ALONE: Book 3
THE JOURNEY
By Darrell Maloney
This is a work of fiction. All persons depicted in this book are fictional characters. Any resemblance to any real person, living or dead, is purely coincidental. Copyright 2015 by Darrell Maloney
This book is dedicated to:
Gwendoline Ann Lupson
Helen Basford
Linda Houghton Rymaszewski
Shannon Snyder
Gayle Jones
James Perry
Sometimes it’s the simple things, like kind words from friends, that give one the strength to go on.
A Recap of Book 1 of This Series,
ALONE: Facing Armageddon
Dave Speer had always been a planner. Dating back to his Boy Scout days, he took the motto, “be prepared” to a whole new level.
When he was twelve and a sudden cloudburst flooded the campsite at the annual camporee, scout leaders considered packing up and going home. Everything, including the matches, were soaked and heavily damaged. Leaders weren’t allowed to smoke at such events, or even carry lighters.
It was Dave, and not the leaders, who saved the day. He laid a sheet of glass over a pile of dead grass tinder so the afternoon sun would dry it while they were cleaning up from the rains. He climbed a tall tree and cut down a dead branch. A branch that had been hardened for so long it soaked up virtually no water. He used his Boy Scout hatchet to cut some of it into chunks of kindling. Some very thin, some a bit thicker.
The rest he made into firewood.
When the day drew to an end and the air turned cool it was Dave, and not his leaders, who used two sticks to spark the tinder. He built a roaring fire as though he’d done it every night of his life.
It wasn’t until the last day of the camporee, after he’d pretty much become everybody’s hero, that he made a confession:
“I smuggled in a lighter, just in case. It’s in my pack, in a waterproof zip lock bag.”
The Scoutmaster asked him, “Why didn’t you pull it out? It would have made things so much easier.”
He answered, “But then we wouldn’t have had such a great adventure.”
That’s the way Dave was.
Many years later, when he and his wife Sarah became convinced there were dark days ahead, he joined a subculture of society whose main mission in life was to prepare for Armageddon.
And to survive it.
They called themselves “preppers.” Every spare minute was devoted to talking through an endless series of “what if” scenarios.
One of their scenarios seemed much more plausible that the others. They’d seen a show on one of the cable channels and it piqued their interest.
It was about the Mayans, and the incredible things they were capable of doing without modern machines or technology.
Sarah was puzzled.
“How could they have identified the planets and their moons without telescopes? I look up and all I see is a bunch of lights. I can’t tell the stars from the planets. And most of the planets are too far away to see anyway.
“And how in the world did they predict earthquakes? Scientists can’t even do that today, even with all the fancy equipment they have.”
She was fascinated. And she had to find some answers.
For weeks, Sarah spent her evenings at the public library, researching the Mayans and their accomplishments.
In the end, she discovered two things. The first was that, contrary to what the public believed, the Mayans never said the world was going to end on December 21st in the year 2012.
What the Mayans actually said was that date would start a new era. An era they called “the last period of progress.”
The second thing Sarah discovered was that the Mayan’s predictions of some type of cataclysmic event had something to do with the mass failure of machines.
She explained to Dave, “The sun periodically has massive storms on its surface, which send huge electromagnetic pulses, or EMPs, to bombard the earth. The EMPs are invisible and harmless to most people. A strong one might cause a feeling of unease or even nausea among very sensitive people, but it’s only temporary and does no permanent damage.
“However, what it does to machines and electronics is something altogether different. Anything that has electronics or batteries will be shorted out forever. Anything with electrical wiring that is plugged into a power source will as well.
They began hoarding food and supplies. They discovered that by building something called a Faraday cage, they could protect a limited number of batteries and electronics.
They soon realized that prepping was a costly affair. So Dave took a part time job, and devoted each of the additional paychecks for the cause.
The one thing they couldn’t control, though, was the timing of the event. It never dawned on them that when the EMP finally came, they might not be together.
And fate would deal them a cruel hand.
On the very day Sarah took their two young daughters, Lindsey and Beth, on a trip to Kansas City, everything suddenly went dark.
Even worse, it happened at almost the exact minute their airplane was due to land at the Kansas City airport.
Dave was suddenly alone, in his suburban home in San Antonio, a thousand miles away.
He had no way of knowing whether his family was on time and landed safely. Or was running late and fell from the sky.
Over the following months Dave struggled to implement all the processes and projects that he and Sarah had planned to do together.
As people all around him were killing each other as well as themselves, Dave managed to stay alive. Hunkered down in a house he’d modified to look vacant. Whiling away the hours and days, trying not to think of the possibility his family might not have survived.
Dave kept a journal, in which he wrote to Sarah every few days. It was a diary, of sorts, and a testament to his love for her. Somehow, writing to her seemed to make him feel closer to her. As though her spirit was there with him when he wrote.
