by James Hunt
“Don’t you think that Mike and his family should help the rest of us like they helped you?” Bessie asked.
“I... I don’t know,” Adam answered.
“But you’re the one who told us they gave you that basket of food. Are you saying that’s all they have?”
“I didn’t see how much they had. They just gave it to me.”
“Well, then. That settles it. If they’re able to hand out food like that on a whim then they should have enough for all of us. Now, we’ll divide up what we have here and then everyone should head home. We’ll start fresh in the morning,” Bessie said.
The families lined up and everything was rationed equally. People either received fewer goods than what they brought, or more than they were able to offer.
Bessie pulled Adam aside from the line. She brought him into the kitchen. Ted followed.
Bessie sat him down at the kitchen table and joined him. Ted stood by the stove watching both of them.
“Adam, I appreciate what you told me about the Grants. It was very helpful, but I was curious to know if they had anything else. Did they have any other provisions, any modes of transportation, any…weapons?” Bessie asked.
“I told you I never went inside. They brought everything to me.”
“Well, it’s well known that Mike has always been one to prepare for these types of things.”
“If he hadn’t given me that food my boy would still be hungry.”
“Adam, if Mike really cared about making sure your boy was okay why didn’t he come today? Wouldn’t have he tried everything he could to make sure your boy didn’t go hungry again?”
“Yeah. Yeah, you’re right he should have been here tonight,” Adam said.
Bessie watched his hands curl into fists and then pound them on the kitchen table, knocking the saltshaker to its side.
“Why the hell didn’t he come?” Adam said.
“Do you still have your brother’s guns and ammo?” she asked.
***
Mike loaded the 12-gauge shells into the shotgun. He checked the safety and put it in the large duffle bag he pulled from storage. Voices coming from upstairs made him freeze; he was holding a handful of 9mm shells. He threw on his holster and shoved the pistol inside.
The stairs creaked with each step up from the basement. When Mike made it to the top he could hear two voices in the foyer.
“Anne, it’s so wonderful to see you. You seem to be holding up well.”
“Thank you, Bessie. Is there something I can help you with?”
“Well, I was hoping too- Oh, hello, Mike.”
Mike watched her eyes fall to the pistol at his side. Her fake astonishment didn’t have the effect she intended.
“Do you really think it’s necessary to carry a gun around like that? I mean really, Anne, what if Freddy got a hold of one,” Bessie asked.
“What do you want, Bessie?” Mike asked.
“I’m sure you know a few of the families in the neighborhood are in a bad spot with what’s been happening. Some of us have decided to pool our resources for the benefit of the neighborhood. I wanted to see if you and Anne would like to join us.”
“Who needs help?” Anne asked.
“Well, everyone really, but there are some folks worse off than others… and a few that are better off than most.”
Mike saw her eyes land on the open basement door that Mike had left. They were only there for a moment, but Mike saw her notice it.
“I’ll run downstairs and see what I can put together,” Anne said.
“Oh, let me help you.”
“No, it’s all right. I’ll only be a minute.”
Anne slid behind Mike and left him alone with Bessie.
“It’s very kind of you to help the way you have, Mike. Not everyone is as fortunate as you are,” Bessie said.
Mike followed her to the edge of the living room. She leaned in without moving her feet from the hardwood floor of the foyer to the brown carpet of the living room.
“Redecorating?” she asked motioning to the plywood over the windows.
“Just making sure the things that belong outside stay outside,” Mike said.
Bessie backed closer to the front door when Anne returned from downstairs with a bag of goods, almost spilling over at the top.
“Oh, Anne, this is too much,” Bessie said.
“No, take it. I hope it helps with what you’re trying to do,” Anne said.
“It surely will.”
Bessie clutched the bag to her chest with both hands. Her shoes clacked against the pavement as she walked back to her home. The moon highlighted her hair along with the slight outline of her downturned mouth, furrowed brow, and creases in her forehead. She entered through her back door into the kitchen and dumped the cans from the bag, sending them clanking and rolling onto the counter tops.
Tim and Adam sat at the kitchen table. Both were emptying boxes of bullets and filling magazines. Both of them froze at the sight of the goods spilling onto the counter.
“They have all that?” Adam asked.
“That’s a fraction of what they have. They’re holding out on us and they’re boarding up their house so no one can get in. They’re creating a fortress over there,” Bessie said.
Adam shoved one of the loaded magazines into his pistol. The click brought a smile to Bessie’s face.
“We hit them in the morning,” Bessie said.
