48
Friday evening,
September First
The Segher Farm
Thursday’s
activities in Fairfield had stretched late into the day, including a prolonged
visit to the National Guard center to review the files sent him; and the review
of the stolen goods after they were processed by the police department. Doug
noted that the hard drives from the digital security recorders were missing,
and mentioned this to the police. Now,
in the early evening of September First, he was happy to help clean one of the
smaller barns and just think.
Julie, Maria and
the balance of the Segher family women were finishing up a large-scale peach
and apricot canning project at Peter and Molly’s house. Doug asked Arie for something he could
do alone and in peace, just to think.
“Much on your
mind, ya?” Arie replied, looking at Doug for a long moment. “I’ve just the
place.”
The ‘small’ barn
formerly housed sixty or so dairy cows, all sold off the previous year as the
fourth official ‘recession’ in eight years began and the real collapse started.
With the endless list of more important things on the farm needing attention,
the clean out of this particular barn had waited, until today. Doug worked with
minimal lighting, which allowed him a narrow focus for both his work and his
mind.
The e-dispatches
forwarded to him by his secretary were encrypted and only portable if sent to
his government-provided laptop, or viewable as read-only at the nearly deserted
Guard facility—‘print’ and ‘save’ functions had been disabled. He hadn’t thought of bringing the
laptop with him, and as a result spent more than three hours reading the
background material and ‘position statements’ provided by Lorraine.
After reading the
many files provided—from many other departments, not just Food and Drug—Doug’s
opinion on the New Republic changed from the organization being a minor
distraction to what seemed like a major debacle in the making. From the President on down, the
statements didn’t seem to take the New Republic voices or actions with a level
of serious consideration—indeed, they were dismissed as dope-smoking Communist
freeloaders at best; America-hating parasites at worst. When the ‘official’
communiqués were viewed in timeline-order, the initial dispatches were serious,
mindful of the consequences, filled with carefully chosen words, and obviously
were put together by people who’d thought out the problem. The later dispatches in the stream of
communications—even those allegedly written by a previously ‘thoughtful’ senior
staff person—were shallow, name calling, sycophantic responses mirroring the
opinions of close friends and political appointees of the President. Almost universally, the Vice
President’s staff rejected the position that the Administration was proposing,
using very strong language. Doug
thought, as he closed the last file in the series, that either the Vice
President would be asked to resign or that the ‘popular uprising’ as the FBI
had called it, would spread in the face of no meaningful resistance.
Doug’s specific
orders remain unchanged, but now had increased urgency to ‘ensure
regulatory safeguards remain in place.’ It seemed to him that
the Federal Government was utterly unprepared for the level of popular
opposition against cutbacks in Federal programs including pensions, Medicare
and Medicaid, farm, technology and fuel subsidies. These had now festered for months, after years of ‘austerity
programs’ that had delayed scheduled cost-of-living increases and ‘mandated’
growth. States, after cutbacks of
Federal funding proved themselves unable to continue the uncounted mandated
programs. Millions of people
‘slipping through the safety net’ were now the constituency of the New Republic. The currency devaluations, the
elimination of recognizable currency—the former ‘nickel’, now being made from
an alloy was one of the changes—all worked against the Federal Government and
the shreds of remaining confidence.
Doug had met with
Arie, Peter, Roeland and Maria and Julie over dinner, and provided them a look
inside of the Federal Government that only a relative handful of people would
hear of. None of what Doug said really came as a surprise, but there was
seemingly a feeling of resignation about the path that the Nation was on.
Late into the
night, Doug lay awake in the darkened bedroom, Julie soundly sleeping at his
side.
Early Friday
morning, they’d had been roused by Roeland, in his deputy sheriff uniform and
body armor.
“Doug, you’re
needed in Fairfield. Pronto,” Roeland said quietly. Julie slept soundly.
Shaking the fog
from his head, Doug finally figured out where he was. “What?” he
whispered. Roeland motioned him to
come out of the bedroom. It was near sunrise, he noted as he quietly closed the
door. A beautiful, cloudless Iowa sky.
“Your suspect died
overnight, according to my sources. The Fairfield P.D. has no idea why. Might be a good idea to get up there
and find out anything you can. Be a little proactive on it,” Roeland said, in
effect saying, ‘eliminate yourself as a conspirator in his death.’
“Uh, was he alone?
Did someone kill him?” Doug asked as they moved into the kitchen, where Maria
had just started to make boterkoek—Dutch
coffee cake.
“No idea. Probably not a great idea for me to be
asking around about it,” Roeland said. “Might be a good idea for you to get to
town by say, seven-thirty or eight.”
“All right. Is
there anything else you can tell me?”
