Jerry D Young
10-30-2011, 03:26 PM
Haroldsville
“Harold!” Lois yelled to her husband. “Get these boxes out of my kitchen!”
“Yes, dear,” Harold said with a sigh. “I was just taking a rest before I took everything down to the basement.” He set the glass of water down on the coffee table, making sure he used a coaster, and hurried back into the kitchen.
“I don’t know why you waste your money on all this nonsense,” Lois said, her hands on her hips as she waited for Harold to take the first of the three boxes down to the basement. “That better go on your side of the basement. I don’t want it cluttering up my side.
“Yes, dear,” Harold said again. “I sh… sh… should have used the outside entrance. I’m thorry. Uh… s… s… sorry”
“You should be. Now hurry up. I’m having my sewing circle over in a bit and I want this place spotless. And don’t start that stuttering and lisping. You always do that when you’ve done something wrong. I know you can control it. You do most of the time. I won’t be embarrassed by you when my friends get here.”
Harold took the first of the three boxes downstairs and set it on a bench in the unfinished side of the large basement. He hurried to move the other two boxes, and then remembered the water glass he’d left in the living room. Lois saw him, but didn’t say anything. Just gave him the evil eye, as he thought of that accusatory look.
A few minutes later Lois’ sewing club members began to arrive and Harold put in his required appearance for five minutes and then hurried down to the basement, making the right turn at the foot of the stairs to go into his side of the basement. He hadn’t stuttered or lisped, though it had been close. He still did both when he started stressing. Life with Lois tended to be stressing now.
He took a few deep breaths and drank half a bottle of water from the small fridge under the bench. He needed to be calm before he did what he planned to do next. When he was ready, Harold slid a tall cabinet to one side on silent rollers to expose a vault door set in the wall. Harold quickly worked the combination, spun the spoked handle to release the plungers to allow him to push the door open.
Harold walked down the short corridor that connected the vault room under the garage with the basement. Going over to a large upright safe, he opened it and stood there for a few moments admiring the contents.
Much to Lois’ disgust, Harold was a collector. But not of nice Art Glass like her. Of course her hobby did make it easy to buy her presents. Any piece of Art Glass was fine, as long as it was expensive.
Harold collected, among other things, quality firearms. Not just fancy ones, though he did have a few of those, but firearms that could be used. Working firearms. Even the fancy ones were quite useable.
He closed that safe and opened another. Where the first one held long guns, the second one held several hand guns, and box after box of ammunition, for the handguns as well as ammunition for the long guns.
Next to the two tall safes was a tall, wide, very heavy duty cabinet. Stacked on its shelves were more boxes of ammunition and reloading supplies, except for primers. A smaller cabinet held Harold’s large collection of primers for reloading.
Finally, there was another of the upright safes. It too Harold opened, just to gaze at its contents. Wasn’t really much to see. Mostly heavy cloth bags. Each bag weighed approximately twenty-five pounds and contained either $500.00 face value pre-1965 US silver dimes, quarters, or halves, which was approximately 360 ounces of silver content; or 300 ounces of US Gold Eagle Bullion coins in 1 oz, ½ oz, ¼ oz, and 1/10 oz sizes.
The only thing to really see was a shelf that held the odd lot of gold and silver coins Harold had, in plastic tubes, to make it easy to keep them sorted. This safe had a key locked inner compartment. Harold opened it, too, to take a look at the small, heavy plastic bags, each with a 1.00 carat to 1.05 carat round brilliant cut diamond rated IF clarity and D color, with attached GIA certificate of identification. Each was worth approximately $20,000 in the current gem market.
Harold hardly paid any attention to the cash stacked inside the compartment, next to the diamonds. Several bundles of every current circulating denomination. Satisfied now, Harold closed the last safe, feeling a bit silly at being so prideful of his wealth. He needed to work on that. Monetary wealth was fine. But you couldn’t eat it. Nor guns and ammunition. And it didn’t help people locked away in a safe.
Food and water, on the other hand, was something that everyone needed, on a daily basis. Harold had plenty of that, and added the three cases of MRE’s that had come in that day at his office. He seldom had anything prep related sent to the house. It upset Lois.
Harold wondered if his ‘Humanitarian Aid’ supplies he’d put up would help counter his pridefulness. He was well prepared for his and Lois’ continued existence, come what may, but fully one-fourth of what he had stored was for relatives, neighbors, and friends.
After adjusting his inventory on the computer, he printed out a copy and put it on the clipboard and tossed the previous copy. He pulled up the internet on the computer and checked the forums for new information. Wasn’t much new. Next he checked the satellite TV news channels. Same ol’ same ol’.
Harold unhooked and grounded all the antennas, turned out the lights, and left the vault room. There wasn’t much in the house for him to do with Lois’ sewing circle in sessions, so he went out the outside entrance to the basement, closing the heavy door behind him. It was counterweighted for ease of opening and closing.
He wondered why he was so restless as he checked the fuel levels in the tanks buried under the yard shed, the jerry cans inside the shed, and the wood pile behind the shed. The large coal bin was full to overflowing. Going inside the yard shed, he ran his hand down the neatly stacked shelves in the shed, looking at the large collection of prep related stores for yard and garden.
Everything in the greenhouse was just fine. There was nothing planted at the moment, but Harold had everything needed to start up a highly productive greenhouse garden, and conventional garden, in the greenhouse and garden support shed.
One end of the green house opened to the swimming pool enclosure. On the far side of the pool was the pool house with change rooms and a pair of shower baths. One room of the pool house held the pool pump and filter, along with plenty of treatment chemicals. It also contained a fire pump that could draw from city water, the garden well, or the pool. Everything was in order, as it always was. Harold saw to that. The pool house roof was covered with hot water collection panels, with enough PV panels to run the electric controls and pumps to keep the pool at a comfortable temperature year round.
The barbeque area was essentially a complete outdoor kitchen, set up, unbeknownst to Lois, as a canning and food preservation center. There was plenty of wood in the bins, with a dozen cords more stacked behind the yard shed, under a wide overhang of the building. The gas cook top portion of the barbeque center could burn natural gas, which was the norm, or be switched to propane, if needed. The propane tank was one of the fuel tanks buried under the yard shed.
Harold walked out to the garden area. It, like the greenhouse, had lain fallow since Harold had set them up. Manure from several horse owners and small farms had been incorporated every year since, with a cover crop put in and worked into the soil as well by one of the farmers that brought manure.
Strolling through the orchard next to the garden, Harold checked the condition of the fruit trees, nut trees, grape vines, and berry patches. The large hedge of thorny wild roses was doing as well as all the rest of the plants, having produced a huge crop of rose hips that fall. All the plants, well cared for by Harold’s professional gardener, were good producers.
Continuing his walk, Harold went up the other side of the house and stopped at looked at the three condenser units for the zoned HVAC system of the house. Next to them was the whole house standby generator. It had its own buried fuel tank near the fence on that side of the house.
Circling the rest of the way around the house, Harold walked into the six-bay detached garage. The finish gleamed on his ‘Cowboy Cadillac’ semi-truck based motorhome. So did the fiberglass of the MacGregor 26 motor sailor. Two bays were currently empty, and the other two were set up as a working home garage, with a lift and set of professional tools. There was a room in the garage almost as big as the bays that held repair and replacement parts, as well as large stocks of consumables. There were buried gasoline and diesel tanks with dispensers at one corner of the garage.
Putting a hand on the tall concrete wall that went around three sides of the place, the security it helped provide the place was almost palpable. The fourth side, facing the street and sidewalk, had a high security, high tensile steel vertical bar fence, set in a concrete base, to continue the security the concrete walls provided. Lois had protested the fence, at first, but it was more than decorative enough to satisfy her sense of aesthetics.
Harold finished his stroll in the attached four car garage. He religiously kept three of the bays pristine, so he and Lois could keep their respective vehicles inside, with plenty of room around them. The fourth bay was Harold’s workshop where he did his various projects and stored more of his supplies and equipment.
Feeling better just seeing everything and understanding he’d done just about all he could for come what may, Harold entered the kitchen through the garage and checked the refrigerator for a snack, knowing he didn’t really need one. Since there wasn’t one, anyway, he went to the den by the back hallway, avoiding the sewing circle.
He pulled up the Anderson plans on the computer and studied them. It was going to be a two million dollar house, and all his hints of building in safety features had fallen on deaf ears. He made the few changes in the plans the couple had asked for and e-mailed them to the document print house that would create the sets of blueprints.
Harold decided to take a look at the prep forums again, to see if there were any new stories or chapters of stories posted. He’d just been checking for news earlier. He found a couple of things he hadn’t read and did so, killing time until Lois’ group was finished. Lois always insisted they go out for dinner after one of the meetings. That was okay. Lois was a mediocre cook at best. She’d taken to serving the fancier heat and serve dishes when she cooked. Harold did at least half of the cooking, and cooked mostly from scratch. He didn’t feel like it that evening, either.
He waited patiently as Lois slowly ushered out her guests, and then took close to an hour to get ready to go out. Harold’s stomach had worked its way up from wanting something simple to premium surf and turf with a bottle of champagne and a real dessert with a drink to top it off.
Lois was a bit surprised when Harold asked her to drive, and suggested the restaurant he did. Sewing circle dinner was usually one of the nicer dinner houses. “You are in a mood, Harold. What’s going on? Did you have a good day at the office?”
Harold smiled, leaning back in the Cadillac’s soft leather upholstery. “More or less normal. I’m just especially hungry tonight. You know, I’m not sure I ate lunch. I can’t really remember.”
Lois didn’t respond, blending into the traffic expertly, the engine in the Cadillac more than equal to her aggressive foot. But Harold only winced once, when she cut across three lanes of traffic to make a right hand turn onto the street where the restaurant was located. She pulled into the parking lot a few minutes later and took one of the available handicap parking spots. Taking the handicap tag from the console she hung it on the rearview mirror.
Harold knew she no more needed the handicap permit than he did, but she had a very good relationship with her doctor, and he had signed off for it for her.
When he’d decided where he wanted to eat, Harold had made reservations. They were seated with only a couple of minutes of wait. Harold was enjoying himself. For whatever reason, perhaps Harold’s own attitude, Lois was open and talkative, vivacious as only she could be. It brought back the good times when they were first married.
They were eating their shared dessert when lightning flared outside the window and a tremendous clap of thunder sounded. Lois jumped slightly. When the power went off she gasped. “Harold?” she asked. Harold marveled at the little girl quality of her voice.
“Give it a few seconds, Honey,” Harold said, reaching over in the dark to take her hand in his. She was shaking.
Moments later the emergency lights came on and Lois began to relax. “Sorry, Harold,” she said, pulling her hand from his. “Don’t know what came over me. I’m not usually frightened by storms.” She was back to her current self.
“It was quite a flash and bang,” Harold replied. The wind had picked up and a hard rain was blowing against the window.
“I’m ready to go,” Lois said, her voice firm. The earlier mood was gone.
Harold signaled for the check and the server hurried over. She looked a bit frazzled. “Will that be all, sir?”
“Just the check,” Lois said. “And make it snappy.”
“Yes, Ma’am,” the young woman said.
“Don’t call me ‘Ma’am,’” Lois barked. “I’m not old enough for you to be using that term for me!”
The server hurried away, tears in her eyes. Harold thought about saying something, but decided it would only make things worse. He’d fix it on the bill. Lois was nearly incensed when the server came back with the check and said, “I’m afraid our credit card machine isn’t working, with the power out.”
Harold left a short note of apology and a hefty tip with the cash in the check holder. He held Lois’ chair for her as she got up and asked, “Would you prefer that I drive, Dear?”
“I am perfectly capable of driving in the rain, Harold!”
Deciding, as always, that acquiescence was the best way to handle Lois’ now quite frequent outbursts, Harold said, “Of course, Dear. My apologies.”
Usually a very aggressive driver, Lois was hesitant on the way home, running one traffic control signal red light due to inattention, and waiting at a green light until someone honked at her, causing her to hit the accelerator even harder than normal, the big engine in the Cadillac squalling the tires on the wet pavement.
The gate opener and then the garage door opener both worked, and the outside illumination lights came on when Lois pulled up. The automatic switchover to the generator had happened as designed. Their house was the only one in the cul-de-sac that had lights showing.
As soon as they got inside Lois told Harold, “I’m going to bed. I plan on sleeping late in the morning. Fend for yourself.”
Harold simply nodded and went about checking the house the way he usually did before turning in himself. As always, everything was secure. He went to his bedroom. Since he tended to sleep warm, often with nothing but a sheet over him, and Lois slept cold, needing two blankets as well as the sheet and comforter, they had been sleeping in separate bedrooms for years. Only when Lois was in the mood did she come to Harold’s bedroom.
With a soft sigh Harold slid between the sheets and turned his mind off, hoping for sleep to come quickly.
Lois was true to her word. She didn’t make an appearance the next morning when Harold got up, prepared for the day, and went downstairs to fix his own simple breakfast. He was partial to granola cereal and, often now, had it with milk and a cup of coffee on the mornings Lois didn’t get up. He ate the cold cereal while he watched the news on the kitchen TV.
The storm had raged all night and the skies were just clearing up as Harold took a stroll around the back of the property, coffee cup in hand. Everything had survived the storm without problem.
Harold pulled his SUV out of the garage a few minutes later. When he drove past his nearest neighbor’s house he saw lights blink on. Apparently the power had come back on. He wasn’t worried about the house generator. The controls would delay a few minutes and then shut the generator down, switching back to commercial power automatically.
Harold was watching the news in his office during his lunch some three weeks after the storm. Global warming was in the news again, in a big way. The mildest winter in generations was expected for North America. And the driest.
After working on a set of plans for a small home in one of the St. Louis suburbs, Harold leaned back in his button tufted leather executive chair. His hands behind his head, Harold mulled over the probable future. The plans he’d just finished had originally incorporated several preparedness related features. They had fallen by the wayside one by one as the couple switched from safety to luxury in their thinking.
He couldn’t push his ideas on anyone, but provided the opportunity to every one of his clients to build a home suited for a very unstable future. Extra insulation was one thing. He seldom had trouble getting the R-factor for walls and roofs up. The same couldn’t be said for windows. When it came to doubling the R-factor of windows, people began to balk. They wanted marble Jacuzzi tubs instead.
With a shake of his head Harold stood up and left the office. “Might as well check out the lead on that property,” he said aloud. He started the Cadillac Escalade ESV and headed out of the city.
Harold did have one client considering preparedness issues. Sort of. He’d replied to the man’s posts on one of the prep forums, answering some questions about building a small home set up for a prepper’s lifestyle. The man had given a link for the real estate agency handling the sale of the land. The land was a few miles from I-44, out near Onondaga Cave. The real estate agent was in Sullivan.
It didn’t take long to find the agent’s office when he got to Sullivan. She had to make some quick arrangements to cover the small office so she could take Harold out to the property. Harold was headed for his Escalade ESV when the real estate agent said, “We’d better take mine. It’s a bit rough where we’re going.”
Assuming she just didn’t want him to get the rig dirty, Harold smiled and walked over to her Jeep. It wasn’t a rock climber, but it was far from stock. And it was rather battered looking. After climbing in, Harold fastened the five-point harness, beginning to wonder just what he was getting himself into.
He didn’t doubt that the Escalade ESV could have made the trip, but it not only would have been dirty, it would have been scratched up to no end from forcing its way through brush and brambles.
“It’s sixty-two acres, and this is the only way in,” Anna Fitzgerald told Harold when they reached a sign nailed up on a tree that said “No Trespassing and No Hunting”. “The access is deeded, so that isn’t a problem. Are you sure you want to get out?” she asked Harold when he unbuckled the harness. “Those dress clothes won’t stand up well out here.”
“I see that,” Harold said, stepping out of the Jeep into ankle deep wet leaves. Anna had put on hiking shoes and followed Harold as he walked deeper into the property. “There is a small spring over here that you will have to contend with,” she said, pointing toward a bench that dropped off almost fifteen feet when Harold got to it.
He could see the glint of the sun on the small stream the spring fed, and hear the slight noise the water made running over the rocky streambed. “There are a couple of restrictions that go with the land. They won’t let you do much with the spring. Just a bit below where it emerges from the rock, if you cut the maximum number of trees the restriction will let you, is probably the best view. You’d have to pipe the runoff from the spring around the home and put it back into the original streambed.”
Harold just nodded. “And back here?” he asked after looking in the other direction for a few seconds.
“The ground rises for a ways and then slowly drops away toward the State Forest land.”
Heading that way, Harold decided he’d sacrifice the shoes he was wearing. They’d be a lost cause if he investigated much more of the property. But he wanted to see more. He traipsed over more of the property, going down to get a closer look at the spring, before going back to the Jeep.
He noticed something about it a little out of the ordinary. On a hunch, he went back to Anna’s Jeep, where she was waiting, talking on her cell phone, and asked, “Not any caves to fall into here, are there? This is cave country, after all.”
