The Directives (15 page)

Read The Directives Online

Authors: Joe Nobody

BOOK: The Directives
12.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Bishop? Hey, Bishop? You still with us?”

It took a moment for the Texan to blink away the crust of sleep and grime, the blurry image of a man standing over him finally coming clear. For a moment, he was still leaning against the mailbox, but then it came back quickly.

“Hi Evan. Nice to see you made it.”

“Same back at ya. We’ve been looking all over for you.”

The word “we” prompted Bishop to glance over Evan’s shoulder, the sergeant’s filthy face managing a slight smile. “Damn… it’s like a high school reunion,” Bishop mumbled.

Like an angel from heaven, the NCO held out what could only be a steaming cup of coffee. “I thought you might appreciate this, sir.”

Bishop smiled, “Why, Sergeant, if I wasn’t already a married man…”

Bishop swung a leg over the edge of the hammock, the move causing him to inhale sharply from the pain. With the help of his two visitors, he managed to stand.

“You’ve been hit,” Evan observed, noting the blood-soaked leg. “You better get that looked at.”

Glancing out the window, Bishop tried to judge how long he’d been sleeping. “What time is it?”

“Zero nine thirty,” the sergeant replied.

“I’ve been out for three hours. Seems like days,” Bishop noted, reaching for the cup of joe.

“It’s all over now,” Evan said. “We won… if you can call it that. Mayor Lewis has disappeared, along with one of the sheriff’s patrol cars. We captured that bloodsucker Winfrey, though. So, as things stand right now, we have managed to detain two of the most selfish opportunists – the banker and the sheriff.”

It was all too much, too fast for Bishop. He sipped the coffee, the strong, bitter brew helping clear the cobwebs as it slid down his throat.

“How many did we lose?” Bishop finally inquired, looking directly at the sergeant.

The NCO stared down at the floor tile, his hoarse voice filled with remorse. “There are still eleven of my men alive, four critically injured. Twelve of your guys made it through, six needing better care tha
n what we can provide here.”

“Twelve? That’s it?”

“Yes, sir. The major is still alive, but barely. He needs surgery, as do several of the others. We are trying to salvage enough transportation to move them back to Hood. A couple of the local doctors are doing their best to stabilize the critical ones… trying to get them to a place where they can be moved.”

“Very good, Sergeant. It sounds like you’ve got it all under control.”

“We’ll give you a few minutes to get your shit together,” Evan said, as the two visitors moved toward the door. “I’d get that leg looked at as soon as possible.”

Bishop thanked both of them for the wakeup call and, more importantly, the coffee. “Let me find a clean shirt and get my shit in a single, neat bag. I’ll be out in a bit.”

He spent the next 30 minutes washing his face and body, pouring the bottled water from his pack to accomplish the task. “You don’t want to frighten the women and children,” he whispered, digging a clean shirt, socks, and pants out of his bag.

He scrubbed as much of the blood and gore off his equipment as possible. Next came his weapon, the carbine receiving a quick field strip and lube.

When he finally emerged, Bishop was far from a new man, but projected a much better appearance than the haggard soul who had entered the clerk’s office a few hours before. Frowning at the thought of a trip through the courthouse again, he was surprised to discover he wasn’t the only thing in Brighton that had cleaned up a little.

Dozens of volunteers were busy outside his temporary room, removing the dead and searching for additional wounded. While the effort wasn’t completely finished, he found the rotunda passable and not nearly as heartbreaking.

He emerged on the front steps, the view of the courthouse lawn completely changed from before. People were moving around, seeming to have some purpose or goal. The only thing that separated the scene from a typical day in any Texas community were the charred piles of burned out vehicles and the rows of bodies laid out on the grass.

Many of the dead had been covered with sheets. Men with clipboards walked among the deceased, taking notes and occasionally bending to search a body for identification. There were scores of dead, with more being delivered to the
makeshift morgue every minute.

Someone had set up a couple of tent-like awnings to keep the sun off the wounded. Dozens of the town’s citizens hustled here and there, assisting what appeared to be a mixture of doctors, EMTs and other healthcare professionals tending to those who were still alive.

Evan was in the middle of it all, the man’s energy and determination enviable. Bishop watched as two more wounded were delivered on stretchers. A table had been set up nearby, three of the surviving soldiers giving blood.

Bishop’s eye was drawn to activity near one of the large trees that dotted the courthouse lawn. Two men were there, each lobbing a rope over a low branch. The Texan inhaled sharply when he noticed one end was tied in a hangman’s noose.

He didn’t feel any pain as he bounded down the steps, determination in his stride as he approached the rope-throwers.

“What are you doing?” Bishop challenged.

One of the men turned, looking Bishop up and down as if he were stupid for asking such a question. “We’re getting ready to have a hanging,” he replied. “We’re going to string up the banker and the sheriff.”

“I don’t think so,” Bishop replied, tightening the grip on his carbine.

The two hangmen exchanged glances, troubled expressions on their faces. “Look mister… we’re just following Evan’s orders.”

Before Bishop could respond, Evan was standing beside the Texan. “Is there a problem, Bishop?”

“Yes. Yes there is. Could I have a word with you? In private.”

The two men strolled a few feet away, Evan clearly not understanding why Bishop was upset.

“Stop this, Evan. Stop it right now. This isn’t right,” Bishop said.

“I don’t understand. You of all people know damn good and well what those two men did. They deserve to die.”

Sighing, Bishop shook his head. “Yes, they probably do, but not this way, and not today. There needs to be a trial, an impartial judge and jury. If you hang them before that, justice won’t be served. You’ll be no better than they are.”

