Read Joshua (Book 2): Traveler Online

Authors: John S. Wilson

Tags: #post apocalyptic

Joshua (Book 2): Traveler (9 page)

BOOK: Joshua (Book 2): Traveler
6.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Carefully Robert undid the snap on his holster and pulled his Magnum out. He held it at his side as he addressed the older man.

Peavey stepped aside, as did everyone.

“All right,” Rob continued to stare the man down, “I’m telling you right up front, I am in no mood for games. I’m going to ask you some questions, and if I suspect, even for a moment, that you’re lying ... you’re going to die. Understand?”

The man solemnly nodded.

In the background, the other prisoner continued hacking, it sounded like he was going to die at any time.

“Was it just the four of you that attacked us?”

The healthy prisoner stood there mute.

Rob pointed his gun right at the older man. He appeared in his mid-sixties, his clothes were tattered and his face was a leathery mask marked by many hard years. “Okay, talk now, before you get me angry. How many was in your group?”

The man finally found his voice. “Four ... just us four.”

Rob pointed out the dead man he already knew with his revolver. “How do you know this guy?”

“We just met him, a few hours ago.”

“You didn’t know him before?”

“No.”

“Was there anyone with him?”

“Yes ... a woman, and another guy.”

“Where are they at?”

“They took off, they didn’t want no part of this. The woman said we were crazy for trying.”

“So why did you try? Are you crazy?”

The old man sneered, “For a chance at this much food, I’d gladly kill all of you, or die trying.”

Rob laughed, a little, “Well, you’re honest, I’ll give you that.” He pointed to the corpse again, “What did this guy tell you?”

“That you guys had a whole cart full of food and a lot of other good stuff too, just ready to be taken. He said we would divide it up evenly.”

“He didn’t tell you we were armed?”

“No, he told us; eight men with machine guns.”

Rob laughed again, “And that didn’t bother you?” He moved over to the cart. “You with your,” and looked down at the newest guns in their collection, “which one is yours?”

“That’s my three oh three.”

Robert was astonished, “So you weren’t scared to take on eight men with automatic weapons, you with your Enfield, your friends here with a single shot AK and a twenty-two?”

“Mister, all I’ve had in two days is half a chipmunk. I’d take all of you on alone, for a tenth of what you’ve got.”

“You’re still thinking about taking it now, aren’t you?”

“Yeah ...” The old man looked around at all of them, and then stared at the two boys standing there, “I’d kill all of you right now and take it ... if you gave me half a chance.”

With his gun Rob got his attention again, “Did this guy tell anyone else about us?”

“I have no idea.”

“Just you three?”

“That I know of.”

“Would you tell me if you knew?”

“Probably not, not my business who or how many this guy told about you.”

Robert laughed again, “Well, I appreciate the candor, you are an honest SOB, I’ll give you that. Now put your hands on the cart.”

As the man was being thoroughly searched, his partner collapsed to the ground.

Rudd guardedly approached the prisoner before Rob stopped his man, “Rudd, don’t go anywhere near him, just leave him there.”

Then they tied the old man by his neck and arms to the front of the cart.

Rob was ready to go, “Start pulling.”

The entire group helped as the prisoner slowly pulled the cart down the lonely road towards that next target.

They left the other one laying there on the ground, struggling to breathe. He tried several times to stand on his feet again, but never did get back up.

After about a mile of pushing, Rob dropped out; he let the cart get about fifty feet ahead, “Alton!”

Alton stopped and let Rob catch up. They both stood there in the road until Rob was sure they couldn’t be overheard. Both started following behind it again.

Rob broke the silence between them, the cart about fifty yards ahead. “Alton, we’ve got a serious problem here.”

Alton was grave in his tone, “I know ...”

“That dead guy could’ve told a lot of people about us, and even if he didn’t, that woman, or her new boyfriend, could be telling a lot of people as we speak.”

“Yeah ...”

“Right now this cart is more of a liability than anything else. Sure, we’ve got a lot of food and other valuable supplies, but it’s so heavy it takes the whole group to keep it moving. We don’t have enough manpower left to even send out scouts. It’s so heavy we’ve got to keep it on the road too, where all the refugees can see it. You know how they talk. Another day or two of this and everyone within twenty miles will know about us. We’re sitting ducks out here.”

