Read Rise From the Ashes: Lena's Story Online

Authors: Laura Franklin

Tags: #Fiction/Action/Series

Rise From the Ashes: Lena's Story (3 page)

BOOK: Rise From the Ashes: Lena's Story
7.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

 

“You heard the TV, there are terrorists landing here now, we have to get inland and find places where the army is guarding.”

 

“I’m too old.”

 

“We’ll walk with you, now come on,” anger and fear were seeping into his voice.

 

“Father, it’s not that I think I will hold you all back. It is just plain and simple that if this is the way the world is going, I am done. My time is close and I’m not going to leave my house.”

 

Glenn broke in, “Ellie’s mentioned this earlier, she’s pretty set. But we can’t stay with her, Father.”

 

“I’ll stay with you Ellie.”

 

“Father! You have to lead us to safety. It is your duty!” Kim nearly screamed.

 

Steve could detect the panic in her voice. Her cool manner shattered, she was no longer that together business owner, but a scared girl clinging to others for help. He could see in her eyes that her thinking had shut down.

 

Kim was normally such a pretty woman, like a stereotypical cheerleader grown up – long, bright blonde hair and blue eyes. Tall and slender. But panic had taken over her face and she looked needy and ugly right now.

 

“I can’t leave Ellie here by herse…”

 

“Yes you can, Father. I’m an old woman. My work is done. Kim is right, they need you. Please go, I don’t want anyone’s death on my head.” She was watching her young priest shake his head – seeing the fear in his eyes. She smiled. “Father, I am at peace. I am ready. Bless me before you go and lead our friends to safety.”

 

There was a heaviness that hung over Steve’s spirit and a physical heaviness that started in his left hand, at his small quartz ring and seemed to weight his whole body down. He looked down at the small ring, a gift from his mentor when he was in his last year at the seminary. The small white stone seemed to be growing darker and heavier.

 

Glenn spoke up again, “Father, we need you. I know it’s hard, but she’s made up her mind. And we don’t have time to debate all the parts of this. I don’t even think we have until morning.”

 

At this, his ring seemed to lighten again, Steve felt his brain clear a little. It was like he was being guided and this was a sign that this choice was the one he should make.

 

But to leave an old woman behind?

 

Was this a trick of the devil? Did he believe in the devil? Or was this a sign that God wanted him to lead these people away from danger?

 

He had no way to know if evil was trying to trick him. He had to reach out for his faith and see where it would lead him.

 

Then his decision was forced. In the distance came the rat-tat-a-tat of gun fire. Alarmed looks were shared.

 

“Right. No time for us to go back to our homes now, we have to get out now. Ellie, please?”

 

“No.”

 

“I love you, you old woman.”

 

“I know. Go and be safe. Go and do what you were meant to do.”

 

There was not a dry eye as the small group left – moving along side streets and easing away and north of the gun fire. Ellie lived only a block from the church. She was able to watch her friends for a few minutes until the distance merged with the dark and it looked like they just faded into the air. As they were making their way out of the city about an hour later, Ellie settled down on her bed with a glass of water and a handful of pills.

 

“I know you will forgive me for not wanting to feel the pain of being shot or stabbed. Thank you for my life here. I’m coming home now.”

Chapter Three

 

 

 

 

Mick ducked even though he was inside his Humvee. It took a few seconds for his eyes to adjust from the flash. He was used to the sounds of combat.

 

It was the drifting dirt or whatever that made his blood run cold. It was some kind of fallout from the bomb. All he could think of was,
Dirty Bomb
. He was only a mile or so from the point of impact.

 

Damn.

 

He ground the gears and jumped the Humvee into overdrive and headed back to base, Natick Soldier Systems Center, in Massachusetts a little west of Boston.

 

It was useless; now there was artillery fire coming down ahead, right where the base was. Someone was targeting the army base. Not only had the bomb hit right on the base, the artillery fire was chewing up the road and even bouncing the rubble. There was no return fire. It didn’t look like there was anyone to save, no one to help. Time to bug out and meet at the prearranged location, Lowell, to the north. The Humvee was a gas guzzler, but it would make it to Lowell with some to spare.

 

Mick called out on the 2-way and the radio as he sped away, but there were no responses. There was no gas mask in his vehicle, Mick figured he was going to be a goner soon from exposure to whatever was in the air, but he wanted to find out who did this and see if he could help provide intelligence for other army divisions to strike back.

 

He was going to be true to his soldier training until he died from radiation. And he hoped he could take whoever did this down with him.

 

Lowell was chaotic and already filling with people running from Boston. They reported that Boston had people dying in the street and men were swarming in the harbor and shooting anything that moved. God knew how the commuter rail was still running – but it was and it was jammed with terrified people. Terrified people who saw him in an army uniform and were thronging around him for help and information. He had to push them away and keep plowing forward towards the meeting point which was a small brick warehouse. There was no one there. There were some 2-way radios, some bug out equipment and other odds and ends that had been tossed here as an afterthought.

Mick locked up his Humvee and went inside to try the bigger radio and wait for reinforcements.

 

By the time the second full day after the bombs rolled around he finally picked up some radio traffic. While the heaviest attacks had hit on the east and west coasts, it seemed that once that first wave was over, a second wave hit about 24 hours later and targeted military bases and large cities everywhere. Not only that, but the drifting cloud of debris was able to kill over 75% of the population.

 

What the impact of the bombs didn’t get, the drifting dirty clouds did.

 

Mick couldn’t believe it. This was like a bad movie. He walked out each day to talk to people and started just wearing a normal T-shirt and jeans because he was constantly being looked to as some kind of leader. He had not had time to think about a scenario this huge. Each night he would go over any new bits of information he got that day.

