a few and sitting them on the floor.  I can only carry so much and there is no need to just grab many of one thing and then have to unload my pack, so a careful inventory will be made and then filling the pack can begin.

Finishing filling every nook and cranny in my pack I replace any leftover cans into their proper place so I don’t leave any sign I’ve been here.  Thoughts run through my mind of baking a cake or having a big dinner at one of the hundred tables in the dinning hall.  The gas stoves and ovens should work if the gas is still on…

Shaking my head, I weave through the chairs to one of the exit doors; the snow is four inches deep and coming down in a white out.  If I go out, I’ll leave a perfect trail to follow even if it keeps snowing hard as it looks like it’s going to.  Just opening the door would push the snow into a clump letting anyone that sees it know someone is inside of the school.  It is a trap…

I back away from the door and take a seat at the nearest table; time to think. 

The snows stacking up by inches every hour; I’ve got all the food I could eat for months; I’ve got perfect shelter and there is no sign anyone has been in or around the school; water……. oh crap, is there any water.  I can only go a few days without replenishing my water. 

Quick search of the kitchen area and I find they have a few hundred galloons of water all stacked away with all the other food supplies…. this is a mother load of food and water.

It’s pitch-black outside, time to find a nice safe area with exits to make camp for the night and fix a fast dinner.  I pull out my little one burner stove and set it on the huge counter in the prep area of the kitchen.  My little stove with a small pot and one spoon looks crazy sitting on the fifteen-foot counter where they use to prep food for a three or four hundred kids at lunch.  I have no worry of the burner’s light casting to any opening; the prep area is walled in and you could fully light it and have no worry of leaking light outside the building. 

5am and I’m wide awake; not a sound.  It’s weird overnighting in a building, it’s been a long time and it’s so quiet it’s unnerving.   The snow is two feet deep and still pilling up fast.  I’m going to search the whole building and see what I can find; it’s a big building and one side is two stories so I if the snow lightens up, I’ll be able to see some of the surrounding area and start to make some kind of plan.

Not much to find; meeting rooms, Offices for the management of the kitchen staff.  But a surprising find, a couple small panties with MRI’s and other supplies of long-term food rations; about ten pallets all together along with pallets of water bottles.

I’m up on the second floor looking out the windows as the snow lightens up and I think the sun might actually shine as the clouds break up to the South.  The school grounds take up at least twenty or thirty acres and is fenced with four to six-foot chain-link fencing on the back and sides.  The front parking lot would hold at least a hundred cars.  As the snow lessens and the sun starts to break through the clouds, I can see that the school is part of a large complex of Government buildings.  The next building in the complex is clearly the school bus barn and has about twenty school buses parked in nice neat rows two deep along the boundary fencing.  It has one large building that is the bus garage and maintenance building for the buses.

Next building over is the County Maintenance yard and I can see road graders, dump trucks and snow plows along with all kinds of other equipment needed to service a community.

The snow storm closes in again and the ground gains a couple inches of snow in twenty minutes, it’s now stacking up to over four feet; my head aches with thoughts… it’s going to be a long night.

School buses… Dump trucks… Snow plows…  I might just as well shoot myself.  Thoughts of a crazy rescue are filling my head.  If I have four feet of snow here, they must have six maybe seven feet of snow at the camp ground.  Five men, eight women and twelve kids from babies to about eleven are finding that without a plan they are going to die in the winter snow storms… there is no escape with the only road in or out filled with feet of snow.  I spend the rest of the evening wondering hallways of a building that use to be filled with our young.  My heads hurt’s thinking that the group I spend a week with are now stuck in this blinding snow storm without anyway to escape.

I have to try a rescue; what type of human would I be if I turned my back on them.  I haven’t seen any sign of another human since I left them in the woods now nearly three weeks.

I can’t sleep so I sit thinking what would be the best vehicle to attempt to break through the snow to make a rescue attempt.  School buses have auto chains in this region and would carry everyone with room to spare, but might not be able to push through the heavy snow and snow drifts.  A dump truck would push through the snow but there is no way to carry people.  A snow plow would be perfect since it’s made to work in the heavy snow but how would I make room for passengers?  It’s a forty-mile trip or better one way and slow going, quicker coming back since the road would be plowed once going in. 

Okay… here’s the plan.  Snow plow; able to fight through nearly any depth of snow while pushing the snow to the side of the road making the return trip easier and fast.  Now how to hold 25 people with shelter in a snow plow.