“I’ve been thinking the very same thing. I have some ideas; what’s yours?”

“This next target, this house, if it’s good enough to serve as a base of operations, well, none of this matters. We can hole up there for a long time. If it’s not good enough, or if we can’t take it, we’ll have to come up with another plan. I was thinking we could cache a lot of this stuff. Bury some, hide some, break the supplies down into manageable pieces so we can come back for them later. The most important thing right now is that we become mobile again. We won’t survive out here like this for very long.”

“Yeah, that was my thinking too. I’m also thinking about this prisoner; we can’t let him know where we’re going. We’re going to have to get rid of him soon.”

“Yep ...”

“I want to take Peavey, we’ll lead him on a good long walk, blindfolded, get him real confused. It will be a long trip, I figure it will take a day for us to do a good job of losing him and get back.”

“Okay ...”

“Can you handle it while we’re gone?”

“Yeah ... we’ll manage, we might as well do it right now, before we get any closer to Mendon.” Rob made a loud whistle and the group and cart came to a complete stop.

Alton told Peavey the plan while Rob tied the prisoner’s hands and blindfolded him.

Just as Alton and his group were leaving, Robert came running after them, Rudd and McCain right behind him. “Alton! Hold on!”

“What’s up, Rob?”

“I’ve been thinking, I’m going to need you to stay, Peavey too.”

“Why, what’s the problem?”

“I need your expertise, Alton. We’ll be in Mendon in a few hours, I’ll need your help assessing the situation, right then, we can’t wait. Besides, you and Peavey are younger and stronger, we need your help pushing.”

“Okay ...” Alton looked at Rudd and McCain silently standing a few feet behind Rob.

“McCain and Rudd, I’m sending them instead.”

“McCain and Rudd, really?” Alton was doubtful, “I don’t think they can handle this.”

“Oh yeah, they can handle it good enough.”

At last Alton agreed and McCain and Rudd took off with the prisoner. As he watched them leaving, Alton had a bad feeling he couldn’t put a name to.

Chapter Four

They stopped briefly for the night and started again before dawn. Late that next morning, they arrived in Mendon and that water tower was the first thing they could see as they approached. Like so many towns before, this one was gutted and desolate, it appeared to have been years since anyone lived there.

They set up a temporary base in an old post office; it was the only building nearby that still had windows.

As they were preparing for the mission, Rudd and McCain showed up only a few hours behind them. Alton was suspicious as he thought the job should take twice as long, but didn’t say a word.

Rob sent out two teams in the known direction of their target hoping to make contact with the enemy. Coyote – Alton, Cornwell, and Peavey, and Jackal – McCain leading Martinelli and Rudd – set out midday in search of treasure.

Late in the afternoon, Alton checked in with command and had only good news to report, “We’ve found them. That older couple you questioned, they weren’t too far off. They’re approximately three klicks north, bearing three hundred fifty degrees from your position.”

“Good work, Coyote! I want you to stay there and observe, try to locate some good spots for reconnaissance. Send the rest of your team back to help us. Jackal, come back to base.”

They waited until near dark before leaving, the entire band loaded down with all they owned. In the black overcast sky, they finally arrived with Alton there to greet them. The boys were already exhausted, so Rob let them get some sleep, but for the men there was still plenty of work to be done. Into the early morning they labored, first splitting up and then digging in, setting up three different observation posts surrounding the home.

Alton set up a half mile east, while McCain was nearly the same distance to the northwest. Robert and the rest of the men set a cold camp, concealed in some trees three quarters of a mile south of their target.

After three days of careful observation, they could write a book on the subject of their latest victims. Robert called Alton and McCain back to base camp that night.

When everyone had a good supper, they all gathered around and Rob got them started on the real work. “Okay, let’s see what we’ve got,” throwing Alton’s handmade map on the ground and pointing out various features with a sharp stick he found. “First, the building itself doesn’t seem like anything remarkable. It’s an old one-story farmhouse with an attic, wood with siding construction, definitely susceptible to fire. I’d say about a thousand square feet in size. They have a working outhouse and a pump out back, so I doubt it has indoor plumbing. No electricity either, looks like they’re using lamps at night. McCain, you said it might have a root cellar?”