“That’s about all
I know. Rumblings in the East, though. Lotta shortwave chatter about this New
Republic bullcrap,” Roeland said, cleaning up his language in front of his
mother.
“Today’s supposed
to be their Independence Day,” Doug said to no one in particular.
“Yeah. But will
there be a ‘shot heard round the world?’”
Doug dressed
quietly, and kissed the snoozing Julie good morning, explaining the
situation. She was out of bed
immediately.
“I’m going with
you,” she stated flatly. Doug knew there wasn’t any point in trying to change
her mind, and for that matter, figured that there wasn’t any reason to
try. Ten minutes later, they were
in the Jeep and had cleared the front gate.
“Do you…think that
Regent killed this guy?” Julie asked.
“’Rule one: Kill
the killer’, I read somewhere. It’s too pat. Too convenient for him to die in
police custody,” Doug said, touching one of the radio buttons to scan. “I don’t know where anything’s going.
Just when I start to think I know where I’m going, I get broadsided.”
“You’re off
balance,” Julie said. “Maybe you’re being deliberately kept off balance.”
“Huh?” Doug said,
puzzled.
“In my former
life, I saw lots of gamesmanship where an employer would pit one employee
against another, stir the pot, create some sort of controversy to hide his real
intentions—keeping his staff low-paid. I saw the same thing where employees
would kiss up to the boss in his presence, while looting the till through all
kinds of creative means,” Julie said. “Most of the time, I could prove it,
given time and authorization. Maybe you’re being played.”
Doug didn’t know
what to say.
“What would be the
motivation, you’re wondering,” Julie said, trying to get comfortable in the
passenger seat.
“Yeah. Exactly.”
“Your ties to Des
Moines are cut. Your ties to
Fairfield are cut. People you knew through Regent are dead. Who would stand to
gain?” Julie asked.
“I don’t know,”
Doug said, turning north toward Fairfield.
“Someone who wants
you to go a different direction.
If they’d have wanted you dead, you’d be gone already. So someone sees
you as an asset, not a liability. For now,” she said with ‘that tone’ of voice.
“For now,” Doug
repeated, his mind now going a completely different direction. Doug slowed as he drove through the
little hamlet of Birmingham. A few
people looked at the FDA label on the side of the Jeep and scowled.
A few minutes
later, Doug drove up the driveway to the wrecked house to show Julie the place.
“My God. You
weren’t exaggerating,” she said.
“No, I was not,”
Doug replied, turning the Jeep around, and heading back down the driveway.
Fairfield was a
bit livelier than Birmingham, but just barely. Virtually all of the marginal business enterprises had long
since closed, leaving only those that really were ‘important’ to the public. In the case of Fairfield, this meant a
few grocery stores, hardware, hunting and farm supply stores, the library,
machine and welding shops, clinics and second hand stores. Franchises of national restaurants and
retails had vanished, including their signs. Barter was more common than either local scrip or
‘dollars’ or the rare precious-metals transaction, but trust weighed heavy in
any transaction. The
Segher’s had schooled Doug on the evolution of the local economy over dinner,
the night before.
Doug’s Government
Jeep was viewed with suspicion as he drove through Fairfield…the FDA logo
drawing many stares.
“You should travel
in something that doesn’t draw so much attention,” Julie said.
“Yeah. The big Federal logo doesn’t really go
with my outfit,” Doug replied, trying to lighten the mood.
“I’m not kidding,”
Julie said seriously.
“I’m not either,”
Doug persisted. “The whole ‘For Official Business Only’ thing cramps my style,”
he said, pulling into the police department.
Doug parked in the
same spot, and he and Julie held hands as they entered the building.
“Officer
Schwartz,” Doug said, introducing Julie. “This is my wife Julie.”
“Ma’am,” Schwartz
said, looking at Julie over the top of his glasses. “Mister Peterson, can you account for your whereabouts since
you were here last?”
“He’s been at the
farm, with my family. Including
Deputy Sheriff Roeland Segher,” Julie replied. Schwartz nodded and noted
Julie’s statement.
“I understand that
the suspect is dead?” Doug asked.
“Yeah. Died in his cell last evening. Window to the outside was penetrated,
but we’re not sure by what. No visible wound on the body. No one heard a
thing.”
“Have you
identified him?”
“No. State medical examiner should have the
autopsy results back to us next week, unless there are drugs involved. Takes quite a bit longer. You wanna
pick up your property?” Schwartz asked. “Can’t prosecute the dead.”
“Uh, I guess I
could,” Doug said.
“Gimme a few
minutes and I’ll take you back to the Property Room.”
“Sure.”
Good to his word,
Officer Schwartz summoned them down the hall after getting an even older man to
cover the dispatch radios.
“You gonna be able
to I.D. what’s yours out of this stuff?” he asked, looking at a clipboard.
