A Distant Eden (17 page)

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Authors: Lloyd Tackitt

BOOK: A Distant Eden
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Roman said, “Honey, these girls are all yours now. You take charge of them and get them settled in. I’m thinking it’s time to move to the cave. I’ve only seen two groups on the river—and that was a long time ago. It’s far from the roads and the roads are where the walkers are coming from. I think another two weeks and the walking phase will be pretty much over. What do you think?”

Sarah smiled, easing the tension lines around her eyes. “The cave sounds great; I’m tired of seeing stars over my head at night. It’s big enough and dry and out of the wind. Plenty of fire wood around the area, easy access to water. It was favored by Indians going back thousands of years, and it’s still a good place. Besides, we left the big wash tub there; we can heat up water and take hot baths.”

With that statement, the women’s faces lit up. Alice said, “Hot bath? Oh my, I haven’t had a hot bath since the grid went down. What do we have to do? We’ll do it, twice!” The rest of the women and Sarah laughed with delight.

It only took an hour to relocate everyone to the cave. Roman took Adrian and two of the men, dug up three food caches, and carried them back to the cave. Adrian said, “I haven’t been here in years. We used to find arrowheads and spear points around here. I heard that there was an archaeological dig near here recently.”

Roman put down his pack. “The dig was a mile or so downstream. This cave apparently was used as living quarters by a lot of natives for a few thousand years. But since it floods occasionally, I guess it was used about the way we’re using it, as a “temporary home.” It has great swimming and fishing, good hunting, and it’s pleasant enough; it’s deep enough for shelter, but not too deep that it warrants exploration. In the winter, you can build a fire and get heat reflected from the walls. The best fire spot is obvious; the cave wall is blackened from where it was done before.”

Adrian laughed. “The ladies will have this place fixed up like home in no time. It’ll hardly be fit for a man to sleep in anymore. Which reminds me, where are Jerry and Shirley?”

Roman frowned. “Still in Dallas. They got together at Jerry’s house and actually dug out a warren of trenches under the floor. They have a pretty good setup from their description, but they’re going to have to get out within the next couple of weeks. The gangs are getting bad and moving closer to them. They wiped out one gang that got too close already. They even had to fight and kill a six hundred pound hog that tried to get under the house with them. I’m going to leave in the morning to go help them get out of there.”

Adrian said, “I’ll leave first thing in the morning to get them. The boys’ll go with me. We’re all rested up after that slow walk and need some exercise. Tell Jerry to hold fast until we get there. It’ll take us two days, three at the most. Can they hold out that long? Don’t take this the wrong way, but if you go, you’ll slow us down. We can travel three times faster than you. You need to stay here and hold the fort until we get back.”

“None taken. With you guys going, I won’t have to worry. And I couldn’t keep up with you guys if I had a horse to ride. When I talk to them tonight I’ll let them know the plan. Speaking of which, we need to set backup rendezvous points, just in case.”

“I’ll round up the boys and tell them what’s up so they can be ready.” As Adrian walked off, Alice came out of the cave and approached Roman.

“I want to thank you on behalf of myself and the girls. We could hardly have expected such warmth and humanity from total strangers. You can’t know how much it means to us; only a short time ago we had resigned ourselves to death. Then, like knights in shining armor, Adrian and his team rescued us from the edge of death, and brought us here to what already feels like home and family.” Alice choked up on the last two words and started crying.

Roman put his arm around her shoulder. “Hey now, I hope those are happy tears. We aren’t such a bad family that you have to cry about being stuck with us. The cave isn’t much of a home, but it is temporary. We’ll do better.”

Alice laughed and cried at the same time. “You are a rare gem, Mr. Hunter, a rare gem indeed. And Sarah is an absolute treasure—what a wonderful woman. We want you to know that we will pull our weight. We’ll do anything and everything that needs to be done around here. We’ll do all we can to make you glad you took us in. You know we are two doctors and the rest experienced nurses, right? Adrian loaded up with all kinds of medical equipment and supplies. With our training, we can set up a field hospital, treating everything from pediatrics to dentistry. I have to believe that eventually such a setup will be a major social center, bringing in folks from hundreds of miles around. Assuming that’s what you want us to do.”

