Prelude/ Chapter One
The Narrow Path
When Steve had come
home excited to see his wife after a long day of meetings and studying, he
found the house empty of the usual buzzing excitement surrounding the ever-joyful
Nancy. He looked at the calendar for clues and discovered the notation for her doctor’s
appointment from a few hours earlier.
After nearly a decade
with this wonderful woman, Steve instinctively knew that if she were back,
where she would be. Without thought for any other once home rituals, Steve
passed by the dining room table where he dropped his notebooks and headed out
the backdoor.
The backyard’s short
lawn led to a small orchard. The flagstone walkway under the canopy of budding
blossoms from the young trees opened to the garden where he found Nancy poking
her small hand spade into the ground.
The grass was lush and green this year. The
heavy spring rains showed in every living thing. Hopping down branch by branch,
a red chested robin made his way to the ground. The freshly dug dirt piqued his
interest in his search for the day’s meal.
Nancy, facing away
from him, leaned on one elbow, with her legs crossed and to her side while she
excavated the few weeds from her blueberry bushes. She didn’t hear him
approaching when he walked around to face her. Steve saw the now dried lines of
tears that had run down her face as she dug; leaving worm trails on her cheeks.
When she saw him her
eyes moistened again, then as Steve crouched down to take her in his caring
arms, the tears broke loose and ran freely down, dripping onto his warm chest
in a cool trickle, as he embraced her. He pulled her in close as if to squeeze
out the pain.
Steve held her while
she found her calm again. He hurt because of their problem, but he hurt more
for what it was doing to her. His legs began to cramp, and his joints to creak,
yet he held her. Slowly her sobbing subsided.
“I really thought
that this time would be different. We’ve been praying about it. I really
thought that we deserved to have a baby,” Nancy said.
Steve had learned
over the years to just listen. He was a man and had the innate need to fix
problems, but he knew that she simply needed to let it out—that was how women
let it go. He hugged her tighter.
He especially loved
how she never turned against him, blaming him for things that didn’t go exactly
her way. She did have her moments of anger, but she knew that he was on her
side and never attacked him. Life had difficulties and if they upset her, she
would only loose her cool for a short time, and not hold onto it forever. Then
she would work through the problems, rather than work on ways to pass the blame
and hurt around to everyone.
Steve had found, from
many years of counseling, that when one, in the couple, had the need to find
blame, other than it just being a broken world full of broken people, there was
only strife and struggle. Those kinds of couples would seem to be bipolar.
Happy one second at each other’s throats the next then happy again.
He was tired of hearing, it’s your fault, or it’s not
my fault. They were always
looking for fault, and never able to accept that everything and nothing was at
fault.
Steve and Nancy had
enjoyed not having anything to tie them down or slow them, during the honeymoon
stage of their marriage—at first. When realization that they could not conceive
finally set in, they began going to specialists. “Usually one spouse is unable to reproduce, but fate has given both of
you the short end,” the doctor had said. Doctor after doctor had given
similar prognoses, some a bit more empathetic, but it was just the same to
them. They were broken.
They had both decided
to see what God had in store for them and had elected to not have any
artificial means taken. Now that their thirty’s were nearly over, Nancy was ready
to give up on her yearly exams—almost.
Steve waited for
Nancy to make the first move. When he felt her embrace loosen slightly he took
that as queue. “I think we should get ready and go to Van der Fiji's. We haven’t been out for quite some time, and I’ve
been craving some of their famous Pear
Clafouti.”
“Only if you promise
to try the Clafoutis aux Cerises this
time.”
“Deal, but I am still
getting the Pear Clafouti.”
“You sure know how to
treat a lady. I need to wash. Will you call for reservations? If we hurry we
can beat the rush.”
Sara sighed, as she
watched the maple leaf float gently to the lawn. She was reminded of the extra
beauty brought to the yard by the great tree mid-autumn. It seemed so calm and
peaceful in the dimming light of the early evening. She had hoped for a
peaceful quiet evening meal with her husband.
Looking out the window,
Sara wondered what she should be thinking right now. Since she was nine months
pregnant, she felt that she should be lying back in her recliner reading a
relaxing book and sipping hot cocoa in front of the fire.
Her quiet thoughts were
interrupted when her husband’s black BMW tore through the lawn and came to a
roaring halt at the front door. Her
annoyance quickly turned to fright when he began honking the horn like a mad
man jumping out of the car and running toward the house.
“Sara!” he yelled when he burst through the
door. “Hurry! Please! We have so very little time.”
“I am coming as fast as
our baby will let me,” she yelled back, out of breath and more than a little
confused.
“I know, and I am sorry
for this, but we must really hurry. Did you get everything I asked you to
bring?” he asked as he eased her down into her seat.
While Sara was
distracted fumbling with her seat belt, Todd pulled out a briefcase from behind
his seat. Before she realized what was happening, he grabbed her by the arm,
and with strength she didn’t know her husband possessed, pulled her arm to him
pinning it between his elbow and torso. Held firmly in his grasp, he injected
her with a hypodermic needle.
As the thick liquid
pushed into her skin and began to course through her veins, it began to sting
spreading warmth up her arm in a throbbing growing tingling sensation. Panic
welled up from her stomach charging out through her tense throat in a roar.
“What was that?”
Her first thoughts were not of herself, but of
the defenseless child growing in her protective womb. “You had better not have
hurt my baby,” she yelled in frustration as he went around to the driver’s
seat.
He didn’t answer as he
jammed the car into gear and tore out of the yard leaving behind a raged scar
in the grass to show his passing.
Turning away from him,
she asked more calmly than she felt, “Why are you doing this?” Not daring to
look at him again, for fear of losing her temper too severely and causing him
to crash the car—she waited for a response.
“Why am I trying to
save our lives? That is a pretty strange question,” he laughed, “but, then
again you don’t know what’s at stake here do you?” he answered her as he
reached over to turn on some soothing music.
“Saving us? You are
endangering both me and my baby!” She almost screamed. “You are driving
recklessly, and that shot. You are acting so strange. What was so important,
that you had to go rushing off in the middle of our dinner?”
“I was paged; it wasn’t
until I got to the lab that I found out the graveness of our situation. Things
are about to get very bad. You just need to trust me,” he implored.
“How can I trust you?
You didn’t even ask me before attacking with a needle.”
It’s an experimental drug we are working on at
the lab. It hasn’t made it far enough to start human trials on, but I am sure
it works perfectly. It’s the only chance we have, and I must save you and the
baby.”
Sara’s maternal
instincts wouldn’t allow her to think about anything but the welfare of her
child. “What could be so important, that you had to use me and our child as
guinea pigs? How can you know for certain that it’s safe for the baby, and what
in the name of all that is sane—is going on?“ she began crying, against her
best efforts to be strong.
Steve threw a sport
coat over his daily work clothes and clipped on a tie for the restaurant
etiquette. Nancy had decided to wear her nice dress, the only one she had had for
wonderful occasions—and funerals. They enjoyed the extravagances of the
privileged American life style so infrequently that their good clothes looked
new from the store, despite being several years old.
Steve already knew
what she would order but, “What would you like this evening my dear?”
“I was thinking of
having the Aged Black Angus Beef Tenderloin with Béarnaise Sauce and Potato and
Leek aux Gratin,” she said not looking up from the menu she was reading.
Steve knew she was
playing with him; it just wasn’t her style to order the most expensive meal on
the menu. “I was thinking the same thing, and a bottle of their finest.”
Her eyes peeked over
the top of the menu, and then she pulled it back up as a light chuckle leaked
from her throat.
The waiter had the ill-favored
timing to show up just then. Steve looked up at him to order their usual and
noticed the other guests. People were leaving their unfinished meals and making
their way out of the restaurant. “What’s happening?”
“There has been a
terrorist threat on New York City, and everyone in the state has been asked to
go to their homes and wait for further information.”
“Really,” Steve
asked. In all of his life he had never witnessed such a thing.
“Yes really. Hurry, I
have to get home to my family. We are getting as far away from here as
possible.”
Steve took Nancy by the arm and together they
walked to the bus stop. As they waited, the traffic built to an unbridled hysteria
and soon became a congested mess.
“I never knew there
were so many cars in our little town,” Nancy said in obvious bewilderment.
“I have a feeling
that most of these are passing through on their way to safety, or rather away
from danger.”
“I don’t think they
are going to make it far in this growing confusion,” sighed Nancy,” especially
when the cars from the city reaches here in a few minutes.”
“That’s for sure, the
bus hasn’t gotten any closer in the last ten minutes,” Steve pointed down the
street to a bus trying to change lanes in an effort to make it to the next bus
stop—their stop.
“What are we going to
do Steve?”
“What we always do.”
She looked at him with that puzzled look he liked to see when prying a
smile out. “This has never happened to us. How can we always do something we
have never done?”
“Easy.” He turned to
look at all of the fleeing people and sighing before turning back to his
beloved. “We trust God, and wait for him to take us home with him. If it’s our
time, let us at least do it with some dignity. Let’s walk home. We can make it
in half an hour.”
Nancy looked him
square in the face and kissed him before taking his arm and turning towards
home.
Todd had no time to
answer, as the emergency beeps came across the radio. “This is Stephanie Cook
with the emergency broadcast system, with an important announcement. Everyone
on Long Island New York is asked to evacuate in an orderly and calm manner. A
terrorist organization, known only as “Hilary’s American Army," has issued
a threat against Brook-haven National Laboratory, in Upton. The threat at this
time is still unknown, but their past exploits in Iran and Israel have been
devastating."
“You already knew about
this didn’t you?” she accused. “We should have been off the island an hour
ago,” Sara said when she turned off the radio.
“My source said that
the blast radius will encompass the entire city, but the radiation could cover
three hundred miles—if they use the same dirty bombs that they used in the
Middle East. We may not have made it far enough to escape the fall out in time.
The drug we both took, bonds to us on a molecular level. In all of our tests, it shielded the subjects
from small doses of radiation with no cellular damage.”
“Blast radius? How are
we going to escape? We’ve lost so much time!” She was truly terrified now.
“There is a tunnel
running under sea to the mainland. Only a handful of us, with the highest
clearances, knows about it. And, that, is assuming we get there before the
traffic blocks us off. I hadn’t anticipated the news report so soon. It must
have leaked to the press from an intern, or someone who doesn’t understand the
mob effect.”
As he spoke, he rounded
a corner toward the residential district and the streets were suddenly
congested—completely gridlocked.
“Watch out Todd! Sara screamed as Todd swerved
to avoid hitting the backed up cars. He began muttering incoherently to
himself, which only caused Sara more alarm.
“No, no, no…, I chose
this rout because it is faster at this time of night. We’re going to have to
turn around; everyone on God’s green earth must have been watching TV after
dinner..." He trailed off and looked at his wife.
“There aren’t many
strategic targets here, in fact I can only think of one; it’s very near my
lab.” His face grew expressionless and cold and Sara suddenly didn’t even
recognize him. This didn’t seem like the man she married, and it made her blood
run cold. Fear made him into a reckless lunatic.
“Where are the National
Guard and Homeland Security in all of this?”
Todd turned to look at
his wife, seeming to come back to reality. “They are searching, but they are
certain that there will be at least three other targets on the eastern
seaboard, besides the one that they were warned of. Our nearby forces are
spread thin, and no one has found anything yet.”
“Maybe we’re just a
decoy for the real targets. There really is nothing here worth attacking—right,”
Sara said hopefully.
“You’re probably
right,” Todd told her reassuringly and gave her a broad smile that never
touched his eyes. His reassurances fell lifelessly to the ground, rendered
useless even more so by the false decency, something he never used to fake.
“Okay, now I am
worried. You gave us an experimental drug because either you are out of your
mind or you know more than you have been telling me. And I am really hoping for
crazy right at this moment.”
“You know I can’t talk
about my work. It’s top secret.”
“Right now—with
everything that’s going on—you are going to give me that ridiculous Top Secret
song and dance? Don’t you dare give me that excuse—not this time! You just
injected me with your ‘top secret,' so now I am part of your work, both me and our baby. I deserve an
explanation.”
“I’m sorry for that,
really I am— I just didn’t know what else to do. I should have talked to you
about it beforehand, but if we had had time for that we could have been half
way to Kansas by now.”
“Where are we going to
go? I’m afraid, Todd.” She looked to her husband for real comfort. “We need to
go to a hospital so that we can be sure the baby is okay.”
At her words, the car
jerked and shuddered as the ground vibrated around them, and Todd had to fight
the wheel to maintain control. Then, in a blinding flash of light, the street
erupted around them in a fountain of boiling magma. As the shock waves tore
through the vulnerable metal of their car, it vaporized into nothing and was
absorbed into the ensuing mushroom cloud.
Quickly tiring of the
commotion made by the aggressive and terrified drivers honking and revving, Steve
led his wife off onto side streets. They made it passed the business district
and decided to take a short detour. They took the bridge to the park and walked
up the small hill that overlooked the valley below.
In the far distance
the sky blazed an orange bright enough to blot out the stars. The city of New
York, fifty miles away, was still massive enough to light half the sky in that
direction.
Steve pulled his wife close, admiring the beauty of God’s creation
mixed with man’s domination of it. They prayed softly to God for his will to be
done.
While in his reverie, the light of the sky
above the city blossomed white suddenly and then faded back to normal. Their
eyes saw the world darker for a few minutes. Then, as their pupils dilated, the
orange glow returned.
“Was that the bomb?”
Nancy asked.
“I don’t know what
else it could be. Let’s pray for those people who may have been caught in the
attack.”
They prayed for the
survivors to be found quickly, for the families of the lost, and for the
country to recover from its loss. Then they walked hand in hand back to their
home and went to bed.
Chapter Two
Unbelievable
Steve rushed to answer the door. Nancy followed behind, curious
about such obnoxiously loud knocking. Steve was almost to the door when it
shook with the violent pounding it was taking again.
She watched as Steve paused a moment, then slowly unlocked the
dead bolt. As he opened the door, she was in awe that she could see the man’s
face, over Steve’s head.
“How can we help you, uh, officer?” Steve asked tentatively.
First looking at Steve and then past him to Nancy, the man
replied, “I’m sorry to disturb you ma’am. I am in need of your help.”
Stepping forward, Nancy looked briefly to the grocery bag in one
hand and a wadded up bundle of rags tucked into the crook of his elbow. “How
can we help you sir?”
He gently handed the wad of old rags to Nancy. “Careful. Please.”
Reaching for the bundle Nancy looked for what might be wrapped
in such rags that needed special care. To her surprise, a tiny face stared back
at her—she discovered a newborn baby wrapped tightly in the rags. “Oh my,” She
gasped.
Too stunned to speak, she sank into the sofa with the baby held
tightly to her chest. This reminder that she could not have children took her
by surprise, and she just sat, peering into the face of this beautiful baby,
cradling it close.
Wide blue eyes looked up at her with curiosity, and then a big
smile washed across his face. Nancy could only stare back at this most unusual
child. A newborn can’t see more than a few inches from its face, yet this one
seemed to see her. And even more of an oddity, he truly appeared to be smiling at
her.
The marine handed a bag to Steve, “I’m guessing the baby is
hungry. I just got these baby supplies on the way to the church. The two teenagers,
who were cleaning there, told me where I could find you.”
Turning back to Nancy the marine began, in a husky voice, "I'm
Gunnery Sergeant Roger Brodemire. I'm attached to the unit that was guarding
the wreckage left by the terrorists last night—you probably heard about it on
the news. Now, I know this seems crazy, but I have to tell you about a dream I
had three nights ago. It was so vivid. I was standing at the edge of a crater,
and saw a movement out of the corner of my eye. It was a man, slowly sinking
into the earth. This is where my story gets really interesting, and why I
sought refuge at a church.”
Steve motioned for Roger to sit then remembered the bag in his
hand. He opened it to find baby formula and bottles. He handed it to his wife
and she took it to the sink, having already decided that the baby was hungry
and that the sergeant hadn’t fed the poor little thing.
The men followed her to the kitchen where Roger continued his
story.
“I ran to help, I really ran, not like in a dream where you
stretch and strain but are always in slow-motion; I ran, but the figure was
already gone. I reached the spot where I
thought it disappeared, but found nothing, not even footprints. I start to turn
away, and I hear a cry— a cry from a baby. Now I am seeing a baby.
“Startled that I hadn’t noticed a baby lying on the ground, I
reach down and pick it up. As I stand up with the baby in my arms, a hand
grabbes my shoulder. Just as I woke up with a start, I hear a voice say, ‘save him.’”
Nancy stared at the marine, unaware that the baby had finished
the bottle, gulping and sucking at air. The marine simply pointed at the
bottle, then continued with his recounting.
“I awoke in a cold sweat
and shaking from the intensity of the dream, never having experienced anything
like it before.
“When we were put on alert for the bomb threat two days later, I
had already forgotten about the dream. When the explosion rocked the base, I
only felt a sense of something familiar. Not until I was on the island staring
out over the brink of the crater did I truly recall the dream. The scene before
me was identical to the one I had dreamed about—only now, I was not alone.
“I was there to guard the investigation and collection crews,
but against what I did not know. I was almost halfway down the side of the
crater wall on my way to save the baby, when I tripped on a rock and fell
rolling the rest of the way down to the bottom of the crater. Laying there with
the wind knocked out of me, I wondered at my stupidity. I rolled myself over to
my hands and knees, and look up to see all of the destruction and shake my head
in wonder, at how I could get so caught up with a stupid dream. How could there
be a living baby anywhere near me.
“Someone yelled down at me and I answered that I had only broken
my pride and waved up to them. I turned to have one last humiliating look at
where I was, when I saw a soot covered baby’s face poking slightly out of the
ash. By then I was falling over myself to get there, hoping that it was only a
porcelain doll. When I reached down, the eyes opened, revealing the most
startling blue, in sharp contrast to the black and gray surroundings. Just then,
I recalled the voice, save him.
