Out of the Ashes

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Out of the Ashes Page 17

by William W. Johnstone


  Ben fixed his dinner and turned in. His dreams were intense, waking him several times. They were mixed—about his parents, his brothers and sisters, Fran, and always, Jerre. And the dream of a free land, run by the people, always intermingled with the others. The Rebels, leaderless ... waiting.

  At first light, he drove over to Shaw Air Force Base, thinking surely, of all places, there would be life here; a military organized disciplined order to things.

  No one challenged him at the main gate. The door to the sentry hut banged and slammed in the wind; the lock was broken.

  The base was eerily silent, but there were no bodies to be seen. Ben drove around the huge complex, stopping at random to check buildings and barracks. Nothing. Finally, in a service club, Ben found four men playing cards. A general, a captain, and two sergeants. They did not seem at all surprised to see him. They tossed the deck of cards on the table, shook hands and introduced themselves, and invited Ben to sit down, have a drink. Booze was free.

  Drink in front of him, with the first ice Ben had seen since leaving Louisiana, he asked, “Is this it?”

  “Meaning all the life on this base?” the general asked. “Yep. What you see is what you get.”

  Ben told him what he was doing, attempting to do.

  “Very admirable of you,” the captain said. “But who in the hell is going to read it?”

  “There are a number of people still alive,” Ben told him. “Probably a lot more than we realize.”

  “Oh, sure,” the general said. “I figure maybe ... oh... twenty to thirty million here in the States. Hell, me and Jake here”—he jerked his thumb toward the captain—“have flown all over the States during the past six weeks or so—been in voice contact with hundreds of people. You know the Rebels are looking for you?”

  Ben nodded. “So I’ve heard.”

  “Don’t want to be their commander, huh?”

  Ben hesitated. “I ... don’t know.”

  “You must be something special for the Bull to put you in charge of the whole shebang.” Ben said nothing. The general grunted. “You know, probably, that when the military gets it all together—take another ninety to one hundred twenty days—that craphead Logan will be named president.”

  “So I heard. I can’t think of anything more appalling for the country.”

  “I agree.”

  “Then ... ?” Ben looked at the general.

  “Why Logan? Hell, it’s a joke, Raines. An ugly, profane joke. He’s the only one left, we think. He ran like a scared rabbit and ducked into a hole. The others went up with Washington and the suburbs. I flew over what’s left of our great boondoggle. It’s awesome, boy, awesome.”

  “Oh, come on, General! There has to be another senator or representative around . . . somewhere!”

  “Oh, sure. Of course. Let’s see.” He smiled, beginning a count on his fingers. “We’ve got that young fellow from Iowa—”

  “Senator Billing,” Ben said. “First-termer. O.K., General, I get the point. Logan is senior.”

  “That’s it. All the secretaries are gone. Every last one of them.”

  “Supreme Court?” Ben asked.

  “All gone ... as far as we know. They can’t be found.”

  “General,”—Ben leaned forward—“one of you people take over; don’t give it to Logan.”

  The general shook his head. “No way, Raines. No way. And we talked it over. There’s . . . twenty six generals and four admirals who came out of it alive—all branches of the service. And that includes retirees. Hell, we’ve got one so old he really thinks he’s on Corregidor, waiting for MacArthur to return. No one has the heart to tell him that was almost fifty years ago. I was two years old! No way, Raines.” The general smiled. “Besides, way I heard it, Logan has a plan for the U.S. to come out on top after this tragedy.”

  “Let me guess, General.” Ben’s tone was icy.

  “I figured you’d want a shot at it, boy.”

  Ben resisted an urge to tell the general he was no “boy.” The general, at most, was about six years older than Ben. But rank has a way of doing that to some men.

  “It wasn’t a double or even a triple cross Adams was pulling off—it was more than that.”

  “Keep talking.”

  “I always figured Logan was hiding something. I never did like or trust that man. He’s a pseudoliberal, isn’t he?”

  The general smiled.

  “The Bull won after all.”

