50
Wednesday morning,
September Sixth
8:00 a.m.
Julie’s
appointment with the family OB/GYN provided Doug an opportunity to check in
with the FDA office via email from Fairfield, and hopefully get a better
perspective of the world outside of the Farm. Doug would’ve preferred to stay
for the appointment, but was shooed out of the office for an hour, with both of
the ladies smiling.
The National Guard
center had three civilian guards in full body armor, watching over the mostly
empty facility. Doug checked in
with his Federal I.D., signed in on a digital pad and then had to use a
thumbprint pad to gain access to one of the secure computer terminals. He
wasn’t prepared for the onslaught of email, voice message and conflicting
messages. He checked the emails in order, oldest-first, skipping over the
departmental briefings, security memos and news summaries.
The first surprise
was the replacement of Lorraine Bancroft with three new executive
assistants. Each had prepared what
appeared to be a personal greeting; each greeting appeared to be jockeying for
position or preference, as if the FDA were now a multi-level marketing scheme
and each ‘Doug-level’ liaison was worth a certain number of points.
The next shock was
a completely new itinerary and ‘encouragement’ to proceed with best time to the
first location on the new itinerary, which was in the next email, abandoned in
favor of a completely different strategy.
The newer emails
limited the travel, and then revoked it completely. The most recent emails
directed Doug to return to Denver on September eleventh for meetings on the
twelfth.
Doug skimmed the
emails again quickly, seeing the pattern of confusion but sensing more. Unlike his previous visit, the
briefings, memos and news summaries were fully downloadable…which Doug thought
was probably a breach in FDA security protocol. Doug weighed the risks, while
fishing out a flash drive. He downloaded all of them for later reading. As he completed the
download, one of the assistants ‘pinged’ him for a video call. He authorized
the call, and was greeted by an overly groomed late twenty something male. None
of the names provided in the prior emails looked ‘male’.
“Good morning,
Mister Peterson. Sorry to disturb you are on vacation. I’m Britt Redmon, first
assistant to the Secretary.” ‘First assistant my ass,’ Doug thought.
“Good morning.
Just getting caught up on emails. Looks like things have been busy,” Doug said,
not asking about Lorraine.
“They have, yes.
You’ve by now seen your new itinerary, correct?” Redmon asked. Doug instantly
disliked the man.
“There is a
substantial reorganization coming to the Department, and to several other
departments. The Assistant
Secretary and Under Secretary wanted to include you in the conversation, hence
the meeting next week.”
“OK, fair enough.
What about the production issues here in the Midwest? Are those issues
magically resolved?” Doug said with some irritation.
“Oh, no. Those are
just lower priorities at this time.
Given the fluidity of the security in that region, the Department does
not believe that your prior assignment is worth the risk.”
‘No shit, Sherlock,’ Doug
thought to himself, but forced himself to sit back in his chair as if surprised
at the revelation. “Sorry. I didn’t really believe the news. I should be able to get out of Des
Moines on Monday for a Tuesday meeting.”
“Would you be in a
position to receive any additional information from the Under Secretary prior
to your return?” Redmon asked, looking at the camera over the tops of his
overly thin glasses.
“No,” Doug replied
flatly. “This is my last trip into
town before I come back on Monday.”
“Unfortunate,”
Redmon replied with raised eyebrows.
“Such are current
communications. I look forward to meeting you next week, Britt,” Doug said.
“That will have to
wait. I will be in another location. Good day,” the ‘first assistant’ said
before ending the videoconference.
Doug had about ten
more minutes before he had to leave to pick up Julie. In that time, he wrote his letter of resignation, effective
September thirtieth, and sent it directly to the Secretary, bypassing the
assistants, the Assistant Secretary and Under Secretary. He cited the need to be close to Julie during
the later months of her pregnancy, and wished the Department well.
“How’d everything
go?” Doug asked as Julie and Cath climbed in the Jeep. He turned the radio
down, after listening to the forecast…rain by evening.
“Couldn’t be
better!” Julie said with a big smile as she kissed Doug. “Everything’s just
fine.”
“And what did you
do for entertainment?” Cath asked.
“I read a bunch of
emails, departmental news and then resigned from the FDA.”
“WOW! Effective
now? Say yes,” Julie said
definitively.
“I don’t think
I’ve ever seen anyone so excited to be married to someone unemployed,” Doug
said. “September thirtieth.”
“Not soon enough,”
Cath said. “And of Regent? When for them?”
“Soon as I can,”
Doug said as he started the Jeep.