“I Climbed out of the hole with my shirt off, wadded up, and
pressed to my side as if a bandaged wound to hide the infant inside. I told the
others that I must have broken something in the fall, and that I needed to see
the medic.
“My mind reeled inside my head; I had no idea what to think. I
had to check myself several times to make sure that I hadn’t hit my head and
imagined the whole thing. This was no coma-induced hallucination, so knew that
I needed to get help from someone who might give me some ideas. And I found my
way to the church.
“You need to understand that I lost my faith quite some time
ago. A person can’t do the work that I do and believe that there is any kind of
a God; but my thoughts kept coming back to the church near my house where I
grew up. When I got there, there were only those two kids, but I still hadn’t
come up with anything better, so I gave them a story, and they sent me to you.”
All was quiet as they sat in contemplation. Finally Steve spoke.
“The newspaper said that the area is completely saturated with
radiation. How is there anyone out there, even someone to investigate?”
“Do you believe everything you hear from the news? The radiation
was gone by this morning; it started receding almost immediately after the
blast. All evidence of the bomb suggested that it should have been many times
more powerful than it was. The blast was severe enough that all organic matter
on the island is now ash and cinder, but now the residual radiation is gone.
That’s why there was such a rush to get as many scientists and examiners out
there this morning.”
“That’s not possible,” Nancy blurted out. “Radiation does not
simply dissipate.”
“That’s what got everyone into such a panic. They don’t
investigate a bomb site from a nuclear blast, not even with radiation suits.
There simply would not be any remains of evidence. The strangeness of this
particular scene is under investigation because they know there was radiation,
but it is as if something had absorbed the power.”
“This is more than a little hard to believe. You expect us to
believe that you dreamed that you would find a living baby at ground zero of a
nuclear bomb blast, and now you have brought that baby here. Why did you sneak
the baby away? Why didn’t you have it checked by a doctor?” Steve asked, as he
stood up, now a little fearful of his safety and for that of his wife.
The marine stood up to his full height as well, and Steve
stepped back.
“Do you have any idea what would happen to this baby if the
government found out about it?” He said with just a little too much ferocity.
Nancy stepped between the two men.” I believe you,” she said
with startling conviction, “Please, sit back down and stop trying to scare us.”
“I’m sorry, ma’am, I don’t blame you. I hardly believe it
myself,” Roger said as he sat back in his seat. “But I know I was called to
help this baby, and I mean to do just that, with or without your help.”
“I don’t think that you are meant to do anything else. You
should leave the baby with us,” she said protectively, as she stared down at
the big man.
“I’m supposed to save this baby,” he answered firmly.
“And you have,” she fired back. “But now you need to get back to
where you are supposed to be. They will be curious about what happened to you,
and it won’t be long until they come after you, and if they do, they will find
the baby. They can’t find out about this baby, you said so yourself. You can
trust Pastor Steve and me to do the best thing for this child.”
She stared at him with such sincere, open eyes that the big
Marine innately knew he could trust her. With a deep sigh and a murmured thank
you, he ducked back out of the tiny parsonage.
Nancy paced the small living room while Steve stared out the
window watching the big marine walk away from them. The baby in Nancy’s arms
was now sleeping peacefully and was completely comfortable in his new
protector’s embrace.
After assuring himself that the strange man was gone, Steve
abruptly turned and headed for the phone on his desk.
The makeshift office in the living room was the only place in
their small one bedroom home large enough for a comfortable work desk. When
Steve can’t think at the office well, at his church, he would often seek the
refuge of his home office.
“Wait,” Nancy blurted out, caught off guard by her own thoughts,
“we have to think this through.”
“What is there to think through? I’m calling the police right
now. They can help us find the baby’s parents,” he answered, with more than a
little surprise showing in his eyes.
Walking over to her husband, Nancy gently put her hand on his,
urging him to put the phone down.
“When I said that I believed him, I meant it. And I still do.”
Dropping the phone in its cradle Steve stared at his wife,
bewildered and confused. "I thought that you were patronizing him so that
he would leave. How can you believe such a foolish story? He is obviously
insane. He kidnapped a baby during a delusional episode, and is now acting out
a strange fantasy of a self-aggrandizing hero complex."
"I don't think he was lying," she countered, “And he
seemed perfectly lucid to me."
"How can you believe such a crazy story?"
"Belief is our business," she softly reminded him.
"Let us at least pray about it."
"Someone out there is frantic, and we have their baby. How
can you ask me to prolong their suffering?"
"We need guidance, Steve. We should wait until morning,
after we have prayed about it."
"I guess you might be right about waiting a little while, I
don't want this poor baby to stay at a police station."
I should go out to see what information I can come up with. I
will only be gone a couple of hours. Do you want me to bring you anything back
for lunch, or something for the baby?" he asked his wife, not sure that
she will be happy about his leaving her alone right now.
"No, go ahead; we have everything we need at present. And
Steve, be careful what you tell people. If sergeant Brodemire is legitimate,
then we need to save this baby."
"Okay honey," Steve replied softly, as he closed the
door behind him.
"Please Lord, show us the truth," Nancy whispered in
quiet desperation.
Chapter Three
Sanctuary
Lost in thought and aimless in direction,
Steve headed down the sidewalk from his house. His mind filled with
contradicting thoughts of fear and unbelief left him feeling weak. How could
he, senior pastor of Tiger Valley Baptist Church, not believe that a miracle
such as this was possible?
Steve had lived in the small city of Tiger
Falls, an almost suburb of the great metropolis New York, for his entire life.
He was born at the local hospital. All of his schooling was at local private
schools. He had never been more than a hundred miles from his home.
While Steve was in his second year at Tiger
Falls Community College, his parents died in a plane crash coming back from a
business trip to Hong Kong.
Their remains were brought back home, and
after the funeral, he changed his major to theology. He wanted to know why bad
things happened to good people.
Steve had never had any desire to visit the
world outside of his community. There are heathens aplenty right here, he thought.
Despite his unwillingness to explore and
travel, Steve had an insatiable appetite for knowledge. It was during his final
year of graduate school that he met Nancy, a self-assured and strong-minded
woman with her attention set on the greatest humanitarian causes of the time.
It wasn't long until, Steve had Nancy
reading the bible and her teaching him the way a good Christian who loves
people should love the planet that serves them.
Nancy's plans for going out to save the
world from itself was detoured by her marriage to a man who's idea of a grand
travel adventure was to visit the Pedaling History Bicycle Museum in Orchard
Park New York—forty miles away.
Nancy's eventual eagerness to settle down
for family life was inexorably and devastatingly altered, subsequently learning
that she was unable to ever have a baby.
Deprived of worldly or family adventures
befitting a woman of her character, she went on. Nancy, never dispirited,
devoted the rest of her life to his vision and to her God.
The miracle of a child in their life now,
after all of these intervening years, seemed like too much of a stretch—and the
way of it coming into their lives even more so.
There must be a way of finding out where
the baby came from. What would it mean if the story were true? How incredible
that any set of circumstances would find a living baby left behind in the
crater of a bomb blast.
"Oh Lord, my God, help me now. My
faith has never been tested in a way such as this. Would this Marine have found
his way to me without your guidance, and brought to me and my wife a baby to
protect? Please, Lord, show me your hand in this," Steve fervently prayed.
Steve was brought out of his prayerful
thoughts when a bus pulled up next to him. He realized only then, that in his
moment of pause for prayer that he had halted at a bus stop. With no other
prodding, he boarded the bus bound for downtown New York City.
Steve had been thinking that God did not
want him to raise any children. Children of pastors were always little terrors
that ran the church like a Mafia, living life off the celebrity status of their
father. Everyone knew that pastors' children were the hardest partiers and the daughters
were a guaranteed good time. At least that was what the jocks in college said.
Steve had no personal experience in that, maybe they were just rumors—although
stereotypes usually have at least a kernel of truth in them.
It made perfect sense to him that he and
his wife should be shepherds of the church and not be responsible for
unleashing havoc on the community.
Steve had some time for thinking on the bus
ride to the big city and pondered how he might be able to verify the marine’s
story, without giving out dangerous information—if the story turned out to be
true.
Going to the police would only serve to bring
the eye of the law directly to his front door, and to the house sheltering the
baby. Finding out if there was a conspiracy cover-up about the bombing would be
impossible for someone like him. Only with a miracle straight from the hand of
God could Steve ever discern the truth.
The two men standing at the next bus stop
were wearing long trench coats— something like you would see on nefarious
characters in the movies, hiding dangerous weapons underneath. The movies are
notorious for creating unrealistic themes out of the most ordinary and mundane
things in life.
Upon entering the bus and paying their
toll, the two men casually made their way to the back of the bus. Their grim
faces did nothing to dispel the ominous nature of their fashion. No one dared
look in their direction for fear of getting on the wrong side of someone as obviously
dangerous as these two surly men surely were.
On their way again, but now with a dreadful
foreboding in the air to add to Steve's already overburdened heart, they departed
for the final stop before the bus’s return trip back to Tiger Falls.
Inside the city, the streets looked like a
warzone. Sandbags and blockades prevented access to streets headed towards the
bridge to the island. People gathered around trying to see around all the
guards patrolling the streets further prevented access.
Carefully maneuvering the bus through the
throngs of people and military vehicles, the driver headed on his way to the
next stop on the route. Everyone on the bus now had their attention focused
outside of the bus—no one even remembered their apprehension of the two men in
trench coats. Even the two men themselves were staring out the window in wide-eyed
astonishment.
Steve and the rest of the passengers of the
bus disembarked into a seething mass of bustling people. So many people coming
to see the devastation left by the attack yesterday had caused the city itself
to come to a veritable standstill. And still, the mob of people circling the
possible routes through to the waterway seemed to create a pulse all its own, seeming
to beat in time to that of Steve's heartbeat. More dread and more questions;
what had become of normal?
Uncertain where to start, Steve walked to
the nearest roadblock and asked to whom he might talk to for more information
about the bomb site, only to have half a dozen automatic rifles leveled at his
head.
“I just have some questions,” Steve said to
the black rifle holes staring him down, “My name is Steve Stade, and I’m pastor
of Tiger Valley Church in Tiger Falls.”
In answer, he received glares from more
guards coming over to back up the six, armed marines against, the lone church man.
Hesitantly he backed away from the blockade
and the small army heading his way. Steve turned quickly away and ran into the
crowded street to become lost among the confusion and chaos.
After looking back over his shoulder to see
if the uncompromisingly single-minded defenders of the country were pursuing
him, Steve relaxed slightly and found that he had become lost in his rush from
undue process.
Going along the boundary of blockades and
following the flow of the crowd, Steve began to see the faces of the people and
the desire in their eyes to learn the facts of the incident. Total despair
seeped in as he realized with complete finality, that if this many people
seeking the truth, were being turned aside—he had no chance whatsoever.
Even the news crews who were circling like
vultures were contenting themselves with interviewing onlookers, having given
up on talking their way through the defenders.
With feelings of doubt and uncertainty,
Steve headed away from the mass of confusion in search of a way back to the bus
stop. The people passing by never seemed to thin out as the minutes passed.
Getting through the crowds of people was getting more difficult with each
passing moment.
With every movement becoming increasingly
restrictive, Steve began to panic. What if it turned into a stampede—so many
people have been trampled under crowds of panicked people.
Now fearful for his life, Steve turned to
go with the flow of the crowd, but so many people pushed up against him that
his every step was a struggle to stay on his feet.
Oblivious to anything else around him,
except the people smashing him in an unknown direction, Steve focused his
thoughts on staying calm—to have enough rationality to escape if an opportunity
arose.
Suddenly, Steve tripped and fell over
unseen steps in his path. With all calm rational thought gone, he clambered up
the steps. Driven by need alone he made it high enough to get out from under
the deadly rain of feet.
With nowhere else to go, Steve ascended to
the top of the stairs and came to the giant doors of an old church. After one
long look out over the horde, and finding nothing more to see as far as could
be seen, Steve pushed open the massive wooden door to go in for prayer and
thought.
To his surprise, even if he had thought a
few moments he would have known, there was a huge cross above the altar with
the dead body of the Christ hanging from it.
It may be a catholic church, but he
couldn’t have been happier to be there and out of the storm, than if it was his
own home.
Not being one to sit while praying, Steve
started wandering around, passed the huge stained glass, and soon was caught up
in the spectacle of the place. Ostentatious though it was, it was also
inspiring and mesmerizing. It was proving to be very distracting to thought and
prayer.
Steve found his way to the front of the
sanctuary. Standing in front of the altar, with so many candles lit and
flickering, was at once calming and hypnotic. No thoughts got through except
those of the traditions and history of the empire that was the Roman Catholic
Church.
When the American constitution was written,
the world had been run not by the ruling class but by the catholic diocese
through the kings and queens. The separation of church and state was in sole
response to that fact. It had been meant only to prevent the government from
being controlled covertly by any sect or group other than the people— not to
prevent the people in the government from being religious.
It was disheartening for Steve to see how
that simple idea had been perverted to the point where even schoolchildren were
not permitted to pray in school, even when it was their choice and freedom to
do so.
Steve wondered if anyone who thought that
this was still a Christian nation was naïve, wishing desperately for something
to be true that wasn’t. Steve wished so desperately that it was still true.
This country was so full of those who could
not go a few moments without any sort of gratification. They have lost their
purpose in the world— the purpose of the individuals' rights and beliefs, where
one person helped another. Instead he would hear about how someone laid dying
on the sidewalk for eight hours with a dozen other people walking by so intent
on themselves that they couldn’t even call on their cell phone for help. Steve
wondered about his own purpose.
Back when everyone sacrificed for each other,
you were not really giving anything up, because it would eventually come back
to you in kind. People helping people was a way of life, so even when they had
nothing, they still had everything. Steve wanted to sacrifice and help, but
this was crazy.
Now, we have a world of stuff and no time
for people. People are second to our need for more stuff, and even further down
on the list from our own selfish wants. Not even needs, just wants.
Steve was jarred out of his sorrow for man,
when someone bumped into him while they rushed by.
“Sorry man, didn’t see you standing there,”
a young man mumbled before he regained his balance and was on his way again.
“I’m sorry too,” Steve said as he turned
towards the bounding youth. “I didn’t mean to be in the way.”
Recognizing the person, Steve yelled,
“Wait! Tom?” Then Steve heard several people clear their throats, and he
remembered that he was in a church and he needed to quiet down.”
Tom stopped and turned back around. “Pastor
Steve?”
Tom motioned Steve over and off to the
side, to a secluded nook out of the way.
“Tom, it’s so good to see you. When you
moved away with your parents I was worried about you finding another good
church.”
“Yeah, it’s good to see you too, I have
really missed you. I haven’t found a church where I fit in the same as I did
with you. How have you been? We should really keep in touch. I’m sorry but I’m
in a huge hurry. You may have noticed when I bumped into you. Gota go,” Tom said
over his shoulder as he raced off again.
“Wait, I want to come with you,” Steve said
urgently as he ran to catch up.
“I can’t let you. I wouldn’t do this
normally, but it’s not safe for you or anyone, really. This is important.”
Tom stopped and put a hand up gesturing for
Steve to stay. “I am sorry and I hope to see you later. I will explain when I
can, if I can.”
Steve grabbed Tom by the arm to prevent him
from leaving.
“Let me help. I have no idea what I’m
doing; I truly am letting myself be led by the will of God. Maybe I was sent
here to help you? Once I got to the city, I really didn’t have a choice about
coming to this church. Please, Tom, if you are in trouble, let me help you find
a way through it.”
Despite the hand, gripping his arm, Tom was
overcome by Steve’s genuine concern for him. “It’s not me that’s in trouble. I
have a great friend that needs my help, and I honestly don’t know what I can do
to help.”
“Then let me help. Let God help through me,
Tom, you are not alone.”
“I’m not alone, there are others waiting
for me. I need to go.” Tom pulled gently away from Steve’s grip and turned to
go. “I’m fearful Steve; I don’t want you to come with me. I don’t want anything
to happen to you, you have a wife and a ministry, and I don’t have anything.”
“I don’t believe that you have a choice in
this, neither of us do, I have to go with you,” Steve answered firmly.
Reluctantly, Tom agreed to Steve’s
assertive request. Together they ran to the back of the church and disappeared
down a dark flight of stairs leading to the basement.
Chapter Four
Dark Descent
The basement of the church was a lot like one would expect— the
clutter from seasonal items, the musty smell of moisture, and the hidden
feeling that no one should be down here.
Following Tom deeper into the dark, Steve wondered why they were
in the basement, when Tom suddenly stopped and pulled back a cabinet revealing
a dark passageway. They followed the
hallway until it turned into a tunnel that gradually descended into the depths
of the earth.
The walls and floor became slick slimy. As the smooth-cut stone turned to natural
rock formations, Steve realized that they had just entered a cave.
Having no time to examine or give much thought about the
surrounding structure, Steve followed close to Tom— who had the only
flashlight.
Soon the walls were wide enough that they could not be seen
except by the flashlight being pointed directly at one.
The path they were following at first seemed to be an
imperceptible track through the dark, but the first time Steve had strayed from
the path directly behind Tom, he slipped and nearly fell on his rear. Upon
further examination, Steve found that the slime had been worn mostly away into
a narrow path where walked on and much thicker were not tread upon.
Time seemed to drag on for Steve in the never ending dark. Now finally in rhythm with the route and more
comfortable behind the silhouetted Tom, Steve had time to contemplate what they
were doing. It seemed unbelievable that
this system of caverns would be running under the church— under the city for
that matter.