“Alice, that is perfect beyond my wildest dreams. I want you to understand that I’ve been thinking about and preparing for a situation like this since I was a boy. For instance, years ago I purchased a pressure cooker that is milled. This means that it works without a gasket. No gasket to wear out—do you know how important that will be now? When we get back to canning our own food, we can do so, and do so for the next ten generations or longer with this cooker because it requires no replacement parts, ever. It will also make a handsome autoclave.

“Over the years Roman continued, “I’ve bought a lot of antique tools that are in working condition. Two man bucksaws, hand powered drills, spoke shaves and drawknives, block planes and all sorts of things like that. Tools that need no electricity. Tools that can be passed down from generation to generation.” Pacing back and forth, Roman’s voice swelled with enthusiasm. “Perhaps more importantly, I’ve built up a library of old-fashioned printed books. Each book contains information necessary to make the best of the situation we are in. One of the best of my collection of books is the Fox Fire series. Thirteen books about life in the Smoky Mountains. Books that describe living skills; soap making, hog dressing, shoe making, chair making, shingle making and on and on. Skills that would otherwise be lost and have to be learned over from scratch. I have books on simple chemistry that explain how to make things like sulfuric acid, batteries, fertilizer and lots more that we’ll need to know.

“I have blacksmith tools and books and metal working books. I have old surgical and dental tools from the civil war era. I have seeds for gardens, and old plows we can use when we have mules. I have a still to make whisky with, and once we have alcohol and sulfuric acid I can make ether for anesthetic purposes. I have reloading equipment for ammunition and I have guns and I can make black powder. I have books and tools for making flintlock rifles. I have books on the best ways to make atlatls and bows and arrows and how to knap flint.

Alice was smiling at Roman’s intensity as he continued. “I’ve collected all this, a little here and a little there over fifty years. We have the basics to restart at a low level, a level without electricity. But wait, there’s more—as they used to say on TV. Once we get set up we have electricity too; I have that figured out. By building a wood gas oven, we can run generators to make electricity. We can run about any internal combustion engine with wood gas, even to the point of fixing up a truck that can go for as far as you can find wood to burn in it. Wood gas is created by baking wood at high temperatures. It was developed during WWII when there were gasoline shortages and rationing.

“I have all this, or know how to build it, or have books on how to do it, but what I never dreamed of having was actual, trained, real honest to God medical personnel. I never dreamed of having a nurse with us, much less five nurses and two doctors and a field hospital. Fantastic.

“Alice, in a nutshell, here’s our future. First, we have to get past this phase of the walking starving, followed by the shorter but more brutal phase of roaming gangs. The third phase will be where we set up as a tribe or village. Literally, we’ll be stone age people for awhile. Why? Because we’ve lost all infrastructure. Think about it this way: before the grid crashed, when everything was running smooth, you couldn’t have made a No. 2 pencil by yourself. I know, that sounds crazy, but think about it.”

Roman waved his hands as he spoke. “To build a number two pencil you need graphite. Graphite has to be mined, refined and manufactured into the pencil lead. Wood has to be cut, dried, milled. Paint has to be manufactured, requiring probably fifty chemical processes that have to be carried out in independent factories. Glue has to be manufactured, same mess as the paint. Then the metal ferrule has to be manufactured, starting with digging ore out of the ground, smelting, melting, metallurgical mixing, and forming. Forming the metal requires huge machines. Then there’s the eraser. I’m not sure what the eraser is made of, but it must be a process that requires the combination of dozens of processes and ingredients. All that just for a pencil!

Roman was slowing down now, become more pensive. “Now that the grid is down, the people who knew how to do each one of those steps are gone. Those factories are now silent. A No. 2 pencil might as well be a rocket ship these days.

“The good news is, we can scavenge off of what was left behind. I can make a wood gas generator that can run engines, and there are millions of engines laying around for the taking. We can scavenge repair parts off of other engines, as we need to, for a couple of generations. But we’re going to run into things we can’t do.