Day Six
Mike rolled out of bed. The room was pitch black. He stumbled to the bathroom tripping over one of Anne’s shoes again. His hands ran along the dresser until they wrapped around the pocket watch that his grandfather had given him. It was the only thing that still kept time in the house.
He lit a candle in the bathroom and held the clock face up to the light. 6 a.m. The watch snapped shut and he scooped some of the water in the sink into his hands, splashing it on his face. He walked back out to the bedroom, candle in hand, and let the glow fill the room.
The light hit Anne curled up under the sheets. Mike stood there staring at his wife, just like he had done for the past twenty-six years, every day, before he left for work.
The second story floorboards creaked under Mike’s steps. He tiptoed to Freddy’s room and cracked the door open. His son lay still, quiet on his bed with all of the covers thrown off and his shirt up, exposing his belly. Freddy had his mouth open and all of his limbs were extended outwards like a starfish.
When he opened the door to his daughter’s room she looked just like her mother. Curled up under the covers. The sheets rising and falling from her calm steady breath.
He stood in the center of the hallway among the three rooms. This could be the last time he watched them sleep in this house.
Pictures hung on all the walls around him. The memories came flooding back to him. The vacation to the Grand Canyon they took three summers ago. The Christmas mornings, Thanksgiving feasts, birthdays, anniversaries, all on display.
The tear he wiped from his cheeks wasn’t one of sadness for having to leave, nor fear of what was ahead. It simply represented all of the joy he felt during those moments frozen in time along the walls, and the gratefulness he felt for still being able to remember them.
Mike stepped down into the cellar to grab the guns and ammo and check for any last items he may have missed. He had the duffle bag strap on his shoulder, walked back up the stairs, and headed for the garage.
***
“Don’t you all want to keep your family alive?” Bessie asked.
Shouts and cheers filled Bessie’s living room. Fifteen families crowded together. Bessie stood on top of her coffee table in the center of the group, Tim standing by her side.
“We tried to come together in a civilized manner didn’t we?”
Hands clinched into fists while others wrapped tightly around baseball bats, crowbars, tire irons, pistols, and rifles.
“Most of us answered that call and for that my family, and every other family here, tha
nks you.”
All of the animosity they had for each other the night before had transformed to a single point of hate. A universal cry of fear and hunger rose from the crowd.
“But one family did not answer that call. One family chose to keep what they had to themselves. One family is letting you starve.”
She fed them hate.
“Your family can’t survive without the food they have. We don’t know when help is coming. Help may never come, so we have to help ourselves.”
She fed them fear.
“But you can do something about it. You can make sure your family survives. You can make sure that they all have something to eat!”
She fed them the answers they wanted to hear.
Bessie threw her hands out, calming the crowd. The cheers slowly dissipated. She stepped down from the coffee table. Tim handed her the bullhorn and she marched everyone out the front door.
***
Mike first heard the squeal of the bullhorn from inside the garage. He rushed to the front door; looking through the peephole he saw twenty people standing out front in the morning light. Bats, crowbars, tire irons, and rifles were poised at the ready.
“Mike, we don’t want to harm anyone. All we want you to do is the right thing. We know you have supplies and there are people out here who need them,” Bessie said.
Anne, Freddy, and Kalen rushed from their rooms and were leaning on the banister rail above Mike, listening to the words echo outside.
“Dad?” Kalen asked.
“Stay there,” Mike said.
Ulysses came out of the guest bedroom fully dressed in a long sleeve shirt, jeans, and boots. He grabbed the duffle bag off Mike’s back and set it on the floor. He pulled out the .223 rifle. The clang of metal on metal rang through the foyer when he shoved a clip in.
“How many?” Ulysses asked.
Mike clicked the safety off the shotgun.
“Around twenty, but there could be more around the house.”
Mike picked up a box of shells and slid them across the floor over to the base of the kitchen window.
“Anne, bring the kids downstairs.” Mike said.
Anne grabbed both of their children’s hands pulling them down the steps. Freddy clung to Anne’s leg all the way down.
“Dad, you take Freddy and Kalen to the Jeep. Get it ready. The moment we get a bad breach I’m going set the house on fire.”
“What?” Anne asked.
“It will send them running and give us enough space to getaway,” Mike said.
Freddy started crying hysterically now.
“Shh, it’s okay, buddy. Hey, you’re gonna be fine,” Mike said. “We’re all going to be fine.”
“C’mon, kids,” Ulysses said.
Kalen grabbed her brother’s hand and followed Ulysses into the garage.