Suddenly, the path brought them up to the wall on their left
side and then the wall ended. They rounded the corner, and there they came to
what appeared to be a campground.
A dozen people were gathered around a campfire, and nearly as
many tents in a semicircle around the fire. On the far side of the central fire
was a rough cut hole in the wall. Scree and rock still strewn about the opening
revealed that the work was recent.
“Where is Jack?” Tom asked the group.
“Right here,” a voice from behind answered, “and who do you have
with you?” Jack asked as he stepped into the light.
“This is Pastor Steve; he’s from my old town, he wants to help
us get Roger out.”
“What’s he going to do, pray his way passed the armed guards and
back out to safety?”
“You must be a prophet, Jack.” Steve replied with mock
amusement. “I will do what I need to do; don’t worry about me.” Steve said with
a serious look on his resolute face.
“I will believe it when I see it,” Jack said with a sardonic
grin.
“Tom, your friend needs his meds adjusted; where did you find
this guy, the asylum?”
“I came to the city for a problem of my own, but God brought me
here, to you, despite the important things I have to work out. I can’t prove my
worth to you, the truth is that I don’t know what I can do to help, but you
can’t argue with God,” Steve began.
“Okay Jack, how about this?” Steve challenged. “If, seeing is
believing, then believing is doing. You are right, I am and will be praying,
but I don’t pray and wait. I may pray sitting down sometimes, but then I get
up. I believe that God led me here for a purpose and now I am going to prove my
faith with my actions. You are about to see my faith; so stop stalling, and
let’s go make a difference,” Steve said as he turned back to Tom. “After you,
my boy.”
Stunned only momentarily by Steve’s conviction, Jack yelled to
the group, “Ready up Mark, Tom, and Stee-vvee,” saying Steve’s name with
exaggerated importance and more than a little annoyance, “It’s time to raid the
government.”
“What?” Steve asked in startled shock.
With only a terse laugh, Jack and Mark hoped through the opening
in the cave wall and into the darkness beyond.
“Come on, Steve, I’ll explain on the way to the blast site,” Tom
said in response to Steve’s concern.
“Blast site, wait a minute,” Steve said to an already out of
sight Tom.
On the other side of the broken wall, Steve found a softly lit
highway, underground and with no traffic. Spaced evenly along the tunnel wall
were recessed lights giving off a faint bluish cast lighting the interior dimly
but completely. The road itself had no
yellow center line; only four Lanes divided by wide white stripes.
“When they built this tunnel for the escape route, the engineers
didn’t know about this cave or how close they came to it. Last night’s blast shook the ground just hard
enough to knock a few stones loose.” Tom answered Steve’s unspoken question.
“Friends of mine live down here, in the tents by the
opening. They like the dark and
solitude; I bring the residents supplies and things. They dug out the wall for Jack and me to get
through to do some exploring. It turns
out that it goes under the ocean all the way to Long Island, or so we
assume. Until a couple of hours ago it
was just a curiosity,” Tom continued.
“Are you telling me that we are going to the site of the bomb
attack?” Steve asked with wide eyed astonishment.
“Yeah, that’s what we are doing,” Tom chuckled. “Now it is
imperative that we make use of the road before us. I have a friend who is in the Marines. He was on leave, home with his parents, when
he was called to duty with the terrorist threat. He called me earlier today; he wanted just to
meet with me.” Tom recalled while walking through the unchanging environment.
“When I had gotten to the restaurant he was there waiting for
me, but he was being apprehended by M P’s.
I followed them as far as I could, but they took him through the
blockades and over the bridge to Long Island.”
“He’s a great friend. He told me that he lived in Tiger Falls
for a short time when he was a kid,” Tom said in a somber note.
“Tom, you’re not going to believe this, but I met a Roger
today. He said that he went to my church
when he was young, before I was the pastor there; and he was a marine,” Steve
said in wide eyed astonishment. “He said
he was gunnery sergeant Roger Brodemire.”
Tom missing a step nearly fell then stopped dead in his tracks.
“He was coming back from seeing you?
That was what he was so excited about?”
“There is a lot to his story that you don’t know. I have to say though; this is too big to be a
coincidence. Do you have any idea why they were after him?” Steve asked.
“I don’t know, he asked me to meet him at Starbuck’s in an hour.
That was 3 hours ago. I couldn’t talk to
him when they arrested him, but the look on his face told me enough. Nothing
scares that guy. I have never seen anyone look that scared,” Tom said with the
horror of it still evident in his wide eyed torment.
“Would he do something bad enough to get him into serious
trouble?” Steve asked.
“Not a chance, Mother Teresa couldn’t be as honorable has
him. He would never back down, but he is
always fair. Roger took on six LSD
loaded bikers attacking a single overwhelmed police officer. I was there for
that one.” Tom’s eyes glazed over with honest reverence, as he recalled his
friend’s integrity.”
Would he go so far as to take a child out of an abusive home or
something like that,” Steve asked, now a little concerned about the Marines
over protective instinct.
“Of course not, he is a letter of the law kind of person. That’s another reason I was so worried and
got everyone together. I would never stage a prison break, but this is
different. I can’t explain, but we need to get him out of there.”
Now walking in muted silence, Steve pondered the conversation
with this now young man, which he only knew as an adolescent.
During their conversation they must have been going downhill
because it was easy enough to walk and talk, but now just walking was strenuous
enough that their breathing became labored.
Jack and Mark were now far ahead enough that they were just dark
silhouettes against a slightly less dark backdrop.
Besides their footsteps, the only other sound was that of a soft
humming that grew and declined at regular intervals. Steve surmises that it must be ventilation
fans set at certain points, because the well-maintained blacktop was obviously
used for motor vehicles. That there was no traffic showed that it was secret.
Being an underwater bridge of massive expense, it must be military.
Steve, being one to always contemplate and give great thought to
every detail, was now caught between those of fear for what they might be
walking into and the excitement from being led, or rather pushed, by the hand
of God himself.
Until now, life as a Christian had been really very boring.
Small church in a small town gave to relatively small problems. While a large
church can fund more programs and missions, the small church focused on the
individual families rather than groups as a whole.
The problem was that he had always prayed for safety and comfort
while God’s will, may be for him to take risk, and if he was to fail, to fail
big.
Awakened from his thoughts by tripping over a rock in his path,
Steve realized that the road was becoming increasingly littered by rubble.
Looking up the road to where Mark and Jack were making their way in front of
him, the lights were also missing in a few places.
With every step, it became more obvious that they were reaching
steadily a place of great destruction. Only then did Steve recall that there
was absolutely no debris back where they started, except what was left from the
excavation to get into the tunnel. He supposed that being that close to the
cavern wall at its weakest point could be the cause of the small break in the
wall. Still, it seemed unlikely that there would be no damage that far away
other than that isolated spot. Was he getting the whole story from these would
be rescuers?
“We made it,” Jack yelled back to the stragglers.
Looking to where the sound came from, Steve saw only black. “I
hope you brought better flashlights,” Steve mentioned to Tom.
Encouraged by the news, Tom started into a jog and headed
directly into the darkness, as though into the deepest reaches of space.
Gathering his nerve and faith, Steve hurried to catch up to his
fellow adventurers, eager not to be left alone in the utter darkness of despair
and seclusion.
Reaching the top of the incline, Steve discovered that not only
did the road level out, but it also jutted to the right at a sharp angle where
it ended at the largest garage door he had ever seen.
The lights were still working enough to make out the massive
door and retaining wall. It was no longer a tunnel, but now a huge room,
possibly a staging area for transport vehicles. Because of the room having
absolutely no damage, Steve assumed that it must be armored in the extreme.
Captivated by the iron door, Steve was unmindful of his cohorts
until he heard a resounding boom from an explosion.
“We’re in, let’s go.” Steve heard from somewhere inside the
pervasive cloud of dust and smoke. With his ears still ringing from the
insolent concussion of the explosives, Steve headed cautiously into the murky
grey expanse of seeming nothingness to follow the sounds of his
companions.
With a rush of fresh air through the new doorway, Steve found a
small door to the side of the main entry blown open. The lock was in bits, but
the door itself was intact, revealing the sturdiness of the armor.
The walls were lined with conduit for wiring and there was no
sign of moisture damage, however there was plenty of damage from an explosion.
The explosives for the lock were on the other side of the door and blew the
pieces into the passage; clearly this service tunnel was damaged by a much
larger explosion.
Making their way through the debris and to the end of the
tunnel, they found another armored door like the one they came through from the
main staging chamber. The door was embedded into the concrete wall opposite the
hole where it used to seal the doorway.
While the opening was packed with debris, mostly blocking access
to the areas beyond, they were able to clear an entrance just large enough to
crawl through.
With a little effort, Steve pulled himself through the rubble
and found Tom on the other side with a hand to help him up.
After brushing away some of the dust and grime from his hands
and pants, Steve looked up to find what was left of a concrete garage.
Military-style transport vehicles sat crushed in their parking
slots by chunks of concrete and rebar composition boulders. Either some of the
escape vehicles were not needed, or the attack was late enough that the
building was mostly empty of personnel.
The lights from the florescent fixtures flickered in a desperate
attempt to stay lit, but most of them were crumpled and strewn about the
wreckage.
The ramp ascending towards the upper levels would be impossible
to traverse in a car now, but on foot the traveling was quite easy.
The long spiraling road to the next level was farther than Steve
expected, they must have been far underground. When they did finally come out
into the next parking area they were relieved to find that it looked more like
a normal parking garage, except for the utter devastation caused by the attack.
“It’s amazing that any of the lights work,” Mark said, for the
first time where Steve could hear him.
“Yes, these people were set up. The lights have to be running
from a backup power source; no way are the city power lines intact.
“We need to get to the top floor to find a way out of here and
to where we can look for Roger. Any chance the elevator is in working order?”
Jack asked Tom who was poking his head through the doors and down the shaft
that had once been an elevator.
Not really listening until he heard his name, Tom pulled his
head back and shot Jack a dubious look. “Sure, if you can fly to the top; not
even the cables are there anymore.”
“The stairs it is then, let’s go,” Jack said with mock
enthusiasm.
With the effort of Jack and Mark, the bent door to the stairwell
was pulled back, and they all look into a pitch-black corridor; none being
eager to be the first to go.
With all the bravado he could muster, Steve said, “Thou I walk
through the valley, in the shadow of death,” and went through the doorway and
rushed up the stairs.
Once out of the ambient lighting coming through the doorway, Tom
realized that no one was moving to follow Steve and shouted up into the
cavernous abyss of absolute darkness, “Do you want a flashlight?”
Chapter Five
Salvation
Stunned by the magnificence of the huge cathedral-like reception
room, Steve stared up at the monolithic statue in the center reaching up to the
arched ceiling, as if reaching for heaven itself.
Emerging from the emergency stairwell, Tom, Mark, and Jack saw
Steve alive and well standing among the wreckage of the once great room,
staring up at the only remaining undamaged display were as awe struck as he.
The statue of pure white marble embodied perfectly the majesty
and strength of man with his grasp on the earth in the palm of his hand, and
his meekness by reaching up to a higher power than himself.
“Wow, look at all the damage. It looks like a bomb went off in
here,” Mark said turning to his friends with a huge grin on his face.
“Really Mark, is that what you think happened here?” retorted
Tom.
“Hey, I’m just trying to break the trance; we need to move out
of here. I don’t think it’s safe in this room. This is why I don’t talk to you
humorless fools,” Mark said as he walked to the elevator doors.
“I don’t think the elevator is safe, Mark,” said an irritated
Tom.
“Oh! You mean that the seven floors, according to the directory
sign that is right here next to the elevator doors, might have collapsed and is
all on top of this floor.”
Curious about the floors and the names of the offices, Steve
walked over to the elevator, but so many of the letters and numbers had been
shaken off, that only floor seven and doctor Todd Blackwell at the top was
readable. “The best that I can tell, we are on the ground floor. We should be
able to find a safe way out from here.”
“At least someone has a brain here,” Mark said staring straight
at Tom.
“Alright, I’m sorry. You’re right, the directory is a good way
to find out where we are, but you must admit that it looked like you were
interested in the elevators,” said an apologetic Tom.
“I’m sorry too, Tom; I let it look as if I was going for the
elevator. Sorry about baiting you; just don’t get too serious on us, you may
die from apoplexy on the spot, and I am not dragging your butt out of here.
“Get a room you two; seriously,” Jack said in mock disgust.
“Come on Jack, you know that we need to work together and be
able to trust each other with our lives here. This isn’t a school yard recess
here. People have already lost their lives.”
“Calm down Tom, I was just playing. Maybe I just wanted
something to say ‘I’m sorry’ about, what about you Steve; do you want a turn?”
“Nah, I’m good, you guys are sorry enough for all of us.”
“Oh look who has a sense of humor now, Mister, God will protect
me.”
“Jack, definitely not the right time or place,” Tom stepped in
for his friend.
“It’s okay Tom, Jack has a right to his beliefs and I do hope to
change his mind before this is all finished.”
“I wouldn’t hold my breath if I were you,” Jack said as he
started for the large double doors facing the front of the impressive statue.
Jack found the hallway on the other side of doors had collapsed
completely, so they found an exit out of the back of the building.
Outside the office building they found that many things had been
thrown around, but there was not a whole lot of damage to the surroundings.
Traveling around the edge of the explosion was not difficult.
The wreckage of ripped apart cars, half torn buildings, and collapsed streets,
was more than sufficient to hide among when the occasional patrol passed. The
military must assume that guarding the only bridge to the island secured them
enough to have a minimal security force guarding the interior of the island.
Because of the island being so loosely manned, the buildings
that were heavily patrolled with guards posted at ever entrance were easily the
best choice for headquarters.
One in particular stood out to the four men on the quest to find
answers and save a life. One building had guards facing possible intruders, as
well as guards watching the exits.
“We should probably wait until dark,” Tom stated with on obvious
look on his face.
“Except that the patrols and guards will be at least doubled in
the dark, when they would expect intruders,” Jack said turning to look at the
buildings around the office building of interest. “Right now they believe that
the area is secure and our only advantage is their ignorance.”
“I agree,” Mark answered simply.
“Well Steve, what do you think? Is God telling you anything; or
are we on our own here—as usual?”
“Jack, it is peculiar you should ask that. I am feeling very
compelled to check out that building on the far side over there,” Steve said
pointing to a little shop fit snugly between two towering office buildings.
“Seriously; now is not the time to get flowers for your wife. I
don’t see any strategic advantages to going to that little building.”
“I didn’t understand why until you just said it. They probably
won’t see any reason to give the insignificant flower shop a moment’s thought.”
“I don’t think so,” Jack laughed as Mark and Tom turned and
started walking around to the back of the buildings. “Whoa, where do you two
think you are going? I just said that we are not going to the flower shop.”
“I guess they didn’t know that you where the designated leader
and have made up their own minds,” Steve said as he turned to follow his
companions.
As they had suspected the back of the building was just as
lacking guards as the front, so their movement was well concealed behind the
delivery truck.
The inside of the store looked like an earthquake picked the
building up turned it upside down and shook it a couple of times for good
measure. All the shelves were toppled, and what looked like every vase in the
store had been thrown to the ground and shattered.
“It looks like a wedding gone wrong in here,” Tom said trying
his luck with the humor. “Have you ever seen so many flowers?”
Jack smiled, “More like a funeral if you ask me.”
“It’s going to be all of our funerals if we don’t hurry up,” Tom
said, looking back to the others urging them on quicker. I think I found
something. Would anyone give me a hand?
Without hesitation, Steve hopped over the counter to the cooler
where Tom was pulling the door open. “What have you found?”
“This refrigerator has shaken loose from the wall and it looks
like the wall behind it has crumbled away. I can see light coming through on
the side here. Help me pull it out so I can get a better look behind it.”
After Tom and Steve struggled in vain for a few seconds, Mark
and Jack seized the top and pulled the cooler over.
“That wasn’t too loud, but I think we should be a little
stealthier.” Steve reprimands.
The force and weight of the refrigerator on the wall anchors was
too much for the already cracked and weakened wall, with very little effort the
men broke away an opening large enough for them to pass through and into the
adjacent building.
Except for the light coming through the newly opened
entranceway, the only light in the room was coming from under the gap at the
bottom of the door across the room.
After making their way slowly through the dark to the door, they
all listened with their ears to the door for signs of anyone on the other side.
After several long minutes they decided that Mark would take a
look out the door while the rest waited back at the shop, in case they needed
to make a run for it. Mark having been a two time state champion cross country
runner made the obvious choice.
After being gone what seemed like hours, Mark finally slipped
back into the dark room where his friends were waiting and rushed up to find
out the news he had for them.
“I think I found something. Another hallway from this one has
two guards at the door. Suspecting that they may be guarding Roger I made my
way around and found an adjoining room with a second door in the back. I can
hear voices when I put my ear to the wall.
“We need to find a way to look in there; we wouldn’t want to
break into a meeting room for the brass,” Mark led the way after they all
consented to his plan.
“The room was a lot smaller than the others that we passed on
the way. I think that since we can hear through the wall that this is a retrofit
partition and doesn’t have the firewall in the middle of it.” Mark nodded to
the long wall running perpendicular to the walls with the door on each end.
“If that’s the case, the wall might not go past the suspended
ceiling. Let’s carry that desk over quietly.”
“Those were my thoughts exactly, Steve. Jack, you and Tom grab
that filing cabinet, it will get us up there a little higher.”
While Jack, Tom, and Steve carry over the heavy four drawer
metal filing cabinet, Mark worked on taking down several of the ceiling tiles
after finding that the wall did terminate just above the hanging panels.
On top of the filing cabinet, Mark was able to just lean over
the wall far enough to lift up one panel’s corner and peak into the other room
just in time to see the door swing into the room.