“There’s five pages of stuff inventoried here.”
“If I can’t, I
won’t take it. As is, I’m not sure what I’m going to do with any of this in any
regard,” Doug replied.
“Fair enough. Here’s the checklist—just initial there
in the left hand column that you’ve retrieved it.”
Twenty minutes
later, Doug and Julie had finished loading five boxes into the back of the FDA
Jeep and were headed back to the Farm.
Julie flipped on the radio in time to hear the last tones of the
Emergency Broadcast Signal.
“This is the Voice of the New Republic,
transmitting over the Emergency Broadcast System. The New Republic has accessed this system for a special
broadcast from Montauk, New York, where Senator Cynthia Blackburn and
Representative David Abdul Muhsin.
Friends, I give you Cynthia Blackburn,”
a game-show style male voice announced.
“What the Hell?”
Doug asked. He pulled to the side
of the empty road to listen to the weak transmission.
“We are here on the dawn of a new day. This day
brings us the promise of true social justice for the people, the end of a
corrupt and collapsing regime geared only toward the profit of a few at the
expense of the rest of us.
We are here to bring commonsense solutions to
millions of people who have been disproportionately oppressed. We are reaching out with a message of
hope to those embattled masses.
Your fair share is coming.
The extremist right-wing leadership that has driven us into the ground
will pass away, and we will rise to lead. We are not in denial that the mean
spirited practices and outright domination practiced by the leaders of the
United States of America is the best thing for this world. They are plainly
not! The violence that they’ve
inflicted on millions must end. We mean to see that it happens now!
It is time for us to rise up, to throw off the
shackles placed on us. It is time
for positive outcomes and shared values.
It is time for sound governance through protection of our environment. It is time for proper taxation of
corporations and individuals who choose to work outside the bounds of fairness.
It is time that the burdens of unfair debt are thrown off, especially those
placed on the young through the Federal Student Loan system. There are so many
marginalized and underserved people in this nation that strive for a vibrant
new community! We call on you to help—to
repurpose your lives and the lives of others to serve all in the struggle for
equality and to work within the global community! We will no longer tolerate corporations disenfranchising the
worker--we will bring our demands to these corporations and see that they are
satisfied. The globalist system has failed us; it is time for us to see that we
don’t fail each other. We are taking this continent--we are remaking it! Their
failed policies will no longer be tolerated and we have the power to end them and
put in place new systems that recognize the value of the creative; that reward
those in need and that benefit our culture! We declare our Independence. Today is the day of the New Republic!”
Blackburn said, as thunderous applause rose.
“And now, Representative Mushin,” the gameshow voice announced.
“On behalf of the many cultures here today, I
thank you for your time,” Mushin began.
“We are here to create, not to destroy. To unite, and not divide. These are not just words, they are true
commitments to equality for the most abled, and for the least. We are here to
see that proper investments are made in the future of the people, that the
emerging consensus of the past few months grows and thrives. That we empower those around us and
that we end the cycles of violence and poverty and division reinforced by the
United States on the people of the world.
The New Republic is founded on these principles. We are here to give voice. We are here to listen. We are here to grow support for those
policies of fairness and investments in the future of our people. Our nation’s children and indeed, the
people of our nation live within and outside the physical borders of the United
States of America, for our nation reaches beyond mere physical lines on maps. We have brothers and sisters in Africa.
In Europe. In the embattled Middle East.
We call on our brothers and sisters to join us. It is a new day; it is our day!”
“Certainly full of
themselves, aren’t they?” Julie said as more applause flooded the radio. Doug
didn’t have a chance to answer.
“We are poised to…”
the broadcast was terminated and static filled the airwaves. Doug punched the
‘scan’ button on the radio, and found all frequencies nothing but an even level
of static.
“Big Brother
didn’t like that show, it appears,” Doug said. “Let’s get home.”
“What do you think
that means?” Julie asked.
“Civil war maybe?
I don’t really know. What would this ‘New Republic’ use for an army? For
weapons? It’s not like they can seize stuff laying around—most of it is in
Mexico.”
“Have you heard of
their…territories?” Julie asked. “Are they just in New England?”
“No, they’re
spread out, but from what I know it’s not like they’re consolidating their
areas of control,” Doug said, getting the Jeep back on the road. “One of my
contacts with Regent said that the company was involved in, ‘efforts to
distract and destabilize current leadership models’. That tells me that they’re part of the New Republic. Am I wrong?” he asked Julie. She sat
there, unspeaking.
“Which means,”
Doug continued, “that I’m an agent for someone that wants to overthrow the
United States Government.” A chill
ran through him. He was on the same ‘side’ as those people on the radio. “Good
God.”