“We can’t, as of today, make a horseshoe from scratch. We can’t make a nail from scratch. It will take years and years before those skilled people are replaced, maybe centuries. Even back before the grid existed, there was a matrix of skilled people and operations that we depended on. Before the blacksmith could make nails, someone had to mine iron ore, smelt it into steel, refine the steel into carbon steel, heat it into billets, pull the steel into strands and coil the strands and deliver them to the blacksmith. All of that is gone. We can’t make metal anymore. We can salvage what is around us, but we can’t create it anymore. That’s why I say we’re going back to the stone age. The only manufacturing process we can perform from scratch, ourselves, will be making stone tools—and not many people will figure that out either.”

Roman paused for a moment, looking at Alice without seeing her. “In the near future, we’ll establish tribes and villages. They’ll be scattered, not in contact at first. Eventually contact will be established between them. There’ll be wars between some of them. Trade between others. Some will begin to specialize in certain manufacturing processes. It’ll be the restart of a civilized world. Getting people together in an amicable fashion will be difficult. Having a hospital will be huge for that. Huge. We have the start for a new Eden, a distant Eden. An Eden for our kids and grandkids perhaps.

“In the interim, there’ll be violent conflict. Between us and roaming bands of thugs. Between us and other tribes that have ill intentions towards us, or get too close and trespass on our hunting grounds. Violence and war will be normal for some time. Having the ability to heal our wounded gives us a strategic advantage over everyone else. That makes us top of the heap in many ways.”

His eyes falling back upon Alice, Roman continued, “I welcomed you because Adrian brought you and I trust Adrian’s judgment. Your skills are a deeply appreciated bonus. Now, why don’t you get the girls and we’ll go find firewood to start heating that bath water.”

Alice whooped, “Yeehaw! Hot Bath! Roman, you just can’t imagine how good that sounds!”

Chapter 22

 

 

Jerry watched the carnage site the next morning from the dormer window. The hogs had come in during the night and eaten most of the giant hog carcass and quite a bit of the human bodies. Jerry said to Dave, “I bet they’re still somewhere close by. They probably quit feeding at daylight and laid up in the creek. Come nightfall they’ll be back to finish their meal off.”

Dave agreed. “That sounds about right. What say we set some snares, see if we can catch a couple hogs? The starving people around here can finish them off and eat them after we snare them. They can learn from our snares how to set their own. We might be teaching them how to survive, and since we’ll be out of here soon, why not?”

“I like it,” Jerry answered. “We can set up leg catch snares with trip wires near the creek. If we go now we can have them set and be back in a couple of hours. Let’s do it.”

Jerry and Dave got rope and twine from the garage. They went to the creek, walking as far from the dead men as they could. It didn’t take long to find where the hogs had gone into the brush. There was a distinct trail between their bedding area and the bodies. They placed two snares along that path line. They were simple; a bent over sapling tied off with twine and a peg. The peg was placed so that it just barely caught on another piece of brush. They placed the lasso on the ground where a pig was likely to step in it. Using the twine, they strung a trip wire across the path that was tied to the peg that held down the sapling. When the trip wire was touched, it would pull loose the peg. When the peg was pulled loose, it released the bent sapling. The rope with lasso tied to the sapling would then be lifted from the ground. It missed more often than it hit; but when it hit the lasso would go around a pig’s leg or neck; sometimes its neck and leg. The sapling simply kept tension on the lasso so that it would not fall off from slack. The pig couldn’t run and became much easier to kill. Simple, effective and quiet.

Jerry and Dave set two snares and left rope and twine behind so that the locals could construct and set several more. Then they returned to the house and watched. At dusk, the pigs came out of the brush in single file and headed for their unfinished feast. The first snare was tripped without catching a pig, but it did startle the rest of them into a temporary retreat. Hunger overcame fear quickly, though, and the second snare caught the lead pig around the right front leg.

Jerry watched with satisfaction. “I guess we’ll see if it’s still caught tomorrow morning, and if the locals come out to kill it.”

The next morning the hog was still in the snare. It had struggled and torn up the brush in a circle around the sapling. Within an hour of daylight, several men showed up with knives. The hog weighed seventy pounds. The men jumped it, held it down, and cut its throat. In just minutes the pig was quartered and the men were gone. One man stayed behind and reset the snares, but didn’t use the materials left behind to make more.

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