Two guards swaggered into the room and positioned themselves one
on each side of the door casing. Following behind, two more guards drug in a
body and tossed him to the ground. The prisoners just stood there, obviously
accustomed to the sight already. The two guards grabbed a woman by the arm and
escorted her out the door to be followed by the two remaining guards.
As soon as the door was shut, three of the people hurried over
to their fallen comrade.
“What do you see,” whispered Jack in quiet eagerness.
Mark patted the air below him signaling his friends to wait
patiently. He withdrew his hand to reach out and waved to the prisoners on the
other side. In a harsh whisper he asked, “Is he Alright?”
Several stunned faces turned up to meet his eyes just visible
passed his waving hand in the dark recess of the ceiling. One of the three
attending the injured man stood up and walked over to where he could talk to
the hiding man quietly. “He is exhausted from being tortured, but he will recover
enough in a few minutes.”
“Tortured? What is going on here? Is Roger Brodemire with you?”
“No, I don’t know any one by that name. We were the ones lucky
enough to survive the bomb, if you can call this being lucky.
“I was in my basement when everyone else was fleeing on the
packed roads. I and these here with me have similar stories; our shelters
protected us from the radiation long enough for whatever happened to it. It
seems that no one else on the island survived. I can still see the bodies; so
many dead.”
“Wait, hold on. I, we, didn’t see any bodies.”
“I don’t think it was possible for them to clean up this
quickly. Where did you come from?”
“We came from the mainland this morning through a secret tunnel.
In fact, it’s only a few blocks from here and I intend to get all of you out of
here.”
“You wouldn’t see any bodies this close. Anyone this close would
have been instantly vaporized. Believe me; the radiation was bad enough that
every living creature on this island died shortly after the attack.
“Are you sure that you can get us out of here? These people are
ruthless. They want to know what happened to the radiation, we should all be
dead by now.”
Mark looked out over the miserably company of survivors, “I will
get you to safety at any cost.
“I will be right back; I have to let my friends, here with me,
know what is going on.” Mark withdrew from the room.
“We have to wait for them to bring Susan back,” the man whisper
shouted up to the ceiling.
A short while later one of the ceiling panels slid away and Mark
dropped through the opening. Crouching down behind a desk he motioned one of
the men over. “I need someone big and tall to stand in front of the door, to
block the view from the little window in it.”
As the man walked towards the door to shield the room from view,
the man who Mark had first been talking to, made his way over. “Susan is back
and she can walk— they aren’t quit as rough with the women.”
“Help me get some things closer to the wall; we all are going to
have climb over here. My name is mark.”
“Thank you for coming, Mark.”
Soon Mark and Robert had makeshift stairs ready for escapees and
began helping people up and over one at a time.
Busy helping the last person up through the hole Mark was
startled by the sound of shattering glass and looked up to see the man at the
door stumble from being hit a glancing blow through the window.
The man straightened himself up as the canister that struck him
rolled across the floor and ruptured into a fog of noxious gas.
“Quick Bill, run!” Robert shouted for the big man to escape with
them.
The door burst open as the two posted guards rushed the escaping
hostages. One jumped for Bill, and the other one fell crashing to the floor.
Mark saw Bill stumble from the weight of his attacker and
hurried to his aid. Nearing his trustee Mark saw the guard pulled off Bill and
knocked unconscious.
Grinning like a mad man the saving stranger stood up tall,
“Mark?”
“Roger!”
“Get up there you two, Mark will be right behind you,” stated a
commanding Roger. “It’s great to see a familiar face right before the end; now
run you fool!”
“Come with us; Jack and I came to save you.”
“I wish I could, the rest of the army is on it’s as we speak,
someone is going to have to hold them off.” True to his words two more guards
rushed through the door and Roger ran through them like a linebacker bowling
ball and out the door.
Knowing better than to tempt fate, Mark climbed the jumble and
through the opened panel. Turning to take one last look in the direction his
suicidal friend went he tripped and fell backwards through the ceiling of the
escape room.
Chapter Six
Fire for Effect
“What was all that commotion?” Steve asked the big man he and
Jack was helping down from the desk to the safety of the floor.
“We’ve been discovered,” the man said looking around the dark
room until his eyes settled on Robert, the man that had been their pillar of
strength during this injustice. “I only made it because one of the army, or
maybe he was a marine, arrived just in time to save me and Mark.”
At the mention of Mark’s name the group looked up to the hole in
anticipation of his return, but he had not yet emerged.
Tom, worried for his friend, climbed the makeshift stairway and
poked his head through the void to peer into the room that had been a prison
for these poor innocent souls. “Ow!” Tom cursed, and in response the ceiling
exploded into a shower of panel fragments and dust.
Momentarily frozen by the suddenness of the unexpected assault
from above, Steve was shoved aside as Jack pushed passed him to get to his
fallen comrade. “What happened?”
“Someone kicked me in the head,” Tom said as he ducked back out
of the panel space.
Groaning from a mangled heap on the floor Mark offered up his
apology, “I was distracted, I am sorry Tom. Roger was in there. He went back to
give us time to get away.”
“Roger was the Marine that the big man over there saw?” asked a
bewildered Steve.
“Bill and I wouldn’t have made it if it wasn’t for Roger.” Mark
explained as he lay motionlessly on the floor.
“Are you hurt,” asked a concerned Jack? “You bounced off the
desk pretty hard.”
“My leg may have brushed it a little, but I’m okay. We had
better get moving.” Mark cringed in agony as he tried to move his leg under
himself to get up.
“I think it’s fractured,” Jack diagnosed from the unnatural bow
in Mark’s shin.
“Is there anything to make a splint?” Tom asked, but the only
answer he would receive was the distinctive sound of gun fire from inside the
building.
“That’s our queue that we have overstayed our welcome. Tom, help
me get Mark to his feet, or… you know what I mean,” growled a straining Jack.
With Jack and Tom on each
side of Mark for support, they followed the group of survivors led by Steve
back through the flower shop.
“The guards are gone from
the back doors out here, let's hurry before they return,” a surprised Steve
informs the group following him.
“Sounds like they have their hands full with Roger, he is one
bad animal. Too bad he won’t make it,” stated a sorrowful Tom.
“Why is that? He seems to be doing pretty good so far,” asked a
confused Robert.
“He won’t kill anyone, not intentionally anyway, he is just
drawing them away knocking unconscious those he can, but none of that matters,
he will be overrun as reinforcements arrive. We had better not waste his
sacrifice standing around here.” Tom’s eyes swelled as he led Mark out the
door.
The refugees paused under the great statue to catch their breath
after the breakneck run they had made through the devastated city blocks.
The statue that had seemed so magnificent and mighty was now
only a shadow in the gloom to Steve’s eyes, now less accustomed to the dark,
having come from outside rather than the dark recesses of the building this
time.
The mood of the escapees was down a little, from the thoughts of
Roger’s sacrifice for them. Rarely does someone do more than just speak of
giving for the good of someone else.
Steve could hear some of the people around him talking about what Roger
had done, was still doing for them. A few of them seemed to be working up the
resolve to go back for him.
Steve, while heartened by the sentiment, knew that they would be
only sacrificing themselves in vain, unlike Roger’s truly heroic efforts.
“Listen up everyone. Roger has done a great thing for us and we must abide by
his wishes. He has asked nothing in return for his actions, he only asks that
you honor him by trying to live.
“Mark, Jack, Tom, and I came here to rescue him,” Steve
chuckled, “As silly as that now seems. Now, however, we know his wish is for us
to all escape. Roger is a true hero whose morals are beyond reproach. He did
not do this for us because it was convenient for him or easy. He simply
believes that it right and good.
“When I met him, it was due to his struggle for the sake of a
human life,” remembering back to earlier that day, Steve winced at the pain
caused by his lack of trust for the man. “While he hadn’t been to church for a
very long time, and he thought that he had lost his faith, I don’t think I have
known a more faithful person. I for one have been honored to know him and will
regret only that he is gone, but never his valiancy and sacrifice for others.”
Boom… debris shaken loose from above rained down
on the gathering.
“What was that?” a stunned crowd asked in unison.
“They have started mortaring this building,” a voice from the
depth of the shadows answered.
Again, as one, the group turned to the new threat.
Stepping out of the dark passageway Roger showed a broad smile,
“While that was very touching, you need to know that I am not gone yet. For the
most part they have lost interest in tracking me and have turned their full
attention on eradicating you.
“This was the reason that I was headed to the concentration camp
in the first place. I found out that they had all the information that they
believed they could get and were sending in units to tie up the loose ends, as
they called it. This is not our military; they are led by a rogue radical,
which I believe is the head of Hillary’s American army and he will stop at
nothing to reach his goals. And he has come here to discover what it was that
has impeded his plan. Something has sucked the radiation out the very molecular
structure of the surrounding.”
Boom, Boom, Boom… the force of
the explosions shook the people as well as the surroundings.
“What are they trying to do? They aren’t even coming close to
hitting us,” a muddled Susan asked.
“They are not trying to hit you; they are trying to collapse the
already ruined building. Follow me, we can sneak into the next office
building,” a commanding Roger urged.
“No, Roger. We didn’t come here to hide; this is our escape
route. There is a secret tunnel under the laboratory here. I thought it was
military, but no one seems to know about it. This building must have been for
something incredible, but now it’s our way to safety.” Steve walked over to the
stairs leading down to the tunnel.
Holding the door open for the others to follow, Steve urged his
companions to follow. As everyone, except Mark, Tom, and Jack who have the
burden of an injured man, rushed to the open door with renewed excitement, the
dust continued to increase choking their efforts.
The ceiling, no longer able to hold under the continually added
weight, finally gave way to the next volley of mortars and the seven floors
above crashed down on its helpless victims with a violent finality.
The force of air, which was pushed from the room as the rubble
took up the space in the chamber, thrust Steve through the doorway and down the
stairs. Being able to grab the hand rail was the only thing that saved him from
the promised broken bones of a landslide down the stairs.
To Steve’s surprise the room had not been completely filled. The
statue in the middle had broken off halfway up, but what remained had caught a
support beam that was retaining a great deal of the crumbled concrete and
steel.
Steve started into the tunnel like pathway leading to the statue
where his friends and companions had been. Along the way, to Steve’s horror he
found crushed body after crushed body. Large chunks of rebar enforced concrete had
stormed down smashing and impaling everyone in its path of destruction.
Unwilling to leave behind anyone Steve made his way through the
rubble and carnage at last reaching the end of the procession. Steve’s hope was
crushed finding the lifeless forms of Mark and Tom. Kneeling over their bodies
he wept with his face in his hands.
A faint noise caught his attention, and he looked down in time
to see some small debris pushed aside by a hand reaching up through the jumble.
Hurriedly Steve worked to clear away the rocks and managed to
dig out Jack— mostly. A heavy chunk of concrete laid half across Jack’s chest.
Steve was unable to even budge the boulder.
Wheezing Jack took in a small breath to speak to Steve and
coughed in a convulsive spasm releasing a foamy spew of blood from his lungs.
“Don’t talk; I will get you out of here.”
His lungs momentarily cleared enough to say a few words. Jack
asked, “Are you and everyone okay?”
Drawn between revealing the horrific tragedy to a dying man and
easing his burden with a coddling lie, “You and I are the only survivors,”
Steve answered Jack.
Steve continued to dig out his friend by clearing away
everything on top of the massive boulder to find that it was the arm of the
statue, and it was still attached to the torso of the monstrous sculpture.
Coughing up more frothy blood from his lungs Jack spit out the
gruesome mess from his mouth. “I still believe that demons and the devil are
merely representations of human characteristics and flaws. I feel that people
are selfish and weak looking to blame something or someone other than
themselves for absolutely everything bad in their lives.”
“Jack? What are you saying?"
“I, however, used to believe that all Christians were just
flawed people looking for excuses. All of the Christians that I had known were
always enabling the poor. Because of that the poor would stay poor because they
would have no motivation to get up and get a job. Christians are like welfare,
creating lazy people by teaching them that they don’t have to do anything to
survive; that they were only teaching people to abuse the system. I always
hated when they said someone was less fortunate, like luck had anything to do
with working hard and earning a living.”
Curious Steve asked, “What do you believe now?”
“Exactly the same but for one thing, there are some real
Christians out there and if their faith is half of what yours is, then they
need to get out in the world and help people.”
Sweating from the exertion of clearing away the rubble Steve sat
down next to his pallid friend. “I am no different from any other Christian
except that I have been put into a position to prove my faith to you and to
myself especially.”
“You are the only survivor from this expedition, your faith
protected you. It’s freezing in here; it’s hard to believe that it’s the middle
of summer.”
“No Jack, if I was able to save myself through my strength in my
faith I should have been able to save everyone. My faith gave me the courage to
go out to do whatever it was that God wanted me to do. I believe that I am
still alive against all likelihood because God is not finished with me; he
still has a plan for me. My faith in God gives me the endurance to do His will and
opens the gates to heaven for me.”
“So, I guess he is through with me then. Steve, would you pray
for me?” Jack’s eyes bulged momentarily from the shock of dying, and then his
face became peaceful.
Steve closed his friend’s eyes to the world and gave thanks to
God for receiving him into his arms. The look on Jack’s face revealed that in
the end he repented and was then able to see the face of God and had found his
way home.
Chapter Seven
Providence
Children were playing, dogs were running, the world was at peace
in the late afternoon sunlight, except Steve was unaware of any of it. His
thoughts, back through the tunnel, the ride on the bus and the walk back to his
house were troubled to say the least.
Steve hurried home; his mind was full of fear and worry. He
contemplated why he survived and what if the rogue evil mastermind had enough
clues for the army to find his home.
Steve came home terrified by what he had found out, to find a
couple from church visiting on the front porch with his wife on their way out.
After they were gone, she retold about how they had wanted to be missionaries,
but had too many obligations to go themselves. Their business had taken off
immensely, and they wanted to fund a missionary expedition.
“They want us to go,” she said. “They believed they were
compelled to talk to me about it.”
Too shocked to speak, Steve just stared at his wife with his
head cocked to the side— which Nancy took as a loud no and by the way are you
out of your mind.
“This is perfect. Get packed now.”
It was now Nancy’s turn to stare dumbfounded. “Are you making
fun of me,” asked a confused wife? “I was just telling you what they said.”
“I am serious. On my way home I was doing my best not to worry—
to leave it in God’s hands, but I was struggling. I couldn’t think what we were
going to do. This is perfect. I don’t know how we are going to do it, but this
is yet more proof positive that the way is being cleared as we speak,” an
excited Steve stammered.
Realizing that his wife was too stunned to start herself into
motion, Steve gave her a reassuring hug and led her back into the house.
The following morning found Steve and Nancy groggily dragging
their tired bodies out of bed to start the new day that awaited them. After
telling his wife the story, leaving out only the gruesome details, they had
gone to bed, but sleep evaded them both like the winning lottery ticket in
Powerball.
Having left Nancy at home to pack up the few things that they
owned in their humble little home, Steve met with the Johnson’s to work out the
details of mission trip to Africa.
Without Steve informing them of any part of the hidden terrors
that he had been through, Janet and Bill had planned the entire excursion.
Janet and Bill Johnson prearranged to take three months’
vacation. They still wanted to be part of a missionary group, and they thought
that it would be okay to leave their kids and business for a short time, in the
hands of a few trusted people.
They had bought a boat and wanted to sail along the coast of the
continent of Africa distributing bibles along the way while they decide where
to leave Steve and Nancy.
The only thing that they hadn’t accounted for was the addition
of a baby and the urgency to leave immediately. The Johnson’s promised Steve
that it would be all worked out and to meet them on the dock in the morning.
Walking from Bill’s office Steve decided that he should go and
help his wife pack the house before he went to his office in the church.
To Steve’s surprise Nancy had their luggage pilled in the living
room, and the walls were all bare of the few personal photographs. He found Nancy in the kitchen just finishing
up with the refrigerator, all the food in a glad bag ready for him to haul out
to the garbage.
“That about does it,” exclaimed Nancy when she saw her husband
enter the room.
“Was that really necessary?”
“It’s bad enough that we are leaving someone to deal with the
mess we are leaving behind, but I’ll be darned if I am going to leave a stinky
mess in the refrigerator. Who knows how long it will be before someone will be
able to get around to take care of the empty parsonage,” explained an
exasperated Nancy.
“It’s hard to believe that everything we own will fit in four
suitcases. Nancy, where is the baby?”
“He is with Steff at the church, waiting on us.”
“Already? We aren’t leaving until morning.”
“Well then we had better find a place to stay for the night.”
Confused about his wife’s strange behavior, Steve asked, “Are
you alright dear?”
“Am I alright? Have you forgotten what happened yesterday? I don’t
know about you, but right now I feel like we need to get away from here.”
“We aren’t fugitives; we have a right to stay in our house.”
“I just have one of those woman feelings, I can’t stay here
another night.”
Steve knew better than to argue about one
of her feelings, it wouldn’t even do any good if he won. No matter how
right you are, you are wrong, when it goes against one of her feelings.
So, Steve picked up the trash bag and hauled it out to the
dumpster and returned to find Nancy carrying two bags out the front door. He
hurried to catch up to her and locked the door to his home for the last time.
By the time they got to the church they were too drained to be
upset with each other. The bags weren’t extremely heavy, but they were old and
didn’t have wheels on them like most of the new ones.
Until he got to the church, Steve had forgotten that he was
leaving his congregation without a pastor and with only four days until Sunday.
He called an emergency meeting, but no one was going to be able to make it
until five thirty.
With his spare time Steve wrote out his planned sermon into
notes that someone, probably Ned Thompson the local newspaper editor—he liked
to talk, could easily follow.
For Nancy the time went by a little more slowly, but with the baby
and Stephanie for company she found the agony of waiting a little more
bearable.