  “No, Adams won,” the general said. “The Bull killed him, somewhere up in New York State, way I heard it. Logan was the mastermind behind the whole caper. The hitch came when the Rebels found out about Logan and Logan found out the Rebs were gonna shoot him if they ever got their hands on him. He is not a well-liked man among conservatives, son.”

  “Now, wait just a minute.” Ben held up his hand. “This is getting a little complicated. The Rebels didn’t know Logan was really behind it all?”

  “That’s the way I hear it. Neither did Colonel Dean ... until the very last, oh, eight or ten days before the balloon went up.”

  “But ... why would Logan hide his true feelings all these years? For what purpose?”

  “To be the most popular liberal in the world, Raines. Hell, the minorities loved him. He was a shoo-in for the White House. He only had the Rebels as a backup in case he lost. But everything went haywire: coups all over the world; a minor revolt in Russia; the Thunder-strikes; the Rebs in the sub.”

  “I see,” Ben said slowly. “He ... once he got into the White House, then he could show his true colors and with the military behind him—and something tells me they would back him—he would be more than president, wouldn’t he, General?”

  “He’d be king.”

  “Logan is going in to help all the poor third-world nations after he gets you people organized, isn’t he, General.”

  “It’ll take ... oh ... four to six years. Maybe eight.”

  “To colonize.”

  “Ugly word, Raines.”

  “The truth sometimes is, boy.”

  The general chuckled.

  “Adams couldn’t convince his people that Logan was really a good guy. His people wouldn’t buy it,” Ben conjectured. “And once Adams leveled with them about Logan, they refused to back Adams and Logan.”

  The general nodded his head, only once.

  “You were part of it, weren’t you, General?” Again, the nod.

  “But ... why?”

  “Oh, hell, Raines. Nobody really likes niggers or Jews or greasers. They’re all fuck-ups. They’re not equals. We’ll use them to serve us, work for us, but not side by side. And that isn’t my plan—that’s Logan’s plan.”

  “Separate but not quite equal, eh?”

  “More or less.”

  “It’ll never work, General.”

  The general’s face brightened. “Sure it will, boy. You don’t know the American people like I know them. Deep down, boy, we’re the master race. Besides, we’ve got the guns—most of them. And the military will be revered in our society—not like it used to be. Logan plans to resettle the people, reeducate them, kind of reprogram them, so to speak. All at the same time he’s offering the hand of good fellowship to the jungle-bunnies in Africa.”

  “Changing the subject momentarily, General—you don’t mind if I stall for a bit more time?”

  “Not at all, since you’re not leaving this club alive.” The general’s eyes were hard.

  Ben had figured that out all by himself. Under the table, he slipped the M-10 off safety, speaking just a bit louder to cover the metallic click. “How come, General, we survived, and so many others didn’t?”

  The cassette recorder was rolling, taping it all.

  “Good question, Raines. I’ve given it a lot of thought, and reached this conclusion: beats the shit outta me.”

  “For a fact, General, the truth: Russia and China?”

  “Gone. Hell, boy—you don’t think we actually destroyed all those nukes
, do you, back when the final SALT was signed? No way. There is nothing left, sonny. Human, that is.”

  “Fallout?”

  “We’ll be getting some—but don’t worry, you won’t be taking any of it. We won’t be taking much. Too many clean bombs used.”

  “You men in on the general’s plan to be part of the master race?” Ben asked the trio.

  “All the way, partner,” the captain said. The sergeants nodded.

  Ben pulled the trigger of the M-10, working the weapon from left to right, clearing the room of all living things in front of its stuttering muzzle.

  He rose from his half-crouch to look at the carnage he had wrought. They were all dead. He got into his truck and drove to the communications center of the base. He stood for a moment looking at the maze of electronic equipment. None of it looked familiar. He finally managed to turn on what he hoped was a radio transmitter and set the dial to 39.2. He keyed the mike and watched the VU meter jump with needle action.