 

It became apparent to him that if whatever virus or poison this was, if it was going to kill someone, it usually only took hours after exposure for that person to die. Nothing was hinting that long term radiation would be a factor. Looked like he was going to live through this after all.

 

There was an army Major who passed on some basic information and plans to Mick via the radio. Cops, local National Guard and even firemen were fighting back, but now the criminal element seemed to be looking at this as a free for all, it was time to fall back to the Canadian border to re-group and then move south reclaiming the land again as they could.

Major Brent Morna told Mick that Keene, NH had been hit by a bomb also, but there was a supply depot ten miles south of the city. Major Morna wanted Mick to get there and refuel his Humvee then load up on supplies before he headed to the border to rendezvous with Major Morna.

 

Mick figured he might just have enough gas to make it to the supply depot. He promised Major Morna he was on his way; he would make it to the meeting spot in Burlington, Vermont as soon as he could.

 

There was no way he could transport a few hundred people with him in the one vehicle, so he told the people who had been hanging around the brick building the basic plan. They could choose to hunker down and wait for the army to make its way south again, or they could make their way north also.

 

“Grab any guns you have, and for God’s sake, make sure you don’t shoot any of the good guys when we come back! You need all of us you can get now.”

 

That didn’t make Mick any new friends, but he had no idea what else he could do. He was only a few months out from basic training, was just 19 and had no idea what to really do. He couldn’t babysit a whole city!

 

His best bet was to head to where other soldiers were gathering and regroup and work under someone who had actual fighting experience. He felt just a small twinge of embarrassment, like he was being a coward. Still, he just couldn’t see how staying here with these people could really help them and it would just be wasting his time and training.

He had checked in via radio and given out as much information as he could to Major Morna. Now it was time to leave it in someone else’s hands.

 

The road to Keene was fairly clear. A few broken down cars, but it was easy for Mick to weave around them. However, this caused him to slow down and the weaving started to add up mileage-wise. He was too close to empty and he was still miles out from the depot. There was no way he was going to make it all the way, so he found a spot down an overgrown lane where he could hide the Humvee. Hopefully no one would strip it down until he could get back to it. Mick flung his pack over his shoulder and set off on foot.

Mick was tasting sweat dripping into his mouth as he finally reached the depot. Set up like the Lowell meeting spot, in a non-descript brick warehouse-type place, there were no other vehicles in the parking lot. He punched the key code into the door pad and walked into the gloom. Mick radioed out to report his new position.

 

“Bad news, Private Buckner. We’ve now got the power grid going down in sections. Charge up everything you have and prepare to get your ass up here anyway you can, fuel pumps won’t be working long.”

 

“Yes Sir,” Mick groaned.

 

Major Morna’s voice boomed out of the radio again, “Gets better, be prepared for a full nationwide blackout within days. Weeks to months before we get the grid up and running again. Over and Out.”

 

“Damn,” he cursed out loud. Then, with a deep breath, Mick started plugging in all the sets of 2-ways he could find. He also had a portable car charger with one outlet plug and a light. Once they were all charging up, he wandered outside to take a look around before the sun fully set.

 

Lovely and lonely. The sky was colored with oranges, pinks and reds. But all was still. Since the night was going to be warm, Mick had no desire to sleep inside that gloomy, stuffy warehouse. He wasn’t even going to bother to put up a tent, he just rolled out his sleeping bag next to a boulder at the side of the parking lot. Used his pack as a pillow and tucked his pistol between layers of his sleeping bag. It was way too hot for him to get in there. Nature was sending out the last of the nice weather before autumn rains and chill set in. Mick was going to enjoy it because he had a feeling that this winter was going to be the hardest one he had ever lived through.

 

Mick started running his travel plans through his head. If he could find a gas container tomorrow, he would fill it and walk back to the Humvee – drive back here and fill it up and go as far as he could in the Humvee. If the electric was out – then he couldn’t pump any gas from the reserve tank underground. He may as well start to walk from here. Perhaps he could find a motorcycle or even a mountain bike. As he drifted off making and rejecting plans, the last of the light played off of some flecks in the bolder above his head. This was called the granite state, must be some flecks of mica in there. Or quartz, wasn’t that part of it? As he thought this, it just felt right. Yeah, it had flecks of quartz all through it – that is why people liked to polish it up and use it in their new kitchens. And with these thoughts he drifted off to sleep.

 

Mick was rested and felt excellent and alert the next morning. He figured it was because he slept outside. Strange that he could remember one of his dreams so well. In his dreams the electric was out, so he started walking northwest.

 

He shook his head, dreams were strange, he knew he had to head out pretty much straight north. Still, it had seemed so real. He had passed a fence an hour into his walk with two horses, brown and grey, on the other side of this fence. He had put a rope around the neck of the brown one and stood on the fence to ease on its back. The he rode northwest and started to follow some railroad tracks.

 

Dreams
were
strange, he had never been near a horse, he had no idea what to do with one. But the thought of riding instead of walking was nice. Must have been his brain doing some wishful thinking while he slept. Time to put the dreams and daydreams aside. He rolled up his sleeping bag and headed back inside. Flipping the light switch to … nothing. Great. No power. So he really would be walking now.

BOOK: Rise From the Ashes: Lena's Story
7.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Journey by H. G. Adler
Love Match by Monica Seles
Deep Surrendering by Chelsea M. Cameron
Travels into the Interior of Africa by Mungo Park, Anthony Sattin
Helsreach by Aaron Dembski-Bowden
Her Dream Cowboy by Emily Silva, Samantha Holt
Ugly Girls: A Novel by Lindsay Hunter
My Runaway Heart by Miriam Minger
R1 - Rusalka by Cherryh, C J
Person or Persons Unknown by Anthea Fraser