“What’s his name?” Steff asked when she decided that the baby
bottles should be marked to discern them from the used bottles left behind in
the nursery. A newborn’s bottles should be more sterilized than normal, I
just want to be sure he gets the safest ones, she had said.
“His name is…”
“Victor,” Steve answered from the doorway.
Startled, Nancy looked at her husband then grinned and stated
with pride, “Victor Stade.”
#
The meeting lasted three long hours and ended with Steve, Nancy,
and Victor going home with Janet and Bill Johnson—luckily they had brought
their Escalade which fit the luggage and four adults comfortably.
“Would you mind stopping by the parsonage so I can make sure
that I didn’t leave the oven on?” Steve asked when they pulled out of the
church parking lot.
“If you need to make an excuse for something, don’t use your
wife’s incompetence,” snapped a hostel Nancy. “You know that I, for a certain,
would have checked everything.”
“I’m sorry everyone, I don’t know why I said that. I guess I
must be nervous about leaving.” Steve looked apologetically at his wife.
“We can drive by it on the way to my house, if you see it and
need to get out and say your good-byes, we can spare the time,” teased a
good-natured Bill.
“I just can’t shake this strange feeling; I just know I forgot
something,” answered a slightly embarrassed Steve. “Probably just seeing the
house will help.”
When the Cadillac rounded the corner, three blocks from the
parsonage Bill saw that they needed to get out of there immediately. He drove casually to the next corner and
stopped at the stop sign two blocks from the house. All eyes were focused
forward to the military vehicles surrounding the pastor’s old house.
Bill took a left, instead of the right that they would have
taken, were they going directly to his home. What should have been an eight
minute drive took forty-five minutes by the time they circled back around to
pull into the Johnson driveway.
Steve could tell that
Bill was hesitant about getting out of the SUV and bringing them into their
home, but in the end, they all went inside the Johnson’s upper middle class
house.
Bill and Janet left their guests in the family room while they
went to tuck their kids into bed.
“Okay, this is awkward. I had hoped to tell them the whole story
only after we were out in international waters.” Steve said to an ashen faced
Nancy. “I hope they aren’t doing anything rash, like calling the authorities or
anything like that.”
If Nancy looked pale before, she looked ghost like at the
mention of the police being called.
“Maybe you should sit down, Hun, you aren’t looking well. Do you
want me to hold Victor for a while?”
At that Nancy perked up, “No thank you dear, I would like to
keep holding him. For some strange reason, I feel like the only reason I
haven’t fainted is because I have him so close to me.”
When Bill returned, Steve stood and waited with a look he hoped
portrayed regret. Janet shortly followed
her husband, with a tray of glasses and a liquor of some sort- Steve didn’t
know by the bottle because he never drank.
“We knew something was
amiss when you insisted on leaving immediately, but I never suspected… whatever
all of those military vehicles imply.” Bill
motioned towards a glass.
“No thank you, I don’t drink,” Steve declined.
“I have known you a good long time,” Bill continued. “I trust
you more than anyone else alive. It seems we have quite a lot to talk about.”
Janet sat the tray down and started to pour another drink for
herself then thought better of it and put the stopper back in the bottle.
“I’m normally a brandy guy, but this seems like a scotch night
if ever there was one,” Bill guffawed which startled Janet and Nancy.
“I am sorry Bill, I don’t know what else to say,” apologized an
uneasy Steve.
“You sure you don’t want a drink, it settles the nerves a
little.” Bill asked when he got up to pour himself another.
After pouring the dark brown liquid to the brim of his glass,
Bill sat back down in his overstuffed recliner. Steve saw him staring off as if
in deep thought then snap out of it, apparently remembering his guests. “We
must replay the meeting over in our heads,” he explained. “If whoever is after
you was able to find where you live, they undoubtedly know where you work.”
Bill paused to let the implications sink in then continued, “By
tomorrow noon, everyone at our meeting will have been interviewed. Do any of
you remember telling anyone why you were leaving or where we are going?”
“I started to tell everyone, but I didn’t get that far into my
speech when the proverbial hell broke loose. I never got another word out that
didn’t have to do with apologizing or fixing the mess I loosed on poor Ned
Thompson.” Steve said reliving the confusion and raucous meeting.
“Nancy?” Steve asked.
“No, at least I don’t think so. Steff and I just sat in the back
with Victor; no one really paid any attention to us. I was thankful then, that
we were left to our own devices, but even more so now.” She sighed.
“Well, I think we should have a couple of days before they get
around to interrogating people at my office, many of whom know our former plans.
“We still have the advantage, because they have no idea what
they are looking for. They only know that I was on the island.” Steve said
believing that that revelation would set everyone at easy.
Janet who had been silent until now jerked upright with sudden
understanding showing on her face. “You can’t possibly mean the island.”
When Steve didn’t answer she continued, “Are you poisoning us with radiation?”
She jumped up to rush from the room.
“No! It’s alright, wait.” Janet stopped at the door to hear what
Steve was going to say. “The radiation was gone by the time I got there.
Actually, that is what has the government in such a scramble. The attack was
put on the back burner after the discovery of the nuclear radiation having been
nullified somehow.”
Janet relaxed visibly, but did not return to her seat so near to
Steve. “That is something, if it is true.”
“I will tell you everything, I promise. But, we have to get
Victor to safety first. This has something to do with him.” Steve said trying
to sound as reassuring as possible. “We have plenty of time to talk about the
details on the voyage. Right now though, we need to focus on getting far out to
sea without drawing attention to ourselves first.”
“It would be too suspicious if we left in the dark of night,
besides things are set up for tomorrow morning. We just need to get a good
night’s sleep and set out early tomorrow morning.” Bill cajoled, who felt much
more relaxed.
The morning did not come nearly soon enough for Steve and Nancy.
They both laid in bed worrying about whom they gave to much information to, and
Nancy had to get up every two hours to feed the baby anyway.
Nancy followed Steve downstairs to see if anyone else was up
yet. To their surprise Janet was already in the kitchen making breakfast.
“Bill will be back in a few minutes, he went to make sure that
everything is still safe to go. He left instructions for me to take you and the
kids if he does not check in by 7 am.” Janet explained to the daunted couple.
“We never heard him leave,” Steve said with question in his
tone.
“We didn’t want to bother you. You probably didn’t sleep any
better than we did last night.”
Steve wondered about Bill, and how well he could trust his
longtime friend. Janet seemed normal enough, under the circumstances she was
not as nervous looking as he and Nancy.
“How do you like your eggs?” Janet asked neither one in
particular.
Steve turned from looking out the window to look at his wife
when Bill walked through the door on the opposite side of the room.
“I don’t know if it’s good news or not, there is no sign of
trouble anywhere that I could find.” Bill said as he sat down to breakfast.
“I’m famished. Are you two going to eat?” He said looking questioningly at the
two empty chairs in front of the steaming plates of food.
Steve pulled out the chair for Nancy. “We just got down here.
Your house is so quiet we thought everyone else was still in bed.”
“Well, maybe you were just more exhausted than you thought. We
couldn’t sleep, so got up after a few hours and went over a few last minute
details. The house sitter slash, don’t tell the kids this, baby sitter will be
here shortly and the boat is ready for our departure as we eat.” Bill reassured
the harried couple.
“It’s great how everything has come together so well. Thank you,
Bill. And thank you Janet. You two are so wonderful,” said an emotional Nancy.
“Don’t worry dear,” Janet soothed, “everything is going to be
fine. We will soon be away from all of this mess.”
“It sure will, Nancy. Janet and I have every detail worked out.”
A knock at the door interrupted Bill and left the kitchen to answer it.
Chapter Eight
Out of Bounds
The drive to the marina was as normal as any ordinary day. But,
the sailboat! It was a yacht at forty-seven feet in length. Steve had never
seen anything so beautiful. Not only was it a luxury that he never imagined
being a part of, it was also what was going to take him and his family to
safety.
“You didn’t expect four people and a baby to sail comfortably,
for who knows how many months, in one of those little boats?” Bill pointed at a
twenty-seven foot single cabin sail boat. “Come on, let me show you around.”
Steve and Nancy followed Bill across the dock to the slip on the
end, where the large vessels where docked. Janet was already aboard and waving
them over.
Once on the deck Janet handed them each a pill and glass of
water. They looked at her momentarily puzzled. “Dramamine. You said you had
never been on a boat before, so it’s a good idea to plan for the sea sickness,
for the first few days anyway.” They both swallowed their pills and handed the
cups back to the waiting Janet.
Bill waved to Tim, the signal that they were good to go, and he
could take the car back home. Back to the only life Steve had ever known. Steve
couldn’t bear to watch as the car pulled away, but he could still hear the
tires grinding on the gravel, and his heart sank.
He couldn’t look back- he shouldn’t look back. Bad things always
happened to the people in the bible that looked back at what they were leaving
behind, instead of only looking forward to where they were being led. He didn’t
need to look to see, he would never forget what his world had looked like.
Steve could honestly say that he was no longer fearful of the
dangers and the unknown that he leading his family into, because he had faith
that he was following the plan. Steve also knew that no matter how well he
followed the plan, he was only human and was bound to mess it up. This is a
whole new level of faith. Having faith in a creator was child’s play, compared
to believing that God has a plan for you. Out of nearly seven billion people on
the planet and that he was the one chosen to save the baby. And, to be
merely human and be part of a God sized plan.
God often chose people that were too weak or too small or too
old or too young for the job, but was willing to trust him, to show to people
that he was God. Steve couldn’t help but to feel puny. How bad could he mess
up, and things still work out?
Looking out to sea and passed, in his mind’s eye, Steve couldn’t
even begin to fathom the future or his role in future events, he was just a
humble servant. He felt that he was on the brink of an abyss where on wrong
step and he would take everyone over the edge, and he was not even in control.
This was more than unknown territory, it was uncharted and way
outside of Steve’s comfort zone. “God please lead me not into temptation and
thy will be done.”
“What was that?” Bill asked from the stairs leading down to the
lower cabins.
“Oh, just a little prayer.”
“Are you coming then? I want to show you your room and other
important features.”
Steve hurried after Bill. “Are you coming Nancy?”
“You can show me later. I’m enjoying the fresh sea air. I think
Victor likes it too.”
Below the deck the luxury level went way up. Steve could not
believe that someone would think of putting some of this in a boat. The kitchen
was small, but clearly designed for functionality. Each sleeping cabin had its
own bathroom. Their room was as big as their house had been.
Bill showed Steve his and Janet’s suite. And Steve thought he
had entered the Hilton, or some other fancy hotel that he had never been able
to imagine what it was like.
The luxury and ease of life one had access to with a little
money was beyond what a simple man could comprehend. The new boat smell was
more than what he could think of in a new car smell that everyone talked about.
The sheets were the softest and smoothest of any fabric he had ever felt.
Lost in luxurious splendor, Steve hadn’t noticed that Bill had
left, and was startled when the engine came alive with a purr. He left the
cabins and went up to the captain’s deck to see what was happening.
“Steve, you look pale,” Nancy said as Steve emerged from the
stairs.
“I heard the motor start-up, is anything going on?”
“Not that I am aware of,” she said.
Nancy followed Steve to the helm and they found Bill and Janet
there laughing to a joke they only heard the tail end of.
“What is happening? Why did you start the motor?” Steve asked.
“This is a sailboat, do we need to hurry?”
“Oh, I didn’t realize— you wouldn’t know,” Bill chuckled. “We
have to maneuver out of the slip and out to the bay under diesel power. Even a
smaller boat than this is too unwieldy to rely on wind. Calm down, nothing is
wrong. Look out there, there is one coming in. Do you see how they are bringing
the sails down?”
“I guess I must seem a little paranoid.”
“Just a bit,” Bill agreed.
“Well, I still haven’t told you anything about what I have been
through, so you will just have to forgive me for a little while yet.”
“When you’re ready, Steve,” Bill said and turned the ship out to
sea. “We have a long journey ahead of us.”
Nancy was in heaven, so to speak, enjoying the Jacuzzi in their
room and Steve walking around and exploring the interesting gadgets and
compartments with Victor sleeping soundly in the middle of the enormous bed.
They had been out to sea almost an hour now, with all of their
concerns left far behind them. Luckily, neither of them suffered from motion
sickness, as far as they could tell with the Dramamine still in their systems.
Leaving home wasn’t as bad as Steve had thought it would be. The
novelty of extravagance that neither had known was dulling the
uncomfortableness of being farther away from where he had grown up and lived
his entire life.
Steve wanted to let his bride soak in the hot bubbly water for
the rest of the trip, but somehow holding Victor close to her, made her seem
more alive and vibrant. The hot tube seemed to be helping her in other ways
though, but Victor would be waking from his after lunch nap at any time.
Nancy must have sensed what Steve was thinking. She looked at
her husband staring at her and stood up breaking his trance. “Would you hand me
that robe dear? I should get dressed before Victor wakes.”
“He’s fine there in bed, and if he wakes, I can put him in the
play pin.”
“Steve,” Nancy said.
“Oh. No, I meant, that he is okay. This isn’t. I didn’t mean.”
“Come on; let’s go see how our gracious hosts are doing. I could
do for a little more sun and open sea air.”
Blushing, Steve wrapped his beautiful wife and got the diaper
bag ready to go topside. Steve was a bit of a prude he realized, but he thought
it natural to be uncomfortable outside of his own personal bedroom.
Nancy was almost dressed when Victor opened his eyes. Steve
picked him up, eager to go out to the common area. When she was finished, Nancy
accepted Victor from Steve and the headed up to the great expanse of blue.
After checking with Bill to see if he needed anything, Steve and
Nancy went to the lounging area to enjoy the incredible sight. There was no
land in sight.
Soon, Bill and Janet came out with refreshments. “I made us some
iced tea,” Janet said and sat the tray down on a handy table between the rows
of recliners.
“Bill! We are still moving,” Steve questioned.
“Oh, I guess you don’t know about GPS guided autopilot either.
This is as much fun as taking the new boat out itself. I can’t wait to take you
to the theater room.”
Steve’s mouth dropped a little at that. “You have a movie
theater onboard.
“Just a small one. And the satellite Internet lets us download
pretty much anything we can think of. I can help you set-up your laptop to the
Wi-Fi, sometime.”
Steve’s head was spinning with everything he had access to now,
and how he was just able to keep the budget for the church each month.
“Bill, what is that, another ship?” Janet interrupted.
They all turned to see what Janet was pointing at. Far out on
the horizon a dark spot was visible, and became several dark spots.
“I’m not sure,” Bill stammered and turned toward the bridge.
“I’ll get the binoculars and have a look.”
By the time Bill got to the bridge the dark spots had turned
into large ships, and they were coming fast. Looking through the glasses to be
sure, Bill yelled down to his guests, “You better find a place to hide. Janet
and I will have to try reasoning with them. They are definitely military, so if
they are looking for you and the baby you should be out of sight. And get down,
they probably have binoculars also.”
Steve and Nancy hit the deck as one and crawled to the stairs. “Catch!”
Jill tossed the diaper bag. “Hide your things as well.”
They got down to their room and put the bags of luggage in the
closet and cleaned out the bathroom. “Now, where are we going to hide?” Nancy
thought out-loud.
“There are many places, but…”
“But, what?” Nancy asked.
“But, if they search the ship, they will find us anywhere we
hide, the boat isn’t that big.”
“That’s great. So what do you suggest?”
“Well, let’s hide in the theater room, and if they search,
because the Johnson’s couldn’t persuade them otherwise, maybe it won’t look as
if we were hiding, and therefore look less suspicious.” Steve suggested.
The boat jerked and shuddered momentarily. “They must have
bumped the ship, maybe to latch on somehow."
“Like for a boarding party? We need to hurry!”
The sound of many pairs of stomping boots echoed through the
chambers, and Steve and Nancy rushed to find the theater room. Then it stopped.
It was quit when they found the theater. They waited in the
silence, for what seemed like an hour.
Suddenly the boots were stomping again, and the sounds of things
crashing to the floor could be heard even though the heavily insulated theater
room. And as suddenly as it started, it stopped again.
“What do you think that was all about,” Nancy whispered.
“Negotiating, pleading, I don’t know. Maybe they were able to
convince them that they are alone out here.”
They waited in silence again. Victor waited quietly.
A ray of light suddenly came through the door that opened to the
room. Steve leaned over Nancy holding her down low and gave her a big under the
bleachers kind of kiss. The lights popped on, and the couple laid there
momentarily blinded.
“Come on you two love birds,” someone said from the entrance.
Steve sat up to see three gun touting uniformed men waiting for
them. They stood in an unaggressive posture with their weapons cradled in their
arms, confidant that they would have no trouble.
Steve stood to face the intruders, “What is this all about?”
“Move it. You’ll find out soon enough,” the man in the middle and
the front said.
Steve and Nancy had no choice. They were led to the deck and
emerged from the stairs as Bill and Janet were being escorted to a ship on the
starboard side of the boat with their hands shackled behind them.
Steve turned to follow his fellow prisoners, but a large gun
wielding man blocked the way, cuffed their hands and motioned them to the ship
on the port as another man took Victor.
They walked the plank to the waiting ship and were led to the
stairs. Nancy started down immediately
and Steve followed. He paused on a whim just before his head was below the deck
to look at the poor innocent people he had unwittingly dragged into this mess.
And saw Bill being un-handcuffed, just before Steve was shoved into the waiting
darkness.
Chapter Nine
No Holds Barred
At midday the sun overhead scorched the cracked and parched
earth. The black CH-47F Improved Cargo Helicopter pulling away left a cloud of
choking dust to mark its dreadful passing after leaving its cargo— the
prisoners. The last one out of the transport helicopter Nancy followed behind
her husband. She could only stare in shocked disbelief at the high fences
topped with razor wire.