If I can find some tarps, they could ride in the dump truck like rear where the sand goes covered up from most of the snow and cold.  It would be around a two- or three-hour trip back to the school and should be do-able as long as I can keep the truck on the road and we don’t get attacked going or returning.  Tomorrow morning, I’ll push through the snow to the County yard.

Up early with the first light; quick breakfast, I’m in a hurry.

Hour fight for maybe three hundred yards to the County Maintenance yard.  I’m beat, wet and cold.  Main door locked of course, kicking around in the snow I find the paver that’s used to block the door open in the summer heat.  Stealth is now a thing of the past, so I just throw it through the door window and I’m in.  Front Office has a nice key locker and I just have to pick which of the three snow plows I want to use.  Easy enough since only one has full chains already in place.  Now if the batteries are still good, they’ve been sitting a long time.

I run the glow plug of the big diesel three times before hitting the starter… slow crank, but it catches and bellowing white cold diesel smoke it rumbles to life.  Gas tank is full… love these guys.  I brought my full pack of supplies and a large bag of MRI’s, water and I found three nice new 12’ X 14’ green tarps in the supply room.  My rifle is laying on the wide dash just in case.

Time to go.

Engine all warmed up; plow down to about four inches from the ground, four-wheel drive set, wheel lockers engaged I grind towards the locked eight-foot chain linked gate.  I can see the huge pad lock on the gate with a heavy chain.  The snow plow doesn’t even lurch as it plows through the gate pushing snow to the right of the heavy plow.

I take a left and head up Highway 67 from the North side of Florence pushing about four feet of snow or so.  The plow pushes the snow out of the road with little effort and I cross over interstate 50 in less than twenty minutes.  I’m clear of any chance of armed resistance now, I’ve been through this area and didn’t see a soul or any sign of anyone as I headed South earlier.  It will be the return trip that if trouble comes it will be then; I’m making a huge amount of noise and the plowed road will show the whole winter and will be a beacon that we came through.

It’s nearly 2pm and I’m still a few miles from the camp ground.  The snow is about seven feet deep and deeper in wind blown areas.  The plow grinds to nearly a stop in places and I have to back up and hit the deep drifts a couple times to break through.  The going is so slow now I can only hope to make the camp by dark.

Snow drifts to the hood of the big plow, it bucks and complains with the work.  I’m making hardly any head way.  I’ve lost complete track of how far I have to go.   Everything looks the same in the deep snow, I worry I might drive past the camp ground.  I have to charge into the drifts and then back up, charge again and push the piles of snow to the side of the road to make just a few feet.  It’ll be dark in less than a hour and I have no idea how far I have to push to the camp ground.

The plow is starting to over heat with the hard pushing, backing up and hitting the snow again and again.

I have to take a break, I’m numb with the constant fight inching forward after rushing the snow banks stalling and backing to hit them again.

I stand on the foot rung at the driver’s door peeing into the snow just a foot down from the high cab.

I can smell wood smoke.

I jump into the cab checking the gauges, temp back to normal, charging normal… I turned off the lights and killed the engine.  Quiet…

Standing on the foot rung I listen in the blowing snow… nothing.  I reach inside and pull the cord to the gas driven horns… long horn blow… nothing that I can hear… another long horn blow… Whoop’s and screams… I’m there.

I fire up the snow plow and push forward slowly; I see figures in the snow.

Rose plowed me over into a snow bank covering me in kisses… “I knew you’d come for us!”  I guess I have some explaining to do…

Rose was a survivor of a small-town South of Florence.  She was saved from gang rape by one of the married men in camp.  She wouldn’t tell me the whole story just the end when he killed the men trying to rape her.  She spent hours during the week I was with the group talking me through my growing PTSD calming the effect.  She’d found two small children orphaned by Covid as she made her way from her home until she was saved and then to the camp.  She took Joseph 3 and Lilly 5 as her own since then.

The group had tunneled towards the little highway after hearing the snow plow fighting its way up the highway.  I turned the plow around so it was facing back towards the South ready for leaving the next morning.  We were all nearly frozen to death by the time we marched in the blowing snow back to the camp.  The tents were sagging under the heavy snow and it was clear they were nearly useless under the load.  We had a quick dinner then worked to lessen the snow load on the tents before heading to bed for the night.  Rose demanded that I share her bed since I didn’t have one and I slept the best nights sleep in a year. Warm with a warm body next to yours is a gift that I will never take for granted again in this life.

