Herb acknowledged with a smile and nodded his thanks.
“I also feel great about Darla and Steve and their son, Toma, living here, knowing that they will be able to forge a fruitful life here together. That said, Bill, Lisa, and Sally, I want you to reconsider coming with me and stay here.”
Bill stood and was about to offer a rebuttal, but Max cut him off.
“Sorry friend, but let me finish first. Then I want you three to discuss it once more before you make your final decision.
“As I was saying, I think you should stay now. Obviously, if you do, I will miss you all deeply. It’s true that I think your talents would be invaluable to Cicada, but I don’t want to be the cause of another separation from your family. Life is short, and who knows how much time we have left, so I couldn’t blame you for wanting to stay. It is a rich and safe place to be.” Max paused for a bit and then finished with, “I’m going to wait outside.”
They were quiet while he left through the squeaky front door.
Bill spoke first. “But what happens if…” he trailed off.
Lisa picked up the thread. “Wait, that’s not what he said….”
They seemed torn and unable to complete their thoughts, their words mirroring their indecision.
Sally stepped in and with confidence announced, “Well, know this, whatever you decide to do, I’m going with Max. I feel I need to do this. I still have a skill, but it’s not for farming and ranching. I’m just not cut out for that. I need to be looking at code or tapping away on a computer. I’m hopeful that I can make a contribution at Cicada and that my contribution helps this world. I owe this to my brother, just as much as I do to my sister and my nephew.”
After only a few minutes of debate, they each announced their decisions to the group.
“Let’s all tell Max,” Sally proclaimed.
The Kings came out onto the porch and told Max the news. The three of them were going after they said goodbye to everyone.
When it was Max’s turn with Darla, Toma, and Stepha, he offered them a gift.
“Here,” he said, handing them the journal. “This has been in my family for over a hundred and fifty years. Besides being our family journal chronicling various odds and ends of unrelated stuff, it is mostly about Cicada. Plus, there are a few secrets,” he winked at them with a grin. “But, that’s not the reason I’m giving this to you. If sometime in the future, you, or your son, or even your son’s son, decide to make the journey to Cicada, I have provided the map my grandfather drew and I added to it to show you where it is from here. When you get there, just hold the book up at the entrance after you announce yourself and they will take you in. Hopefully, we will return long before that day. But just in case,” he said, releasing the journal.
“We will take good care of it, Uncle Max,” Darla promised him.
Around noon, they pulled the truck out onto the highway and drove north. The distance they had to travel was a little less than half what had taken them almost a year to travel from Mexico. In their Blazer, in the days before, when there was a clean road and AAA to call on if there was engine trouble, it was an easy day of driving. In this world that had changed so completely, it was impossible to guess. They would be the only operating vehicle on roads with scattered hazards and people everywhere who were willing to kill for no reason. They presented antagonists with many solid reasons for violence: food, supplies, and a working vehicle. This trip was extremely dangerous and they all knew it. They planned on it taking less than a week, but to be safe they packed for a month.
They passed Albuquerque without incident because the city had apparently been abandoned. Only one person shot at them the entire time, but he (she? Who knows?) missed. When they crossed the Colorado state line as the sun was setting, they decided against pushing on to Pueblo and chose to pull off the road. They parked under the cover of several trees near the Saint Charles River. Max, Bill, and Lisa pitched a tarp and slept a restless sleep, interrupted by cool blowing winds, the bright luminescence of the night sky, and anxious dreams. Sally slept well in Stanley’s back seat. When they left the next morning, just before the sun rose, they were full of expectation and excitement at knowing they were less than sixty miles from Cicada.
Max took over the driving from Bill, giving him shotgun, almost literally, as Bill’s job was to shoot at anyone who stood in their way.
Pueblo posed no problem for them and they drove onward toward Colorado Springs. Just before signs of the city appeared, Max turned off the road onto a four-wheel-drive trail.
“This is sort of a back way, so we can avoid any traps. I’m worried that this place will be less of a secret than I hoped. If word of this sanctuary gets out, there may be many others trying to get to Cicada just like us.”
“I’m all for the back way,” Bill replied, still remaining vigilant on watch.
They stopped on top of a hill several miles farther on. Max asked, “Lisa, can you hand me the binoculars?”
“Sure, is everything okay?” She handed them over and frowned.
“I don’t know,” he said, looking toward the horizon. “There are a lot of people around the grounds. And I see a fire and some smoke, which is probably nothing. All right, this might be hairy.”
When they had gone less than a mile, they passed people. It was just one camp site, except it looked like it had been there for a long time. Then another, and then another. A half a mile up the little Jeep trail they were on, a man stood in the middle of the track with his hands up, holding a rifle in one hand.
Max said in a low voice to Bill, “You know what to do.”
Bill rolled the window down, aimed the rifle and fired two shots in quick succession at the man’s feet. He dove into a nearby ditch. Bill kept the sight on him in case he tried anything.
“Ladies, keep your eyes open. Yell if you see anything,” Max ordered as they all scanned the area.
They pulled up to the base of a mesa on which stood a rock wall that looked fairly old and circled the summit. On top of the wall was barbed wire. They all glared at the insurmountable fortress, heads craned upward against their windows. All, except for Max. He pulled the truck onto a frontage road that appeared to go around the mesa.
“This is it, guys. This is Cicada,” Max stated proudly.
After driving a mile down the frontage road, they came to a steep Jeep trail up the hill to a tall gate only slightly wider than their truck. Max drove up the trail like a pro, handling every inch with knowledge and skill, the truck’s wheels fighting to grab on the broken road. After a few short minutes, they pulled up to the gate and honked the horn. He waited a bit and then honked again. A couple more minutes, another long honk.
“I have people walking our way,” Bill called out, as they all watched a group of people walking up the broken road they had just driven. “I count five, six… no, eight, and most of them have guns.”
Max put the Blazer into gear and stepped on the gas, bumping into the gate. A big thump reverberated through the truck. He then started honking like a crazy man, or so it seemed. After a few seconds Bill realized that Max wasn’t honking wildly, but with purpose. He was using Morse code, telling whoever was behind the wall it was him.
“Bill, you have to take the shot!” Max stopped only long enough to shout at Bill and went back at it, producing the same pattern each time: honk-honk, hoooonk, honk-honk-honk… hoooonk-hoooonk, honk-hoooonk, hoooonk-honk-honk-hoooonk.