Anna closed her phone and shook her head. “You don’t have to worry. Almost all of this area has been mapped and cave openings closed off for safety.”
Harold nodded and said, “That’s good. I guess I’ve seen enough.” He got back into the Jeep and buckled up once more.
As soon as he got back to his office he got on the Internet and PM’ed the man interested in the property.
It was two days before the man responded. Harold couldn’t say he got the reply he was hoping for, because he really did want to help the guy. The reply indicated that the man was no longer interested in the property. He’d found something else.
Harold didn’t know he was smiling so largely when he dialed the real estate agent’s number. Never one to pay more than necessary, Harold made a counter offer to the listed price. It was another three days before the agent called him back and said the buyer had accepted.
First Harold had a copy of the original owner’s CC&R’s for the property faxed over, and then hired a surveyor to confirm and mark the boundaries of the property. Next he looked for and found a firm that did underground survey work with ground penetrating radar.
After reading the CC&R’s, Harold decided that the real estate agent had put the worst spin on the restrictions, probably due to not even having read them. There were restrictions that went with the land, including one about the spring’s natural flow. The preliminary plan that had come to Harold when he saw the spring was easily doable under the restrictions.
Another of the restrictions was that if any trees were removed, other than diseased trees, at least two additional trees had to be planted, except, one-for-one planting was okay if the planted tree was a fruit or nut tree. That worked right into Harold’s burgeoning plans for the property.
He made arrangements to have a water well driller check the property and give an estimate on a well. Likewise a plumber specializing in difficult septic systems. The spring was going to complicate the placement of the septic system. And, if the ground radar proved Harold’s hunch about a concealed cave on the property, it would also have to be taken into account.
Knowing he was getting ahead of himself, Harold went ahead and ordered fruit and nut tree seedlings and saplings to be transplanted when he had an area cleared for them. He would be selectively thinning the forest somewhat, besides clearing a couple of areas. There was a great deal of brush growing under the tree canopy and Harold wanted it removed. It was a huge fire danger.
The decision to where the main open area would be would be made after the surveys for water and sewer. Harold wasn’t too concerned about a ‘view’ that the real estate agent had been pushing.
Again, even before the papers were signed, Harold ordered a custom concrete monolithic dome style garage large enough for the motorhome.
After the flurry of activity of making the arrangements, assuming he would get the property, things slowed down on the project. It was the following spring, on an unusually hot day that early in the year, when things began to heat up in other ways, as well. The deal was closed and Harold took title of the property.
The lumbering firm started the tree cutting, with the first cutting making space for the well drilling rig to get in to do the water well. The plumbing company showed up the next day, to install the oversized septic system Harold had requested. The cave had been confirmed by ground penetrating radar, and a specialty earthmover was there to form an access point for it. Two days later the firm that would build the garage showed up with their equipment.
Harold, closing the office for a few days, took the motorhome to the property to keep an eye on the proceedings. Lois took the opportunity to go visit her mother for a few weeks.
With flashlight in hand, Harold investigated the cave, such as it was, going down a ladder placed down the hole that had been cut and blasted through the ridge of rock that covered the cave. There was only the one large chamber the radar had indicated. Roughly thirty feet long, ten feet high and sixteen feet wide, the chamber was slick rock, the roof slightly narrower than the floor, and higher at one end than the other.
Harold discovered the source of the spring coming from the bench. At least the local source. There was a large wet area on the tallest end of the chamber, constantly dripping water to a small pool at the base. A shallow channel ran along the side of the chamber, disappearing into the rock at the shortest and narrowest end.
Having read up on caves and the way they formed, Harold decided that there had been a small pocket of limestone that had slowly, over the millennia, dissolved away from the action of the seep of water that had probably first come through a tiny crack from the wet wall to the exit wall, starting at the top of the chamber and making it larger as time passed.
The floor of the cave was relatively flat, with some high and low spots. The walls and roof were smooth, but rather ‘wavy’, as Harold thought of them.
The air wasn’t musty, so there were some points in the cave that allowed air to circulate. He couldn’t see anything specific, but Harold knew they had to be there. With the constant flow of water, small as it was, the cave would have been damp if there wasn’t air flowing through it.
He noticed one ragged crack in the wall near the outlet of the water and put his hand up to it. Sure enough, there was air movement against the back of his hand. Working his way around the perimeter of the chamber, doing the same thing, Harold found at least one source for the air coming into the cave. Like the crack near the water exit, there was a similar one just above the almost perfectly round wet face of the end wall. Air was coming from it.
After orienting himself, Harold climbed out of the cave, and went exploring above ground. He found the air outlet near the spring outlet. If one looked very closely, a tiny movement of the leaves of a vine growing on the face of the bench could be seen.
Going to the other end of the cave, above ground, Harold looked around. He couldn’t see anything at all that could be the air entry point. He looked up the slope. It could be anywhere. Probably on the other side of the ridge line. No telling where the water was coming from, either. One of the small rivers common to the area was probably the source, though the aquifer that led to the cave.
All-in-all, Harold was happy with his discovery. He sketched out how he wanted the entrance covered, and where he wanted another entrance made. It cost him some expense for the down time as one contractor did the work before the garage builder could get to his work. But when the work was done, the big entrance was hidden in the garage floor, with wide steps going down into the cave, and a smaller hole, with a permanent ladder installed, hidden under several slabs of the naturally occurring rock in the area. The escape tunnel, as Harold thought of it, was well into the woods that would be left standing around the small clearing.
Once the processes were started, Harold went home, and back to work, checking on the progress of the various contractors every week or so. The well was finished first and turned out to be a good one. The water was clear, cold, slightly hard, but not contaminated by any pathogens. As good as could be asked for. Harold would use a softening system, on general principles, though it probably wasn’t necessary.
A solar pump was installed, with a PV panel and dedicated battery, the discharge piped to the same cistern that held the water collected from the garage structure.
The septic system, after what turned into a rather heated argument between the contractor and the plumbing company owner, was finally finished, oversized just the way Harold wanted it, against the plumber’s objections that it was wasted money for a hunting camp. That was what Harold was telling people he was building. It was true, in part. Harold had decided to take advantage of the surroundings and learn to hunt.
Harold, and the workmen on the site, found one of the few drawbacks of the place. Even with the thinning of the trees going on, the area would still be considered heavily forested. The wind blew in the tops of the trees. Not much reached the surface of the ground.
With temperatures often above one-hundred-degrees Fahrenheit, working conditions on the property were rather miserable. With Harold’s permission, the various contractors got together and rigged up a misting system using the cold well water to provide a cooling station the workers could use to avoid heat illnesses.
Harold’s business, always steady, since he was very good at designing homes that fit individuals’ lifestyles, began picking up, mainly in his specialty line of designs. Those designs being for people uncertain about their security in the future. He had three preppers’ homes in the design stage that summer. He usually had one, sometimes two, a year.
The weather forecasts, more particularly the climate forecasts, called for more heating. Global warming, whatever the actual cause, was accelerating. Despite the problems seacoast cities were beginning to have with rising sea levels, there was a large element of society that welcomed the increased arable acreage and longer growing seasons.
The thrust toward bio-fuels had initially hurt the production of grains for human consumption, but that was changing. There was more than enough production to go around now. For the moment.
There were losses from the heat, and extended spells of drought in places. But there were many other places that the increased rainfall produced because of the high evaporation rates over the oceans increased production by anywhere from ten percent to fifty percent. Prices dropped as availability increased, but not by much. Farmers were raking it in. If they lived in the right spot at the right time.
Along the Mississippi River, from St. Louis south, the increased rains had created constant flooding problems. Efforts were being made to put in new, higher dikes, further away from the river, to create a flood plain that could contain the massive quantities of water going down the river.
But people were suffering in some other areas from the heat and drought. The Phoenix megalopolis, during the summer Harold was building his hidden retreat, stayed over ninety-five degrees Fahrenheit at night, and over one-hundred-ten during the day for ninety-three straight days.
There were several heat related deaths every day. That number jumped when the power grid went down from huge overloads of the electrical system due to air conditioning loads.
Extreme desert conditions became the norm for Southern California, the Southern tip of Nevada, all of Southern Arizona, Southern New Mexico, and into the western tip of Texas. The always on the books water rights wars began to get out of hand, the people involved leaving the courtrooms to go to the riverbanks, guns and knives in hand. That summer alone, seven people died violent deaths because of water rights issues.
Then the Gulf Stream submerged beneath the freshening North Atlantic, from off the Carolinas northward. The New England area, Eastern Canada, and Western Europe couldn’t tell the difference until the winter after the record breaking summer.
While the rest of the country enjoyed a mild winter, those northern areas around the North Atlantic, their weather tempered for centuries by the Gulf Stream, set record lows. With the oceans pumping moisture into the atmosphere many times more than the old norm, snow levels were in the tens of feet in some places. People died by the hundreds when the ample supplies of fuel oil simply could not get delivered.
By the end of that winter, Harold had either moved what he wanted from the house to his new retreat, or had purchased additional equipment and supplies just for it. There were stacks of firewood all over the property and Harold dropped a few dollars on a Bobcat 5600T Toolcat utility vehicle. He used it to haul the firewood from the remote locations to the retreat compound, a few loads each time he was there. It also gave him a way to travel over all of the rather rough property.
With the garage nearly impenetrable, short of explosives or sophisticated tools, Harold had a few amenities installed in the garage, for when he brought the Escalade ESV instead of the motorhome. Plenty of space was left for the motorhome, the Toolcat, and one other vehicle.
The bad weather took a back seat in the news when the mainstream media got onto the story of a Near Earth Object projected to cross Earth’s orbit in less than three years. About the time Earth was at that same point in the orbit.
Harold was glad he’d made his preps before the panics. ‘Survivalism’ took on yet another meaning, this one closer to the original positive one of the seventies. Of course there were those that claimed that it was various Gods’ wills, and wanted people to surrender their possessions and go to their end in repentance.
After Harold openly advertised prepper friendly home designs his steady business boomed to the extent of hiring a couple of recent drafting school graduates to assist him in the production of designs. Harold supervised every one of them, but much of the tech work was done by the two new employees.
He and Lois were spending less and less time together. That abruptly changed after the two drafting techs were hired. One of them was a woman. A very good looking younger woman. Lois did not like it very much.
At first, Harold thought his wife had just taken an interest in his work, since the weather and the NEO were in the news often. But when Catherine mentioned, in passing, that Lois didn’t like her working for Harold, did the light dawn on Harold. Lois was jealous. That was remarkable, in and of itself. Her displaying it was even more remarkable.
Harold decided to take advantage of it, to try to get the closeness back in their relationship that had faded over the years. Lois became even more suspicious initially, thinking Harold was trying to cover up something, but finally relaxed after Catherine began wearing a wedding ring to work. Catherine never actually said she had married, but the presence of the ring was enough for Lois to go back to her normal routine and attitudes. Harold began to wonder how much longer their relationship would last.
Harold threw himself into his work. Lois still checked on him from time to time when he called to tell her he was working late, but Catherine was never around when she got to the office, ‘to bring him something to tide him over until dinner’.
Every chance he got he went to the Retreat, to get away from Lois and the oppressive heat of another record breaking summer. Since the garage was earth-bermed concrete, it stayed relatively cool, but the cave was even more so. He had a thermometer mounted on one wall of the chamber. It never varied much from sixty-two degrees Fahrenheit. It would climb perhaps a degree from his body heat in the small space, but drop right back down to sixty-two when he left the cave.
The water passing through was only fifty-six degrees, the same temperature it was when it exited as the spring. Despite being fairly sure the cave wouldn’t flood, since it hadn’t even during some of the furious thunderstorms in the region that were now common place, Harold had built everything up off the floor of the cave, just in case.
He had also purchased enough heavy polymer plastic pallets to cover the floor so he wasn’t walking on the cold, rough floor, trimming the pallets to sit level, rather than chiseling the rock to make the floor level.
After bringing in a large, shallow, steel bowl he’d had made, into the cave along with some wood, Harold started a fire. Once he was sure it would burn and not set off the carbon monoxide alarm, he went outside to see if he could see any smoke coming out of the ground near the spring.
His nose twitched. Harold could smell the smoke, barely, but it wasn’t visible. “Good!” Harold said, satisfied with his experiment. He stocked the shelter with firewood and kindling for his fire bowl, bringing down the accessories he’d had made for it. They included a spit, swing arms for pots, a swing around griddle, and a swing around grill. He felt like a kid equipping a hidden cave, for the fun of it. He certainly wasn’t a kid, but he sure was equipping a hidden cave, just for the fun of it, since the earth-bermed garage provided the security he wanted.
The social unrest because of the weather extremes and the possible impending NEO impact, made its terrifying way to Harold’s home late that fall. It was still in the low nineties at Halloween and people were restless. Though there probably many children out and about Trick-or-Treating, hopefully accompanied by adults, there were far more adults, costumed or not, roaming the streets Halloween evening and into the night.
The crossover rural/suburban enclave where Harold lived was a gated community, though only fenced along the county road. It was hilly terrain, heavily wooded, with large wedge shaped lots build around a series of cul-de-sacs.
People did get turned around in the area, if they didn’t live there, but that was usually a relative or delivery person looking for a specific address. When you had an Oak Street, Oak Lane, Oak Place, Oak Circle, Oak Way and about three more Oak-named roads it was fairly easy to get turned around.
While there was never any evidence the mob that came through Halloween night targeted the complex specifically, it was the one that came under violent attack by the mob turned angry. It was probably just the time and place of the situation. When the mob reached the boiling point they were at the entrance of the enclave.
It was a sign, to the mob, of wealth and advantage. There’d been some local, fortunately small, brush fires nearby, and the fact that the enclave had a private paid fire station located near the gated entrance, in easy view of the county road, seemed to set the mob off.
After smashing the small gate kiosk, the now raging mob attacked the fire station, setting all three of the fire vehicles on fire while holding back the firemen until there was nothing for them to do but watch the fire burn itself out. Moving on, the mob hit the cul-de-sacs at random, starting more fires and throwing Molotov cocktails at some of the houses, as well as anything else small enough to throw and still do damage to the houses.
“What is going on?” Lois asked, stepping out onto the small front porch of the house. “It sounds like a mob.” she said, turning to look at Harold as he joined her.
“Lois, I think you might be right,” he said after a few seconds of hearing the shouting, some screams, and then the sight of flames coming from a cul-de-sac two over from theirs.
“Get inside,” Harold said, “Quickly,” taking Lois’ arm rather roughly to pull her inside.
“I beg your pardon!” Lois said, jerking her arm free of Harold’s grip. “How dare you manhandle me that way?” She was incensed. But Harold was already headed into his den.
Harold began to flip switches on a control panel, and activated several cameras that displayed in a grid on a large video monitor.
“Harold, I demand…” Lois said, coming into the den, ready to lambaste him for his actions.
But Harold said, “Lois! Look at this!”
Frowning, Lois moved around so she could see the monitor. It was like something out of a bad Halloween monster movie. There weren’t any fiery torches, but there were plenty of people with flashlights and lighters. Many were in costumes. They all seemed to be shouting. What, Harold wasn’t sure. The external microphones were on, but the noise was incomprehensible. It was just shouts and screams of anger.
Harold was watching various indicator lights and finally eased his position. “I’ve got us locked down, now Lois. We’ll be all right.”
Lois, watching the scene on the monitor was beginning to realize the danger they were in. “Harold?” she asked, turning frightened eyes on her husband.
“Come on, sit down. We’re okay. I’ll get you a drink.”
Lois couldn’t take her eyes off the monitor. She took the drink Harold handed her without looking. But then she looked up at Harold again. “What are we going to do?” She was nearly hysterical.
“Lois, please. Don’t worry. You know I built this house so we would be safe. I’ve turned out all the outside lights and the security shutters are closed on all the doors and windows. The fence is there. We’ll be fine.”
Lois didn’t look convinced. She turned back to the monitor. Harold sat down beside her and worked the remote control of one of the cameras. The mob had skipped the first house on the right in the cul-de-sac. Harold’s and Lois’ house was the next one.
Harold was calling 911 on his cellular as he operated the camera controls with his other hand. “Yes. There is a riot… Okay. Please don’t take too long,” Harold said and folded close the phone.
Lois looked at him. “They already know and have a riot control team on the way,” Harold told his wife.
Both of them looked back at the monitor. The security fence seemed to have thrown the mob into an even deeper rage. People were throwing everything they could get their hands on at the house. Harold had designed the space from the front fence to the house so only a professional baseball pitcher had any chance of hitting the house with anything that might damage it.
Harold couldn’t figure out where the Molotov cocktails were coming from, but two were lighted by the mob and given to the best throwers. The Molotov’s fell short, but the gasoline began to burn brightly.