The next morning nearly never came; heavy snow clouds filled the skies and darkened the growing morning light to just twilight.  We made a heavy breakfast as I explained to the group that I had ample supplies so there was no need to hold back.  Our tracks back to the snow plow were filled with eighteen inches of new snow and each person could only bring one large parcel of belongings.  As a group we dug the snow out of the rear area of the plow that would normally hold sand and lined the bottom with tarps and then wove tarps I had to cover everyone sitting in the bed of the truck.

The truck had just two seats; I wanted Rose and the children up front with me but I had to pick one of the men that had firearms expertise in case we ran into trouble on the return trip.

As a group we had just three firearms, my AR15 and two side arms… we’d have to make due with what we had if trouble came.

The heavy snow came in sheets, blocking out the light and forcing the use of the bright lights of the truck to keep on the road as we fought our way out of the mountains.  Noon found us twenty miles North of crossing highway 50 and I could only keep on the road by following the plow marks I’d made just less than 24 hours before.

We crossed Highway 50 at dusk and it was pitch black in minutes.  I had to decide whether I’d drive right up to the school marking it as where we where as a group or force the survivors to hike a quarter mile in the snow in the dark to the safety of buildings.   I drove straight to the school…

We bailed out of the plow and two trips later all was unloaded.  The women make fast work of the kitchen and dinner was served by eight. 

I finally met up with Rose as things were quieting down, both kids were glued to her side and I found a small side Office to make as a bedroom for the three. We both agreed that the kids needed quiet and slow adjustments as we moved forward.

I stood guard with my rifle until about 3am, I was relieved by one of the groups men.  I slept under a cabinet in the great room until light.

If it was even possible the snow storm grew heavier and we had three feet of fresh snow by ten am.  I decided to move the plow back to the maintenance yard with the hopes the snow would cover the tracks leading to the school if lucky.  I took my friend Jim with me, the one I’d surprised in the forest as I hoped to meet the group weeks before.

We returned and warmed up with coffee and biscuits the women had made.  I was scared to death and happier than a clam at the same time.  How could we secure the safety of our people with so few firearms and limited people?  At this point I’d have to be happy with a successful rescue… and I was.

Three days of getting everything tied down and people into rooms and the kids calmed down.  Our shortcoming if anything would be water.   We dug snow by the feet into all kinds of pots and pans filling the kitchen area with everything that would hold water.

I searched the Kitchen’s administration floor and found keys to all the buildings in a lock box.  This gave us access to the gym so we had a huge area for the kids to play safely.  What a god’s sent.

I spoke in private with the men of our camp; three of us would make a sneak run into Florence.  We needed firearms and ammunition if we were going to make a stand over winter and beyond here at the school and County Buildings.  There was no sign that anyone had come the couple miles out from the small city to the County works buildings.  The gates were locked until I broke them down and the school was locked tight and no tracks were showing in the snow.

We had a community meeting while the kids ran around yelling in the back ground playing having a great time.  It was decided that I, Jim and John would make the trip into town finding out how many people were left in the area if we could and grab weapons to bolster our armory if any were still left.

I guessed we’d need at least four days with the snow conditions, if we went over seven days, we weren’t’ coming back and no one was to try to find us.

We left just before 4am on a Friday, not that the day had any meaning any more but it just seemed noteworthy for some reason; I guess when time has no meaning and you put a time date on something it’s a big deal now. 

We moved slowly fighting our way pushing through the drifts keeping to the side of buildings and areas protected by trees and bushes.  Moving forward we found no indications of anyone moving through the snow banks; we found no tracks at all.  We made camp without fire just outside of the old town area in a small shop selling coins and trinkets.  We wrapped our blankets and sleeping bags tight as the temperature dropped to -12 overnight.

No sign of any life, no wood burning smoke, nothing.  It was so eerier and quiet.

The next morning the three of us pushed our way to the only sporting’s goods store in the area; locks still intact we broke the door open to access the business.  We found just four AR15’s and took a couple other weapons in the same caliber.  Ammunition and carriers filled out what we thought we’d need.  We made a quick exit and moved back towards our encampment as fast as we could. 

Day two finished at the edge of Florence in a small building used as bead shop as the sun dipped in the South West.  Our loads were heavy slowing us down, sore muscles from the weight made hurrying impossible.  A quick meal of thawed chicken and rice filled each stomach from freeze dried stock.  We figured we’d make the County buildings by early evening Sunday with luck. 