The journal had another purpose as well. If she and the girls somehow made it back to him, only to find out he hadn’t survived, it would tell them of his struggles. And let them know he never forgot them.
Dave had already resolved to set out in the spring to look for his family. It would be a long and arduous journey, and one which might have a heartbreaking conclusion.
But he had to do it. He’d plan well, be cautious and careful, and hope for the best.
First, though, he’d have to survive the worst winter in modern history.
A Recap of Book 2 of This Series,
AN UNKIND WINTER
With no internet and no Weather Channel Dave had no way of knowing, but San Antonio was suffering through its worst winter on record.
Dave counted 107 consecutive days of freezing nighttime temperatures, and began to wonder whether the EMPs had somehow shifted the earth’s climate patterns.
He remembered before the blackout, how scientists all over the globe screamed that the earth was getting warmer. That the polar caps were melting and polar bears were dying.
Dave couldn’t help but think that if the world was indeed getting warmer, it wasn’t doing a very good job of it.
At least not in San Antonio, Texas.
For most of the winter, Dave stayed up at night, hunkered in front of a fire in his tiny safe room. It wasn’t much bigger than a prison cell, and felt like one.
During the days, when the fire would have attracted unwanted attention to a house that was supposed to be vacant, he doused the flames and slept, cozy and comfy in two winter sleeping bags.
Oh, Dave wasn’t alone. Not technically. He shared his house with a dead burglar
named Mikey, and a couple of rabbits he named after his daughters.
Mikey was a good kid before the blackout who turned into a looter when his family died in a tragic accident.
Like Dave, he was all alone in the world.
Unlike Dave, he was totally unprepared.
It was while looting Dave’s house that Dave surprised Mikey and shot him. Mikey turned and Dave saw something shiny in his hand catch the light. He thought it was a weapon.
It wasn’t.
No jury would have convicted him, Dave was certain of that. Justifiable homicide, they’d have called it.
Still, Dave felt incredibly guilty about killing an unarmed seventeen year old boy.
Mikey stayed as a houseguest in Dave’s kitchen, in a seated position with his back against Dave’s cabinets, where he’d slumped when he died. He froze solid that way, and Dave had no way to bury him.
The ground, it seemed, was frozen hard as a rock as well.
He could have dragged Mikey’s body into the street, where he’d have joined other looters shot by homeowners and put on display and as a warning to others to stay away.
But Dave felt to do so would be wrong.
So he and Mikey became roommates. Temporarily, anyway, until the thaw allowed Dave to give Mikey a proper burial.
In due course, the two became friends, of sorts.
As Dave related to Sarah in one of his journal entries:
Mikey is the strong silent type. He doesn’t talk much at all. I think he has something to say, but he yields the floor to me because he knows I love to talk.
He just sits there most of the time, staring off into space. His expression never changes, but deep down inside, I know he finds my jokes hilarious and is trying not to crack a smile.
In fact, he hides his emotions better than anyone I’ve ever seen. I don’t think I’ll ever play poker against this guy. He’d clean me out.
Despite his quiet nature, I’ve decided that I like him. I’m sorry I killed him. If I hadn’t, I’m convinced we might have become friends.
In fact, I asked him if we could be buddies, since we’re apparently stuck with each other’s company for the next three months or so. He just looked at me, but didn’t say a word.
I’ll take that as a yes.
I think I’ll like having Mikey as a friend. With someone to talk to every day, I’m less likely to go insane.
As the harsh winter dragged on, Dave also developed a close friendship with an older couple two blocks away. Frank and Eva Woodard helped him in his efforts to share his seeds and rabbits with others.
For Dave, the gesture was therapeutic. He felt a need to give penance for having more than enough to eat, while others around him starved to death. Helping others eased his conscience.
The neighbors, on the other hand, considered Dave a saint. Word got around, and they even named him: the mysterious Rabbit Man.
Through Frank’s ham radio, Dave was able to find out that the area around Kansas City had been overrun just after the blackout.
Dozens of convicts from Fort Leavenworth Prison, northwest of the city, escaped and were still on the loose.
“But wait a minute,” Dave protested. “Those are just military prisoners. They’re just guilty of desertion and AWOL and stuff like that. They’re not really dangerous, right?”
He learned otherwise.
He learned that the escaped convicts ran the gamut from counterfeiters to murderers. And that many of them were brutal beyond belief.
Through Frank, he learned something else too. That FEMA and the National Guard were restricting travel between large cities to curb a crime wave in the rural areas.
He could no longer hope to travel to Kansas City without being detained.
The only bright spot, as the winter grew to a close, was Dave’s success in getting his vehicle running again.
It took a lot of work. He had to replace key components with undamaged parts he’d squirreled away in his Faraday cage. He also had to simplify the electrical system by bypassing anything that wasn’t reallyimportant.
Like lights, for example.
But he didn’t need lights. He planned to travel at night, blacked out, seeing his way along with the aid of night vision goggles.