Hitting another switch, the front yard sprinklers came on, dousing the fires in moments. It infuriated the mob even more. A human pyramid was built against the security fence and two men climbed up and jumped down on the house side of the fence. They were tossed two more Molotov’s and they lit them in turn. Running forward, they waited until they got close to the house without anything happening to them other than getting wet from the sprinklers, and then threw the Molotov’s. Both hit the brick façade of the house and burst into flames.
A flick of another switch and the under eave sprinklers came on, again dousing the flames. Harold finally turned on the outside lights and spoke into a microphone attached to the control panel.
“You better leave before someone gets hurt. The police are on their way.”
Harold’s announcement over the outdoor speakers didn’t seem to affect the mob one bit. With the lights on now, the fact that the doors and windows had security shutters closed on them became known. More people started to climb the pyramid to get into the yard.
“Harold?” Lois asked, looking at him with worried eyes again.
“Stay calm,” Harold said. He reached into one of the desk drawers and pulled out a handgun and two spare magazines. He slipped the magazines in one pocket and the pistol in the other.
“Go into the bedroom and lock the doors. Don’t come out until I come get you.”
“But…”
“Do it, Lois! Please. I don’t think there is much danger, but I’m not going to take a chance with your life.”
Lois hurried off and Harold turned back to the monitors. He’d taken the gun out to comfort Lois, not intending to use it. It would take anyone hours to break into the house without some serious tools or explosives.
Harold’s attitude changed suddenly. Someone in that mob had a gun. Harold saw the flashes at it was fired several times. He heard the sounds of the gunshots on the control panel speaker.
“Back away before someone gets hurt!” Harold’s amplified voice startled the people into immobility. For an instant. Then the advance continued, as did shots from outside the fence. He wasn’t worried about the shots. All the exterior walls were the Skousen design. They’d absorb any rounds that penetrated the reinforced brick façade. But it annoyed Harold no end.
He had a whole book of options up his sleeve, but he went with a less-than-lethal one. He turned on the high intensity pulse strobes and triggered the disruptive sound speakers. He watched on the monitors as people staggered around, temporarily blinded and deafened by the riot control system.
Those of the mob inside the fence ran toward it again, trying to get away from the light and sound. But they couldn’t get over the fence without the human pyramid to assist them. Harold took a chance, a slight one he thought, and released the small sidewalk gate. One of the mob finally saw it and guided the others to it and off the property.
Harold closed and locked the gate remotely, and turned off the disruptive lights and sound system. It was as people began to scatter that the riot squad showed up, with two police helicopters in support.
After putting away the pistol and magazines, Harold shut down the other security systems, the illumination lights first and the sprinklers second. Next the security shutters were raised or lowered, depending on the individual window treatment. Then he triggered the driveway gate to open.
Harold went to the front door, turned on the porch light and stepped out onto the porch, his hands in the air. “Thank you for showing up when you did,” Harold said, as the police officer approached him with gun drawn, aimed at Harold. Harold didn’t like that much, either, but he didn’t do anything about it.
“What’s your name?” asked the officer.
Harold told him.
“You live here?”
Harold told him.
“What’s the address here?
Harold told him.
“Anyone else here?”
“My wife is in the bedroom safe room.”
“Anyone hurt?”
“No.”
“Any damage?”
“Won’t know until in the morning when I can take a look. Some bullet holes, I expect. I heard shots and saw the muzzle flashes.”
The officer began to relax. “Had to be sure you were you.” He holstered his gun, finally.
Harold looked over the officer’s shoulder. It was more of a madhouse now than before, with the riot squad trying to chase down and hold some of the mob. They weren’t having much success.
“They seemed to be breaking up when we got here. You have any idea why?”
“I turned on the outside lights and used a PA system to tell them that you guys were on the way.” It was the truth. Not all of it, but the officer didn’t ask for any details.
“Any clue as to what got them started?” Harold asked the officer, who was scribbling rapidly in his report book.
“The heat, I guess,” replied the Officer, not looking up from his report. “Something sure did. They left a trail of disasters from the front gate house to your place. You’re lucky they didn’t have a chance to do more damage.”
“That’s the truth,” Harold agreed. His stutter and lisp were trying to come back, but he controlled his voice carefully.
“Can you identify any of them?” the Officer asked after more writing.
“N… No, I’m afraid not. It was dark mothst of the time, and none of them got that close.”
“Read this and sign it,” the Officer handed Harold the report book, looking at him curiously.
Harold couldn’t make out half of what was written. The man’s penmanship was almost nonexistent. But he signed it and handed the book back to him.
Tearing out a copy of the report, the Officer gave it to Harold, along with one of his cards. “If you think of anything else, call me or the station.” With that, he was gone.
Harold watched the mop up activities for a while from the front porch, but suddenly remembered Lois. He hurried upstairs and knocked on the door. It took him three tries before she would open the door.
He had a key, of course, but didn’t want to use it and startle her. Finally she opened the door. Lois didn’t hesitate when Harold held his arms open. She stepped right into them and cried for a while.
Harold got her another drink after she calmed down. Lois finally looked over at Harold and said, “I’m fine, now. I’m going to bed. Make sure you set the security alarm.”
It was a dismissal and Harold knew it. He’d heard many like it. Lois hated showing any weakness and was always somewhat angry after she did.
Two days later the same officer that he’d talked to the night of the riots came by the office. “I need you to come to the station with me.”
Harold’s eyes narrowed. “Why?”
“Some of those we managed to arrest are accusing you of attacking them. The ADA wants to talk to you.”
“Me attack them?” Harold shook his head. “Back just a few months ago I would think you were kidding me. Not now. You aren’t going to handcuff me, are you?”
The Officer shook his head. “You aren’t under arrest. They just want to talk to you to straighten this out. Victims have rights, you know.”
“Some victims,” Harold started to say, but held his tongue.
When the ADA finally called him into the office after an hour’s wait, Harold repeated the things he’d told the original officer, almost verbatim.
“You say you turned on your security lights and used a PA to warn them that the police were on the way?”
It was exactly what Harold had just said. “Yes,” Harold said anyway.
“Do you understand that the defendants in the disorderly conduct case say your lights and PA caused them pain? What do you say about that?”
“What is there to say? Some people are more sensitive than others. Look. That group of people threw four Molotov cocktails at my house, and fired I don’t know how many rounds into it. And they say I did something to them?”
“We have to investigate these matters. Criminals have rights, too.”
“So I’ve heard. Is that all?” Harold was getting angry, which he didn’t want to do.
“I suggest you watch your step. Do not contact any of these people in any way. We will call you to testify in their case, if we need you.”
Harold left without saying anything else.
The process took months and the hooligans were released without any punishment, having spent only part of the one night in jail. A week later the night time shots at the house started. Harold reported every one of them. After the third shot in two weeks, he began keeping the security shutters closed on the front of the house, and set up a camera to watch the cul-de-sac roundabout.
The police did send a car to check the house from time to time, but the shots only came after the police had been there. Despite the tapes with the vehicle in clear view getting turned around and then the rifle barrel appearing in the window, followed by the sound of a shot and the muzzle flash of the rifle, the police were unable to find any leads. Even the rubber marks from the tires, which the driver of the vehicle chirped every time as he sped away, were of no help.
After a total of six shots, Harold began staying up and watching for the car to show up. It was almost a week before a car, lights off, rolled quietly around the roundabout and stopped. Knowing the house was in no real danger, Harold waited for the shot. When it came, he tripped the flood lights by remote control, having adjusted two of them to light up the cul-de-sac brightly.
Harold was hiding near the front security fence and jumped up, his Nikon digital camera snapping shot after shot of the car and the two men in it, in the few seconds of total surprise the men went through before the driver floored the accelerator and the car sped off.
Harold dialed 911 and reported the shooting, just as he always did. Knowing it would be several minutes, if not a full hour, Harold hurried inside the house, downloaded the pictures to his laptop in the den, and printed them out. He took the printed pictures and the memory card from the camera back outside to wait for the police.
When they showed up they were not happy. They were getting tired of Harold calling, having as much as accused him of making false calls. They had found only a couple of the bullet holes in the brick façade of the house.
Waiting at the driveway gate, Harold handed the officer in the passenger side of the patrol car the pictures and memory card. “Maybe now you can ID these punks,” he said and turned around.
Harold didn’t know if the police even tried. The shootings stopped, either because the police had successfully taken the shooters off the streets, or Harold’s camera work had scared them off.
But it didn’t matter to Lois. Two weeks after the confrontation with the snipers, with nothing else having happened, Lois came into Harold’s den where he was working after dinner. She handed him a legal document folded in a blue cover. She turned around and walked out, without speaking.
He read the papers requesting a legal separation. When he’d read them through, he got up and stepped out of the den. Lois was carrying two suitcases through the kitchen and into the garage. Going to the front door and opening it, Harold watched his wife of fifteen years drive away.
Harold went back into the den, sat down, and fought back tears. He’d seen it coming, but had ignored the signs. Slumped in the desk chair, Harold picked up the papers and read through them again.
She really wasn’t asking for anything all that unreasonable, Harold decided. A condo in the city in lieu of selling the house and splitting the proceeds; a million in the bank; a new Cadillac; her clothes, jewelry, and Art Glass; and the MacGregor 26. Harold put the papers back on the desk, asking himself, “Why does she want the boat? She’s only been out on it twice with me.”
The next day Harold took care of some business first off at the office and then took the papers to his lawyer.
“Pretty straightforward, Harold,” Tony Akruba said, after reading the papers. He looked up at his occasional golf partner. I’d say what she is asking is about half of your combined net worth.”
“But why the boat?” Harold asked.
“You’ll have to ask her that,” Tony replied. “But one thing I don’t like is reason she stated for the separation. Mental cruelty. Have you been abusive in any way at all toward Lois?”
“No!” Harold said adamantly. “And that bothers me, too. We’ve had that sniper shooting at the house. She had a hard time dealing with it. I spend a lot of time working lately, at the office and in my den. I have my hobbies… We don’t spend much time together…”
“I’ll try to get that changed to irreconcilable differences. You really don’t want ‘spousal cruelty’ on your record. Are you going to contest it?”
Harold had been thinking about that since the evening before. Finally he looked over at Tony and said, “No.”
“Want to make it a divorce?”
Again Harold said, “No,” and then added, “She doesn’t believe in divorce. It would be a huge fight if I tried to divorce her.” Harold’s answers put the case on the fast track.
It took two months to finalize the separation. Harold threw himself into his work, letting Tony deal with Lois’ attorney. The marriage had been strained for some time, but Harold had simply ignored the problems. He blamed himself more than Lois for what had happened.
It was something of a strain on his finances to give Lois what she wanted, without dipping into his preparations reserves. Figuring that if the world situation did happen to turn around, he had plenty of years to build up a conventional retirement again, Harold held onto his preps and signed over three life-annuities to Lois in lieu of the million in cash.
She would be able to cash them out and get more than a million up front. He wrote a check to the Cadillac dealer when Tony brought him the information that Lois had picked out the one she wanted. She was holding onto the other one, which was only two years old. That Harold found a bit annoying.
What was really annoying was the situation when Lois came out to the house to get the MacGregor 26. She was in her new Cadillac, cradling a miniature poodle in her arms, accompanied by a real bruiser of a guy with a big Dodge four-wheel-drive dually pickup truck.
Harold could only stand and watch as the man hooked the MacGregor’s trailer up to the Dodge, and then walk over to Lois to give her a big, theatrical kiss. He looked over at Harold and gave him what could only be called a smarmy look, before getting back into the Dodge. He followed Lois out of the cul-de-sac, shooting Harold the bird as he drove away.
“At least I know why, now,” Harold said through gritted teeth. That particular possibility had never occurred to him. He wondered how long the two had known each other and how long something had been going on. The thoughts hurt. Harold put them out of his mind and went back to work in the den. He was drawing up plans for a small gated community for a mutual aid group of preppers.
Assuming the twenty-million dollar deal went through, Harold would be able to recoup his retirement, and then some, for the property plans he was working on. If he got any of the individual house plans out of the deal, and he was sure he would, he’d be sitting pretty. “Sitting pretty, but alone,” Harold sighed as the thought came to him. He had no idea he would miss Lois as much as he was, despite the person she had become. Again he blamed himself.
It had been a while since he’d paid any real attention to the news. Harold was shocked when he finished up a project early one afternoon at the office and turned on the TV to see what was happening.
He watched the Weather Channel for a bit, amazed at the amount of severe weather New England was getting for an October. “That Gulf Stream situation had really hit them hard,” Harold muttered. Though it had been hot during the summer in Eastern Missouri, the previous winter had been mild, and the one coming up was being forecast as another mild one.
But that was to come. What was happening to the Plains States west of Missouri was cause for worry. A massive storm front was building, already cold air riding the jet stream down from Canada, with a large moist front being drawn up from the Gulf. The storm would hit the St. Louis area some time the following day.
Since nothing was immediately pressing that his staff couldn’t handle, and Harold had wondered for some time about the water flow in the cave, he left the office to Catherine to run and went home to get the Kenworth Motorhome. He got to the Retreat shortly after 10:00 pm, backed it into the garage and decided to stay in the motorhome the rest of the night.
The next morning, after a simple breakfast of cereal and milk, plus coffee, Harold put on some outdoors clothes and began to look over the property in detail. First he went into the cave through the access point in the garage and checked things out. The water flow was just the same as it had been the other times he’d been in the cave. He made a few chalk marks along the water’s path, so he could discerned any changes in the flow later.
Harold fired up the Toolcat, locked the pallet forks on the front lift arms, and left the garage. He’d decided to move some more firewood while he was out and about. Stopping to pick up one of the empty pallets stacked beside the garage with the forks, Harold then headed for the far side of the property, taking a roundabout route, just to see how the now open forest looked.
He had to admit the logging company had followed his instructions to the letter. Every diseased and deformed tree had been cut down and cut up for firewood.
It had taken some additional money and hard talking to get the loggers to gather up even the small branches and the underbrush into bound twig fagots for use in the wood stove in the garage. It almost doubled the amount of fire wood that was harvested. Only enough brush was piled in the few small ravines that cut the property to provide habitat for small game animals and birds.
The skies were already beginning to darken when Harold reached the far side of the property and stopped by one of the firewood stacks. He took the tarp off and began to load the bed of the Toolcat to capacity, and then stack the pallet full. There was a bit left, so Harold covered it back up and headed for the garage, going past one of the areas that had been clear cut except for a few old growth trees.
Harold had hired some college kids majoring in ecology and conservation to plant the seedlings and saplings he bought. Three large areas had ash planted, for future firewood coppicing and they seemed to be doing okay despite how hot the summer had been. They had been planted on a four-to-one ratio of new trees to removed trees.
Next Harold checked the orchard. Even though the requirement was only for a one-to-one planting exchange, Harold had done two-to-one on the fruit and nut trees, not even counting the strawberries, blackberries, and wild roses he’d had planted as well. Though there were wild blackberries, black walnut trees, and hickory trees, he’d planted more of each.
Like the coppicing firewood patches, there were three orchard plots with a wide variety of trees planted. It would be a few years before they began to produce, but Harold thought the wait would be worth it.
Lightning was visible in the distance to the west and thunder sounded softly as Harold pulled up to the main firewood storage area by the garage. Harold set the pallet load of firewood beside the others, and after laying down another pallet, transferred the wood from the bed of the Toolcat to the pallet. He went to the garage to get another tarp and covered the additional wood up to protect it from the weather.
It started to rain as Harold was putting away the Toolcat. He stood in the open garage door and watched the storm continue to approach. With lightning getting close and the thunder hurting his ears, Harold closed up the garage and went down into the cave, putting on a sweater as he went down the stairs.
He checked the chalk marks. The water level hadn’t changed. After starting a fire in the fire bowl, using a bow drill he’d bought on the Internet, just to have it, Harold took a seat in the old leather recliner he’d brought down on one of his previous trips. He drifted off to sleep, the storm pounding outside unheard in the small cave.
Harold woke up hungry. He checked his watch and was amazed the he’d slept for over four hours in the comfortable chair by the cheerful fire. The fire was burning down so he added a pair of split logs to it. He used the chemical toilet behind a Japanese silk screen, and then went to look at the chalk marks again.
He couldn’t see any difference in the face of the rock that dripped into the pool. It was still crystal clear. The water in the channel was no closer to the chalk marks than it had been earlier. Harold went up into the garage, and then outside, standing in the personnel door of the garage. It was still raining hard, but the violence of the lightning and thunder seemed to be gone.
Harold took a steak out of the motor home’s refrigerator/freezer, along with a potato and ear of corn, and went back down into the cave. Working with the fire for a moment, he got the coals where he wanted them, wrapped the potato and corn in foil from a box setting beside the fire bowl, and worked them into the coals.
He gave the vegetables a few minutes to start cooking and then threw the steak on the grill and swung it over the coals. Rather pleased with himself when he raked the corn and potato out of the coals, and forked the steak from the grill to his plate, all three being done just the way Harold liked them; he tore into the food, suddenly ravenous.