Sunday morning broke with heavy clouds to the South West; we were in for a heavy storm.  Before breakfast the winds picked up to gale-force raddling the windows and pushing through the doors and windows seals leaving frost trails from the weather stripping in a neat line.  It was clear we were not leaving the buildings we were hiding in.  The business had no heating other than electric so we were forced to shelter in our sleeping bags and anything we could find for insulation.   The windows and doors rattled with the wind, gusts screamed and pulled at the corners of the building.  We could hear roofing snap and rip away as the wind found places to catch.  Near noon the building shook with near 70mph’s gusts, dust demons swirled in the dusty air as weather stripping gave way leaving tiny vortices dancing across the tiny room.  We pulled sleeping bags close as the temperature dropped to record colds. We were in a polar vortex; sub zero temperatures in the -40’s or below; siding crackled and snapping as walls contracted with the numbing cold. 

I woke to slanted late afternoon sunlight bringing sundown.  The winds had fallen leaving just faint rustling of roofing torn loose.  Numb hands, feet frozen, nose caked with frozen snot; body shaking with cold.  Knees stiff, painful to straighten, elbows crackling awake.  Jim and John nothing but frost covered lumps; shaken to awake. 

We pilled broken boards and paper together starting a small fire in the front show room of the business.  Smoke filled the room quickly but cracking a door and opening an upper story window pulled the majority of the smoke up and out of the lower floor.  We warmed by the spluttering fire and heated the last of our food shaking from the cold, we hoped to survive the night as we wrapped ourselves again in our sleeping bags for the frigid night to come.

Monday morning came with brilliant sunshine and calm winds.

We loaded our packs then kicked the front door open against the piled snow.  Heading East a few streets then turning due North along Hwy 67 we had open residential neighborhoods to push through.  We made fairly good time until hitting drifts.  The winds had plowed most of the two-lane highway of snow but any wind obstruction built huge drifts that we either climbed over or tried to busted out our way though.  The extreme cold had solidified most of the snow drifts into steep walled solid ice we could not fight through making us ice climb over. 

Nearing the end of the small houses on both sides of the road the highway was mostly open from the high winds and lack of obstacles making drifts, just a few more yards and we’d be in the open clearing the out skirts of Florence.

One of the last houses on the right we could see a small amount of smoke from the chimney.  After a quick meeting we decided to give it a wide berth, so we hung far to the left of the two-lane highway keeping nearly 150 yards between us and the house. 

I was close to 80 yards past the house when I tripped on something under the snow, I spun up and I landed on my back, I realized there was a huge boom in my ears, then echoing off the hills.  The pain was immense in my neck, shoulder area as I realized I’d been shot.  15 seconds and another huge explosion of a heavy rifle shook the snow and a raised a cloud just a foot from my face.  I was in nearly five feet of snow so he was shooting blind into the snow hoping to get a hit.  I fought my way back to my knees and plowed my way into the snow forward a good ten feet.  The next round must have hit between me and John who couldn’t have been more than twenty feet behind me when we’d been pushing through the snow.

I dumped my heavy pack and cleaned the snow from my rifle.  I hadn’t fired a round in months, no idea if all the dirt, snow and dust would allow the rifle to fire. 

Another huge explosion as and the heavy rifle hunted for another hit.  Every fifteen seconds another shot searching for a hit on bone and flesh.

I pushed through the snow heading direct to the house wanting to close the distance keeping well under the height of the snow.  I tripped again and fell face down in the snow.  I was face to face with a frozen corpse, face white twisted in agony in the frozen ice.

I pushed around to the left and found two more bodies frozen in the snow; how many had he killed as they tried to pass his house?

The rifle boomed hunting targets…

I knew I’d covered enough area so I’d be roughly under a hundred yards to the house.  My rifle was sighted in at exactly one hundred yards and I’d practiced shooting at that range at out local rifle range now seeming like a decade before.

I cleared a small area around me, the snow was just at four feet deep here.  I carefully pulled the scope covers off my rifle and cleaned the snow from the lenses.  Turning the magnification of the scope up to six, that would give me a close in view but leaving plenty of field of view.  I cycled the rifle dumping two rounds of 30 into my waiting hands.  I dropped the magazine and reloaded the two rounds and pushed the magazine into the rifle weld and made sure it was properly seated.

Boom…  Every fifteen seconds… boom… hunting for another hit of the two targets left alive in the snow.