“Remember to stop
at Stefana’s before we leave town,” Julie said. Stefana was a friend of the family who had a retail
maternity shop before the collapse. The shop now ran on trades of all
kinds.
“Not a problem,”
Doug said.
A few minutes
later they arrived at the small storefront, sandwiched between closed
franchised coffee and sandwich shops. Stefana Groesbeck’s family had leased the
land to the national franchises and had built the three shops turnkey in
exchange for a sizeable signing bonus and favorable terms over the lease. With the closure of the franchise
outlets, the property and penalties were paid to the family, more than covering
the development cost.
“You stay put and
we’ll be right back!” Julie said to Doug, now feeling like a chauffeur. He noted that Cath took a file box into
the store, which Doug figured was a front for a cell of the Weerstand.
Doug had not been
invited to attend the meetings, held on three consecutive nights off the farm.
He didn’t take offense at all—as he’d finally been cleared for night
patrol. In the distance, two nights
before, Doug had been in a watchman’s location, a half-mile from the
house. The still night was
interrupted by rifle and semi-automatic weapons fire…and not a single word was
heard on any of the radio frequencies about it.
It had been
impossible to tell the range of the brief firefight; Doug wasn’t that
experienced in such matters, and the fickle wind could’ve carried the sound for
a very long way. With no reports
coming in from any of the farms, men from the Weerstand had to be hunting
raiding parties. The
following morning, Arie took one of the small pickups from the farm, alone, and
returned two hours later. Doug noticed that the bed of the pickup held a
covered bundle of something that was missing when Arie returned.
The town was
‘quiet’ of course, with only a handful of shops of any kind open for trading,
and Doug noted that each of them had someone nearby with a shotgun or rifle in
plain sight. On top of the
hardware store, two men with rifles were positioned, and he noted that at least
one other person had a large spotting scope atop the roof. Most of the traffic in town was
composed of bicycles with cargo trailers, although a few people rode in on
horseback. He turned up the radio
to kill some time.
“…no idea what they’ve done. The shortages are
everywhere, another unintended consequence of unending incremental regulation.
Of course prices have been through the roof for years now, but as soon as stock
becomes available, any ammunition not already in a pipeline to the Army or
Homeland Security is snapped up in a frenzy that sharks would be proud of. It
seems the only state left that has half a brain is Texas, now the home to
ninety percent of firearms manufacturers in the country, and sixty percent of
the ammunition manufacturers.”
‘You’ve visited
the clue store,’ Doug thought of the talk show host.
“I don’t really see that changing any time soon,
either, America. There are things going on in the East that demand our
immediate action and the President is giving it lip service. We’ve got thugs running around in packs
and attacking entire towns from the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Lakes! Little
towns! Farms! Where’s the Federal response? Where the Hell is Homeland? It’s on
you, my friends, because they’re covering their own asses. The Feds are sending
‘advisory teams’ to the states. Right. Like we need more people playing
dictator and demanding our allegiance!
It’s on you to defend yourself and your family…but thanks to the actions
of this creeping regulatory parasite we know as the Federal Government, a whole
lot of you will be defending yourself with bird guns and revolvers and no more
than a hundred rounds of ammunition of all kinds per address. You’re in
violation of that? Federal implications. You defend yourself and are investigated
by even your local cop? He is mandated to report any and all findings of
firearms, ammunition, reloading equipment of any kind. Unregistered
thirty-round mag in fifteen states? Jail time and forfeiture of assets,
citizen. If Officer Friendly
doesn’t report you? Well, thanks to the latest National Defense Authorization
Act, his jurisdiction can lose all Federal funding and HE can be investigated!”
“This guy’s on a
roll,” Doug said aloud, wondering whom the host was.
“This is where we are, America. This is what we’ve come to. Too late to fix it within the framework
of legislation, because the legislators threw you under the bus. Re-read the first sentence of the
Declaration of Independence my friends, and keep going from there. Then ask
yourself honestly, are you are in any better shape NOW, than the Founders were
as they contemplated revolution. Are you? Hell, no you’re not. In fact, you’re
probably much worse off and you just don’t realize it.”