The scraps went onto the fire, to be burned up with the wood, and the dishes into a plastic container that he would add hot water to from the kettle being warmed on the fire. A bit of detergent and he would wash them. The waste water would go into a wheeled waste water container he would take outside and dump into the septic system when the container was full.
The storm worsened again that afternoon, though Harold didn’t know it. He was working on his laptop contentedly, amused once with the thought of working on a computer by firelight. He kept an eye on the clock display on the bottom left corner of the screen and shut things down at seven that evening. He wasn’t hungry after the huge lunch he’d had, so just went up to the motorhome and got an ice cream bar from the refrigerator/freezer and had dessert as his evening meal.
Again he checked outside. Harold realized from the look of the area in the fading light that the rain had been heavy the entire time he was in the cave. Going back down into the cave Harold banked the fire for the night and went back into the garage, securing the hidden entrance to the cave before he went into the motorhome to turn in for the evening.
It was still raining when Harold got up the next morning, but lightly. The satellite TV dish on the Kenworth wouldn’t work inside the garage, so Harold hooked up the garage’s system to the external antenna connection on the motorhome and watched the weather, and then the news as he had breakfast.
The weather should be clearing by noon where Harold was, he saw. He’d do another load of firewood after the rain ceased, before he left to go back home. It was snowing in New England; The Mississippi, from St. Louis to Memphis, was going into flood stage; Phoenix was suffering with ninety-plus temperatures again; Kansas was recovering from tornadoes the storm that Harold had just weathered had spawned; and Florida and the Gulf Coast were bracing for Winston, a cat three hurricane, building toward a cat four.
Harold shook his head and switched to the news. It was equivalent to the weather. Troubles all over. And it was still not determined if the NEO would impact the Earth or not. It was definitely going to be close.
He checked the cave again just before he left, to make sure the fire was out, and to check the chalk marks. The water had, indeed, risen. But by only a fraction of an inch. It was still well inside the channel it had cut in the rock floor.
When Harold got back to the office that afternoon, going there directly from the Retreat, in the motorhome, Catherine was visibly excited. “They sent a check, Boss! A big one!”
“Who?” Harold asked, taking the envelope Catherine eagerly held out to him.
“The MAG! They’re buying the property, based on your preliminary drawings. And I’ve fielded five calls from MAG members wanting you to do their individual house plans.” Her exuberance faded somewhat. “People are getting scared, Boss.”
“I know,” Harold replied, taking the check out of the envelope. He gave a small whistle. Catherine had not been joking. Though the separation had never actually put him in the red, he was close to it. The check put him well into the black, with more to come.
“I think this calls for a celebration. How about some surf and turf on me this evening?”
“Suits me, Boss,” Kevin Sanderson said. “I’ve never actually had real surf and turf. Uh… that is lobster and filet mignon, right?”
Harold laughed. “Yes it is. Catherine?”
“I’m in,” she replied. “Should be enough for me to have leftovers for a couple of days.”
“Is that a hint for a raise?” Harold asked, enjoying the mood.
Catherine turned bright red. “No! Of course not! I just… I like leftovers…”
Harold laughed and Catherine’s red face finally faded.
“You two wrap things up and I’ll make the reservations.”
The three had a good time and Harold was feeling rejuvenated, between his time at the Retreat, and the news from the MAG.
Harold took on two additional drafters, to do the grunt work, while he, Kevin, and Catherine took care of the work directly relating to making the homes suitable for the concerned preppers that were building them.
It did seem as though none of the MAG members liked exactly the same layout in their houses as the others. Every one of the fifteen homes Harold’s firm did the blueprints for was significantly different from each other, while incorporating similar aspects the individuals wanted.
Harold, becoming more concerned about the NEO when it dropped out of the news, began asking for, and receiving, payment in gold at a highly discounted rate for his work.
Most of those wanting the work done understood his reasoning, and at the rates he was quoting in gold they were getting significant savings. Harold was using a $2,500.00 per ounce exchange rate while the actual spot price for gold was hovering around $2,000 per ounce.
Though the two new people wanted cash, Kevin and Christine took half their pay in gold and prep goods, which they got at a discount by putting in large orders with Harold, who was now including supplies for the home as well as the design.
The prepper forums were filled with people asking about the NEO. None of the governments were talking and those people with quality home observatories that had the capability of tracking the NEO fell silent when the governments did. Many of them were nowhere to be found.
More and more concerned, Harold checked some of the older posts, when the NEO first became a concern. Talk then was the asteroid would cross the Earth’s orbit shortly after Christmas of this year. Using Christmas Day as his target date, Harold began making arrangements to have the office shut down for the holiday by December twentieth, at which time he would hunker down at home, but with everything set up to be able to go to the Retreat if he felt the need.
His two new employees were totally unconcerned with the situation, but Harold could tell that Kevin and Catherine were becoming nervous, too. When he offered them both places in his shelter, come the day, they both relaxed. Both also moved most of their personal preps they’d begun gathering after they started working for Harold to the basement of his house. It was the basement that they considered the shelter, since it was built as such. Harold had never mentioned the vault room to either of them.
Harold spent the Thanksgiving Holiday long weekend at the Retreat, taking a few more items with him to round out his equipment and supplies for the next to worse case of an NEO impact. He figured the worst case was the NEO would land on top of him and there simply was no preparation for that.
Fearing a run on the banks if there was any additional bad news on top of what the weather was doing, and the encroachment of the sea into many coastal towns due to global warming induced sea level increases, Harold cleaned out all of his bank accounts, down to the limit of maintaining free checking. He couldn’t bring himself to close them, given the very real chance that there would be no impact.
The news broke after millions of people saw the series of bright flashes in the night sky deep in space a week before Christmas. A series of nuclear tipped missiles had been launched and detonated on or near the NEO to try to divert it. Government authorities all over the world announced to their citizens of the impending doom of large pieces of the NEO hitting the earth the next day.
Harold’s newest employees didn’t show up for work the next morning. Kevin and Catherine did. They hurriedly faxed, e-mailed, and surface mailed everything left pending and then headed for Harold’s house, wondering if Harold’s missed target date would prove detrimental to them.
The first fiery streaks of light began to appear as the three, driving their individual vehicles, made their way to Harold’s house. It was sudden pandemonium. There were literally people in the streets shouting, screaming, pointing at the sky, running every which way, or just standing and staring.
Harold had told Kevin and Catherine to follow closely behind him so they wouldn’t get separated. For no apparent reason Harold could see, people began to attack the moving vehicles, bringing Kevin’s to a stop. He was third in line, but Catherine’s frantic horn honking and head light flashing got Harold’s attention and he stopped.
Somehow Kevin managed to get out of the car before it was turned over, his new BOB in hand. He ran forward, towards Harold’s Escalade ESV. The group, done with Kevin’s little car, attacked Catherine’s. Kevin stopped to help her, and the both of them ran for Harold. He had one foot out of the Escalade and suddenly began firing the pistol he’d started carrying in the SUV.
He wasn’t trying to hit anyone, but wanted the rounds to impact close enough to people to scare them away. Someone else had a gun and didn’t like what Harold was doing. Fortunately the man was a lousy shot. Two bullets bounced off the pavement and hit people in the crowd trying to turn over Catherine’s car.
Harold spun around when he realized what was happening and snapped a couple of shots at the guy, to get him to stop shooting long enough for Catherine and Kevin to get into the Escalade ESV. One scrambled in on each side and Harold sat down on the driver’s seat, dropped the selector in drive, and gunned the engine. The acceleration forced the door closed, helped along by a bullet hitting the frame. It left a dent, but didn’t break the door glass.
Never intending to run over anyone, Harold had to give up trying his best and go for minimal damage, rather than stopping completely. People were bouncing off the fenders as he picked up speed. It seemed to be an isolated event, for once he was away from the mob, the rest of the people they saw seemed to be headed somewhere in a hurry, on foot or by vehicle. That became the new danger. Erratic drivers.
Harold managed to avoid a serious accident, but the Escalade ESV looked rather the worse for wear when Harold hit the side streets and worked his way home. There was no one in the kiosk at the entrance to the development.
Gun in hand, looking around constantly, Harold got out of the SUV and went into the kiosk. He worked the gate lift mechanism, ran back to the Cadillac and pulled it through. He took the time to go back and close the gate.
He saw a few people standing outside, looking at the sky. He didn’t bother to stop and tell them to get to their basements. Harold debated for a moment on whether to put the Cadillac inside the garage or not. The risk was about the same between something hitting the house and collapsing it onto the SUV and something hitting the SUV itself. He decided to leave it outside.
He led Catherine and Kevin to the house, but suddenly stopped and looked up at the sky again. He said, “Everything is going over the top of us! Look at the angle of the contrails. And they are starting to disappear in the east. Those we’ve been seeing are impacting well west of here.” After watching and thinking for another few seconds Harold added, “But there can always be a stray! Come on!”
He led the way into the house and then into the basement. “Make yourselves to home,” Harold said absently and went to the second of three control stations for the home automation features of the house.
Catherine went to find a bathroom and Kevin watched over Harold’s shoulder. Harold aimed one of the external cameras at the sky and the two watched as the meteor shower moved on to the west as the Earth turned on its axis. He buttoned up the house from the control panel. Catherine had just joined them in front of the camera monitor when something flashed between the camera and the sun, creating a momentary shadow.
“Oh my… Was that what I think it was?” Catherine asked.
“A really big piece of it, at the very least,” Harold said. The danger suddenly dawned on Harold. “Come on! Hurry! He ran for the door to the unfinished side of the basement and struggled the cabinet hiding the vault door out of the way so he could get to the lock mechanism. Catherine and Kevin were right behind him.
Once he had the door open he ushered the two down the hallway and closed the vault door and locked it, hurrying after the other two. Both had stopped when they entered the vault room and were staring at everything.
“Down! Down!” Harold cried. “Lay down, away from each other and the walls!” He did as he had instructed the others. They quickly followed suit. Long moments passed and then a minute. Harold was starting to think he’d misjudged the possibility of a heavy ground shock when it occurred.
All three of them gripped the carpet with their fingers, trying to stay in place as the whole room danced. Harold was thankful he’d secured the safes and cabinets to the wall. They surely would have toppled during the earth movement if he hadn’t.
Harold cautioned the other two to stay in place when the shaking stopped and they made moves to get up. Sure enough, three more shocks rattled things, with a longer period of stillness between each one. Finally, after ten minutes had passed without another shock, Harold carefully stood up. The others followed suit.
“You think it’s over?” Catherine asked.
Harold shook his head. “It’s just getting started. I want to go up and see how the property fared, before we get fallout.”
“Fallout?” asked Kevin. “That was a nuke?”
“No. There might be some radiation involved, but I’m mainly talking about the millions of tons of debris the NEO is sure to have put into the air when it impacted. You two can stay here if you want.”
“Oh, no!” Catherine said. “If we’re going to be stuck in here because of fallout I want a last look at the sky.”
“It won’t be your last,” Harold said firmly. He led the way out of the vault room and into the finished portion of the basement. There was some damage, but the basement held up fairly well. Harold carefully opened the door at the top of the basement stairs. It was a bit difficult to open. Even with the extra stout construction, the house had shifted slightly, taking it out of plumb.
There were a few knick-knacks lying on the floor, and pictures were down in the hallway. Things had been ejected from the higher shelves in the kitchen. The door to the garage opened without too much difficulty. The water heaters were still attached firmly to the wall. It made him think of the utilities. He wasn’t sure if they had lost power and the generator had kicked on, or if they still had commercial power.
He doubted that fact and had to use some force to get the back personnel door opened so he could go outside. Harold hurried around to the natural gas meter. He went ahead and shut off the valve even though the earthquake valve had closed the line. He could hear the generator running now and went to the electrical access panel and pulled the main. It shouldn’t matter with the automatic transfer switch for the generator, but Harold wasn’t going to chance anything.
Kevin and Catherine followed Harold around curiously, as he ran out to the front fence and went to one knee. He turned the water meter off. Looking around, he checked the security fence. It was in good shape. So were the gates. Looking back toward the house he breathed a sigh of relief. The Cadillac was okay.
He began to explain what he was doing from that point forward. “Wanted to get the commercial utilities turned off for safety reasons, and check the local stuff for damage.” He went through the pool house, which had stood the impact caused earth tremors. So had the other structures. “We’re coming through this with flying colors so far,” Harold said. “But I don’t want to jinx it. Oh. Looks like the north wall is leaning slightly. Shouldn’t have said anything. The detached garage had held up just as well as the other buildings. The Kenworth based motor home was fine and Harold suddenly wondered how the MacGregor 26 had faired. He hadn’t replaced it yet.
Suddenly hot ash and rock began to fall, burning Harold’s skin, as well as the others. They all ran for the garage and Harold went into the house, still running toward the den. It was the closest control panel.
He checked the roof of the house. It was a metal roof covered almost entirely with photovoltaic panels which were also relatively fire resistant. The hot rocks were making some marks, but Harold didn’t think it would catch fire. Each of the other buildings had enough of the PV panels to provide individual electric power when the commercial power was off and the generator wasn’t running, above their metal roofs.
The outer walls of the house were brick façade, so he didn’t worry about them much, either. He would have to keep an eye on the roof and start the roof sprinkler system if it became a problem. When he trained one of the cameras on the ground, there were spots where it was starting to burn. He turned on lawn sprinklers.
Harold decided to add more water to the pool, just in case. He made sure the large pump on the well was pumping into the pool, from which the fire pump would be getting its supply of water if he Harold had to run it. The yard sprinkler pump and well were more than holding their own at the moment.
Catherine began to cough slightly, and Kevin did the same a few seconds later. “It’s the fumes or gas from the fallout,” Harold said. “Best to get into the basement.”
All three made their way down and Catherine and Kevin both began to breathe easier, as Harold explained why. “There is a separate HVAC system for the basement, and then another for the vault. If we still have problems in here, after a while, we’ll move to the vault. I can totally isolate us there.”
The other two took chairs near Harold when he sat down at the home automation controls. The material that was falling was small gravel size, down to mere dust. Worried about the PV panels, Harold went ahead and started the fire pump and turned on the roof sprinklers on all the buildings.
Catherine began to cough again and the carbon monoxide monitor in the basement sounded off. “Not good, guys,” Harold said. “Into the vault.”
It didn’t take much encouragement. They could all breathe much more easily when they were in the vault. Harold, just so they would know in case something unexpected happened to him, showed the pair the filter systems in the vault.
“That’s the escape tunnel,” Harold said, opening a hatch about waist level in one of the vault walls. It goes to a point where you can release a couple of dogs and a hatch will fall open, letting sand fall down into the pit. You can push up through the sod then and get out.
“Just as important as that is the fact that the tunnel has an air inlet into it at the far end, too. It is a rock crib adjacent to the tunnel, with a screened opening to the crib. The crib is full of large rocks, which disperse and absorb any shockwave that might occur. It’s that decorative design element near the north wall.
“There are a couple more air inlets, six inch steel pipe, hidden in the house structure to pull air in case the rock crib becomes compromised or blocked by snow. Though it takes a pretty good snow to keep air from filtering down.
Harold closed the access hatch to the tunnel. “The air from the tunnel goes through a set of CBRN filters, which can be changed safely if they do stop up. They are way oversized for this much cubic space, but I like it that way. The air blower will run on the generator, or the twelve volt system, and can be manually operated.
“In the case where the CBRN filters don’t filter the contaminate, and that includes carbon monoxide, we can seal off the system by closing these valves…” Harold showed them how to operate the valves.
“And last several hours on the air here in the vault. If the CO2 level gets too high, I’ll start the stand alone CO2 absorption filter. That would give us several more hours before the oxygen level gets too low. Then I add medical grade oxygen to the room from a well insulated liquid oxygen tank buried outside. It’s not an easy supply to get. I have a sympathetic doctor that gave me a prescription.
“Just keep changing the absorption chemical, and adding oxygen, and we can stay isolated for several days, if need be.” Harold walked over to the home automation control panel they were familiar with from the den and basement versions. “CO, CO2, and oxygen monitors for the vault here, and a humidity meter. On the off chance the humidity does rise from our breathing, there is a standalone dehumidifier I can start.”
“Wow!” Kevin said. “I had no idea this level of protection was possible, except in the government shelters for the politicians.”
“You have to have some friends in the right places to get things like LOX. Same goes for medications. Only a friendly doctor can help you out with them, too. Cutting-torch-grade oxygen might be okay, but I can’t get any clear answers on that, so I wouldn’t use it. Simple compressed air would work, too, but it really takes up more space than practical. Liquid oxygen is the way to go.
“There is a back up to this system,” Harold continued, going over to one of the myriad cabinets in the room. “SCUBA rebreathers. Does the same thing as the vault system, but for individuals, using a face mask.”
There were plenty of things to occupy time in the shelter and Harold showed Catherine and Kevin all of them. From board and card games, to computer games, to a huge library of DVD movies and regular books; including a whole separate library for starting up society again after a disaster.