“How can you say that? You saw what they did. They tried to kill you and all of the soldiers, too. How can you defend them?”

Bishop put his hand on Evan’s shoulder, his face full of compassion. “I’m not defending them. I’m defending the system. Rule of law doesn’t mean replacing one leader with another. It means restoring a system that has worked for over 200 years. Have a trial. Give them the same shake you would want if the situation were reversed. Then hang them from the highest tree in town if they are found guilty. I’ll even help hoist the rope if it’s done in a fair, just way.”

Watching Evan’s face closely, Bishop knew this was a critical moment for both the town of Brighton and the Alliance. How the man reacted would be an important indicator of his future leadership.

“You’re right,” Evan finally admitted. “I’m sorry… I just have loathed and hated for so long. I’ve buried so many friends and neighbors.”

Bishop smiled, relieved his new friend still possessed reason and humanity. At that moment, the Texan was sure Evan was going to be a great leader for the people of Brighton.

Without hesitation, Evan moved back to the two hangmen and ordered the ropes be taken down. It was a small, but positive event that helped offset the pain, suffering and misery Bishop knew would dominate so many lives in the coming days.

It was a ragtag lineup if Bishop had ever seen one.

Only four of the military vehicles were salvageable, three of the civilian pickups. He surveyed the remnants of what, only three days before, had once been an impressive display of strength and authority.

No longer. Even the units judged capable of making the trip back to Fort Hood looked more like candidates for a junkyard than any semblance of a military force. Bullet holes, dented fenders, missing window glass and numerous scorch marks were testimony to their experience in Brighton. The men didn’t look much better.

The pickups were filled to capacity with wounded, some in critical need of surgery and treatment unavailable locally. Other casualties could ride in the cabs, their arms in slings, heads in bandages and legs supported by crutches.

The sergeant appeared at Bishop’s side, “We’re ready, sir. We managed to salvage enough gasoline and diesel to make the trip back. One of the pickups is questionable, but I’ve got a rope along. We may end up towing her into Hood.”

Bishop nodded, ‘Thank you, sergeant. Get the men loaded up.”

The Texan then turned to Evan and extended his hand. “In a few days, the Alliance will send in more people. I have the list you created and will get some experts hustling to gather what you need. It may take us a bit, but we’ll be back.”

The local nodded and smiled as he shook Bishop’s hand. “I’ll do what I can to get the plant ready. We’ll repair the generator you’re leaving. There should be enough fuel to prepare the facility. We’ll be ready when your people return.”

Bishop started to turn, and then paused, one last thing on his mind. “Evan, you may already know this, but I’ve got to say it anyway. Your first priority now is to heal… to bridge the divide that still exists here in Brighton. If you are fair, compassionate and equal handed, then it can be done. If you allow vengeance, retribution, or hatred to control this town, you’ll never recover. That’s the end of my little speech. Good luck.”

And with that, Bishop limped down the stairs, making a beeline for the lead unit of the convoy without as much as a glance back.

They rolled out of Brighton in silence, the sergeant behind the wheel, Bishop gazing out of the passenger window.

“Where do you think we went wrong, sir?” the NCO eventually asked. “Don’t you believe there was something we could have done better? I feel like there should be some payoff for all of the men we lost… that they shouldn’t have paid the ultimate price for nothing. There has to be something salvageable out of this whole mess.”

“We should get some of the parts necessary to restart the nuclear power plant. I suppose we should feel some sense of accomplishment over that.”

Shaking his head in disagreement, the soldier expanded his thought. “No offense, sir, but I don’t remember fighting for the factory in Brighton. I don’t recall anyone trying to stop us from reaching it, or saying it was off limits. My point is we went in without any intelligence, local knowledge, or concept of what was happening on the ground. That’s why we lost so many good men, sir. That’s why those citizens back there will be burying their fathers, husbands, and brothers for weeks.”

“I feel exactly the same way. If I have anything to say about it, we’ll never make the same mistake again. We were arrogant, full of a righteous belief that we were on the side of good and right. But there isn’t any black and white left in our world. Nothing, it seems, is that simple.”

They continued, eating up the miles in silence. Bishop shared the sergeant’s looming sense of dread, despite being able to report, “Mission accomplished.” The price had been too high, the cost, perhaps, unnecessary.

The Texan also faced a serious session with a surgeon. He fully expected the removal of the buckshot still in his leg to take him out of action for quite some time. It would be his third time in convalescence since the world had gone to hell, and he wasn’t looking forward to it.

“I’ll promise you one thing, Sergeant. I swear upon my father’s grave that we are going to change our protocols and tactics. I don’t care if I have to personally beat every general and council member over the head with a bat, we are going to learn from this and get better. I owe it to our dead. Never again.”

The NCO scanned his passenger’s face, considering the words. He’d heard it all before, skepticism and doubt creeping into his thoughts. How many politicians had said the same thing about Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan? How many men had died in those long, bloody wars, only to
have the United States pull out and allow the enemy free reign?

But the man beside him wasn’t a politician. He was a warrior, a kindred spirit with conflict and death.

Glancing again at Bishop, the sage old NCO reconciled his internal ambivalence, arriving at a conclusion.
I believe this man. He is committed to making a difference. If these Alliance people have more like him, this will all work out.

Other books

The Tender Glory by Jean S. MacLeod
Legacy by Steve White
The Ugly Duchess by Eloisa James
Golden Girl by Mari Mancusi
VoodooMoon by June Stevens