McCain pointed it out with his finger on the map, “Yeah, in the back there was some type of small door, on the northwest corner of the building. No one went into it the whole time I was watching.”

Rob turned to his second in command, “Alton, the house is not much, but they have reinforced it, right?”

“Yes, they’ve reinforced the outer walls with sandbags, I’m assuming filled with top soil; the bags are stacked about four feet tall.” He took the pointer from Rob’s hand, “They’ve done a lot of work. Look at this, ten meters out the entire house is surrounded with a chain link fence, ten foot tall and topped with razor wire. There’re only two gates, one on the north side and one on the south. All the way around, inside the fence line, are lengths of old telephone poles set in the ground. They’re set about four feet apart and probably buried deep. Obviously they were put there to stop vehicles, and I bet they will. Not that it matters to us. But I mention it to show the effort they’ve put into their defenses. Beyond the fence line it’s all open field in every direction. They have a large garden tilled on the northeast side but even so they’ve got a clear shot in every direction for at least one klick. Their defensive perimeter is well thought out; it will be a tough nut to crack.”

‘The Boss’ took his stick back and seemed more than a little annoyed, “Okay, Alton ... your usual good work. Now let’s talk about their personnel.”

Promptly Alton took over again, “Five men and four women are living there for sure. No children have been observed. It’s possible there is another person there we haven’t seen. I noticed several times people talking to someone in that southeast bedroom. It could be a small child, or ... I’m betting there’s an invalid in there.”

Rob tried to take over again, “What about their schedule?”

But it was no use, this was Alton’s show now. “They have guards, at least one on patrol during the day and two at night. The shifts run eight hours and the sentries always change things up, they don’t follow any set path. Ain’t that right, McCain?

“Yep ... you’re right.”

“Like I said, this is a tough nut to crack.”

“Weapons?” Robert tried to take control one last time.

“Standard stuff, the guards have all been observed with the same rifle. It’s hard to tell from a distance. But it looks to me to be a stainless steel Remington 700 with a high magnification scope, eight, maybe ten power. Assuming that it is in 7.62 NATO, and the guards know what they’re doing, they could easily kill anyone before they even got close. The second day, McCain noticed some of them cleaning weapons on a picnic table on his side. What was the count, McCain?”

“They had three M16 rifles ... or more likely AR-15 semi-autos. All of them had open sights. There were two shotguns, one a Remington 870, the other I couldn’t identify, probably both twelve gauge, and some handguns.”

Alton went on like he was in charge, “Yeah, we observed all five men, and two of the four women with various handguns we couldn’t recognize. They are wearing them in holsters and they have them on at least during the day. This is a tough one, Boss, in my opinion I think we should pass it on by.”

But for now Robert was still running the show. “What? Are you crazy? Can you imagine how much food and supplies they must have on hand to support that many people? Then there’s the building and location itself, winter will be here before you know it and this place would be great to ride it out.”

“I’m just saying ...”

“What are you saying?”

“I’m saying if we’re going to do this we’ll have to use Nicky, it’s the only way it can be done. You know I don’t like doing that. Also, while I think we could take the target, we’ll most likely have casualties.”

“You know I don’t want to put Nicky in jeopardy any more than you, but he’s part of this team, and a willing one. Aren’t you, Nicky?” Rob reached out and ruffled his hair again.

The boy smiled and looked around at all of his friends, “You know you can count on me, guys!”

“As for casualties, well, that’s a chance we all take every day. I say we take this place. Does anyone not want to do this?”

All of them looked around at each other and there was not a word to be heard.

Finally McCain broke the silence, “Well you know I’m in. I’m always looking for a fight.”

Reluctantly, the rest fell into line behind their leader, Alton agreed too, although it was easy to see the reservations in him.

At last Robert put on that huge winning grin of his, “Okay, it’s settled. Let’s get started on a plan. I doubt we can take this place tomorrow ... but I would like to take it the next day if we can.”

BOOK: Joshua (Book 2): Traveler
6.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Wolfsbane Winter by Jane Fletcher
Across the Counter by Mary Burchell
Eco: Foucalt's Pendulum by eco umberto foucault
La caza del meteoro by Julio Verne
King's Test by Margaret Weis
Mad Dog by Dandi Daley Mackall
The Seed Collectors by Scarlett Thomas
Life Sentence by Judith Cutler