Copyright 2007
“Harold!” Lois yelled to her husband. “Get these boxes out of my kitchen!”
“Yes, dear,” Harold said with a sigh. “I was just taking a rest before I took everything down to the basement.” He set the glass of water down on the coffee table, making sure he used a coaster, and hurried back into the kitchen.
“I don’t know why you waste your money on all this nonsense,” Lois said, her hands on her hips as she waited for Harold to take the first of the three boxes down to the basement. “That better go on your side of the basement. I don’t want it cluttering up my side.
“Yes, dear,” Harold said again. “I sh… sh… should have used the outside entrance. I’m thorry. Uh… s… s… sorry”
“You should be. Now hurry up. I’m having my sewing circle over in a bit and I want this place spotless. And don’t start that stuttering and lisping. You always do that when you’ve done something wrong. I know you can control it. You do most of the time. I won’t be embarrassed by you when my friends get here.”
Harold took the first of the three boxes downstairs and set it on a bench in the unfinished side of the large basement. He hurried to move the other two boxes, and then remembered the water glass he’d left in the living room. Lois saw him, but didn’t say anything. Just gave him the evil eye, as he thought of that accusatory look.
A few minutes later Lois’ sewing club members began to arrive and Harold put in his required appearance for five minutes and then hurried down to the basement, making the right turn at the foot of the stairs to go into his side of the basement. He hadn’t stuttered or lisped, though it had been close. He still did both when he started stressing. Life with Lois tended to be stressing now.
He took a few deep breaths and drank half a bottle of water from the small fridge under the bench. He needed to be calm before he did what he planned to do next. When he was ready, Harold slid a tall cabinet to one side on silent rollers to expose a vault door set in the wall. Harold quickly worked the combination, spun the spoked handle to release the plungers to allow him to push the door open.
Harold walked down the short corridor that connected the vault room under the garage with the basement. Going over to a large upright safe, he opened it and stood there for a few moments admiring the contents.
Much to Lois’ disgust, Harold was a collector. But not of nice Art Glass like her. Of course her hobby did make it easy to buy her presents. Any piece of Art Glass was fine, as long as it was expensive.
Harold collected, among other things, quality firearms. Not just fancy ones, though he did have a few of those, but firearms that could be used. Working firearms. Even the fancy ones were quite useable.
He closed that safe and opened another. Where the first one held long guns, the second one held several hand guns, and box after box of ammunition, for the handguns as well as ammunition for the long guns.
Next to the two tall safes was a tall, wide, very heavy duty cabinet. Stacked on its shelves were more boxes of ammunition and reloading supplies, except for primers. A smaller cabinet held Harold’s large collection of primers for reloading.
Finally, there was another of the upright safes. It too Harold opened, just to gaze at its contents. Wasn’t really much to see. Mostly heavy cloth bags. Each bag weighed approximately twenty-five pounds and contained either $500.00 face value pre-1965 US silver dimes, quarters, or halves, which was approximately 360 ounces of silver content; or 300 ounces of US Gold Eagle Bullion coins in 1 oz, ½ oz, ¼ oz, and 1/10 oz sizes.
The only thing to really see was a shelf that held the odd lot of gold and silver coins Harold had, in plastic tubes, to make it easy to keep them sorted. This safe had a key locked inner compartment. Harold opened it, too, to take a look at the small, heavy plastic bags, each with a 1.00 carat to 1.05 carat round brilliant cut diamond rated IF clarity and D color, with attached GIA certificate of identification. Each was worth approximately $20,000 in the current gem market.
Harold hardly paid any attention to the cash stacked inside the compartment, next to the diamonds. Several bundles of every current circulating denomination. Satisfied now, Harold closed the last safe, feeling a bit silly at being so prideful of his wealth. He needed to work on that. Monetary wealth was fine. But you couldn’t eat it. Nor guns and ammunition. And it didn’t help people locked away in a safe.
Food and water, on the other hand, was something that everyone needed, on a daily basis. Harold had plenty of that, and added the three cases of MRE’s that had come in that day at his office. He seldom had anything prep related sent to the house. It upset Lois.
Harold wondered if his ‘Humanitarian Aid’ supplies he’d put up would help counter his pridefulness. He was well prepared for his and Lois’ continued existence, come what may, but fully one-fourth of what he had stored was for relatives, neighbors, and friends.
After adjusting his inventory on the computer, he printed out a copy and put it on the clipboard and tossed the previous copy. He pulled up the internet on the computer and checked the forums for new information. Wasn’t much new. Next he checked the satellite TV news channels. Same ol’ same ol’.
Harold unhooked and grounded all the antennas, turned out the lights, and left the vault room. There wasn’t much in the house for him to do with Lois’ sewing circle in sessions, so he went out the outside entrance to the basement, closing the heavy door behind him. It was counterweighted for ease of opening and closing.
He wondered why he was so restless as he checked the fuel levels in the tanks buried under the yard shed, the jerry cans inside the shed, and the wood pile behind the shed. The large coal bin was full to overflowing. Going inside the yard shed, he ran his hand down the neatly stacked shelves in the shed, looking at the large collection of prep related stores for yard and garden.
Everything in the greenhouse was just fine. There was nothing planted at the moment, but Harold had everything needed to start up a highly productive greenhouse garden, and conventional garden, in the greenhouse and garden support shed.
One end of the green house opened to the swimming pool enclosure. On the far side of the pool was the pool house with change rooms and a pair of shower baths. One room of the pool house held the pool pump and filter, along with plenty of treatment chemicals. It also contained a fire pump that could draw from city water, the garden well, or the pool. Everything was in order, as it always was. Harold saw to that. The pool house roof was covered with hot water collection panels, with enough PV panels to run the electric controls and pumps to keep the pool at a comfortable temperature year round.
The barbeque area was essentially a complete outdoor kitchen, set up, unbeknownst to Lois, as a canning and food preservation center. There was plenty of wood in the bins, with a dozen cords more stacked behind the yard shed, under a wide overhang of the building. The gas cook top portion of the barbeque center could burn natural gas, which was the norm, or be switched to propane, if needed. The propane tank was one of the fuel tanks buried under the yard shed.
Harold walked out to the garden area. It, like the greenhouse, had lain fallow since Harold had set them up. Manure from several horse owners and small farms had been incorporated every year since, with a cover crop put in and worked into the soil as well by one of the farmers that brought manure.
Strolling through the orchard next to the garden, Harold checked the condition of the fruit trees, nut trees, grape vines, and berry patches. The large hedge of thorny wild roses was doing as well as all the rest of the plants, having produced a huge crop of rose hips that fall. All the plants, well cared for by Harold’s professional gardener, were good producers.
Continuing his walk, Harold went up the other side of the house and stopped at looked at the three condenser units for the zoned HVAC system of the house. Next to them was the whole house standby generator. It had its own buried fuel tank near the fence on that side of the house.
Circling the rest of the way around the house, Harold walked into the six-bay detached garage. The finish gleamed on his ‘Cowboy Cadillac’ semi-truck based motorhome. So did the fiberglass of the MacGregor 26 motor sailor. Two bays were currently empty, and the other two were set up as a working home garage, with a lift and set of professional tools. There was a room in the garage almost as big as the bays that held repair and replacement parts, as well as large stocks of consumables. There were buried gasoline and diesel tanks with dispensers at one corner of the garage.
Putting a hand on the tall concrete wall that went around three sides of the place, the security it helped provide the place was almost palpable. The fourth side, facing the street and sidewalk, had a high security, high tensile steel vertical bar fence, set in a concrete base, to continue the security the concrete walls provided. Lois had protested the fence, at first, but it was more than decorative enough to satisfy her sense of aesthetics.
Harold finished his stroll in the attached four car garage. He religiously kept three of the bays pristine, so he and Lois could keep their respective vehicles inside, with plenty of room around them. The fourth bay was Harold’s workshop where he did his various projects and stored more of his supplies and equipment.
Feeling better just seeing everything and understanding he’d done just about all he could for come what may, Harold entered the kitchen through the garage and checked the refrigerator for a snack, knowing he didn’t really need one. Since there wasn’t one, anyway, he went to the den by the back hallway, avoiding the sewing circle.
He pulled up the Anderson plans on the computer and studied them. It was going to be a two million dollar house, and all his hints of building in safety features had fallen on deaf ears. He made the few changes in the plans the couple had asked for and e-mailed them to the document print house that would create the sets of blueprints.
Harold decided to take a look at the prep forums again, to see if there were any new stories or chapters of stories posted. He’d just been checking for news earlier. He found a couple of things he hadn’t read and did so, killing time until Lois’ group was finished. Lois always insisted they go out for dinner after one of the meetings. That was okay. Lois was a mediocre cook at best. She’d taken to serving the fancier heat and serve dishes when she cooked. Harold did at least half of the cooking, and cooked mostly from scratch. He didn’t feel like it that evening, either.
He waited patiently as Lois slowly ushered out her guests, and then took close to an hour to get ready to go out. Harold’s stomach had worked its way up from wanting something simple to premium surf and turf with a bottle of champagne and a real dessert with a drink to top it off.
Lois was a bit surprised when Harold asked her to drive, and suggested the restaurant he did. Sewing circle dinner was usually one of the nicer dinner houses. “You are in a mood, Harold. What’s going on? Did you have a good day at the office?”
Harold smiled, leaning back in the Cadillac’s soft leather upholstery. “More or less normal. I’m just especially hungry tonight. You know, I’m not sure I ate lunch. I can’t really remember.”
Lois didn’t respond, blending into the traffic expertly, the engine in the Cadillac more than equal to her aggressive foot. But Harold only winced once, when she cut across three lanes of traffic to make a right hand turn onto the street where the restaurant was located. She pulled into the parking lot a few minutes later and took one of the available handicap parking spots. Taking the handicap tag from the console she hung it on the rearview mirror.
Harold knew she no more needed the handicap permit than he did, but she had a very good relationship with her doctor, and he had signed off for it for her.
When he’d decided where he wanted to eat, Harold had made reservations. They were seated with only a couple of minutes of wait. Harold was enjoying himself. For whatever reason, perhaps Harold’s own attitude, Lois was open and talkative, vivacious as only she could be. It brought back the good times when they were first married.
They were eating their shared dessert when lightning flared outside the window and a tremendous clap of thunder sounded. Lois jumped slightly. When the power went off she gasped. “Harold?” she asked. Harold marveled at the little girl quality of her voice.
“Give it a few seconds, Honey,” Harold said, reaching over in the dark to take her hand in his. She was shaking.
Moments later the emergency lights came on and Lois began to relax. “Sorry, Harold,” she said, pulling her hand from his. “Don’t know what came over me. I’m not usually frightened by storms.” She was back to her current self.
“It was quite a flash and bang,” Harold replied. The wind had picked up and a hard rain was blowing against the window.
“I’m ready to go,” Lois said, her voice firm. The earlier mood was gone.
Harold signaled for the check and the server hurried over. She looked a bit frazzled. “Will that be all, sir?”
“Just the check,” Lois said. “And make it snappy.”
“Yes, Ma’am,” the young woman said.
“Don’t call me ‘Ma’am,’” Lois barked. “I’m not old enough for you to be using that term for me!”
The server hurried away, tears in her eyes. Harold thought about saying something, but decided it would only make things worse. He’d fix it on the bill. Lois was nearly incensed when the server came back with the check and said, “I’m afraid our credit card machine isn’t working, with the power out.”
Harold left a short note of apology and a hefty tip with the cash in the check holder. He held Lois’ chair for her as she got up and asked, “Would you prefer that I drive, Dear?”
“I am perfectly capable of driving in the rain, Harold!”
Deciding, as always, that acquiescence was the best way to handle Lois’ now quite frequent outbursts, Harold said, “Of course, Dear. My apologies.”
Usually a very aggressive driver, Lois was hesitant on the way home, running one traffic control signal red light due to inattention, and waiting at a green light until someone honked at her, causing her to hit the accelerator even harder than normal, the big engine in the Cadillac squalling the tires on the wet pavement.
The gate opener and then the garage door opener both worked, and the outside illumination lights came on when Lois pulled up. The automatic switchover to the generator had happened as designed. Their house was the only one in the cul-de-sac that had lights showing.
As soon as they got inside Lois told Harold, “I’m going to bed. I plan on sleeping late in the morning. Fend for yourself.”
Harold simply nodded and went about checking the house the way he usually did before turning in himself. As always, everything was secure. He went to his bedroom. Since he tended to sleep warm, often with nothing but a sheet over him, and Lois slept cold, needing two blankets as well as the sheet and comforter, they had been sleeping in separate bedrooms for years. Only when Lois was in the mood did she come to Harold’s bedroom.
With a soft sigh Harold slid between the sheets and turned his mind off, hoping for sleep to come quickly.
Lois was true to her word. She didn’t make an appearance the next morning when Harold got up, prepared for the day, and went downstairs to fix his own simple breakfast. He was partial to granola cereal and, often now, had it with milk and a cup of coffee on the mornings Lois didn’t get up. He ate the cold cereal while he watched the news on the kitchen TV.
The storm had raged all night and the skies were just clearing up as Harold took a stroll around the back of the property, coffee cup in hand. Everything had survived the storm without problem.
Harold pulled his SUV out of the garage a few minutes later. When he drove past his nearest neighbor’s house he saw lights blink on. Apparently the power had come back on. He wasn’t worried about the house generator. The controls would delay a few minutes and then shut the generator down, switching back to commercial power automatically.
Harold was watching the news in his office during his lunch some three weeks after the storm. Global warming was in the news again, in a big way. The mildest winter in generations was expected for North America. And the driest.
After working on a set of plans for a small home in one of the St. Louis suburbs, Harold leaned back in his button tufted leather executive chair. His hands behind his head, Harold mulled over the probable future. The plans he’d just finished had originally incorporated several preparedness related features. They had fallen by the wayside one by one as the couple switched from safety to luxury in their thinking.
He couldn’t push his ideas on anyone, but provided the opportunity to every one of his clients to build a home suited for a very unstable future. Extra insulation was one thing. He seldom had trouble getting the R-factor for walls and roofs up. The same couldn’t be said for windows. When it came to doubling the R-factor of windows, people began to balk. They wanted marble Jacuzzi tubs instead.
With a shake of his head Harold stood up and left the office. “Might as well check out the lead on that property,” he said aloud. He started the Cadillac Escalade ESV and headed out of the city.
Harold did have one client considering preparedness issues. Sort of. He’d replied to the man’s posts on one of the prep forums, answering some questions about building a small home set up for a prepper’s lifestyle. The man had given a link for the real estate agency handling the sale of the land. The land was a few miles from I-44, out near Onondaga Cave. The real estate agent was in Sullivan.
It didn’t take long to find the agent’s office when he got to Sullivan. She had to make some quick arrangements to cover the small office so she could take Harold out to the property. Harold was headed for his Escalade ESV when the real estate agent said, “We’d better take mine. It’s a bit rough where we’re going.”
Assuming she just didn’t want him to get the rig dirty, Harold smiled and walked over to her Jeep. It wasn’t a rock climber, but it was far from stock. And it was rather battered looking. After climbing in, Harold fastened the five-point harness, beginning to wonder just what he was getting himself into.
He didn’t doubt that the Escalade ESV could have made the trip, but it not only would have been dirty, it would have been scratched up to no end from forcing its way through brush and brambles.
“It’s sixty-two acres, and this is the only way in,” Anna Fitzgerald told Harold when they reached a sign nailed up on a tree that said “No Trespassing and No Hunting”. “The access is deeded, so that isn’t a problem. Are you sure you want to get out?” she asked Harold when he unbuckled the harness. “Those dress clothes won’t stand up well out here.”
“I see that,” Harold said, stepping out of the Jeep into ankle deep wet leaves. Anna had put on hiking shoes and followed Harold as he walked deeper into the property. “There is a small spring over here that you will have to contend with,” she said, pointing toward a bench that dropped off almost fifteen feet when Harold got to it.
He could see the glint of the sun on the small stream the spring fed, and hear the slight noise the water made running over the rocky streambed. “There are a couple of restrictions that go with the land. They won’t let you do much with the spring. Just a bit below where it emerges from the rock, if you cut the maximum number of trees the restriction will let you, is probably the best view. You’d have to pipe the runoff from the spring around the home and put it back into the original streambed.”
Harold just nodded. “And back here?” he asked after looking in the other direction for a few seconds.
“The ground rises for a ways and then slowly drops away toward the State Forest land.”
Heading that way, Harold decided he’d sacrifice the shoes he was wearing. They’d be a lost cause if he investigated much more of the property. But he wanted to see more. He traipsed over more of the property, going down to get a closer look at the spring, before going back to the Jeep.
He noticed something about it a little out of the ordinary. On a hunch, he went back to Anna’s Jeep, where she was waiting, talking on her cell phone, and asked, “Not any caves to fall into here, are there? This is cave country, after all.”