She, her husband, and six others were dragged through a series
of electronic turnstiles on their way inside the heavily guarded Emergency
Center. Their chains linked together at hands and ankles pulled taut as she
slowed every few steps to make sure the woman carrying baby Victor was still
coming.
Nancy watched as each one approached the final gate, the shackles
were taken from their hands and feet. On the inside of the fence leading to the
main yard, inmates were gathered around and choosing newbies— like a slave
auction block.
Steve and Nancy were last in line. The others had disappeared
into the crowd or were dragged off by their new owners. “You can’t let that
happen to our baby,” Nancy pleaded with the female guard carrying Victor.
The stone faced guards unlatched both Steve and Nancy, while the
guard handed the infant to Nancy.
They waited as if somehow they were going to be treated
different from the other innocent people. The guards started becoming agitated,
and one pushed Steve into the turnstile.
“Move, before I push you through the closed gate,” said the biggest man
Nancy had seen in her life.
“Ram him through the strainer, Hoss,” said someone from inside
the fences. “Squeeze his juice out on this side, like you did that guy last
month.”
As the gorilla like man stepped back, as if he needed a running
start, Steve took Nancy by the arm and pulled her after him.
“Welcome to Hell’s Bathroom, FEMA Camp number twenty-one,” said
one of the guards on the outside. “Enjoy your stay.”
Nancy found that she had been wrong, because the man coming
through the throng of captives was easily a foot taller and two feet wider than
the menacing guard on the outside of the fence.
“Out of my way,” the giant growled. “I want that baby.” Those
near him didn’t hesitate to scramble out of his way.
Nancy watched as Steve’s color turned ashen, while he looked as
though he was shrinking as the giant came closer. She knew Steve had never
defended himself before, but there was no way he was letting anyone near his
wife or Victor.
She watched in horror as Steve pulled himself up to his full
height of five feet and eight inches and put his fists up near his face as the
huge man, and his entourage came near. She could see that he intended to
protect her and she felt warmth at the thought— momentarily. His efforts would
be as futile as walking into a tornado.
The brute casually swatted Steve’s shoulder and threw him as
though he were nothing more than an annoying fly.
Steve was still rolling as Nancy shrank away against the fence.
Her attacker bent down to look her in the face and growled like a rabid dog as
he reached for the baby. His warm breath stank of alcohol. She fought the urge
to squeeze her eyes shut, blocking out the nightmare from her vision.
When his hand touched the infant he froze, none but Nancy could
see his face change to pure emotional pain and his eyes blazed with the terror
that should have been hers alone.
The kingpin let go and turned, walking away slowly at first,
then more quickly. The shock in the eyes of all who watched was apparent even
to Steve, who had landed quite far away. The minions with the monster man,
trailed behind their boss in confusion, but none dared speak.
A man ran over to help Steve up and a woman that had been by his
side rushed to Nancy, after seeing that these newcomers were not going to be
molested by the unruly mob.
“I thought certainly you were going to be Ivan’s new pets. I
don’t know what changed his mind, but I think I want to be your friend. What do
you think Dee?” The man said.
“I could certainly use the company of another woman.” She said,
then turned to Steve and Nancy, “Would you care to share our pod?”
Nancy, who was too shook up, only stared at the woman in front
of her, but Steve nodded in assent for both of them.
After the big honcho left the yard, the others disbursed,
leaving Steve and Nancy alone with their new companions. They didn’t know what
to think, and they were not willing to risk finding out what had bothered the
heartless killer, so they did not pursue the usual course of taking slaves and
left them alone.
#
The Pod, as Dee had called it, was a room at the top of the
building with the outside wall gone- having crumbled to the ground sometime in
its history. An already nervous wreck of
a woman, Nancy clung to the wall by the door that was only six feet from the
precipice.
Dee noticed Nancy’s terror, “This was the only space left for
us. Its survival of the fittest here, so we count ourselves lucky that those
mindless brutes didn’t have the intestinal fortitude to sleep up here. They
were afraid of rolling over in their sleep and off the side. And,” She pointed
outside, “That guard tower right there, with that trigger happy sniper who is
staring at you through his scope, added to their dread.”
Nancy slid down the wall to the floor, no longer able to stand.
Steve sat down with her and held her in his reassuring arms.
Troy came back shortly with two jars. One had a clear, but brown
tinted, liquid in it- Steve assumed it was water. The other was mostly brown
and looked like vomit. He put the jar up to his lips and slurped down a
mouthful of the sick looking stuff, then took a swig of the water. “It’s best
to wash this down with some water,” he said.
“What is it?” Steve asked.
“Well, it’s never the same day to day, but it’s food, or
garbage, puréed into this here slurry of your basic food groups. Do you want
some now? I would wait until I was good and famished if I were you. It’s an
acquired taste, if you know what I mean. You eventually get numbed to it
though. With a little water to wash it down with I mean.” Troy said as he
tipped up the jug for another slurp.
Sniffing the contents of the jar Steve jerked it away from his
face sloping some of the remaining goo over the edge to drool down the side and
onto his hand, “I will take your advice on that,” Steve said. “I’m not sure I
could get hungry enough for that stuff.”
“I lasted a weak,” Troy said. “I puked it all back up the first time, promising
myself I would die before doing that again, but like with my first hangover, I
couldn’t keep that promise either.”
“You have been here awhile then?” Steve asked.
“Oh yeah, it has been a while.”
“Why are you here? You don’t seem any worse than Nancy and I?”
“It’s a pretty short story.
“We were holding up in our snug little cabin in the mountains
when troopers parachuted in passed our traps. Someone had turned us in, they
wouldn’t say who.”
“It was those dirty rats, the Jenkins,” Dee cut in. “They were
jealous that we had ten years’ worth of food saved up for the end times. No
good deed goes unpunished. We warned them about what was coming and they
laughed at us.”
“Calm down Dee,” Troy said and turned back to Steve and Nancy.
“That was nearly two years ago, and you know women, they can hold a grudge well
beyond the grave.
“All of that planning and hard work, that fat old Dorothy Jenkins
has probably eaten all ten years’ worth by now,” Dee jumped in again. “You know
they went up there and made it their own after we were gone.”
Troy laughed, but Dee glared at him with a look that could
freeze water, then she burst out laughing herself.
“Our son got away,” Troy said. “Quinn had been out hunting for
some days prior. He is out there somewhere now, planning a rescue, if I know my
son.”
Suddenly excited, Nancy asked, “Do you think he really can get
you out of here? And, maybe us to?”
“Oh, I’m sure of it. He will be sixteen next month and eager to
prove himself a man,” Troy said proudly.
The light dimmed in Nancy’s eyes. “He had been gone for several
days, out in the wild, when he was only fourteen?” Nancy asked.
“We had been training him since he was old enough to walk,” Dee
said in defense of her parenting skills. “We knew the dark days were coming
long before the labor pains of the earth started.”
“Labor pains?” Steve asked.
“Haven’t you noticed the increasingly terrible weather, the largest
earthquakes in recorded history, the strange signs of the moon, aggression in
the Middle East, food shortages, and… I could go on?”
Steve knew about the end coming someday, but to be as
arrogant as all the previous generations that were sure that the world was
going to end during their lifetime, was not what would help him get through
life.
“I’m not sure that that is the kind of being prepared that Jesus
taught about. He spoke of being prepared by studying the bible, praying to God
for guidance, and listening to the Holy Spirit, so that you will not be
deceived. He said, in his parables that the wicked should run and hide, but his
people were to be servants and to show their fruit, or their proof, by living
for him.”
“Well, you might be right about some of that,” Troy said, “but I
don’t want to be anywhere near any of that. And you think we haven’t been doing
anything to help our fellow man? We have been telling people about all the
horrors that are coming. We have been sharing our knowledge of the signs. We
have implored people to help us prepare by investing in land in the hills and
food and other supplies. We have been working on them for years.”
“Yes, it sounds as though you have been working very hard. You
have been spreading the bad news to everyone around you. But, Jesus asked that
we spread the good news. He said that we would be imprisoned and brought before
judges, but, as he always says, do not worry, the Holy Spirit will give you the
words to say, you are to be their witnesses.”
“He says when you flee, pray that it is not winter. We are to
run and save ourselves.”
“No matter how hard you try to hide and shelter yourself from
the evil that is the world, your delusional fantasy is always broken by the
fact that you are in the world. If you are going to make a difference, you must
be a light in the darkness, not just a shadow hiding among the blackness.”
“We are in the world, but not of the world,” Troy responded.
“Alright, boys. None of that matters that much. We are all here,
together, and I think we need to work together to survive,” Nancy cut in.
“Speak for yourselves, Nancy,” Dee put in. “We have been doing
okay so far. Well, we had a couple of close calls over these last few weeks,
and it seems to be getting worse around here, but we don’t need any more mouths
to feed.”
“Alright, I forget how the negativity can be so contagious. I’m
sorry. We do want you here. It’s lonely. And, well. It’s just that we have
never seen Ivan back down like that. It looked like the life was drained out of
him.
“I talked to some of the other POWs, and they said that he went
to his rooms and passed out.”
“Is he going to be Alright?” Steve asked?
“What do you care, you have no idea what would have happened had
he not fallen ill.”
“He needs to be taught the good news, not be trampled into
submission.”
“Oh, here we go again. Do can’t really believe that everyone
should be forgiven, do you. I have never seen a worse monster than Ivan the
terrible. I know for a fact, that sometimes his servants are sacrificed to feed
his goons. He won’t eat the garbage that the rest of us have to suffer. I don’t
think he is human anymore. Are we supposed to forgive monsters,” Troy asked?
“Only God can…"
The sound of a single gunshot cut through the air and their
conversation.
Chapter Ten
To Save a Life
Troy and Dee had gone to find out about any news in the prison,
leaving Steve and Nancy to themselves. The gunshot was news, and anything to
break the daily monotony of prison life was welcome news.
Steve couldn’t understand the conspiracy theorist personality,
but he had to admit that there might be some truth to it. The Wade’s must be
right about something, they were in a secret military prison after all. They
don’t send people to regular jails for simply wanting their privacy. This was
where they sent people they didn’t want in the judicial system.
While Steve and Nancy were not thrilled about being in a prison,
they were determined to be Christian about it. They were not going to pout or
grumble. They both new it would serve no purpose, and it might do a lot of
harm. It is never a good idea to reveal too many of your weaknesses, unless you
are a sociopath and need the pity.
Nancy told Steve what had happened to Ivan and how he seemed to
have been drained of his life force after he touched Victor. Steve assured her
that it was because he was on the edge of some illness and the stress or
excitement of the day had pushed the monstrosity over the breaking point.
The view outside the walls and the tower of death was stunning
with bright orange mountains below a cloudless blue sky.
The vision of the happy little family standing together holding
their baby at the portal to the great blue abyss of sky, with the breeze
blowing Nancy’s hair back into the tower room, must have been a sight to see
for the seasoned veterans of the prison.
Steve and Nancy were unaware that their roommates had returned.
They stood there enjoying the fresh air of the desert, oblivious for the moment
of their misfortune at being imprisoned.
The Wade’s had returned with two large men, dragging Ivan, and
were momentarily captivated by the sight of the blissful serenity extrude by
the Stade’s very being. “You still want to forgive and forget?” Troy asked the
silhouetted couple with their backs to him, “Here is your chance. When the
rival gangs got word that Ivan was in a coma, they attacked the ruling clan—
Ivan’s clan. They were going to kill him.”
At sight of the immense man, Steve tensed out of reflex, but
since he was completely subdued relaxed visibly. “Was he shot?”
“The sniper guard shot one of Ivan’s men that had jumped on the
fence trying to escape the bloodshed.” Troy answered the question of the
gunshot.
“What caused Ivan’s coma, was he ill?”
“Who knows? He certainly seemed fine until he got on the wrong
side of you three. Seems like a good enough reason to be your friend, rather
than your enemy. It’s the law of the jungle in here.”
“What? We didn’t have anything to do with that. I was nothing
more than a nuisance that he swept away without effort.”
“That leaves Nancy and the little baby.” Troy nodded towards
them.
Steve looked to Nancy for support, but knew she already thought
something was out of the ordinary with Victor. The innocent looking baby had
survived an atom bomb, and had lived long enough for the radiation to disappear
mysteriously preceding his rescue. Steve was not a man learned in science, but
it seemed like a huge impossible coincidence that the radiation had been
drained from the area Victor was in and now something like life energy was drained
from the person threatening them.
It had been hours since Victor or any of them had eaten, Steve
was definitely feeling the hunger cravings, but Victor just lay in Nancy’s arms
seemingly content. Content like one feels after devouring their thanksgiving
meal, it seemed to Steve.
“John and Scott, you can lay Ivan in the corner over there,”
Troy, pointed to the corner that had a few inches of the outside wall
remaining. “I don’t think he can move while comatose, but I don’t want to take
the chance of him rolling out the window.”
After wedging a few spare things against Ivan’s side, as an
extra precaution against rolling, John and Scott found room to sit with the new
friends.
“I see why no one ever comes up here, this isn’t a room so much
as it is just a narrow ledge. How do you sleep?” asked a curious Scott.
“You do what you have to do to survive, well so do we, we just
don’t do it by taking from anyone else,” Troy said in an accusing tone.
“You must know that if it’s not us, it will be someone else. So,
why shouldn’t it be me? Trust me, there are much worse here, luckily we are
stronger.” Scott said looking at Troy.
“You mean you were stronger. As I see it you two are just
a couple of lackey thugs working for the one who was stronger.”
“It’s all we have known,” John, responded, “we have been working
with Ivan since we dropped out of school.”
“You three have been together since before you were put here?”
Steve asked.
“Like John said, it’s the only life we have known. If it wasn’t
for Ivan, we would probably be just victims like everyone else.”
“What are you going to do now? It sounds like you just lost
everything you had here.” Nancy asked.
Overcome by her genuine concern, Scott and John could manage
only weak shrugs.
“I think they are going to have to decide if they are going to
wait here for Ivan to recover, or go to one of their rivals for refuge. They
certainly don’t have any friends in here. They have been terrorizing people
since before Dee and I got here.”
Steve got up, walked over, and put a hand on each of the boys’
shoulders, “You have to make a choice, but not until after we have had a chance
to talk. I must tell you some of life’s truths, the truths that no one else is
going to tell you about.”
“What do you mean, everything I need to know, I learned in
kindergarten?”
“That’s probably true, but you didn’t listen to those who cared
and wanted well for you. Did your parents take you to church?”
“Yeah, my mom took me to church, when my dad was too hung-over
to stop us, or when Sunday fell on one of the last few days before payday. That
was when she would be out of her drugs.” Scott said.
“No. My parents were not even home on the weekends, but some of
my friend's parents tried. I only went a couple of times— it was so weird to
see all of those families together, and with their own spouses.”
“It sounds like your parents were together as some sort of
business venture, John.” Steve said. “No child should have to go through what
you two did.”
“What is so wrong with a little adversity, everyone needs
toughened up a little.”
“Even if that’s true, everyone needs to be loved even more so.
Being loved by two caring parents is great and needed, but there is another
love— a perfect love.”
“Who needs love; that stuff is for wimps.”
“You know you do. If you didn’t need to act tough for your ego
and the benefit of your audience, you would admit it to yourself. Do you love someone? Do you want to love
someone?”
“No, of course not, that’s for wimps,” Scott exclaimed.
“I did,” John admitted. “In ninth grade, I loved Julie Somethinson.
I actually went to school the whole year, so I could see her. However, she
moved away with her parents. I would have stayed in school for her. I would
have died for her.”
“Did you ever look for her?” Nancy asked.
“I thought about it. However, I thought so long about it, that
by the time I thought I was ready to, I realized that I was a horrible person.
She deserves better than me, even if she would want to be with a criminal.”
“Do you believe that because you are afraid to be rejected or
because you truly care that she gets the best possible husband?” Nancy prodded.
Conflicted John looked down and answered, “I don’t really know.”
Steve let John think about what kind of love he was capable of
for a few minutes then asked, “If you knew how to be a good and honorable
person, would you do it— for her, or even for yourself?”
John never looking up shrugged his shoulders signaling that he
was ready to hear about real love.
“John, you have never seen real love. All of the love you have
seen is the fantasy love portrayed on television or the movies. You should know
that that is all unrealistic. Are your friends like any of those actors
pretending to be like you? It is all exaggerated glorification of the aspects
the writers and producers want to portray. It’s pure fantasy, and so are the
love and sex that is so exaggerated in those shows— it’s not real.
“John, people make mistakes. Every single person on the planet
messes up every single day. The women and the men on movies spend years and
sometimes decades to learn how to pretend to be attractive people— at least for
the couple of hours during the movie.
“The director is giving you an emotion through their works of
art. Moreover, just like a painting, you are not seeing any of it in context.
The emotion you are feeling is from your mind filling in the missing aspects
with what it knows is real love.
“Love on earth is not something that you feel— it is something
that you do. You can’t know real love without knowing where it comes from.
“You can do things, good things, for someone that you don’t
love, but when you do things for someone that you do love, it reinforces both
her’s and your feelings—and that is where you get the feeling of in-love from.
Only God is real love.
“God gave us life. Not because it was just a side effect or an
accident of having too much fun, and oops he was a father. God deliberately
formed our bodies and put our soul in each and every one of us with his own
breath.
“God knew beforehand, that many, maybe most of us would, given
the opportunity, turn away from him. Nevertheless, he gave all of us a choice
to love him, in the weak insignificant way that we humans love, so that those
of us, who love him, despite the struggles and hardships of life, would know
true love.