“You have to get
out. You have to get out of Regent and out of the FDA,” Julie said in pleading
voice. “You have to, Doug.”
“I know. But I can’t just ‘not show up.’ I need
to complete this assignment and resign.
Then we need to disappear,” he said, thinking about what that really
meant.
“What will Regent
do?” Julie said, reading his thoughts.
“I have no idea,”
he said, lying. He knew perfectly
well. They’d kill him.
They arrived at
the Farm a half-hour later, and were immediately directed back into the
equipment shed, and the giant metal cage within. Jake Segher, dressed in coveralls, waved them inside. He pulled the huge door closed behind
them.
“Let’s see what
they’ve done to your rig,” Jake said flatly.
“Who?” Julie
asked.
“Oh, I dunno. Just the global conspiracy.”
“Not funny, Jake,”
she replied.
“Not really meant
to be. Contact at any time means that something could be added to, or taken
away from, your person or your vehicle. So we check to see,” Jake said, picking
up some sort of hand-held scanner. “Big batch of stuff in the back. Yours?”
“These were stolen
from my house up north. A few
things that belonged to the Kliest’s as well,” Doug said. “A half dozen
radios.”
“All right, we’ll
start with these then,” Jake said, opening up the hatch, and holding the
scanner over the boxes. “Well, now,” he said, looking at a small LCD screen on
the scanner. “Someone’s added a few cookies to your cookie jar.”
“What?”
“Something here is
actively transmitting. Weak, but it’s there. Something else, here, too,” Jake
said, brow furrowed.
“I don’t
understand,” Doug said.
“Think of this as
a rotating transmitter,” Jake said.
“Something in there answered back. Whatever is in there responded with a
data stream when it was hit with the initiating frequency.”
“Can you…tell what
was sent?” Julie asked.
“Not a chance in
Hell,” Jake said. “Not without a supercomputer and the correct programming
algorithm.”
“Who’d have that
kind of technology?”
“The National
Security Agency, for one,” Jake said. “Doug, can you positively identify each
piece of equipment here as yours or your neighbors?”
“Yeah, pretty
sure.”
“Pretty sure won’t
cut it. Positive ID is definitive.”
“I can ID 80% with
certainty,” Doug replied, initially irritated but understanding what Jake was
getting at.
“Dig out your
stuff, put it on that bench over there.”
“Doug, I’m going
to go inside. I’m late for my nap,” Julie said, yawning.
“I’ll let you know
what we find,” he said, giving her a quick kiss and a hug.
Doug pulled out
the electronics and placed them on the copper-covered workbench, where Jake
immediately ensured they weren’t transmitting anything, or responding to any
signal from his scanner.
“That’s all of the
stuff that I can ID as coming from my place. The rest might be mine or Augie Kliest’s.”
“OK. One piece at
a time, on the table to the left.”
Doug started with
a ham radio that had belonged to Augie, a big Yaesu transceiver, the
FT2000. Jake scanned it as he
moved it from the Jeep to the workbench.
“That’s one of
them—it’s transmitting when hit with a certain freq,” Jake said.
Doug pulled out
several other items, including digital video recorders, cameras, Internet
routers and a laptop. Nothing
responded to Jake’s scanner. The last items were a pair of Sony AM radios and a
cable TV box.
“Cable box. Put it over there near the Yaesu. The
Sony’s are clean.”
“What do we do
now?” Doug asked.
“I do some surgery
here and see what I can find. You
go take care of your better half and see if Arie needs any help. He’s working
on a new woodshed out back of the house. There’s twelve cord of wood back there
that needs to be stacked before the bad weather sets in.”
“Thanks,
Jake. I appreciate your expertise
with this stuff. We’d never have known…”
“Most people have
never known. There’s more of this
stuff out there than anyone realizes. And you’re quite welcome. Anything I can do to put a wrench in
the works, and I’ll do it.”
The late summer
morning was growing hotter, but many of the leaves had already started to
yellow with the coming of autumn, much earlier, Maria had said, than she’d ever
seen. Doug walked back toward the
house, looking across the large garden, to the empty fields to the west. Nothing had been planted in any of the
fields, as far as he could see.
“Pretty bleak, ya?”
Arie said, coming toward Doug.
“Yes, it is,” he
replied.
“Fallow year. Think of it as a fallow year.”
“Yeah, that’s the
bright side,” Doug said, feeling a little depressed at the view.
“There’s another
bright side. There’s no food to be
found for others to take. So they
go elsewhere.”
“Is that what you
had planned? I mean, you and…the others. The Weerstand.”
Arie looked at
Doug with a glint in his eye. “Some learn from history. Far too many don’t, are instead rewarded by death. We do not intend to be among the latter. Come now. I have a hammer and nails and
some tin that need your undivided.”