Anna closed her phone and shook her head. “You don’t have to worry. Almost all of this area has been mapped and cave openings closed off for safety.”
Harold nodded and said, “That’s good. I guess I’ve seen enough.” He got back into the Jeep and buckled up once more.
As soon as he got back to his office he got on the Internet and PM’ed the man interested in the property.
It was two days before the man responded. Harold couldn’t say he got the reply he was hoping for, because he really did want to help the guy. The reply indicated that the man was no longer interested in the property. He’d found something else.
Harold didn’t know he was smiling so largely when he dialed the real estate agent’s number. Never one to pay more than necessary, Harold made a counter offer to the listed price. It was another three days before the agent called him back and said the buyer had accepted.
First Harold had a copy of the original owner’s CC&R’s for the property faxed over, and then hired a surveyor to confirm and mark the boundaries of the property. Next he looked for and found a firm that did underground survey work with ground penetrating radar.
After reading the CC&R’s, Harold decided that the real estate agent had put the worst spin on the restrictions, probably due to not even having read them. There were restrictions that went with the land, including one about the spring’s natural flow. The preliminary plan that had come to Harold when he saw the spring was easily doable under the restrictions.
Another of the restrictions was that if any trees were removed, other than diseased trees, at least two additional trees had to be planted, except, one-for-one planting was okay if the planted tree was a fruit or nut tree. That worked right into Harold’s burgeoning plans for the property.
He made arrangements to have a water well driller check the property and give an estimate on a well. Likewise a plumber specializing in difficult septic systems. The spring was going to complicate the placement of the septic system. And, if the ground radar proved Harold’s hunch about a concealed cave on the property, it would also have to be taken into account.
Knowing he was getting ahead of himself, Harold went ahead and ordered fruit and nut tree seedlings and saplings to be transplanted when he had an area cleared for them. He would be selectively thinning the forest somewhat, besides clearing a couple of areas. There was a great deal of brush growing under the tree canopy and Harold wanted it removed. It was a huge fire danger.
The decision to where the main open area would be would be made after the surveys for water and sewer. Harold wasn’t too concerned about a ‘view’ that the real estate agent had been pushing.
Again, even before the papers were signed, Harold ordered a custom concrete monolithic dome style garage large enough for the motorhome.
After the flurry of activity of making the arrangements, assuming he would get the property, things slowed down on the project. It was the following spring, on an unusually hot day that early in the year, when things began to heat up in other ways, as well. The deal was closed and Harold took title of the property.
The lumbering firm started the tree cutting, with the first cutting making space for the well drilling rig to get in to do the water well. The plumbing company showed up the next day, to install the oversized septic system Harold had requested. The cave had been confirmed by ground penetrating radar, and a specialty earthmover was there to form an access point for it. Two days later the firm that would build the garage showed up with their equipment.
Harold, closing the office for a few days, took the motorhome to the property to keep an eye on the proceedings. Lois took the opportunity to go visit her mother for a few weeks.
With flashlight in hand, Harold investigated the cave, such as it was, going down a ladder placed down the hole that had been cut and blasted through the ridge of rock that covered the cave. There was only the one large chamber the radar had indicated. Roughly thirty feet long, ten feet high and sixteen feet wide, the chamber was slick rock, the roof slightly narrower than the floor, and higher at one end than the other.
Harold discovered the source of the spring coming from the bench. At least the local source. There was a large wet area on the tallest end of the chamber, constantly dripping water to a small pool at the base. A shallow channel ran along the side of the chamber, disappearing into the rock at the shortest and narrowest end.
Having read up on caves and the way they formed, Harold decided that there had been a small pocket of limestone that had slowly, over the millennia, dissolved away from the action of the seep of water that had probably first come through a tiny crack from the wet wall to the exit wall, starting at the top of the chamber and making it larger as time passed.
The floor of the cave was relatively flat, with some high and low spots. The walls and roof were smooth, but rather ‘wavy’, as Harold thought of them.
The air wasn’t musty, so there were some points in the cave that allowed air to circulate. He couldn’t see anything specific, but Harold knew they had to be there. With the constant flow of water, small as it was, the cave would have been damp if there wasn’t air flowing through it.
He noticed one ragged crack in the wall near the outlet of the water and put his hand up to it. Sure enough, there was air movement against the back of his hand. Working his way around the perimeter of the chamber, doing the same thing, Harold found at least one source for the air coming into the cave. Like the crack near the water exit, there was a similar one just above the almost perfectly round wet face of the end wall. Air was coming from it.
After orienting himself, Harold climbed out of the cave, and went exploring above ground. He found the air outlet near the spring outlet. If one looked very closely, a tiny movement of the leaves of a vine growing on the face of the bench could be seen.
Going to the other end of the cave, above ground, Harold looked around. He couldn’t see anything at all that could be the air entry point. He looked up the slope. It could be anywhere. Probably on the other side of the ridge line. No telling where the water was coming from, either. One of the small rivers common to the area was probably the source, though the aquifer that led to the cave.
All-in-all, Harold was happy with his discovery. He sketched out how he wanted the entrance covered, and where he wanted another entrance made. It cost him some expense for the down time as one contractor did the work before the garage builder could get to his work. But when the work was done, the big entrance was hidden in the garage floor, with wide steps going down into the cave, and a smaller hole, with a permanent ladder installed, hidden under several slabs of the naturally occurring rock in the area. The escape tunnel, as Harold thought of it, was well into the woods that would be left standing around the small clearing.
Once the processes were started, Harold went home, and back to work, checking on the progress of the various contractors every week or so. The well was finished first and turned out to be a good one. The water was clear, cold, slightly hard, but not contaminated by any pathogens. As good as could be asked for. Harold would use a softening system, on general principles, though it probably wasn’t necessary.
A solar pump was installed, with a PV panel and dedicated battery, the discharge piped to the same cistern that held the water collected from the garage structure.
The septic system, after what turned into a rather heated argument between the contractor and the plumbing company owner, was finally finished, oversized just the way Harold wanted it, against the plumber’s objections that it was wasted money for a hunting camp. That was what Harold was telling people he was building. It was true, in part. Harold had decided to take advantage of the surroundings and learn to hunt.
Harold, and the workmen on the site, found one of the few drawbacks of the place. Even with the thinning of the trees going on, the area would still be considered heavily forested. The wind blew in the tops of the trees. Not much reached the surface of the ground.
With temperatures often above one-hundred-degrees Fahrenheit, working conditions on the property were rather miserable. With Harold’s permission, the various contractors got together and rigged up a misting system using the cold well water to provide a cooling station the workers could use to avoid heat illnesses.
Harold’s business, always steady, since he was very good at designing homes that fit individuals’ lifestyles, began picking up, mainly in his specialty line of designs. Those designs being for people uncertain about their security in the future. He had three preppers’ homes in the design stage that summer. He usually had one, sometimes two, a year.
The weather forecasts, more particularly the climate forecasts, called for more heating. Global warming, whatever the actual cause, was accelerating. Despite the problems seacoast cities were beginning to have with rising sea levels, there was a large element of society that welcomed the increased arable acreage and longer growing seasons.
The thrust toward bio-fuels had initially hurt the production of grains for human consumption, but that was changing. There was more than enough production to go around now. For the moment.
There were losses from the heat, and extended spells of drought in places. But there were many other places that the increased rainfall produced because of the high evaporation rates over the oceans increased production by anywhere from ten percent to fifty percent. Prices dropped as availability increased, but not by much. Farmers were raking it in. If they lived in the right spot at the right time.
Along the Mississippi River, from St. Louis south, the increased rains had created constant flooding problems. Efforts were being made to put in new, higher dikes, further away from the river, to create a flood plain that could contain the massive quantities of water going down the river.
But people were suffering in some other areas from the heat and drought. The Phoenix megalopolis, during the summer Harold was building his hidden retreat, stayed over ninety-five degrees Fahrenheit at night, and over one-hundred-ten during the day for ninety-three straight days.
There were several heat related deaths every day. That number jumped when the power grid went down from huge overloads of the electrical system due to air conditioning loads.
Extreme desert conditions became the norm for Southern California, the Southern tip of Nevada, all of Southern Arizona, Southern New Mexico, and into the western tip of Texas. The always on the books water rights wars began to get out of hand, the people involved leaving the courtrooms to go to the riverbanks, guns and knives in hand. That summer alone, seven people died violent deaths because of water rights issues.
Then the Gulf Stream submerged beneath the freshening North Atlantic, from off the Carolinas northward. The New England area, Eastern Canada, and Western Europe couldn’t tell the difference until the winter after the record breaking summer.
While the rest of the country enjoyed a mild winter, those northern areas around the North Atlantic, their weather tempered for centuries by the Gulf Stream, set record lows. With the oceans pumping moisture into the atmosphere many times more than the old norm, snow levels were in the tens of feet in some places. People died by the hundreds when the ample supplies of fuel oil simply could not get delivered.
By the end of that winter, Harold had either moved what he wanted from the house to his new retreat, or had purchased additional equipment and supplies just for it. There were stacks of firewood all over the property and Harold dropped a few dollars on a Bobcat 5600T Toolcat utility vehicle. He used it to haul the firewood from the remote locations to the retreat compound, a few loads each time he was there. It also gave him a way to travel over all of the rather rough property.
With the garage nearly impenetrable, short of explosives or sophisticated tools, Harold had a few amenities installed in the garage, for when he brought the Escalade ESV instead of the motorhome. Plenty of space was left for the motorhome, the Toolcat, and one other vehicle.
The bad weather took a back seat in the news when the mainstream media got onto the story of a Near Earth Object projected to cross Earth’s orbit in less than three years. About the time Earth was at that same point in the orbit.
Harold was glad he’d made his preps before the panics. ‘Survivalism’ took on yet another meaning, this one closer to the original positive one of the seventies. Of course there were those that claimed that it was various Gods’ wills, and wanted people to surrender their possessions and go to their end in repentance.
After Harold openly advertised prepper friendly home designs his steady business boomed to the extent of hiring a couple of recent drafting school graduates to assist him in the production of designs. Harold supervised every one of them, but much of the tech work was done by the two new employees.
He and Lois were spending less and less time together. That abruptly changed after the two drafting techs were hired. One of them was a woman. A very good looking younger woman. Lois did not like it very much.
At first, Harold thought his wife had just taken an interest in his work, since the weather and the NEO were in the news often. But when Catherine mentioned, in passing, that Lois didn’t like her working for Harold, did the light dawn on Harold. Lois was jealous. That was remarkable, in and of itself. Her displaying it was even more remarkable.
Harold decided to take advantage of it, to try to get the closeness back in their relationship that had faded over the years. Lois became even more suspicious initially, thinking Harold was trying to cover up something, but finally relaxed after Catherine began wearing a wedding ring to work. Catherine never actually said she had married, but the presence of the ring was enough for Lois to go back to her normal routine and attitudes. Harold began to wonder how much longer their relationship would last.
Harold threw himself into his work. Lois still checked on him from time to time when he called to tell her he was working late, but Catherine was never around when she got to the office, ‘to bring him something to tide him over until dinner’.
Every chance he got he went to the Retreat, to get away from Lois and the oppressive heat of another record breaking summer. Since the garage was earth-bermed concrete, it stayed relatively cool, but the cave was even more so. He had a thermometer mounted on one wall of the chamber. It never varied much from sixty-two degrees Fahrenheit. It would climb perhaps a degree from his body heat in the small space, but drop right back down to sixty-two when he left the cave.
The water passing through was only fifty-six degrees, the same temperature it was when it exited as the spring. Despite being fairly sure the cave wouldn’t flood, since it hadn’t even during some of the furious thunderstorms in the region that were now common place, Harold had built everything up off the floor of the cave, just in case.
He had also purchased enough heavy polymer plastic pallets to cover the floor so he wasn’t walking on the cold, rough floor, trimming the pallets to sit level, rather than chiseling the rock to make the floor level.
After bringing in a large, shallow, steel bowl he’d had made, into the cave along with some wood, Harold started a fire. Once he was sure it would burn and not set off the carbon monoxide alarm, he went outside to see if he could see any smoke coming out of the ground near the spring.
His nose twitched. Harold could smell the smoke, barely, but it wasn’t visible. “Good!” Harold said, satisfied with his experiment. He stocked the shelter with firewood and kindling for his fire bowl, bringing down the accessories he’d had made for it. They included a spit, swing arms for pots, a swing around griddle, and a swing around grill. He felt like a kid equipping a hidden cave, for the fun of it. He certainly wasn’t a kid, but he sure was equipping a hidden cave, just for the fun of it, since the earth-bermed garage provided the security he wanted.
The social unrest because of the weather extremes and the possible impending NEO impact, made its terrifying way to Harold’s home late that fall. It was still in the low nineties at Halloween and people were restless. Though there probably many children out and about Trick-or-Treating, hopefully accompanied by adults, there were far more adults, costumed or not, roaming the streets Halloween evening and into the night.
The crossover rural/suburban enclave where Harold lived was a gated community, though only fenced along the county road. It was hilly terrain, heavily wooded, with large wedge shaped lots build around a series of cul-de-sacs.
People did get turned around in the area, if they didn’t live there, but that was usually a relative or delivery person looking for a specific address. When you had an Oak Street, Oak Lane, Oak Place, Oak Circle, Oak Way and about three more Oak-named roads it was fairly easy to get turned around.
While there was never any evidence the mob that came through Halloween night targeted the complex specifically, it was the one that came under violent attack by the mob turned angry. It was probably just the time and place of the situation. When the mob reached the boiling point they were at the entrance of the enclave.
It was a sign, to the mob, of wealth and advantage. There’d been some local, fortunately small, brush fires nearby, and the fact that the enclave had a private paid fire station located near the gated entrance, in easy view of the county road, seemed to set the mob off.
After smashing the small gate kiosk, the now raging mob attacked the fire station, setting all three of the fire vehicles on fire while holding back the firemen until there was nothing for them to do but watch the fire burn itself out. Moving on, the mob hit the cul-de-sacs at random, starting more fires and throwing Molotov cocktails at some of the houses, as well as anything else small enough to throw and still do damage to the houses.
“What is going on?” Lois asked, stepping out onto the small front porch of the house. “It sounds like a mob.” she said, turning to look at Harold as he joined her.
“Lois, I think you might be right,” he said after a few seconds of hearing the shouting, some screams, and then the sight of flames coming from a cul-de-sac two over from theirs.
“Get inside,” Harold said, “Quickly,” taking Lois’ arm rather roughly to pull her inside.
“I beg your pardon!” Lois said, jerking her arm free of Harold’s grip. “How dare you manhandle me that way?” She was incensed. But Harold was already headed into his den.
Harold began to flip switches on a control panel, and activated several cameras that displayed in a grid on a large video monitor.
“Harold, I demand…” Lois said, coming into the den, ready to lambaste him for his actions.
But Harold said, “Lois! Look at this!”
Frowning, Lois moved around so she could see the monitor. It was like something out of a bad Halloween monster movie. There weren’t any fiery torches, but there were plenty of people with flashlights and lighters. Many were in costumes. They all seemed to be shouting. What, Harold wasn’t sure. The external microphones were on, but the noise was incomprehensible. It was just shouts and screams of anger.
Harold was watching various indicator lights and finally eased his position. “I’ve got us locked down, now Lois. We’ll be all right.”
Lois, watching the scene on the monitor was beginning to realize the danger they were in. “Harold?” she asked, turning frightened eyes on her husband.
“Come on, sit down. We’re okay. I’ll get you a drink.”
Lois couldn’t take her eyes off the monitor. She took the drink Harold handed her without looking. But then she looked up at Harold again. “What are we going to do?” She was nearly hysterical.
“Lois, please. Don’t worry. You know I built this house so we would be safe. I’ve turned out all the outside lights and the security shutters are closed on all the doors and windows. The fence is there. We’ll be fine.”
Lois didn’t look convinced. She turned back to the monitor. Harold sat down beside her and worked the remote control of one of the cameras. The mob had skipped the first house on the right in the cul-de-sac. Harold’s and Lois’ house was the next one.
Harold was calling 911 on his cellular as he operated the camera controls with his other hand. “Yes. There is a riot… Okay. Please don’t take too long,” Harold said and folded close the phone.
Lois looked at him. “They already know and have a riot control team on the way,” Harold told his wife.
Both of them looked back at the monitor. The security fence seemed to have thrown the mob into an even deeper rage. People were throwing everything they could get their hands on at the house. Harold had designed the space from the front fence to the house so only a professional baseball pitcher had any chance of hitting the house with anything that might damage it.
Harold couldn’t figure out where the Molotov cocktails were coming from, but two were lighted by the mob and given to the best throwers. The Molotov’s fell short, but the gasoline began to burn brightly.
Hitting another switch, the front yard sprinklers came on, dousing the fires in moments. It infuriated the mob even more. A human pyramid was built against the security fence and two men climbed up and jumped down on the house side of the fence. They were tossed two more Molotov’s and they lit them in turn. Running forward, they waited until they got close to the house without anything happening to them other than getting wet from the sprinklers, and then threw the Molotov’s. Both hit the brick façade of the house and burst into flames.