“We know that our love is weak and ineffectual because he gave
us proof of his real and true love. While we were still hating him and
disobeying his trust, he sent a part of himself to live as one of us. Jesus was
God in the flesh of our human weakness and frailties. Jesus had to deal with
the same sinful nature that plagues us. Jesus had been tempted by every
possible human weakness, and he refused to give in.
“After living a sinless life, he was executed for crimes that he
was completely innocent of. And, all of this while knowing that we were sinners
and incapable of fixing ourselves. Jesus, allowed himself to be murdered,
because we could not live up to his standards. He let himself die, rather than
destroying the evil world, so that those of us who would love him would live.
“Out of all the religions in the world, and there are many,
Christianity is the only one where God loved his creation so much that he came
down to our level then sacrificed his only son for our good. All the other
religions believe that their god will grant them eternal life if they prove
that they are good enough or work hard enough to get there. However, the truth
is, none of us can get to heaven on our own. We can’t even see it on our own.
If we were capable of making it to heaven on our own, we could just make our
own heaven. But, no matter how hard anyone tries, this is and always will be a
broken world—until the one who made it fixes it.
“But, it’s not all our fault, there is someone working against
us. Another of God’s creations wanted to rule like God himself. Satan, an
angel, was cast out of heaven and left on earth, with many other angels that
believed they could win against God.
Whether the devil believes he can still win, still unable to get himself
back up to heaven, or has resigned himself to loosing but trying to hurt God by
taking away as many of God’s children as he can before his end, I don’t know.
“I can’t see everything the way that God does, but the best I
can explain, is that God is allowing this broken world, with its broken people,
tormented by a broken angel, to continue for the purpose of sifting out the
righteous people to populate the new world that he is going to replace this one
with.
#
Nancy had withdrawn from the discussion as Steve took over
telling about Jesus' sacrifice for them. She moved near Ivan, worried for the
vicious criminal, but terrified about what would have happened if Victor had
not stopped him.
With one touch, Victor seemed to have drained the life force out
of this monstrous human being. Then, after they were safely away from his
overreaching grasp, he showed back up. Though not as a murderous and terrible
conqueror, but as a helpless and fragile person.
She found, looking down on the helpless form, that she could no
longer hate the man. He was an evil, greedy, selfish, person. God still
loved this man. She found herself feeling sad for whatever had happened to make
him into the criminal he had become.
Nancy had heard Scott and John telling Steve about Ivan, and
that was when she had decided to move over to him. Now she felt compelled to
help him somehow. She thought about what Ivan had become.
In the outside world, Ivan had been a Mafia boss, but spoke
against The Rockefeller Group and its New World Order of population controlling
bankers. His out-spoken and loud public displays got him sent to the first
operational FEMA camp.
He couldn’t be all-bad then. Maybe it was just a matter of
convenience and ignorance that led him to a life of crime. He was simply the
largest man she had ever seen. His size would have made it easy for him to take
whatever he wanted from whomever he wanted.
Nancy was just beginning to see the monster on the ground in
front of her as a person when Victor reached out and touched Ivan’s forearm.
Ivan’s eyes opened and looked Nancy full in the face.
Chapter
Eleven
Out
of Control
Steve, startled by the
sudden inhalation from Nancy behind him, turned to see Nancy stumbling
backwards toward the open abyss of desert air. From across the room He felt
helpless as he moved seemingly in slow motion to her rescue. He had not taken a
full step towards her, when her foot caught on the lip at the edge of the
remaining wall.
Nancy tripped on the rubble
and was falling backwards out the portal, and Steve was no nearer to reaching
her. Suddenly Ivan was there and had ahold of Nancy’s flailing arm. Steve could
see the shock of falling change to pure terror as she jerked her arm to free
herself from the monster man’s glove like hand. When she pulled to rip her hand
free of his grasp, she managed to pull herself back into the room and landed
against Ivan’s massive bulk.
Ivan let her go when she
was safely into the room and she collapsed at his feet.
Steve was finally at
Nancy’s side, and ignoring her apparent savior, cradled her in his arms, amazed
that she hadn’t loosed her grip of Victor.
Nancy’s eye lids were
fluttering, the stress overwhelming her left her weak and on the verge of
fainting. As she fought the blackness creeping in, Steve asked her if she was
okay and her eyes opened fully to the recognition of her husband’s caring
voice.
“Oh, Steve, I feel so
stupid for letting a panic attack take control of me.”
“Don’t be silly, you had
every right.”
“I almost killed myself. I
didn’t need some bad person to do it for me, I almost did it all on my own. I
almost took Victor over the edge with me.”
Realization showed on
Nancy’s face as she looked towards Ivan, who had gone to his friends. “Ivan
saved my life,” she whispered.
#
After Nancy and Steve
composed themselves, they joined the group where John and Scott were filling
Ivan in on the situation.
Steve waited, until Ivan
had received the report and seemed to be thinking things through, to broach the
subject of a new life. “I realize that you haven’t had time for things to sink
in, and you are probably already making plans for your revenge, but I implore
you to listen to me before you take action.”
“I don’t know who you are,”
said a weary Ivan, “but, there is something about you and your family, “Ivan
nodded towards Nancy, “that give me pause to consider. While I was apparently
unconscious, I was living another life. It must have all been in my head, but
it is no less real to me. I need to talk to someone, something that is of rare
occurrence for me. I am a take charge and final decision kind of person, and
the consequences be dammed, but… I need to sit.”
The odd group of unlikely
companions situated themselves as well as they could in the cramped little
room. They sit lined up against the wall, each facing out to the open air of
the late afternoon sky over the Nevada desert. The ever-watchful gaze of the
sniper peered through his scope at each face in turn, before turning his
attention back to the rest of the prison.
Steve having fortified his
courage sat to the right of Ivan with Nancy next to him. John and Scott sat to
Ivan’s left. Troy and Dee sat on the far side of Scott, next to their meager
possessions.
The group sat in silence
for several minutes, Steve hoped that John was at least giving some thought
about the love of God he had shared with him earlier. He felt that he hadn’t
had enough time with the two of them to persuade them into giving any of their
attention to powers outside of their own little misguided world.
“Is there a God?” John
asked Ivan breaking the silent reverie.
“Before today, I would have
knocked you out that window for bringing up the name of that so called
benevolent being. The one who let my father and mother die in the Russian gulag
and then forced me into their fate. But, today… I can hardly believe that has
only been a few hours. Today, I met God.”
“What!” Scott asked. “Did
you lose your mind while you were out of it?”
“You would be out the
window behind John for talking to me that way—before today.” Ivan laughed. “I
no longer find that I am filled with rage. I have peace. I never imagined that
calm and serenity could feel so good. Rage and anger have always been my
closest dearest friends.”
While John and Scott seemed
to be stunned, Steve was dumbfounded. He knew, he wanted to believe, that God
could turn a person’s life around in the blink of an eye, but he had only
witnessed the long, often futile struggles of man to work and fail at changing
their lives to the better. It was always something he could count on. He would
help someone back onto their feet and they would work hard and get themselves
back up, just to fall back full on their face.
Paul, in the bible, meet
God on the road to Damascus, where his life was changed in an instant. but the
miracles in the bible seemed to always be the pinnacle of man, the highest point
of man’s connection to God, with only the long road down to the end times.
Until recently where he has been in the midst of God’s world changing will.
“I don’t know where to
start…”
“Start with telling us why
you wanted to take my baby!” Nancy growled.
“That was a different me. I
was a different person back then.”
“Back then? It has been
three hours!”
“For me, it has been three
years.”
“I think Scott is right,
you are out of your mind.”
“Like I said, I don’t know
where to start. I think your question is as good a place as any.
“I was born and raised in a
Russian gulag until I was fifteen. That was when my parents died trying to keep
them from taking me away to join the army. Needless to say, I was in the
Russian army, until I was seventeen when I deserted.”
“What does any of that have
to do with Victor?”
“Is that his name?” Ivan
asked looking into the steel blue eyes of the baby in Nancy’s arms.
Nancy jerked Victor out of
view of this hated man’s view. “You don’t have the right to even look at him.
You are a monster, and no way has anything changed. I don’t know why you saved
us, but it was probably a subconscious reaction that you had no control of.”
“It was reflex, at first,
but in times like those, action slows to a pace where one can think much more quickly
than anyone could possibly move. It was an eternity while I held your wrist
preventing you from falling backwards out the window. It was you, that pulled
yourself in, because I was in conflict with myself and unable to pull you in or
let you go. My two selves merged into one as I awoke from my out of body life.
For a few moments I was both, the loving caring person that God created and the
evil monster that I allowed created in me by sinful selfishness.”
“What?” Nancy said
incredulously. “You aren’t in the middle of explaining that, it wasn’t your
fault that you became a monster, and really it was the prison and you’re being
forced into the army as a child?”
“No, it was entirely my
fault. When I came to America, I thought I was doing good, taking over for the
weak and impotent. I was honorable in my dealings— at least I thought so at the
time. I did not allow my men to harm women or children— those who did were made
a public example of. I did the punishments myself. My reputation was not gossip
in my city— I killed those men in full view.
“I made my fortunes
honorably, by only stealing from the thieves themselves. I never gave thought
to the fact that the more I took from the criminals, the more they took from
the honest hard working victims.
“My law was the law. The police became lazy because
they dare not get in my way. I was the police, essentially. I enforced the
laws, not realizing that I was the worst of the criminals. I truly thought I
was what was best for the people. As long as they kept me on top of my little
kingdom, I allowed them to live their paltry little lives. I was king of the
world. I was law unto myself.
“However, I discovered that
there truly was power beyond the government and myself. I spoke too loud and
too often against corrupt government, and that very same corruption came after
me like I could not even imagine.
“That’s what lead me here,
but the driving force that lead me and my ambition was the need to fill some
void. I began to suspect that because my childhood had been ripped away from
me, that I needed to recreate a family life and raise a son.
“I looked for a suitable
mate to start a family with, but it turned out that the kind of women that were
attracted to a guy like me lacked any sort of intellect. Women of learning or
class were repulsed by me.
“When I saw a child being
brought to me, here, in prison, I thought it a sign. It was divine
intervention, to give back what was robbed from me. I saw in him,” Ivan pointed
at Victor, “a chance for redemption. I had to ad him to my empire— such that it
was.”
“You thought that God would
give you, a baby?”
“Clearly I was wrong. The
moment I touched him, my life was taken. The world that I found myself in was
incredible beyond anything I had imagined. I don’t know what brought me back to
this reality, but I was at first crushed to be back to this broken world. However, things began to come together in my
head as I was saving you. A completely new world was appearing before my eyes,
the possibilities were coming into focus for me, for the first time.
“While the world I was
dreaming about, if indeed it was a dream, is not possible in the world the way
that it is. An angel from God showed me what was intended for this world,
before corruption and evil found a home in it. Plans are developing inside my
head. Plans based on an empire centered on God and his son, rather than my own
misguided selfish ambition.”
“It was Victor,” Nancy
began. “After you were brought here, in a coma, I was curious about you. While
you were unconscious, you looked peaceful, even serine. I got too close and
Victor reached out and touched you— that’s when your eyes opened.”
“That was why you were
startled into leaping from a seven story building? You wanted to get away from
me?” Ivan asked with earnest concern revealed in his mournful eyes.
“There was no want involved. I panicked, and all brain
activity shut down, I was all reflex,” Nancy hastily explained. “From the
moment I first saw you and you threw my husband away, I could feel the evil
surrounding you.”
“Do you still feel that
same evil now?” Ivan asked rhetorically. “My heart is now full of the
incorruptible spirit of God. I am sorry and I will live with those shames for
the remainder of my earthly life. I am grateful to be used by God, and your
child is used of God as well.
“That is some remarkable
kid you have there. What did he do to me? He looks to be only a few weeks old,
how does he look at me like that, and how did he reach to me when I was
unconscious?”
“It’s a bit of a story, and
really, we don’t know much anyway. We adopted him and are protecting him from,
well, that group you were talking about.”
“I can see why. He has
abilities that are well beyond human capabilities.”
#
Steve told the group
everything he had been through. He had decided that while he didn’t want anyone
to know about Victor, he was going to need help. What better help than a man
freshly on fire for God. Scott and John seemed the only liabilities, and John
appeared to be willing to consider God. If he was wrong about the two men, Ivan
was still their boss.
Ivan agreed that both
objectives were in line with his new calling. They were going to teach the
inmates about God, while working on a way to freedom and safety for Victor.
They all understood that they were brought together for the benefit of saving
the child. Only Scott was undecided.
“Victor was sent to the
world, by God, to give us hope and power in the times to come. We can be
willing accomplishes to God’s plan, or obstacles to be overcome by God himself,
undermining his authority, ultimately being crushed and sifted out like so much
garbage.” Ivan stood to face Scott.
“God loves you, Scott. I
have— as have so many others— used you for my own selfish gain. I was wrong. I
was just like the government of Russia, in that I recruited, not for a higher
purpose, but for my want— my greed and dominance. My will is flawed. Please
allow me to make it up to you. I can show you that there is a God of love, who
knew your name before the first star in the sky was created by his word.”
Chapter Twelve
Out of the Fire
The heat of the day was
gradually creeping into the stone of the walls where it would stay well into
the night. The still cool brick would
give some relief along with the shade of the roof to the dwellers of FEMA camp
number twenty-one, until the late afternoon and early evening.
Scott wiped the sweat
from his face. “How can you speak to me of a loving God, while you decay in an
unjust prison, full of hate filled individuals bent on your suffering and
detriment—all for their own gain?”
“A well man has no need
of a doctor, as does a man who has God not need someone to show him God. No
matter how you feel about it, I cannot do you the disservice of allowing you to
continue to live in ignorance.” Ivan said.
“My followers looked to
me for a strength and power that I did not possess. Christ’s followers looked to him for strength
and power that they themselves did not possess. My strength and authority is
limited to a handful near to me. Jesus’s strength and power echoes throughout
time and have no limits. My influences and strengths are imagined through fear
and threat. God’s, is love.
“Whether it was God’s
will or not, for us to be here, we are
here, and it is God’s will for Victor to be protected, and I choose to be part
of that plan. The creator of the universe is asking for our help. He does not
need our puny insignificant efforts at help, yet he wants us. He loves us that
much. We are like this child, helpless and weak. We are like ants, and still he
chooses to let us help, to be part of something wonderful and glorifying, if we
but choose him.” Ivan turned to look out over the great expanse of desert
before him. Now that his eyes were opened, he could see the great beauty of the
world, and the magnificent power that was required to create it.
Ivan noticed the guard in
the tower and his rifle was to his shoulder looking down to the ground in the
yard. Ivan looked down and had to lean out the window to see that most of the
population of the prison was out, in the heat of the day, amassed in the yard.
“What is going on outside?”
The tower guard fired
into the crowed.
“We had better get out of
sight,” Troy said.
The door burst open and
two men with makeshift knives rushed in. Ivan leapt over the people sitting in
the cramped quarters, and grabbed each assailant by the throat and shoved them
back out the door.
They both hit the wall on
the opposite wall, but only one dropped his knife as he slid to the floor. Ivan
grabbed the hand wielding the knife and lifted the shaken attacker off the
floor by it. Looking the man in the face, with his feet dangling a foot and a
half off the floor, Ivan growled, “Do you have any idea who I am and what I
could do to you?”
Steve squeezed passed the
bulk of Ivan in the hall and took the knife from the floor before the other man
could reach for it. “Don’t want you hurting yourself,” Steve said looking the
fallen man in the eyes.
The rest of the occupants
of the room moved to the hall to be out of eyesight of the guard tower.
“We were only looking for
a place to hide. The prison is at war.”
“And the weapons?” Ivan
asked.
At the mention of the
knife, the restrained man let the weapon fall harmlessly to the floor where it
rattled loudly in the silent hallway. Troy grabbed the knife from the floor.
“In case it was occupied.
It was just for encouragement, in case they wouldn’t let us in.”
“I had previously vowed
to myself, that anyone who came to me with a weapon would be killed first, and
then asked why,” Ivan growled.
The man’s face paled and
he hung limp as if resigned to his fate.
Ivan let him fall to the
ground, where the man began to weep.
“But today, you have been
spared by God. Jesus set me free and I now vow to forgive, as I have been
forgiven.
“I don’t understand,”
said the man. “I know who you are. I have seen you kill men and spit on their
corpses before letting your men strip them for spoils.”
“Then let that be a
testimony to the glory and power of the one most high. He has done a great work
in me, and I am no longer consumed by hatred and rage.” Ivan reached out a hand
to the fallen man. “I am now ‘Ivan the changed’.”
The man hesitantly took
Ivan’s hand, “I’m Trevor.”
After helping Trevor to
his feet Ivan turned to the other man who had not moved from the spot he had
fallen. Reaching his hand out to the man Ivan asked, “Will you also take my
hand in friendship?”
Scott stood closest to
Ivan and stared slack jawed at the man he knew most of his life, who couldn’t
be farther from the man he had known.
“James,” the man said as
he clasped hands with Ivan. “I want what you have.”
Ivan laughed, “You are to
be among the first, to be in on the new foundation of this prison. Today we are
going to take over this place.”
Every eye in the hall
looked at Ivan in shock.
“We are going to remake
this place into a church of God.” Ivan said as a huge grin spread across his
face.
#
Steve and Nancy,
reluctantly followed Ivan, Scott, John, Troy, Dee, Trevor, and James through
the hallways and down each flight of stairs, as if into the pits of hell
itself. The riot below, murderers and thugs, would surely be the end to their
safety.
The final doors that open
out to the seething masses of raging men, seemed to Steve, to be the final barrier
that protected Him and his family— and Ivan strode to them as though they led
to freedom.
Steve watched from the back of the procession, with his wife and child, as Ivan put his hands to the middle of the double doors and shoved them out as his body weight propelled them forward. Sound as thunder shook the walls, from the doors slamming open, on the inside where he hid in the shadows. Steve held firm to Nancy’s hand and the two followed out through the open gateway to a nightmare world.
