Around 9 a.m., Danny and I used our own bully pulpit to try to convince the hundred or so citizens who showed up to leave town—head north, south, somewhere, anywhere, anything but stay here. The collective resistance astonished us. We were actually booed and insulted. Several citizens told us they’d heard this already from a few other visitors and no enemy force had come yet. We lost half the small crowd before we had even finished speaking. No matter what we said a majority of them didn’t seem to believe us. Frustrated by the ignorance, I urged everyone there to pick up their phone and call anyone they knew who lived anywhere else in the country. I saw very few people even try. Unbelievable! One extra vocal opponent to our advice yelled out that, “he wasn’t afraid of no terrorists. If they really wanted him, they could come get him.” Oh, they’re coming, you idiot.
The entire population of a ten-mile radius around Medora was barely three hundred strong, and less than a quarter of them took our advice, most of those heading north for Canada. The majority of residents decided they’d stay put and face whatever was coming. Two words: Imminent death. One rancher’s thirty-five-year-old daughter, Tara, and her eleven-year-old daughter, Emily, were in town visiting from Rapid City. When the rancher heard our story he believed it entirely and led his daughter and granddaughter directly to Danny and me. He pleaded with us to take the two of them along, even though he intended to stay put. “My wife has stage 4 breast cancer. She doesn’t have much time left. She can’t travel and I can’t leave her.” He said. We respectfully didn’t argue with him.
Danny, Dad and I had discussed what we’d do if other survivors along the way wanted to join us. We initially had no opposition to the idea, but our selflessness had almost fatally backfired with Wooly. Now, we were more than a little leery of taking similar chances. For some reason though, I wasn’t opposed to these two joining us. Okay, so it was an obvious reason. The rancher’s daughter was a visual knockout. I caught Hayley’s amused stare and ignored it. She seemed to have read my mind. Or followed my eyes. I could tell Danny didn’t like the idea of increasing our group numbers, especially with a child involved. But, I whispered in his ear, “We told these people they should go with us. We can make room for a couple, right?”
He looked at me like I was crazy, clearly not as distracted by Tara’s beauty as I was. But he must not have felt like objecting in front of the rancher. He shrugged “Whatever Dad. Your call.”
I turned to the farmer. “We’ll take them.” I said with a smile and false sense of confidence.
He thanked us repeatedly and we began to make our exit.
We filled up with gas at the west end of town. So far we’d been fortunate the fuel switches and pumps at most stations still worked off generator power. We’d had to leave our own generators back in the bunker, but Tara’s dad gave us a brand new one to take along. All we had to do at each stop was go into the station supply rooms and flip the switch. If they didn’t have a generator, we plugged ours in.
Had there been more cars on the road, we’d have been in a mass competition over dwindling fuel supplies. As it was, with only a few of us traveling, gas was plentiful. So far.
As we were about to leave the station a truck pulled up with two men in it. They introduced themselves as Blake and Nathan. They’d been packing to leave before we even arrived in Medora. An earlier visitor had convinced them to leave. Blake had been on a final supply run and happened by the town center. He’d seen the crowd gathered and stopped to hear us speak, before rushing home to grab the rest of his gear. He’d picked up Nathan on the way here. As Rapid City transplants, they figured they could help us get through the back roads to their former home turf, if we’d let them tag along. We had an atlas, but their local knowledge could definitely pay off. We agreed and followed the two locals north into Teddy Roosevelt’s old stomping grounds to a series of caves off the beaten path. We’d be safe there for today, but it was hard to leave those two hundred plus people behind, knowing pretty soon they’d probably all be dead.
From our secure hideout we heard the drones fly over around noon. The distant explosions echoed through the maze of canyons to our position. There was likely little left of Medora now. Tara was trying to be strong for her daughter, but the personal loss was evident on her face. She understood what those bombs meant for her parents. We all did. And even if anyone managed to survive the aerial assault, Captain Eddie and his troops likely weren’t far behind.
EIGHTEEN: (Eddie) “Catching Up”
It was all Eddie could do to not scream, but he had to keep his composure in front of his troops. As the roof of the bunker imploded, a rush of water exploded from the resulting crater. Debris scattered, and the ground caved in all the way down to the lake. There was no way to get the water back out, no way to get in and see what had been below the surface of the cabin. It had become part of the lake. Clearly there had been a window or door leading to the water, and the explosion had ripped it open. Some of the debris was sucked out into the lake, but the rest spilled out of the cabin foundation. He ordered his men to collect what they could, and they began to sort through it.
A soldier brought Eddie a large bag. It was evidently waterproof as its contents—a tent, sleeping bag, two guns, some food, and a folder of maps—were dry. Interesting. He carried the folder and the guns back to his truck and went through every map. There were maps of Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona, Mexico, Hawaii and one national map with a straight line drawn across it from Minnesota to Hawaii. This answered the question about the trucks and where their passengers had been. They had started from northern Minnesota. They had indeed been in this bunker. But now where were they, and how had they escaped?
He got that answer a few minutes later when his men brought him several small diving suits. There had been a door to the lake after all, which also explained the waterproof bag. These clever Americans had escaped right under their feet last night. A wry smile crossed his lips. Impressive. This was more like hunting a lion than a boar. Boars were stupid. Nasty, but stupid. These people, whoever they were, were clearly far from stupid. They were now his lions, and Eddie had killed every lion he’d ever tracked.
He was impressed with the ingenuity they’d displayed so far. Eddie had little doubt now he’d been pursuing these same people for a while. In Fargo the company leaders had been directed to collect the license and weapon registry from every hunting store they ransacked. American firearm laws mandated that every stocked and sold gun have an independent serial number that could be traced. Law enforcement used the numbers for solving crimes. Qi Jia could use those registries to compile a list of addresses on potential resistance groups and facilitate the tracking of any armed survivors.
Eddie put the registry to his own personal use. He had the serial numbers on the guns checked against the store in Grand Forks, already confident they would match. These were indeed the same people that had killed Markus. They’d had the upper hand on him twice now, and he was determined it not happen again. The maps gave him an idea of where they were heading: through South Dakota and toward Colorado. They were taking it one state at a time, but their final destination was clear. He knew it was against his orders to cross into another state, but no one would miss him and his seventy-three men. Besides, they’d already deviated from their assigned route. Many more soldiers would cover where he had originally intended to go. His current destiny, he knew, was to track these Americans down and kill them, wherever it took him. For Markus, and to make sure they never made it to Hawaii. “Men,” he yelled. “Let’s go.”