“Where’s your flash point? Where do you decide
that you want the Constitution back? Is it after the thugs steal everything
you’ve earned and built? Then you’re late—because they already have. Your retirement funds were
nationalized, remember? That 401K you worked so hard for? That investment
account? That 529 plan you worked so hard to fund so that your kids could go to
school? Remember when you could choose your own doctor, and decide for yourself
if you wanted to buy insurance—or not? BAM—nationalized so that the Ponzi could
continue. Remember when you could order ammunition and have it delivered? As
much as you could afford? Remember walking into a gun shop and being able to
walk out with a rifle? Or three? Remember those days? Remember folks who had
licenses for Collectible and Antique firearms? They used to buy weapons and
have them shipped to their houses!
That’s now a Federal prison sentence! Mark my words: They’re going to come out with some
cockamamie scam with rainbow colored money and start it all over again. If you
get in their way, they’ll run you over—they’ll find a way to outspend you, wear
you down, deny your God-given rights, deny your Federal train-wreck of a
medical insurance program…and kill you by doing so. This is how they plan to win. This is how they plan to wipe
out opposition,” the host said as Julie and
Cath opened the doors to the Jeep. Cath was carrying a different box that
seemed heavier.
“Whatcha got on?”
Julie asked.
“Some guy on
fire,” Doug replied as the commentator continued. Cath answered.
“Rice. Danny Rice.
He’s down in Hannibal,” Cath said, listening to the continuing monologue. “It’s
too bad no one’s been listening to him. He’s been saying this for years.”
“It’s coming. It’s coming as sure as the sun will
rise. There’s a real fine line between sovereign citizen and partisan. A real
fine line.”
“Honey, you should
be getting some sleep. You’re on watch at midnight,” Julie told Doug at
half-past four.
“I know. Almost
done,” he said. “Arie’s up at six, right?”
“Yes, then on
watch,” Julie said. Doug couldn’t get over how pretty she looked. “Why?”
“I think he should
read this. I’ll write a note for him.”
“If you’re not in
bed in fifteen minutes, I’ll not be
happy,” Julie said with eyebrows raised and chin lowered.
“I’ll be there,”
Doug said with a little grin. She’d made him a light dinner that would be
followed by ‘breakfast’ before he went on watch.
He was tired, but
he plowed ahead, with just a few more pages to cover. He’d been reading more than two hundred pages of briefings
sent out to Federal administrators, succinctly covering news events, foreign
and domestic, that could have an impact on Federal operations. The distilled news briefs had been
provided for decades to those in D.C., and now were produced and coordinated in
all Federal zones in North America and in the handful of remaining overseas
bases.
The briefs
clinically described ‘bandits’ robbing numerous local, state and Federal
locations; first of food, later of other equipment; later still of people,
thought to be held for ransom. No analysis or other commentary was made—the
statements were reported for the analysis of the reader.
President
Lambert’s coverage included meeting with families of two Medal of Honor winners
from a battle in Monterrey; his looking forward to the Supreme Court ruling on
a number of crucial issues in October; and a pending address to the full
Congress—the first since January—on September fifteenth. No mention of the Vice President or any
Cabinet members was made.
In Mexico, the
briefs described current efforts in ‘pacification’ in the most general terms,
without unit descriptions of any kind or any enlightenment of how the war was
progressing.
Throughout the
review of the briefs and the FDA departmental memos, there was very
little—perhaps only a hundred words—covering the New Republic. For such a dramatic threat—even a small
group of radicals—Doug could not understand why so little coverage was
provided. The dearth of crop production
in the Midwest in a general Federal briefing covered eight hundred words, and
that particular brief was an update of a monthly projection.
For threats of
secession, there was virtually no ‘news’ to report. Doug wrote Arie as much, posing the question for
Arie’s consideration.
September Sixth
11:35 p.m.
Julie’s wind-up
alarm clock sounded next to Doug’s head, and he gently extricated himself from
the soundly sleeping mother-to-be, curled into him after some brief, intense
lovemaking. Doug hadn’t ever
dreamed that sex with a pregnant Julie could be so…incredible. To the contrary,
he’d expected to be ‘cut off’. To their mutual delight, he was quite wrong.
‘Breakfast’
included hot tea, hard boiled eggs, smoked ham and biscuits, retrieved from a
sealed container that Maria had set aside for the night watch. The tea was quite strong, brewed
automatically on a timer, and he poured the thermos full, saving a cup for the
meal. Doug ate quickly and suited
up in black, cloth-type raingear before heading out to the equipment shed for a
pre-patrol briefing. The rain was
spattering into the windows despite the wide, covered porch.
The waterproof
rain shell and overalls were made of some kind of soft cloth that shed water,
remained quiet when rain hit it, and blended in well with the darkened
watchmen’s positions. Roeland
called them Elven Cloaks.