Steve watched from the back of the procession, with his wife and child, as Ivan put his hands to the middle of the double doors and shoved them out as his body weight propelled them forward. Sound as thunder shook the walls, from the doors slamming open, on the inside where he hid in the shadows. Steve held firm to Nancy’s hand and the two followed out through the open gateway to a nightmare world.
The momentary blindness of going from the shade of the interior
to the sun lit exterior left them vulnerable, but Ivan had stopped at the top
of the stairs. Steve and the others lined up on either side of the big man.
The scene before his virgin eyes, took in the horror, in shocked
terror. Bodies lie dead or crawling, leaving behind blood soaked sand. The
bodies near the fences piled deep did not move. Fortunate for most of the
prisoners, the guards only shot the prisoners who got too near the fence.
Half of the inmates where dead or dying, yet they continued to
fight. Steve could not imagine the single-minded futility that it took to
linger for an eventual fruitless end. There must be more in hiding, but the
numbers out in the fight were more than he would ever have dreamed. The mob
effect must surely have been where they came up with the concept of zombies.
Like zombies, these people attacked and died, never slowing, never stopping,
ever raging.
The slam of the doors had not gotten the attention of the
inmates, but Ivan boomed in a deep resonating voice, “Stop!”
Only the handful squabbling at the bottom of the stairs showed
sign of having heard Ivan. Not discouraged Ivan strode down the stairs grabbing
men as he passed. He pulled men apart and thrust them away from each other. He
snatched weapons out of startled hands and worked his way through the horde.
Steve could not believe his eyes. Everywhere that Ivan passed,
the fighting stopped. He made a circle around the yard and back to the steps.
Most of the fighting had stopped, and when Ivan shouted for attention again,
the rest of the ruffians halted.
At the top of the steps, after the entire group was at his
attention, he dropped the armful of weapons letting them tumble down the stairs
as they would.
Ivan stood there, unmoving. Time seemed to stand still while
Ivan stared out across the crowed. The silence was becoming uncomfortable for
Steve— he could only imagine how it felt under the gaze of Ivan.
Finally, Ivan lifted his hands and eyes to heaven. “God has
spared those of you who are left. Some of you here will be a part of God’s
plan. I have been visited by messengers of God,” Ivan said as he returned his
eyes to the former rioters.
At words about God, many in the crowd wandered off to other
parts of the prison. As many that had left stayed behind, and they all had
known Ivan.
“I am here to save as many of you as are willing. God has
granted me the privilege of teaching you of him, and helping you to find him.”
More people left at words of their needing saved.
“And,” Ivan continued when the unwilling had left. “I have been
told to help save you from this prison.” The crown became more attentive and
gathered closer to listen.
“There is in place a revolutionary task force of anti-government
rebels, and God has put on their minds to come here. There is soon to be a
battle here.
“I am here to implore you to put your trust in God. With this
prophesy and the coming event, you will have more evidence than most believers
are ever given. If you cannot believe in God after this, your hart has been
hardened and will never be swayed. You are to be given a special privilege, but
do not think that you deserve it. You are being asked to help the chosen of
God, to get him to safety.
“Do not count yourselves as lucky that you are about to see the
hand of God at work, because even a pagan can believe in something he sees— it
takes faith to believe in something that you cannot.”
“When is this battle coming?” a voice from the crowd yells.
“Today,” Ivan responded. “We have little time, but we need none
anyway. Our fleshly freedom is upon us, but it is your spiritual freedom that I
am here to bring you to. What is it for a man to gain the world, but to lose
his soul? Do not squander this gift you have been given. I am going to pray
over us, and it will begin.”
Many in the crowd stood and looked around. They could see no
sign of anything to come and settled back down.
“Our lord in heaven, creator of the universe, I lift your name
in reverence so that all present may hear and believe in you.”
Steve wondered if he should be the one up there praying and
leading people to Christ— it was his calling after all. However, these people
already knew Ivan. He decided to just be honored to be a part of God's plan.
Steve could sit back and watch from the sidelines for once.
"We pray to you to protect these people through the events
coming and allow them to have time to find you.
I pray for your forgiveness, I have sinned more than most and I do not
deserve your mercy. I now choose to love you, trust you, and do your will. Let
your will be done, and not my weak and selfish desires. Amen.”
A whistling became evident in the air. A guard tower exploded
and rained down ruble chasing the group of prisoners towards the doors to the
building.
Steve stood shocked momentarily as fifty people turned towards
the stairs leading towards him and his family. A severed arm from the guard in
the tower landed between him and the coming rush of panicking prisoners. He
decided that they had the right idea and turned to take his wife into the
prison.
More whistling from the coming mortars terrified the people even
more.
“Stop!” Ivan yelled. “The back of the building. We must go
around to the back. Follow me!”
Ivan made his way through the confused people; despite their
indecision they made a path for him and the others following him. Steve was
surprised at how easy it was for him to follow Ivan.
More guard towers were hit.
And still there was no sign of the attackers. The military base was five
minutes away and reinforcements would be on their way by now. Steve could not
understand what the anarchists thought they would accomplish, but he did trust
God.
Steve hadn’t needed evidence from God before all that had
happened, but being in the middle of it truly was humbling. He couldn’t stop or
even slow the hand of God, should he have wanted to. He was surprised that his
faith was not any stronger than when he was just a small town pastor living the
day-to-day life of a child of God. He thought that he would be ever so much
more faithful in light of the mounting proof of God. Perhaps, he thought, the
proof of God has always been so overwhelming, that more evidence was redundant.
If one could not believe, then one simply could not believe.
The group was on the side of the building making their way to
the back, but some lingered at the end and peaked around the corner when the
front of the building was hit by a mortar. Three prisoners lay dead from
shrapnel blown loose from the wall of the building.
Steve turned to go to them, but Ivan turned him back around to
follow. “They cannot be helped now.”
Steve did not argue— he knew it to be true without being told,
he just felt so helpless— and useless.
The entire yard and front of the facility were being bombed now.
From the back of the building they could see very little, but the sound was
that of a warzone.
Chapter Thirteen
Into the Pan
The explosions shook the building again and
again. The militia was clearly not coming to rescue any one. Steve and his
group simply waited for Ivan to lead them to an uncertain safety.
When the bombing stopped the prisoners,
encouraged, peaked out around the building and saw people rushing through the
pervasive dust from the broken building towards the downed fences.
“Not yet,” Ivan said.
Most heeded his words, but five men and two
women could not restrain their want for freedom and ran for the open fences.
As the group watched and the people
escaped, they turned questioning eyes to Ivan in obvious confusion. They turned back and watched until the
escapees were out of sight around the train station.
Not long after the last one was out of sight
she and a handful returned—running in a terror-stricken panic, until blood flew
out of them in a spray. The
reinforcements had arrived and were shooting anyone in sight from the back of
the transport vehicles.
Ivan’s followers now hid behind the walls
of their home— their prison once again. Ivan stood, arms crossed over his
massive chest, and watched the heavens. It seemed to Steve that he was watching
for direction from an angel of God— that no one else could see.
The army of radical anarchy chose that time
to attack. The pickup trucks full of men charged down the dunes towards the
encampment drawing the attention of the armed forces. The scene was ridiculous.
Men in plain tattered clothes attacking uniformed military.
Half of the group stopped at the top of the
dune while the other half continued down. Puffs of smoke could be seen from them
half mile away. Seconds later soldiers fell by the dozens. Then the sound of
hundreds of high power supersonic rifles could be heard over the shouting of
the falling soldiers. Seeing the laws of faster than sound in action was
awe-inspiring, and horrifying to Steve. Still the army advanced on the guarding
military unit.
The commander soon realized that his men
were not in a defensible position and outnumbered, moved his soldiers in
towards the building.
The military kept the building to their
backs, ready for the assault. Then the mortars rained down again.
The military scattered from the surprise of
the attack. The anarchist army was at the fence to greet the fleeing soldiers.
The already fading light turned the
ambience red. A brilliant sunset to burn the bloodied images into Steve’s mind.
As the last of the guards and soldiers were
executed Ivan gathered his herd into the far back corner, where the fences
remained. He asked his people to sit behind him, and as the advancing rebels
come towards the group, Ivan wet to his knees and raised his hands— as if to
surrender.
“Are you the prisoners of this camp?” one
of the men of the army asked.
“We are,” Ivan responded to the scruffy
man.
“You just wait right here while we secure
the building. When our comrades confirm that the nearby base is secured, we
will figure out what to do with you.
Seven guards remained to watch over the
unarmed prisoners while the others searched out to crumbling building. Steve
could only imagine what they would find left after their mortars had done their
work.
A few bloody and dirty prisoners were
escorted to the back of the building; more than Steve believed would have
survived— but, only a handful of those who had left when Ivan began speaking.
Soon, a group of rag tag men returned. As
they stopped, a young man emerged out of the group. “Has anyone seen Troy or
Dee Wade? I haven’t come across their bodies in the debris,” the young man
asked peeking around the immense form of Ivan.
Troy stood up slightly to get a look at the
speaker, and then helped his wife to her feet. “Quinn!” his mother shouted and
started for her son. Two guards leveled their guns on her and Troy. They
stopped, but Quinn rushed though the sitting people to embrace his parents.
Steve was surprised, as he imagined his
wife must be. Quinn was a tall slender boy, dressed better
than the hillbillies he was with, but was showing signs of starting a scruffy
beard. And, he really had come to rescue his parents.
“Steve. Nancy.” A voice called out. A burly
man came through the crowed of rebels.
Steve couldn’t believe his eyes. Emerging
from the crowed, an unarmed Bill came forward. They locked eyes, and Bill
rushed to Steve. Helping him to his feet, Bill crushed him in a bear hug.
#
The nighttime desert air was chill but
invigorating. Steve hadn’t felt this alive when he had escaped New York— the sole
survivor of a bombed building attack.
Walking a free man through the dark desert
with his betrayer, didn’t bother him the way he had thought it would. God has
been by his side through this entire ordeal— he couldn’t wait to see what his
savior had in store for him now.
Steve and Bill walked behind Ivan, with
Nancy and Janet following behind. They had been driven to the rebel’s camp
where Janet waited for her husband’s return. Ivan convinced them that they
should not stay with the rebels— they were on a mission for God and needed to
be on their way. A dozen others, including Scott and John, followed Ivan and
his wards through the desert on their mission— the only sounds where the
hissing of their feet through the sands.
After an hour of walking, thinking—
silence, “Why did you betray us?” Steve asked quietly and much calmer than a
man without God would have.
“I figured you would think that— it was
their plan after all,” Bill said as if he were relating the weather of just
another mundane day.
“What!” Steve stopped.
Ivan continued onward while the group
behind waited for Steve and Bill to continue.
Bill waited silently for Steve to follow
after Ivan. He finally motioned towards Ivan. Steve began walking again.
“It must have looked bad,” Bill said, “but
I was not part of it. When they un-cuffed me— for your benefit, I assume— I was
shocked. When your boat pulled away, I was horrified as I realized what you
must have been thinking. I prayed out load right then and there, in front of
everyone.
“They sent Janet and I back to our boat,
and once we were off theirs, they left. It was cruel what they did— to all of
us.”
Steve did not know what to think. The story
fit, but made no sense. “How did they find us so fast, if you didn’t tell them
where we were?”
“We didn’t know what had happened until
after we followed them to Mexico. We followed you. I felt guilty— though I had
done nothing.
“Finally, after two weeks of tracking, we
made it back to U.S. soil. We are actually just inside of Death Valley. When we
got here, we met some people who seemed to be just wandering the desert. We
told them of the outrageous actions of our government.
“We followed them back to their camp, were
we waited. They came to us and offered us a proposal. At first, I was
disturbed, but I soon realized that it was the only way.
“A rouge military group had you, and we
were informed that when their leader reached the prison, he was going to be
interrogating you.”
Steve listened in silence, and prayed.
Bill continued, “They told us that they
were attacking that very day, as the sun set, and they proposed that I join
them. Another was there for the very same reason. They introduced Quinn to
Janet and me. I was against letting a boy be part of the gruesome task, but he
had already convinced them that he had training and would be of help. I wasn’t
in a position to argue, but I would not carry a weapon— and I urged Quinn to
forgo one as well.
“We were given information that their
intelligence had uncovered. Their hillbilly look is more a distraction than
reality— though, many of them are quit red necked.
“They only knew that you had been on Long
Island and was the only escapee, but they didn’t know about the baby. That was
very good news, if they had an inkling about the baby, they would never stop
hunting you. Fortunately, we have time to escape, and the rebels— or America’s
Last Hope as the call themselves— will be a hindrance to the military
pursuers.”
“Why didn’t you say anything when we were
back with them? I would like to have heard what they had to say.”
“They wouldn’t have talked to you. Besides,
you saw what kind of a hurry they were in to get out of their before the
regular army showed up— they would all be killed against hardened marines.”
“Why do you think they wouldn’t have talked
to me, they just rescued us from false imprisonment?”
“You were a coincidence for them, they
never intended rescuing you— only because it wasn’t an inconvenience did they.
They are a bit odd you know. I just got in right by accident, something I said
about a government conspiracy or something.
Steve sensed that Bill was sincere. While
praying, he was overcome with peace and gratitude for what Bill and Janet had
done for them. “Thank you Bill.”
Bill blushed, realizing that he hadn’t been
bragging, but what they had done was selfless— and dangerous.
Steve caught up to Ivan, who seemed to have
a one-track mind, and asked him if he had any idea where they were going.
“Not a clue, I just follow the light.”
“What light,” Bill asked.
“That one right up front. We are following
right behind him.”
“Him? There is no one there. And, there is
no light but the stars overhead.”
Ivan looked over his shoulder at Bill, “You
really don’t see?”
“I don’t see anything either,” Steve said.
“Well, you had better stick close to me
then. I don’t want you getting lost without a guide.”
“I have to say, I am a bit jealous that you
have been chosen to see the light of God,” Steve said.
“It is easy to follow God when I can see
him— how much more blessed are those that follow him when they cannot. How weak
is my faith that I need to be put on the right path by and angel from God
himself?” Ivan looked down in shame.
“Look up Ivan,” Steve said, “Jesus paid the
price and took away your shame. You are in God’s will, and you should be proud
of that.”
“But you are here because you are following
God, and yet you cannot see the angel before us. That means that your faith is
so strong that you don’t need to be pushed in the right direction, unlike me,
who needs to be coddled and have my hand held so I don’t get lost again.”
“Or,” Steve thought out loud, “We need you,
and no one else will do, for whatever is in store for us, and God is rewarding
you for your obedience. You know that Paul, the writer of most of the New
Testament, was visited by an angel of God before he found his faith. Like you,
he was incognitos to the living world and saw the invisible side. Paul never
felt sorry for himself.”
Ivan stood erect at the feeling sorry for
himself part, but realized that he was being silly letting his weak flesh-self
rule him. “I have never read the bible. I have a lot of making up to do. I am
so stuck in worldly ways, that I feel as though I need to earn God’s
forgiveness. It is mankind that I need to make up to, God has forgiven me
completely.”
#
They continued through the night not
needing to stop and rest. Steve thought that he had never felt better in his
life, and he had not slept or eaten for two days.
The sky was starting to lighten up in
front of them as they topped the crest of a high hill. The sun was rising
behind them and had not risen above the horizon, but the sun’s light
illuminated the sky above in the most brilliant gold and oranges contrasted by
the deep blue sky of the not yet day.
Cresting the top of the hill, Steve saw on
the valley floor below them a small private airport. A lone cargo plane sat on
the runway.
As they got closer, Steve could see men
loading the plane with forklifts. Some men came out of the hanger and walked
casually toward the group of people coming down the sandy hill towards their
plane.
Ivan waved at them and shouted, “Hello, may
we get some water?”
“My govorim tolʹko russkiĭ,” they said back.
“What?” Bill said.
“Prekrasno,” Ivan said, and turning to his
friends, “They said they only speak Russian.”
The forklift drivers finished loading the
plane as the group met the Russians at the back of the large plane. Ivan talked
with them for a while then came to speak to Steve and the group. “Steve, they
knew my parents! When I told them why I was in America and that we were fleeing,
they offered all of us a ride. They are flying their cargo back to the
motherland, but will be stopping at Cancun to trade this cargo for another on
their way home.”
“That’s great,” Bill, said, “My boat is
across the bay. My boys should be there by now and can sail across to meet us.”
“Cancun is not on the way to Russia,” Troy
said.
“It’s true that eastern Russia is much
closer if they go back west, but Russia is a big country and they are going to
civilization, which is west, near Ukraine.”
“And they have room for all of us?” Steve
asked, looking at the group of fifteen including himself.
“They said there are not enough seats, but
we could make due. If any of you want to part with us and hitch hike to Las
Vegas, it’s that way about a hundred and fifty miles,” he pointed toward the
rising sun. ”Or Los Angeles is that way two hundred miles or so,” he pointed
away from the sun. “It’s dessert either way you go.” And Ivan turned walking up
the ramp to the cargo hold boarding the plane.
All but four followed immediately behind
Ivan. Steve looked back at them as they seemed to be deciding their own will
for their lives. The decision to follow where God led him was getting easier
for Steve, but he never needed to be compelled to do so. He had been content
living in Tiger Valley, and he would have been content to stay there, if it had
been God’s will.
They were all onboard and ready to takeoff,
to an unknown future, in the hands of God— and Steve loved it. Those who fail
to plan, plan to let God lead— for who can say, Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year
there and trade and make a profit.
Рука Бога was written on the side of
the airplane in huge bold letters, though Steve
had no idea what it said, he was drawn to it and thought he liked it.