  “Here goes nothing,” he muttered, then took a deep breath. “This is Ben Raines,” he spoke slowly. “I hear you people have been looking for me.”

  “How do we know you’re Ben Raines?” a voice jumped back at him. “We’ve had two dozen crank callers.”

  “How do I know you’re who you claim to be?” Ben challenged.

  “The Bull told us about the last time you two saw each other. He shouted something to you as he stood in the door. We know what he said. And if you’re Ben Raines, so will you. Do you remember those two words?”

  “Bold Strike,” Ben said.

  “Sorry, General Raines, sir. But we had to be certain. Lot of snooping going on.”

  “General!” Ben blurted. “Man, I’m not a general.”

  “Yes, you are, sir. Begging your pardon.”

  “I’d like to know just who in the hell told you that!”

  “Colonel Dean, sir.”

  “A colonel can’t make anybody a general.”

  “The Bull can—and did, General.”

  Ben released the mike button. “Shit!” he said. “Now what?” He pushed the mike button. “How ... ah ... do I scramble this thing?”

  “On which end, sir?”

  “Both ends!”

  “What is the number on the transmitter facing?” Ben looked, found about forty-eight different numbers. He settled on the largest number that seemed permanent.

  “Look to your left, sir,” the voice told him. “A switch with the word ‘scramble’ just above it. Flip the switch.”

  Ben looked. There it was. He felt like an idiot. “Some general I am,” he muttered. Keying the mike, he said, “Am I scrambled?”

  “Repeat sir.”

  Ben repeated.

  “Scrambled now, sir.”

  Ben informed the voice of what had just transpired in the service club.

  “Yes, sir. We know Logan is planning world-wide power play under the guise of a good-neighbor policy. But our immediate concern is: what do we do?”

  “Are you people nationwide?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Can you handle explosives?”

  “We can do anything with explosives, General.”

  “I am not your general!”

  “Yes, stir.”

  Ben sighed. He waited.

  “General Raines? Are you still there?”

  “Oh, for Christ’s sake!” Ben punched the mike button. “You wanna know what you can do? I’ll tell you: you can order your people to slip onto every military base in this nation and destroy every goddamned plane they find.”

  “Yes, sir, very good, sir. That will prevent Logan from getting the jump on us. We have men among us who can fly those planes, sir. Shall we take some for our use?”

  “What use!” Ben yelled.

  “For the defense of our nation, sir.”

  “What fucking nation!” Ben screamed.

  “The one the Bull told us you had planned. The one you used to talk about in ’Nam.”

  Ben’s sigh was long and frustrated. “By all means ... ah ... to whom am I speaking?”

  “Lieutenant Conger, sir.”

  “Fine. All right, Conger. If you people have places in ... ah ...”He closed the mike switch and thought for a few seconds, then said, “Idaho or Montana, take them there. Pick up anything you feel you might need along the way. Do you understand?”

  “Yes, sir!”

  With the mike closed, Ben said, “Goddamned yo-yo. That ought to keep them busy.”

  “General Raines?” The voice popped and snapped.

  “What!”

  “Where are you, sir? I need your location so I can send some personnel to guard you until you link up with us.”

  “Guard me? Goddamn it, I don’t need anyone to guard me!”

  The voice was silent for a few seconds and Ben was sure he had broken off transmission. “Yes, sir. You said General Ruther, sir? That’d be Shaw AFB. We’ll have our South Carolina contingent pick you up as soon as possible. I—”

  Ben began shouting into the mike, not knowing whether the man called Conger was off the air listening or still jabbering his nonsense. “Now, you listen to me!” Ben roared. “I am not—repeat—NOT your commander. I hereby appoint you, Conger, as commanding officer of the army of the Rebels, or whatever in the hell you’re called. Do you understand that?”

  “Affirmative, sir. But you can’t make me commander.”

  “Why the hell not?”

  “Because Bull Dean was my uncle. He gave his life for this country, and he said you were to command after his death. And, sir, that is that.”