I waited… counting, one, two, three; twelve, thirteen… boom…

I raised up clearing the snow by maybe ten inches standing full height; I brought the rifle carefully up making sure I didn’t plow the scope through the snow.  I could see a man standing on the front porch of a maybe two room house; “that’s a tiny house” my little voice said in my ears.  He was looking down at his rifle as he jacked another round into the rifle.  I raised the scope to my eye and he came into close view, I leveled the cross hairs on his chest as he came up with his rifle ready for another shot into the snow.  I saw his eyes turn towards me, I must have appeared as a ghost in the white snow no more that 90 yards to the left of where he’s been dumping round after round into the snow field hoping to hit John or Jim.

He twisted right to bring his heavy rifle in line to where I’d just appeared. 

The .556 rounds landed squarely on his chest pushing him back and through the open door of the small house.  I lowered the out bound rounds as he disappeared into the shadows dumping all thirty rounds from chest to floor level as he fell tearing the front of the house to pieces.

As the smoke and pieces of shattered wood landed two animals rushed from the house into the snow banks disappearing in an instant.  I jammed another 30-round magazine into my rifle waiting for the attack dogs to show them shelves.

Two Labradors, one black the other yellow greeted me with unbridled happiness………. their tags said they were Jack and Jill; Jill was about to pop with puppies.  Addresses on the tags didn’t match this house, they must have been with the people he killed.

From getting shot in the heavy pack to two Labradors kissing you to death, the last ten minutes was seriously crazy. 

I covered John as he pushed through the snow to the front porch of the little house. “He’s done.” John yelled back.  “The house is on fire; you must have knocked something down, it’s gonna go up in just a minute.  The smoke began to roll out of the open door and curtains in the room to the left of the front door burst into flames. 

We all met at a little detached garage on the right of the house, dogs jumping wanting to be petted.  “That dog isn’t going to make a half mile she’s so close to having those puppies.”  John said with a smile “We are going to have some happy kids.” 

“Hey there’s a little boat over here.”  Jim yelled.  “We could dump our packs in and let Jill ride as we pull it, shouldn’t be too hard in all this snow.”

Side door was unlocked and a big bag of dog food was just inside.  We grabbed a couple moving blankets and found a short length of rope. 

Huge WHOOSH as the window blew out of the house and ammunition started to cook off with rapid fire bangs.  “Let’s get out of here before something big goes off.”

The small boat was aluminum and only about ten feet long, super light.  With two of us on the rope and boat all loaded it was remarkably easy to pull in the snow.

We’d made about a quart of a mile when a huge explosion flattened the house and knocked the side garage down.  We all looked at each other and kept moving.

We had less than ten miles to reach the High School and figured we’d make it by dark if we hurried and switched off pulling giving rest breaks.

They saw us coming from manning the top floor of the cafeteria as a look out a good half mile out.  The roads here had been blown clear by the heavy winds and most of our group met us a quarter of a mile South of the school.  The kids went crazy over the dogs and trying to keep Jill in the boat was a full-time job which we finally just had three of the kids jump in and pet her to near death; Jack jumped on everyone in his excitement. 

In the warmth of the building after telling our story Rose carefully pealed off my layers of clothing and found a nasty bruise but nothing serious.

We had a huge dinner with fantastic desert and settled back into our routine. 

Two nights later we had a community meeting again with the kids screaming and playing in the background and decided as a group we’d stay and build a community here.  We had many ideas of enclosing all the fields and see if we could find animals to raise.  A huge garden area could be worked using all the equipment available at the County yard.  We’d have to drill a well or try to find a good water supply before totally committing to this area. 

Epilogue: Jill had eight puppies, all in good health. Three boys and the rest girls. We found that the bus barn had a well and yards of hoses so that problem took care of itself. Spring came late but we managed to fill in the fence open areas and found eight head of cattle less than a half mile away that had wintered over in a heavy barn; as luck would have it 15 chickens had wintered over also. We also had an announcement that our community would be adding a member in early fall putting a smile on everyone’s faces. Things were quickly coming together and about mid-June we had a new couple find our community after over 18 months of hiding and traveling as we had.

August had a surprise; a lone fighter jet flew over and dipped its wings as a hello, a telling sign that the military people had won the war in the Denver area making us all feel safer.

Rose and I were married in late September and our small family of four is very happy.

We are fully ready for the coming winter and this story is at its end. We still have hay to bring in and I’ve spent the most of the last three weeks getting it all on paper so our story will live on.

From the Ramblings.

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