Mike handed Anne the other shotgun and tossed her a few shells. She fumbled the first one to the ground after attempting to load it in the chamber.
“Shit,” she said.
Mike picked it up and placed it back into her hand. When she went to take it he held her hand in his and squeezed. He locked eyes with his wife. There was no fear in them. Only the stubborn will to survive.
“Take the kitchen window,” Mike said.
Anne clicked her safety off and crawled over to the opening in the plywood at the corner of the window. Mike kept his head low heading for the living room. Bessie’s voice boomed outside.
“We don’t want any bloodshed, Mike. Your family will still get their fair share of food. Don’t make this harder than it has to be,” she said.
Mike put his eye up against the corner hole of the plywood, looking outside. He watched Bessie motion to a few of the people on the edges of the group. They scurried over to the sides of the house. Only one of them had a gun.
Mike hunched low as he moved to Anne, who was looking out her corner of the kitchen window through the hole in the plywood.
“A few broke off and went to the sides of the house. I’m going to head to the back.”
He leaned in and kissed her. The moment had his adrenaline pumping. He felt like he could smash through the walls if he needed to, but even with all of that, his lips still hit hers with tenderness.
“I love you,” Anne said.
“I love you, too.”
At the back of the house Mike peered through one of the plywood holes giving him a view of his backyard. He saw the barrel of a gun peek around the back corner of the house. The hand and arm came next, followed by the face.
Adam Stahl.
***
Nelson came running out of his house, his slippers nearly flying off his feet and his robe flapping in the wind.
“Bessie? What’s… What’s going on?” he asked.
“Nelson, go home. This will be over soon,” she said.
“But, what are you doing? Where’s Mike? Mike!”
“Quiet!”
“Mike! Are you okay?”
Bessie pulled a revolver from her side and shoved the barrel into Nelson’s face. Nelson threw his hands in the air and slowly backed away from her.
“Go home, Nelson. Now,” she said.
Nelson ran back to his house. Bessie pulled the bullhorn back to her mouth.
“You have sixty seconds, Mike. If you don’t come out by then, we’re coming in.”
A gunshot rang out. People ducked for cover, hiding behind cars, mailboxes, bushes, anything close that they could jump behind.
The bullhorn and pistol that Bessie held dropped to the ground, followed by her knees, and then her chest and face hit the grass of the front yard.
“Bessie?” Tim asked.
Tim rushed to his wife. Her mouth was spilling blood. She coughed and hacked, spitting it all over his shirt. She grabbed Tim’s shirt desperately, wrenching his collar.
A few final coughs of blood and her hand slowly let go. Tim snatched it up before it fell to the ground.
Tim rocked her back and forth. He brought her lifeless body up to his chest. Both of their bodies shook, but he was the source of the shaking. He laid her gently back down and kissed her forehead. He looked up at the house. His face distorted from grief and pain to anger. He picked up the revolver from the ground and cocked the hammer back. The shrill screams of his voice silenced by unloading the entire .45 revolver into Mike’s front door.
***
When the first gunshot went off, Mike watched Adam duck for cover. He took the opportunity to run back to the front of the house.
Anne had her shotgun through the plywood’s hole and blasted through the glass. She pumped the shotgun sending an empty shell flying to the floor and squeezed the trigger again, the recoil from the blast knocking her shoulder into the chair behind her.
“You all right?” Mike asked.
“Somebody shot, Bessie,” Anne answered.
What?”
Anne scooted out of the way to let Mike get a look outside. He could see Bessie’s lifeless body sprawled across the lawn.
A few bullets came splintering through the plywood and into the kitchen. Mike threw his body over Anne’s until the firing stopped, then aimed his shotgun through the window and squeezed the trigger, sending a dozen steel balls through James Sturgis’ chest.
Mike pumped the shotgun and reloaded the chamber. He scanned the yard. He saw a few people hunched behind a car on the side of the street. He saw the pistols in their hands. He took aim and fired.
The blast from the shotgun shell shattered the car’s windows and peppered the metal on the side doors.
“Anne! Get to the Jeep, now!” Mike screamed.
Anne nodded and ran, keeping herself low, through the kitchen into the garage. The front door thumped loud and Mike could hear the wood starting to crack.
***
Ray watched the crowd around Mike’s house scatter with the exception of a few after he sent the bullet into Bessie’s back. He sat hunched behind a car on the other side of the street behind everyone. He re-
racked the bolt-action rifle watching Tim make a beeline for Mike’s front door.
Ray adjusted the pack on his back and headed up the street, keeping low and out of sight behind the cars parked on the curb.