A flick of another switch and the under eave sprinklers came on, again dousing the flames. Harold finally turned on the outside lights and spoke into a microphone attached to the control panel.
“You better leave before someone gets hurt. The police are on their way.”
Harold’s announcement over the outdoor speakers didn’t seem to affect the mob one bit. With the lights on now, the fact that the doors and windows had security shutters closed on them became known. More people started to climb the pyramid to get into the yard.
“Harold?” Lois asked, looking at him with worried eyes again.
“Stay calm,” Harold said. He reached into one of the desk drawers and pulled out a handgun and two spare magazines. He slipped the magazines in one pocket and the pistol in the other.
“Go into the bedroom and lock the doors. Don’t come out until I come get you.”
“But…”
“Do it, Lois! Please. I don’t think there is much danger, but I’m not going to take a chance with your life.”
Lois hurried off and Harold turned back to the monitors. He’d taken the gun out to comfort Lois, not intending to use it. It would take anyone hours to break into the house without some serious tools or explosives.
Harold’s attitude changed suddenly. Someone in that mob had a gun. Harold saw the flashes at it was fired several times. He heard the sounds of the gunshots on the control panel speaker.
“Back away before someone gets hurt!” Harold’s amplified voice startled the people into immobility. For an instant. Then the advance continued, as did shots from outside the fence. He wasn’t worried about the shots. All the exterior walls were the Skousen design. They’d absorb any rounds that penetrated the reinforced brick façade. But it annoyed Harold no end.
He had a whole book of options up his sleeve, but he went with a less-than-lethal one. He turned on the high intensity pulse strobes and triggered the disruptive sound speakers. He watched on the monitors as people staggered around, temporarily blinded and deafened by the riot control system.
Those of the mob inside the fence ran toward it again, trying to get away from the light and sound. But they couldn’t get over the fence without the human pyramid to assist them. Harold took a chance, a slight one he thought, and released the small sidewalk gate. One of the mob finally saw it and guided the others to it and off the property.
Harold closed and locked the gate remotely, and turned off the disruptive lights and sound system. It was as people began to scatter that the riot squad showed up, with two police helicopters in support.
After putting away the pistol and magazines, Harold shut down the other security systems, the illumination lights first and the sprinklers second. Next the security shutters were raised or lowered, depending on the individual window treatment. Then he triggered the driveway gate to open.
Harold went to the front door, turned on the porch light and stepped out onto the porch, his hands in the air. “Thank you for showing up when you did,” Harold said, as the police officer approached him with gun drawn, aimed at Harold. Harold didn’t like that much, either, but he didn’t do anything about it.
“What’s your name?” asked the officer.
Harold told him.
“You live here?”
Harold told him.
“What’s the address here?
Harold told him.
“Anyone else here?”
“My wife is in the bedroom safe room.”
“Anyone hurt?”
“No.”
“Any damage?”
“Won’t know until in the morning when I can take a look. Some bullet holes, I expect. I heard shots and saw the muzzle flashes.”
The officer began to relax. “Had to be sure you were you.” He holstered his gun, finally.
Harold looked over the officer’s shoulder. It was more of a madhouse now than before, with the riot squad trying to chase down and hold some of the mob. They weren’t having much success.
“They seemed to be breaking up when we got here. You have any idea why?”
“I turned on the outside lights and used a PA system to tell them that you guys were on the way.” It was the truth. Not all of it, but the officer didn’t ask for any details.
“Any clue as to what got them started?” Harold asked the officer, who was scribbling rapidly in his report book.
“The heat, I guess,” replied the Officer, not looking up from his report. “Something sure did. They left a trail of disasters from the front gate house to your place. You’re lucky they didn’t have a chance to do more damage.”
“That’s the truth,” Harold agreed. His stutter and lisp were trying to come back, but he controlled his voice carefully.
“Can you identify any of them?” the Officer asked after more writing.
“N… No, I’m afraid not. It was dark mothst of the time, and none of them got that close.”
“Read this and sign it,” the Officer handed Harold the report book, looking at him curiously.
Harold couldn’t make out half of what was written. The man’s penmanship was almost nonexistent. But he signed it and handed the book back to him.
Tearing out a copy of the report, the Officer gave it to Harold, along with one of his cards. “If you think of anything else, call me or the station.” With that, he was gone.
Harold watched the mop up activities for a while from the front porch, but suddenly remembered Lois. He hurried upstairs and knocked on the door. It took him three tries before she would open the door.
He had a key, of course, but didn’t want to use it and startle her. Finally she opened the door. Lois didn’t hesitate when Harold held his arms open. She stepped right into them and cried for a while.
Harold got her another drink after she calmed down. Lois finally looked over at Harold and said, “I’m fine, now. I’m going to bed. Make sure you set the security alarm.”
It was a dismissal and Harold knew it. He’d heard many like it. Lois hated showing any weakness and was always somewhat angry after she did.
Two days later the same officer that he’d talked to the night of the riots came by the office. “I need you to come to the station with me.”
Harold’s eyes narrowed. “Why?”
“Some of those we managed to arrest are accusing you of attacking them. The ADA wants to talk to you.”
“Me attack them?” Harold shook his head. “Back just a few months ago I would think you were kidding me. Not now. You aren’t going to handcuff me, are you?”
The Officer shook his head. “You aren’t under arrest. They just want to talk to you to straighten this out. Victims have rights, you know.”
“Some victims,” Harold started to say, but held his tongue.
When the ADA finally called him into the office after an hour’s wait, Harold repeated the things he’d told the original officer, almost verbatim.
“You say you turned on your security lights and used a PA to warn them that the police were on the way?”
It was exactly what Harold had just said. “Yes,” Harold said anyway.
“Do you understand that the defendants in the disorderly conduct case say your lights and PA caused them pain? What do you say about that?”
“What is there to say? Some people are more sensitive than others. Look. That group of people threw four Molotov cocktails at my house, and fired I don’t know how many rounds into it. And they say I did something to them?”
“We have to investigate these matters. Criminals have rights, too.”
“So I’ve heard. Is that all?” Harold was getting angry, which he didn’t want to do.
“I suggest you watch your step. Do not contact any of these people in any way. We will call you to testify in their case, if we need you.”
Harold left without saying anything else.
The process took months and the hooligans were released without any punishment, having spent only part of the one night in jail. A week later the night time shots at the house started. Harold reported every one of them. After the third shot in two weeks, he began keeping the security shutters closed on the front of the house, and set up a camera to watch the cul-de-sac roundabout.
The police did send a car to check the house from time to time, but the shots only came after the police had been there. Despite the tapes with the vehicle in clear view getting turned around and then the rifle barrel appearing in the window, followed by the sound of a shot and the muzzle flash of the rifle, the police were unable to find any leads. Even the rubber marks from the tires, which the driver of the vehicle chirped every time as he sped away, were of no help.
After a total of six shots, Harold began staying up and watching for the car to show up. It was almost a week before a car, lights off, rolled quietly around the roundabout and stopped. Knowing the house was in no real danger, Harold waited for the shot. When it came, he tripped the flood lights by remote control, having adjusted two of them to light up the cul-de-sac brightly.
Harold was hiding near the front security fence and jumped up, his Nikon digital camera snapping shot after shot of the car and the two men in it, in the few seconds of total surprise the men went through before the driver floored the accelerator and the car sped off.
Harold dialed 911 and reported the shooting, just as he always did. Knowing it would be several minutes, if not a full hour, Harold hurried inside the house, downloaded the pictures to his laptop in the den, and printed them out. He took the printed pictures and the memory card from the camera back outside to wait for the police.
When they showed up they were not happy. They were getting tired of Harold calling, having as much as accused him of making false calls. They had found only a couple of the bullet holes in the brick façade of the house.
Waiting at the driveway gate, Harold handed the officer in the passenger side of the patrol car the pictures and memory card. “Maybe now you can ID these punks,” he said and turned around.
Harold didn’t know if the police even tried. The shootings stopped, either because the police had successfully taken the shooters off the streets, or Harold’s camera work had scared them off.
But it didn’t matter to Lois. Two weeks after the confrontation with the snipers, with nothing else having happened, Lois came into Harold’s den where he was working after dinner. She handed him a legal document folded in a blue cover. She turned around and walked out, without speaking.
He read the papers requesting a legal separation. When he’d read them through, he got up and stepped out of the den. Lois was carrying two suitcases through the kitchen and into the garage. Going to the front door and opening it, Harold watched his wife of fifteen years drive away.
Harold went back into the den, sat down, and fought back tears. He’d seen it coming, but had ignored the signs. Slumped in the desk chair, Harold picked up the papers and read through them again.
She really wasn’t asking for anything all that unreasonable, Harold decided. A condo in the city in lieu of selling the house and splitting the proceeds; a million in the bank; a new Cadillac; her clothes, jewelry, and Art Glass; and the MacGregor 26. Harold put the papers back on the desk, asking himself, “Why does she want the boat? She’s only been out on it twice with me.”
The next day Harold took care of some business first off at the office and then took the papers to his lawyer.
“Pretty straightforward, Harold,” Tony Akruba said, after reading the papers. He looked up at his occasional golf partner. I’d say what she is asking is about half of your combined net worth.”
“But why the boat?” Harold asked.
“You’ll have to ask her that,” Tony replied. “But one thing I don’t like is reason she stated for the separation. Mental cruelty. Have you been abusive in any way at all toward Lois?”
“No!” Harold said adamantly. “And that bothers me, too. We’ve had that sniper shooting at the house. She had a hard time dealing with it. I spend a lot of time working lately, at the office and in my den. I have my hobbies… We don’t spend much time together…”
“I’ll try to get that changed to irreconcilable differences. You really don’t want ‘spousal cruelty’ on your record. Are you going to contest it?”
Harold had been thinking about that since the evening before. Finally he looked over at Tony and said, “No.”
“Want to make it a divorce?”
Again Harold said, “No,” and then added, “She doesn’t believe in divorce. It would be a huge fight if I tried to divorce her.” Harold’s answers put the case on the fast track.
It took two months to finalize the separation. Harold threw himself into his work, letting Tony deal with Lois’ attorney. The marriage had been strained for some time, but Harold had simply ignored the problems. He blamed himself more than Lois for what had happened.
It was something of a strain on his finances to give Lois what she wanted, without dipping into his preparations reserves. Figuring that if the world situation did happen to turn around, he had plenty of years to build up a conventional retirement again, Harold held onto his preps and signed over three life-annuities to Lois in lieu of the million in cash.
She would be able to cash them out and get more than a million up front. He wrote a check to the Cadillac dealer when Tony brought him the information that Lois had picked out the one she wanted. She was holding onto the other one, which was only two years old. That Harold found a bit annoying.
What was really annoying was the situation when Lois came out to the house to get the MacGregor 26. She was in her new Cadillac, cradling a miniature poodle in her arms, accompanied by a real bruiser of a guy with a big Dodge four-wheel-drive dually pickup truck.
Harold could only stand and watch as the man hooked the MacGregor’s trailer up to the Dodge, and then walk over to Lois to give her a big, theatrical kiss. He looked over at Harold and gave him what could only be called a smarmy look, before getting back into the Dodge. He followed Lois out of the cul-de-sac, shooting Harold the bird as he drove away.
“At least I know why, now,” Harold said through gritted teeth. That particular possibility had never occurred to him. He wondered how long the two had known each other and how long something had been going on. The thoughts hurt. Harold put them out of his mind and went back to work in the den. He was drawing up plans for a small gated community for a mutual aid group of preppers.
Assuming the twenty-million dollar deal went through, Harold would be able to recoup his retirement, and then some, for the property plans he was working on. If he got any of the individual house plans out of the deal, and he was sure he would, he’d be sitting pretty. “Sitting pretty, but alone,” Harold sighed as the thought came to him. He had no idea he would miss Lois as much as he was, despite the person she had become. Again he blamed himself.
It had been a while since he’d paid any real attention to the news. Harold was shocked when he finished up a project early one afternoon at the office and turned on the TV to see what was happening.
He watched the Weather Channel for a bit, amazed at the amount of severe weather New England was getting for an October. “That Gulf Stream situation had really hit them hard,” Harold muttered. Though it had been hot during the summer in Eastern Missouri, the previous winter had been mild, and the one coming up was being forecast as another mild one.
But that was to come. What was happening to the Plains States west of Missouri was cause for worry. A massive storm front was building, already cold air riding the jet stream down from Canada, with a large moist front being drawn up from the Gulf. The storm would hit the St. Louis area some time the following day.
Since nothing was immediately pressing that his staff couldn’t handle, and Harold had wondered for some time about the water flow in the cave, he left the office to Catherine to run and went home to get the Kenworth Motorhome. He got to the Retreat shortly after 10:00 pm, backed it into the garage and decided to stay in the motorhome the rest of the night.
The next morning, after a simple breakfast of cereal and milk, plus coffee, Harold put on some outdoors clothes and began to look over the property in detail. First he went into the cave through the access point in the garage and checked things out. The water flow was just the same as it had been the other times he’d been in the cave. He made a few chalk marks along the water’s path, so he could discerned any changes in the flow later.
Harold fired up the Toolcat, locked the pallet forks on the front lift arms, and left the garage. He’d decided to move some more firewood while he was out and about. Stopping to pick up one of the empty pallets stacked beside the garage with the forks, Harold then headed for the far side of the property, taking a roundabout route, just to see how the now open forest looked.
He had to admit the logging company had followed his instructions to the letter. Every diseased and deformed tree had been cut down and cut up for firewood.
It had taken some additional money and hard talking to get the loggers to gather up even the small branches and the underbrush into bound twig fagots for use in the wood stove in the garage. It almost doubled the amount of fire wood that was harvested. Only enough brush was piled in the few small ravines that cut the property to provide habitat for small game animals and birds.
The skies were already beginning to darken when Harold reached the far side of the property and stopped by one of the firewood stacks. He took the tarp off and began to load the bed of the Toolcat to capacity, and then stack the pallet full. There was a bit left, so Harold covered it back up and headed for the garage, going past one of the areas that had been clear cut except for a few old growth trees.
Harold had hired some college kids majoring in ecology and conservation to plant the seedlings and saplings he bought. Three large areas had ash planted, for future firewood coppicing and they seemed to be doing okay despite how hot the summer had been. They had been planted on a four-to-one ratio of new trees to removed trees.
Next Harold checked the orchard. Even though the requirement was only for a one-to-one planting exchange, Harold had done two-to-one on the fruit and nut trees, not even counting the strawberries, blackberries, and wild roses he’d had planted as well. Though there were wild blackberries, black walnut trees, and hickory trees, he’d planted more of each.
Like the coppicing firewood patches, there were three orchard plots with a wide variety of trees planted. It would be a few years before they began to produce, but Harold thought the wait would be worth it.
Lightning was visible in the distance to the west and thunder sounded softly as Harold pulled up to the main firewood storage area by the garage. Harold set the pallet load of firewood beside the others, and after laying down another pallet, transferred the wood from the bed of the Toolcat to the pallet. He went to the garage to get another tarp and covered the additional wood up to protect it from the weather.
It started to rain as Harold was putting away the Toolcat. He stood in the open garage door and watched the storm continue to approach. With lightning getting close and the thunder hurting his ears, Harold closed up the garage and went down into the cave, putting on a sweater as he went down the stairs.
He checked the chalk marks. The water level hadn’t changed. After starting a fire in the fire bowl, using a bow drill he’d bought on the Internet, just to have it, Harold took a seat in the old leather recliner he’d brought down on one of his previous trips. He drifted off to sleep, the storm pounding outside unheard in the small cave.
Harold woke up hungry. He checked his watch and was amazed the he’d slept for over four hours in the comfortable chair by the cheerful fire. The fire was burning down so he added a pair of split logs to it. He used the chemical toilet behind a Japanese silk screen, and then went to look at the chalk marks again.
He couldn’t see any difference in the face of the rock that dripped into the pool. It was still crystal clear. The water in the channel was no closer to the chalk marks than it had been earlier. Harold went up into the garage, and then outside, standing in the personnel door of the garage. It was still raining hard, but the violence of the lightning and thunder seemed to be gone.
Harold took a steak out of the motor home’s refrigerator/freezer, along with a potato and ear of corn, and went back down into the cave. Working with the fire for a moment, he got the coals where he wanted them, wrapped the potato and corn in foil from a box setting beside the fire bowl, and worked them into the coals.
He gave the vegetables a few minutes to start cooking and then threw the steak on the grill and swung it over the coals. Rather pleased with himself when he raked the corn and potato out of the coals, and forked the steak from the grill to his plate, all three being done just the way Harold liked them; he tore into the food, suddenly ravenous.
