All in all he felt pretty good about the morning’s efforts, even if he hadn’t been able to buy any gas. The only thing left to do in the city was drive back to his dorm and load up all his possessions.
Trev had intentionally saved his room for last because some of his most valuable stuff was in there. He hadn’t wanted it sitting in his car while he was away doing something else because losing some of those items would be really painful in a survival situation.
Which he was continuously reminded of as he pulled everything from his closet, where he’d meticulously packed it into every spare inch of space, and piled it all on his bed.
He had his backpack, expensive even though it was military surplus, which he’d carefully loaded with gear and supplies for an extended hike. Among other things was a self-inflating sleeping pad, a compact lightweight sleeping bag rated for 30 below zero, a one man tent, a quality hatchet, 2 pairs of merino wool long underwear, a change of clothes he’d picked out to be durable and warm, the best pair of hiking boots his cousin could find in his research that Trev had already spent some time breaking in, 5 pairs of merino wool socks, a top rated camping water purifier and extra replacement filters, a merino wool balaclava, and a quality pair of ski goggles for intensely cold weather.
He also had enough food for two weeks in there, food that was designed to be convenient to eat while traveling that also gave good energy like jerky, vacuum sealed dinners, a trail mix of dried fruit and nuts, energy bars, and peanut butter. The last major item of consideration was a reasonable amount of ammo for his two firearms, where weight was a concern on a long trip. The rest of the pack was filled in around the bigger stuff with toiletry items, a large variety of firestarters, a sturdy folding knife for chores around camp and a heavier skinning knife, flashlights and candles and an electric lantern, and fifty feet of thin nylon rope with carabiners he could clip to his belt.
Trev hadn’t researched or shopped for most of the stuff, since Lewis had been preparing his own pack and Trev had just convinced him to send along all his recommendations so he could get the same things. To his chagrin he hadn’t even used any of it enough to really familiarize himself with how it worked. For the more complicated stuff like the tent and the water filter he’d left the instructions in so he’d at least be able to figure them out if necessary, but learning to use everything had always been one of those things he’d intended to do but hadn’t found time for.
One of his regrets, especially now, was that he’d never even had a chance to go out on an extended camping trip with the pack and really test himself and his preparations and, if need be, weed out the stuff he didn’t need. Lewis had gone on a few trips like that and had invited him to come along, but Trev had always been busy with school or other stuff and couldn’t spare a week or even a few days.
He supposed his opportunity to make up for that oversight had arrived now that he was in a real disaster situation. Assuming he didn’t end up regretting his lack of familiarity with stuff he really needed.
But that was just his pack. In his closet he also had a complete set of serious winter gear, the kind you could practically live in outside in the heart of winter if need be, enough buckets of wheat, beans, and honey to last him six months, with the other year and a half’s worth of food storage already down at the shelter with Lewis, bottles of olive oil to go along with it, a 50lb box each of peanuts, cashews, walnuts, and pecans, the remainder of his thousand rounds and half a dozen magazines for each of his firearms, gear to properly carry, store, clean, and maintain his firearms, along with extras of the parts that wore down quickest, a good pair of binoculars, several unopened tarps and four thick wool blankets, a propane stove, a propane lamp, several extra propane tanks, a floodlight, and half a dozen road flares. He also had a few boxes of MREs he’d gotten cheap.
Between the MREs, the nuts, the olive oil and the buckets he figured he had nearly a year’s worth of food, plus however many months extra he could stretch out the stuff he’d gotten at the store. Most of it he’d gotten fairly inexpensively, and now that he looked at it and thought of the tough times ahead he was intensely grateful for his forethought. Everything else seemed less daunting, knowing he had enough food for difficult times.
Most of the other stuff in the closet was, like with his pack, things Lewis had recommended or had been buying and had offered to let Trev go in with him on. Trev had joked several times that even though he paid for his own stuff he still felt like he was taking advantage of all his cousin’s hard work, to which Lewis had always replied that knowledge was free and it was more than worth it to have him prepared too.
The final thing he pulled from his closet, resting it carefully atop the buckets beside the bed, was the locked hard case containing his .223 Mini-14 tactical rifle. He and Lewis had purchased their 1911s together a few years ago, and since then his cousin had purchased several other useful and very valuable guns and several thousand rounds of ammunition for each along with a dozen spare magazines where applicable. But unlike his cousin, once he’d got his Mini-14 Trev considered himself to be set for personal defense.
Aside from personal items like clothes, electronics, books, and assorted small odds and ends that was everything Trev had in his room. Most of what he’d left down in his and Lewis’s shelter in Aspen Hill was more buckets of food and stuff he mainly intended to use while living in the shelter.
Trev inspected everything, judged how many trips it would take to get it all to his car, then shrugged into his pack, snapped closed the waist belt, and picked up his rifle case and a few bags full of boxes of ammunition to take out first. He wanted to get all the stuff that would draw immediate attention into the trunk of his car and out of sight before he really began moving things, since those were his most valuable possessions and some people would make a big deal out of a gun, even one being responsibly stored and handled.
Before moving in he’d asked ahead with dorm management about storing firearms in his room and had been assured that it would be okay as long as they were unloaded, stayed in locked cases, and he never brought them onto campus for any reason or took them out of their cases on the dorm premises. When he showed them his concealed carry permit they said it would be okay to carry concealed to and from his car if he was going somewhere else, but that was as much as he could expect so close to a university campus.
With thoughts of avoiding potential trouble about his firearms in mind he nodded to his roommates Jim and Connor in the living room but didn’t stop to chat, hurrying out into the hallway and making for the nearest exit to the parking lot.
His presence didn’t go unnoticed, although fortunately nobody freaked out. But as he left the building and walked down the sidewalk towards his car he heard a few catcalls from windows and from guys playing frisbee or kicking back on lawn chairs. A couple did their impressions of survivalist nutjobs, talking in old coot voices about how the world was ending, the woooorld was endiiiiiiiing. A few even started singing famous songs about the end of the world.
Trev ignored them all. If they weren’t smart enough to get out within the next few weeks, or at least take steps to ensure their survival, they wouldn’t be laughing for long.
He quickly reached his car and opened the trunk, shoving his gun case inside and then shrugging out of his pack. He’d tossed it inside and was pushing it to the back when he saw someone he recognized walking across the lot towards the dorm from the direction of campus. He recognized the sandy-haired man and paused to wave. To his surprise Nelson waved back, and then even though the two hadn’t spoken for over half a year turned and made a beeline for him.