  Ben knew when he was whipped. “Fine, Lieutenant, dandy. You have my orders. Carry them out. I’ll be in contact ... sometime.”

  He cut off the transmitter before Conger had the time to object. He looked at the radio and said, “I am not your commanding officer, son. Period. Good-by. Good luck.”

  Ben prowled the base until he found the ordnance hut. He broke open the building and began picking through the explosives. He was too rusty to trust himself if he used any type of timer, so he chose several crates of incendiary grenades and began the job of filling five-gallon cans full of high-octane jet fuel and pouring some around the line of jets on the tarmac. He then began the job of destroying the aircraft.

  When he had finished, he was covered with soot and hard of hearing from the booming explosions. This was one runway that would be a long time getting cleared and repaired.

  He then drove around the base, tossing grenades into every other building, and setting the base ablaze. He drove out the main gate, smiling. He said, “Fuck you, Logan.”

  Ben took highway 601 down to Orangeburg, then picked up highway 21. He spent the night in a home by the side of Interstate 95, about fifty miles north of Savannah. In the morning he would drive close enough to listen to CB chatter, then decide if he was going into the city.

  The next morning, after reviewing the talk on the CB, he decided he most definitely was not going into the city.

  He skirted the city, between Savannah and Fort Stewart, on Interstate 95. South of the city, he picked up highway 82 and once more began checking towns along the way, making notes into his recorder, and letting Conger and his band of reactionaries slip from his mind.

  Just a few miles outside of Jessup, at a roadside picnic area where he had stopped to eat a can of C-ration, Ben heard a growling. He turned slowly, picking up the M-10 with his right hand.

  At first he thought it was a wolf sitting in the bed of the truck, on a tarp-covered crate, and peering over the side at him. Ben took a closer look and could see its upturned tail. This was not a husky, he concluded, but a malamute, the largest of the breed. The dog looked to be about thirty-two inches high, about eighty to ninety pounds. Big. It was wolf-gray with a black mask area around its almond-shaped eyes.

  The animal yawned, exposing teeth that could tear a man to painful chunks of meat very quickly Then the malamute closed his mouth and looked at Ben. It was nei
ther friendly nor hostile, just curious. Ben dumped what was left of his C-ration into a piece of paper and placed it on the ground beside him.

  “Come on,” he said.

  The dog jumped from the truck and walked to the food, eating it in two bites. He looked up at Ben, as if asking, but not begging, for more. Ben opened another can and dumped that on the paper. The animal ate, then walked to the ditch beside the small park and enjoyed a noisy drink of water. His thirst quenched, he walked back to the truck, jumped up into the bed, and lay down, closing his eyes as if he had been doing that, on this truck, all his life.

  Probably belonged to someone who rode it around in a pickup truck, Ben thought.

  “Well,” Ben said, “if you want to ride, you can damned well ride. I’m not going to tell you to move.”

  The dog opened its eyes, looked at Ben, then went back to sleep.

  Ben policed the area, dumped his trash into a container, and got into the truck. He opened the sliding glass of the rear window, cranked up, and pulled out. After a few miles, the animal stuck his head through the window, looked at Ben, who was holding his breath; then licked Ben on the cheek. Ben rubbed the animal’s head and the dog barked happily, then settled back on the canvas.

  “Looks like I found a friend.” Ben grinned.

  So Ben and his new friend, whose name, Ben discovered, when he checked the tags on the collar, was Juno (probably, Ben thought, a shortened version of Juneau, Alaska), spent the day and the evening getting acquainted. And Ben and the dog took to each other. He had not had a pet since his boyhood days in Illinois and, after spending a little time with Juno, he wondered why he had not. He found Juno to be alert, probably no more than three years old, and seemingly intelligent.

  Ben’s sleep that night was deep and secure, for the animal was attuned to the night’s every noise. During the night, Juno had snuggled up to Ben’s sleeping bag, the closeness and warmth comforting to both man and beast.

  Lost a girl friend and found a dog. Ben smiled as he drifted off.

 

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