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Rich’s very serious look when he was on the radio changed to a smile as he was looking at the semi-truck full of food.

“You seriously had no idea what was in that truck?” Rich asked Grant.

“Kinda,” Grant said. “It’s hard to explain. Maybe over some Pendleton. It’s…hard to explain.” Grant hoped he didn’t sound too weird.

“I’ll bet,” Rich said. “Well, no meeting tonight. We’ve got an attack coming.”

“Could I respectfully disagree?” Grant asked. “Not about the attack. Yeah, we’ll see some action tonight. But I disagree about not having a meeting. We need to get the message out right now that we have secured a load of food and that the community will be deciding what to do with it. I don’t want people’s expectations to be that they’ll get a bunch of food. I want to hold onto the food as a reserve and only use it when people have exhausted their own supplies. Like around winter. I have an idea on how to do that I’ll tell you later.”

Man, this guy thinks of all the political angles, Rich thought. Not “political” as in “vote for me,” but as in getting people to work together as much as possible. Rich was very glad to have Grant around. He wasn’t a military genius, but those political and administrative ideas of his were solid.

“OK,” Rich said. “You go up to the Grange and give out the message you want to give out and then get back down here with all the guys as soon as you can. I’m staying here with Dan to coordinate our defenses.”

“We need to get that semi up to the Grange for safekeeping,” Grant said. “I’ll have Gideon drive it up there.”

“Who’s Gideon?” Rich said. Grant pointed toward him.

“Oh, yeah, do that,” Rich said.

Grant ran over to Gideon and told him to get in the cab and follow him. They went to the back of the trailer to lock it up. Some of the guards were concerned about why they were there to lock up the goodies. Were they jacking it from them?

Grant explained, “We’re just taking it to the Grange for safekeeping. Grab two guards and get in the cab.” Two guys jumped into the cab.

Grant told Gideon to follow him as he rode in front on his moped. He saw Pow and said, “Hey, we’ll probably be attacked tonight. You and one other guy need to go back to the yellow cabin and get all the ammo and magazines you can. Get all our spare rifles. AKs, shotguns, you name it. There will be some new guys on guard duty tonight. Bring all that shit. Get a truck to bring it down.”

Grant got on his moped and continued on toward the Grange with Gideon and the cab full of guards following him. They had to get there quickly. The attack might be minutes away.

On the five-minute ride there, Grant collected his thoughts. He would park the truck and have at least two guards on it. He’d have someone get Chip up there, who could manage the guards. Grant thanked God that Chip was out there. It was just one of the many things Grant thanked God for on that five-minute ride back to the Grange.

Grant wanted “his” guys to be in charge of the food and be seen by the community as in charge of it. Not that he wanted to take all the food; quite the opposite, he had enough food for his family and he wanted to distribute the food as widely as possible. But, he wanted the residents to see that he and his guys were the problem solvers, the people to go to and the ones who get things done. Guarding a semi full of food when the stores were closed sends a powerful “can-do” message, and would make them very popular. And Grant knew they would need all the friends and supporters possible for what was coming.

There was no way he could prevent a vote on how to distribute the food, although he wished he could. He was no dictator, but he was worried that people would want to divide it up among 500 or so households, which would be a pittance per person. However, there was no way to hide the food or convince people that Grant alone got to decide what to do with it. This was a difficult problem to solve. So he started thinking as hard as he could.

He knew that the first message that went out in the rumor mill—and news of a semi full of food would spread like wildfire—would be what people would assume the plan was. It was important to be the first one to get the message out. Just like in politics. Wait, Grant laughed to himself, this was politics.

Distributing the food made Grant momentarily wonder if he was becoming a socialist. Does the collective get to decide how to divide up other people’s property? Nope.

First of all, they were at war. Most people at Pierce Point didn’t realize it, but they were. An undeclared, informal low-intensity war. That semi was the “spoils of war.” It went to supplying the troops and the civilians supporting the troops. That’s how spoils work. At least, when the capturing force is decent instead of looters, who just take it for themselves. Captured goods go to support the military forces that captured it. It’s like paying for a military, but with the other side’s stuff.

Second, there was the practical problem of who owned the food. The government? Who would it be returned to? The FC and the gangs? That would just get it back to the “government” or to the boss running Frederickson, if the FC didn’t steal it for themselves first. What if Gideon’s company owned it? How would he get it back to them? The truck would be hijacked a few miles down the road. At the gate to Frederickson, for sure. So there was no way to return the truck.

A final reason that distributing the food wasn’t considered socialism was…well, payback. Technically, the food belonged to the government, which had nationalized the food and trucks. Well, the government owed the people in Pierce Point several million dollars. The government had seized their bank accounts. The government had taken their property for years through environmental regulations. The government had taxed them at absurd levels. The government had taken way more than a semi of food from these people. Now the people were getting back some of what had been stolen from them. It could be considered “returning stolen property,” even though Grant just kind of stole it himself. Kind of, but not really.

The fact that the semi was the spoils of war explained why the food would be distributed, but not how. Grant remembered an ingenious solution for this problem from one of his favorite novels, One Second After. In it, the community had to decide how to distribute food. They wanted people to use their own reserves first before dipping into the community food. They also didn’t want to be an authoritarian government. So they came up with the meal card system.

Under the meal card system, a person was obligated to use up their own food first. If they chose to accept a meal card—and some did not—they thereby agreed to let the community come into their house and inspect it to ensure that they did not have any food. This was all voluntary. The meal card got them one good meal every day cooked at the community facility. They got a meal to eat there, not food to carry back to their houses where they could sell it.

There was another important feature of the meal card system: they had to work for the meal card (except if they were disabled or elderly). They had to do something for the community for their meals. There were no free loaders.

Yet another important feature of the meal card was that there was no favoritism to it. If a person worked (or was disabled) and they agreed to allow inspection of their home, they ate. Period. There were no political tests or some families getting more, or girlfriends eating without working—none of that. If they contributed to the community, they got to eat one meal a day. Period.

There was a subtle, but important, political component to the meal card. While everyone who worked and allowed inspections got one, the community could yank the card if people broke the rules. If a person was hoarding food, the meal card was taken away for a period of time (roughly until their hoarded food was exhausted). If someone stole, their card was yanked. Grant thought this was a great system.