The scraps went onto the fire, to be burned up with the wood, and the dishes into a plastic container that he would add hot water to from the kettle being warmed on the fire. A bit of detergent and he would wash them. The waste water would go into a wheeled waste water container he would take outside and dump into the septic system when the container was full.
The storm worsened again that afternoon, though Harold didn’t know it. He was working on his laptop contentedly, amused once with the thought of working on a computer by firelight. He kept an eye on the clock display on the bottom left corner of the screen and shut things down at seven that evening. He wasn’t hungry after the huge lunch he’d had, so just went up to the motorhome and got an ice cream bar from the refrigerator/freezer and had dessert as his evening meal.
Again he checked outside. Harold realized from the look of the area in the fading light that the rain had been heavy the entire time he was in the cave. Going back down into the cave Harold banked the fire for the night and went back into the garage, securing the hidden entrance to the cave before he went into the motorhome to turn in for the evening.
It was still raining when Harold got up the next morning, but lightly. The satellite TV dish on the Kenworth wouldn’t work inside the garage, so Harold hooked up the garage’s system to the external antenna connection on the motorhome and watched the weather, and then the news as he had breakfast.
The weather should be clearing by noon where Harold was, he saw. He’d do another load of firewood after the rain ceased, before he left to go back home. It was snowing in New England; The Mississippi, from St. Louis to Memphis, was going into flood stage; Phoenix was suffering with ninety-plus temperatures again; Kansas was recovering from tornadoes the storm that Harold had just weathered had spawned; and Florida and the Gulf Coast were bracing for Winston, a cat three hurricane, building toward a cat four.
Harold shook his head and switched to the news. It was equivalent to the weather. Troubles all over. And it was still not determined if the NEO would impact the Earth or not. It was definitely going to be close.
He checked the cave again just before he left, to make sure the fire was out, and to check the chalk marks. The water had, indeed, risen. But by only a fraction of an inch. It was still well inside the channel it had cut in the rock floor.
When Harold got back to the office that afternoon, going there directly from the Retreat, in the motorhome, Catherine was visibly excited. “They sent a check, Boss! A big one!”
“Who?” Harold asked, taking the envelope Catherine eagerly held out to him.
“The MAG! They’re buying the property, based on your preliminary drawings. And I’ve fielded five calls from MAG members wanting you to do their individual house plans.” Her exuberance faded somewhat. “People are getting scared, Boss.”
“I know,” Harold replied, taking the check out of the envelope. He gave a small whistle. Catherine had not been joking. Though the separation had never actually put him in the red, he was close to it. The check put him well into the black, with more to come.
“I think this calls for a celebration. How about some surf and turf on me this evening?”
“Suits me, Boss,” Kevin Sanderson said. “I’ve never actually had real surf and turf. Uh… that is lobster and filet mignon, right?”
Harold laughed. “Yes it is. Catherine?”
“I’m in,” she replied. “Should be enough for me to have leftovers for a couple of days.”
“Is that a hint for a raise?” Harold asked, enjoying the mood.
Catherine turned bright red. “No! Of course not! I just… I like leftovers…”
Harold laughed and Catherine’s red face finally faded.
“You two wrap things up and I’ll make the reservations.”
The three had a good time and Harold was feeling rejuvenated, between his time at the Retreat, and the news from the MAG.
Harold took on two additional drafters, to do the grunt work, while he, Kevin, and Catherine took care of the work directly relating to making the homes suitable for the concerned preppers that were building them.
It did seem as though none of the MAG members liked exactly the same layout in their houses as the others. Every one of the fifteen homes Harold’s firm did the blueprints for was significantly different from each other, while incorporating similar aspects the individuals wanted.
Harold, becoming more concerned about the NEO when it dropped out of the news, began asking for, and receiving, payment in gold at a highly discounted rate for his work.
Most of those wanting the work done understood his reasoning, and at the rates he was quoting in gold they were getting significant savings. Harold was using a $2,500.00 per ounce exchange rate while the actual spot price for gold was hovering around $2,000 per ounce.
Though the two new people wanted cash, Kevin and Christine took half their pay in gold and prep goods, which they got at a discount by putting in large orders with Harold, who was now including supplies for the home as well as the design.
The prepper forums were filled with people asking about the NEO. None of the governments were talking and those people with quality home observatories that had the capability of tracking the NEO fell silent when the governments did. Many of them were nowhere to be found.
More and more concerned, Harold checked some of the older posts, when the NEO first became a concern. Talk then was the asteroid would cross the Earth’s orbit shortly after Christmas of this year. Using Christmas Day as his target date, Harold began making arrangements to have the office shut down for the holiday by December twentieth, at which time he would hunker down at home, but with everything set up to be able to go to the Retreat if he felt the need.
His two new employees were totally unconcerned with the situation, but Harold could tell that Kevin and Catherine were becoming nervous, too. When he offered them both places in his shelter, come the day, they both relaxed. Both also moved most of their personal preps they’d begun gathering after they started working for Harold to the basement of his house. It was the basement that they considered the shelter, since it was built as such. Harold had never mentioned the vault room to either of them.
Harold spent the Thanksgiving Holiday long weekend at the Retreat, taking a few more items with him to round out his equipment and supplies for the next to worse case of an NEO impact. He figured the worst case was the NEO would land on top of him and there simply was no preparation for that.
Fearing a run on the banks if there was any additional bad news on top of what the weather was doing, and the encroachment of the sea into many coastal towns due to global warming induced sea level increases, Harold cleaned out all of his bank accounts, down to the limit of maintaining free checking. He couldn’t bring himself to close them, given the very real chance that there would be no impact.
The news broke after millions of people saw the series of bright flashes in the night sky deep in space a week before Christmas. A series of nuclear tipped missiles had been launched and detonated on or near the NEO to try to divert it. Government authorities all over the world announced to their citizens of the impending doom of large pieces of the NEO hitting the earth the next day.
Harold’s newest employees didn’t show up for work the next morning. Kevin and Catherine did. They hurriedly faxed, e-mailed, and surface mailed everything left pending and then headed for Harold’s house, wondering if Harold’s missed target date would prove detrimental to them.
The first fiery streaks of light began to appear as the three, driving their individual vehicles, made their way to Harold’s house. It was sudden pandemonium. There were literally people in the streets shouting, screaming, pointing at the sky, running every which way, or just standing and staring.
Harold had told Kevin and Catherine to follow closely behind him so they wouldn’t get separated. For no apparent reason Harold could see, people began to attack the moving vehicles, bringing Kevin’s to a stop. He was third in line, but Catherine’s frantic horn honking and head light flashing got Harold’s attention and he stopped.
Somehow Kevin managed to get out of the car before it was turned over, his new BOB in hand. He ran forward, towards Harold’s Escalade ESV. The group, done with Kevin’s little car, attacked Catherine’s. Kevin stopped to help her, and the both of them ran for Harold. He had one foot out of the Escalade and suddenly began firing the pistol he’d started carrying in the SUV.
He wasn’t trying to hit anyone, but wanted the rounds to impact close enough to people to scare them away. Someone else had a gun and didn’t like what Harold was doing. Fortunately the man was a lousy shot. Two bullets bounced off the pavement and hit people in the crowd trying to turn over Catherine’s car.
Harold spun around when he realized what was happening and snapped a couple of shots at the guy, to get him to stop shooting long enough for Catherine and Kevin to get into the Escalade ESV. One scrambled in on each side and Harold sat down on the driver’s seat, dropped the selector in drive, and gunned the engine. The acceleration forced the door closed, helped along by a bullet hitting the frame. It left a dent, but didn’t break the door glass.
Never intending to run over anyone, Harold had to give up trying his best and go for minimal damage, rather than stopping completely. People were bouncing off the fenders as he picked up speed. It seemed to be an isolated event, for once he was away from the mob, the rest of the people they saw seemed to be headed somewhere in a hurry, on foot or by vehicle. That became the new danger. Erratic drivers.
Harold managed to avoid a serious accident, but the Escalade ESV looked rather the worse for wear when Harold hit the side streets and worked his way home. There was no one in the kiosk at the entrance to the development.
Gun in hand, looking around constantly, Harold got out of the SUV and went into the kiosk. He worked the gate lift mechanism, ran back to the Cadillac and pulled it through. He took the time to go back and close the gate.
He saw a few people standing outside, looking at the sky. He didn’t bother to stop and tell them to get to their basements. Harold debated for a moment on whether to put the Cadillac inside the garage or not. The risk was about the same between something hitting the house and collapsing it onto the SUV and something hitting the SUV itself. He decided to leave it outside.
He led Catherine and Kevin to the house, but suddenly stopped and looked up at the sky again. He said, “Everything is going over the top of us! Look at the angle of the contrails. And they are starting to disappear in the east. Those we’ve been seeing are impacting well west of here.” After watching and thinking for another few seconds Harold added, “But there can always be a stray! Come on!”
He led the way into the house and then into the basement. “Make yourselves to home,” Harold said absently and went to the second of three control stations for the home automation features of the house.
Catherine went to find a bathroom and Kevin watched over Harold’s shoulder. Harold aimed one of the external cameras at the sky and the two watched as the meteor shower moved on to the west as the Earth turned on its axis. He buttoned up the house from the control panel. Catherine had just joined them in front of the camera monitor when something flashed between the camera and the sun, creating a momentary shadow.
“Oh my… Was that what I think it was?” Catherine asked.
“A really big piece of it, at the very least,” Harold said. The danger suddenly dawned on Harold. “Come on! Hurry! He ran for the door to the unfinished side of the basement and struggled the cabinet hiding the vault door out of the way so he could get to the lock mechanism. Catherine and Kevin were right behind him.
Once he had the door open he ushered the two down the hallway and closed the vault door and locked it, hurrying after the other two. Both had stopped when they entered the vault room and were staring at everything.
“Down! Down!” Harold cried. “Lay down, away from each other and the walls!” He did as he had instructed the others. They quickly followed suit. Long moments passed and then a minute. Harold was starting to think he’d misjudged the possibility of a heavy ground shock when it occurred.
All three of them gripped the carpet with their fingers, trying to stay in place as the whole room danced. Harold was thankful he’d secured the safes and cabinets to the wall. They surely would have toppled during the earth movement if he hadn’t.
Harold cautioned the other two to stay in place when the shaking stopped and they made moves to get up. Sure enough, three more shocks rattled things, with a longer period of stillness between each one. Finally, after ten minutes had passed without another shock, Harold carefully stood up. The others followed suit.
“You think it’s over?” Catherine asked.
Harold shook his head. “It’s just getting started. I want to go up and see how the property fared, before we get fallout.”
“Fallout?” asked Kevin. “That was a nuke?”
“No. There might be some radiation involved, but I’m mainly talking about the millions of tons of debris the NEO is sure to have put into the air when it impacted. You two can stay here if you want.”
“Oh, no!” Catherine said. “If we’re going to be stuck in here because of fallout I want a last look at the sky.”
“It won’t be your last,” Harold said firmly. He led the way out of the vault room and into the finished portion of the basement. There was some damage, but the basement held up fairly well. Harold carefully opened the door at the top of the basement stairs. It was a bit difficult to open. Even with the extra stout construction, the house had shifted slightly, taking it out of plumb.
There were a few knick-knacks lying on the floor, and pictures were down in the hallway. Things had been ejected from the higher shelves in the kitchen. The door to the garage opened without too much difficulty. The water heaters were still attached firmly to the wall. It made him think of the utilities. He wasn’t sure if they had lost power and the generator had kicked on, or if they still had commercial power.
He doubted that fact and had to use some force to get the back personnel door opened so he could go outside. Harold hurried around to the natural gas meter. He went ahead and shut off the valve even though the earthquake valve had closed the line. He could hear the generator running now and went to the electrical access panel and pulled the main. It shouldn’t matter with the automatic transfer switch for the generator, but Harold wasn’t going to chance anything.
Kevin and Catherine followed Harold around curiously, as he ran out to the front fence and went to one knee. He turned the water meter off. Looking around, he checked the security fence. It was in good shape. So were the gates. Looking back toward the house he breathed a sigh of relief. The Cadillac was okay.
He began to explain what he was doing from that point forward. “Wanted to get the commercial utilities turned off for safety reasons, and check the local stuff for damage.” He went through the pool house, which had stood the impact caused earth tremors. So had the other structures. “We’re coming through this with flying colors so far,” Harold said. “But I don’t want to jinx it. Oh. Looks like the north wall is leaning slightly. Shouldn’t have said anything. The detached garage had held up just as well as the other buildings. The Kenworth based motor home was fine and Harold suddenly wondered how the MacGregor 26 had faired. He hadn’t replaced it yet.
Suddenly hot ash and rock began to fall, burning Harold’s skin, as well as the others. They all ran for the garage and Harold went into the house, still running toward the den. It was the closest control panel.
He checked the roof of the house. It was a metal roof covered almost entirely with photovoltaic panels which were also relatively fire resistant. The hot rocks were making some marks, but Harold didn’t think it would catch fire. Each of the other buildings had enough of the PV panels to provide individual electric power when the commercial power was off and the generator wasn’t running, above their metal roofs.
The outer walls of the house were brick façade, so he didn’t worry about them much, either. He would have to keep an eye on the roof and start the roof sprinkler system if it became a problem. When he trained one of the cameras on the ground, there were spots where it was starting to burn. He turned on lawn sprinklers.
Harold decided to add more water to the pool, just in case. He made sure the large pump on the well was pumping into the pool, from which the fire pump would be getting its supply of water if he Harold had to run it. The yard sprinkler pump and well were more than holding their own at the moment.
Catherine began to cough slightly, and Kevin did the same a few seconds later. “It’s the fumes or gas from the fallout,” Harold said. “Best to get into the basement.”
All three made their way down and Catherine and Kevin both began to breathe easier, as Harold explained why. “There is a separate HVAC system for the basement, and then another for the vault. If we still have problems in here, after a while, we’ll move to the vault. I can totally isolate us there.”
The other two took chairs near Harold when he sat down at the home automation controls. The material that was falling was small gravel size, down to mere dust. Worried about the PV panels, Harold went ahead and started the fire pump and turned on the roof sprinklers on all the buildings.
Catherine began to cough again and the carbon monoxide monitor in the basement sounded off. “Not good, guys,” Harold said. “Into the vault.”
It didn’t take much encouragement. They could all breathe much more easily when they were in the vault. Harold, just so they would know in case something unexpected happened to him, showed the pair the filter systems in the vault.
“That’s the escape tunnel,” Harold said, opening a hatch about waist level in one of the vault walls. It goes to a point where you can release a couple of dogs and a hatch will fall open, letting sand fall down into the pit. You can push up through the sod then and get out.
“Just as important as that is the fact that the tunnel has an air inlet into it at the far end, too. It is a rock crib adjacent to the tunnel, with a screened opening to the crib. The crib is full of large rocks, which disperse and absorb any shockwave that might occur. It’s that decorative design element near the north wall.
“There are a couple more air inlets, six inch steel pipe, hidden in the house structure to pull air in case the rock crib becomes compromised or blocked by snow. Though it takes a pretty good snow to keep air from filtering down.
Harold closed the access hatch to the tunnel. “The air from the tunnel goes through a set of CBRN filters, which can be changed safely if they do stop up. They are way oversized for this much cubic space, but I like it that way. The air blower will run on the generator, or the twelve volt system, and can be manually operated.
“In the case where the CBRN filters don’t filter the contaminate, and that includes carbon monoxide, we can seal off the system by closing these valves…” Harold showed them how to operate the valves.
“And last several hours on the air here in the vault. If the CO2 level gets too high, I’ll start the stand alone CO2 absorption filter. That would give us several more hours before the oxygen level gets too low. Then I add medical grade oxygen to the room from a well insulated liquid oxygen tank buried outside. It’s not an easy supply to get. I have a sympathetic doctor that gave me a prescription.
“Just keep changing the absorption chemical, and adding oxygen, and we can stay isolated for several days, if need be.” Harold walked over to the home automation control panel they were familiar with from the den and basement versions. “CO, CO2, and oxygen monitors for the vault here, and a humidity meter. On the off chance the humidity does rise from our breathing, there is a standalone dehumidifier I can start.”
“Wow!” Kevin said. “I had no idea this level of protection was possible, except in the government shelters for the politicians.”
“You have to have some friends in the right places to get things like LOX. Same goes for medications. Only a friendly doctor can help you out with them, too. Cutting-torch-grade oxygen might be okay, but I can’t get any clear answers on that, so I wouldn’t use it. Simple compressed air would work, too, but it really takes up more space than practical. Liquid oxygen is the way to go.
“There is a back up to this system,” Harold continued, going over to one of the myriad cabinets in the room. “SCUBA rebreathers. Does the same thing as the vault system, but for individuals, using a face mask.”
There were plenty of things to occupy time in the shelter and Harold showed Catherine and Kevin all of them. From board and card games, to computer games, to a huge library of DVD movies and regular books; including a whole separate library for starting up society again after a disaster.
Copyright 2007