As for the National Guard and FEMA’s order to stay off the interstate highways?
That didn’t deter him much.
As far as Dave was concerned, FEMA and the National Guard could get… well, they could mind their own business. Dave was going after his wife and daughters, whether the government liked it or not.
As so begins Book 3 of the saga…
THE JOURNEY
Chapter 1
“How else can we help you? There must be something we can do.”
Dave smiled at the older woman he’d come to know well in the weeks leading up to his departure.
He smiled and hugged her.
“You’ve done enough already. Both of you. You’ve given me someone to talk to, when I was all alone in the world. You quite literally kept me from going insane. You’ve become good friends. And that’s what I’ve needed the most lately. Good friends to show me that even though the world has gone to hell, there are still some things worth having.
“You’ve given me a reason to keep going on, at a time when I was dangerously close to ending it all.
“And you’ve renewed my resolve to make this journey to find my family.”
Frank Woodard put his two cents in.
“How in heck did we do that? If I had my way, I’d have been able to talk you out of it.”
“You don’t understand, Frank. When we became friends I was starting to have second thoughts about the whole thing. I was thinking that if Sarah and the girls had made it to Kansas City, then they were safely in the care of Sarah’s sister and brother in law. And they were being well cared for. And I began to wonder whether pulling them out of that safe environment would have placed them in unnecessary danger. Danger that they didn’t have to be in.”
“Makes sense. So how did we strengthen your resolve to go, then?”
“By telling me about the prison break. And about the dozens of dangerous men who were trapped in the area, unable to get out because they’re being hunted and because they have no transportation.
“No, I’m convinced that Sarah and the girls may be in peril. They may already be hostages. If that’s even the remotest of possibilities, then they need me now more than ever.”
Frank couldn’t hide the look of sadness in his eyes. Part of it was the thought of his new friend leaving, just as they were getting to know one another. He’d lost a lot of good friends lately, and he didn’t have many left.
But there was another reason Frank didn’t want Dave to go.
“Maybe I shouldn’t tell you this, Dave. You might consider me just a doddering old fool. But Eva and I have come to consider you almost a son. In fact, Eva, would you go get Jake’s photo?”
Eva nodded slightly and left the room.
Dave was suddenly puzzled.
Frank continued in Eva’s absence.
“We have a son. Jake is his name. His wife and children lived in Cibolo, not far from here. Stacey was her name. They had three beautiful children.”
Dave saw the tears forming in Frank’s eyes and knew the answer to his question before he even asked it.
“They didn’t make it?”
“They might have, if I’d gotten there sooner. The day after the blackout I borrowed a neighbor’s bicycle and rode to Cibolo. My neighbor, he’s a young fella, about your age. He said, ‘Just give me the address. I’ll go check on them.’ But I didn’t know their address. They’d moved a couple of months before, and we’d been to their house several times. I knew how to get there, but only by landmarks. I didn’t know the house number, or any of the names of the streets in their neighborhood. I told him I had to go myself.
“It took me two and a half days to get there. I didn’t ride very fast, but I’m an old man, and I had t
o stop and rest frequently.
“They were dead when I got there. All three of them. The kids, it looked like they were shot in their sleep. I pray each and every night that they went quickly.
“Stacey, on the other hand, had been savagely beaten and raped. They showed her no mercy.”
“And your son, Jake?”
“If Jake had been there, he’d have moved heaven and earth to prevent it from happening. He’d have fought them to his dying breath.
“But he wasn’t there.”
Eva returned to the room, clutching an eight by ten photograph that Dave wasn’t able to make out.
Frank was overcome by emotion and couldn’t continue.
So Eva did for him.
“Our Jake, he was always an adventurous sort. Like you, he joined the military when he was young. But he took a slightly different path. He signed up for four years in the United States Air Force.
“Jake was always good with his hands, and they made him a mechanic on F-15 fighter planes. We were so proud of him. They sent him to a base in a place called King Salmon, Alaska. He was to be there by himself for a whole year, but he was young and single and liked to hunt and fish, so he saw it as a great adventure.”
She started to choke up and looked to Frank, who continued the story.
“He was supposed to get thirty days leave after six months into his tour, so he could come back home to see us. But he called us up one day and asked if he could stay up there for the thirty days instead. He said that there were canneries in a nearby town called Naknek that only worked at certain times of the year. When the salmon were running, the canneries ran full speed, twenty four hours a day, and paid people really good money. He said that many of his friends were going to spend their thirty days to work at the cannery, and he wanted to join them.
“We said of course we’d miss him, but that it sounded like a once in a lifetime opportunity. So we told him to follow his dream.
“It turned out that he made more in those thirty days than the Air Force paid him for the entire year he was up there. More than thirty six thousand dollars. He put it in the bank, and when he finished his tour he paid off all his bills and paid cash for a brand new truck.
Alone, Book 3: The Journey Page 1