Doug entered the
blanketed vestibule in the equipment shed, and found Arie, his daughter
Elisabeth and son Hendrik gathered around the radios. Hendrik and Arie’s watch
wrapped up at midnight, and it was not customary for them to be anywhere but in
the watchmen’s positions until relieved.
“What’s going on?”
Doug asked.
“There’s an ambush
about to be sprung. We didn’t want to be in the middle of it,” Hendrik replied.
Doug noted that neither of them was wet from the rain.
“What about
patrol? Watch?”
“Not tonight. The
Weerstand is close,” Arie said. “Hendrik, show him on the map,” Arie said,
listening to one of the headsets. Doug thought he heard someone on the radio
speaking Dutch.
Hendrik motioned
Doug to a large map of the farm, marked with a coordinate grid that would
normally correspond to GPS coordinates for nearly automated farming. With the
loss of the GPS system and most communications satellites, the map was a bit of
a relic.
“The Weerstand put
out some information that we were having some storage issues here—implying that
we had supplies at risk because we didn’t have enough men,” Hendrik explained.
“A trap? Here?”
“Sure. Good reason
too,” Hendrik continued. “They came up from the south, through these farms that
pulled back defensive and patrol lines. This is a funnel that they had to pass
through,” he said, showing three and a half miles of woods and streams through
a well-defined drainage, leading toward the Des Moines River.
“How many men?”
“Enemy count is
one hundred thirty, more or less. They have boats at the river and men
there. When action starts here,
they’ll go down too,” Hendrik said.
“Where is the
target? I mean, where do you spring it?”
“Half mile south.
The Gunder cattle barn. The red
one,” Hendrik said.
“The Weerstand is
there?” Doug asked.
“No, just south of
that in force. There are a few men there, to make it look like a soft target.
If it goes as planned, most of the enemy will never reach the barn.”
“Hendrik, why
wasn’t I told about this?”
“We didn’t know
where they’d be striking or when. If they had picked another night, you’d be
out in the far post, looking at black rain. They picked tonight, so tonight it
is.”
“Where did they
come from?” Doug asked.
“We’re not sure.
If we catch some alive, we might be able to find out.”
Doug heard Arie
say something firmly, that sounded like ‘Aanvallen’.
“What did he say?”
Doug asked.
“Dutch. ‘Attack’.”
Hendrik replied.
Elisabeth took off
her headphones and flipped on the speakers for all to hear. As Doug had been instructed in this
eventuality, the men in the field at this point were in charge to direct the
battle. There was nothing to do now but to listen and wait. Six frequencies on
each of the radios and scanners competed for attention. The enemy conveniently
had a single unencrypted frequency; the Weerstand had eleven that were
encrypted, covering various parts of the route from the Des Moines to the
Gunder barn. The fighting
was over within fifteen minutes.
“All right then.
It is over for now,” Arie said. “Douglas, you may proceed to Wilde boom,” the
‘wild tree’.
Doug knew that
even with a large raiding party being wiped out, there could be stragglers or
lone attackers, waiting for advantage.
“Thomas will be at
the spring house soon,” Hendrik said. “He’ll be covering that side. Kurt is
down with a fever.”
“Anything
serious?” Doug asked.
“Too soon to tell.
He didn’t get the flu in the spring, so we’ll have to wait and see,” Hendrik
said, handing Doug his radio and his pack. Doug tucked the thermos into a
pocket.
“We talk tomorrow,
Douglas. Ja?” Arie asked. “This news of yours. Interesting.”
“For what it
didn’t say and for what it did.”
Arie nodded
without speaking, looking at the map of the farm. “You sound as if you are surprised
that your government is lying to you. Surely you are not that naïve, Douglas.”
Keep 'em coming!! Seriously though, it seems like a lot is this is happening now.
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting a new chapter.
ReplyDeleteI'm enjoying this very much!
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Thanks for the new chapter. Tom.
ReplyDeleteLife is getting very interesting!
Bob
III
Love the story, can't get enough :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the continued effort, enjoying the writing immensely!
ReplyDeleteGlad to see another riveting chapter! Many thanks!
ReplyDeleteGlad to see another installment in this adventure!
ReplyDeleteread the first three back to back and then the forth great stuff tom keep them coming im a fan
ReplyDeleteAwesome, I'm loving the story just like the previous books
ReplyDeleteThanks for your story...I enjoy every installment. Take care!
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Came late to the books and the blog. Good stuff, gives the reader things to think about. Thanks Thomas.
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