When The Grid Went Down

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When The Grid Went Down Page 2

by Nick Randall

Randall avoided making eye contact with anyone around him, but he couldn’t help but hear what people were saying:

  “Did you hear a jet airplane fell over Spokane?! Crashed into a field by the airport!”

  “Are we being attacked?!”

  “Where’s the military?!”

  “Hey, a hundred bucks for half the food you have there!”

  “Is your car working?!”

  One person even had a red wagon that was filled up to the brink with supplies. They were walking quickly and didn’t stop, forcing Randall to ride around them.

  There were police officers posted at various checkpoints, many of whom were armed with shotguns and M4s.

  Randall made sure to ride around the checkpoints rather than directly through them. Most of the officers were talking with concerned civilians anyway, so they shouldn’t pay much attention to him.

  Out of the corner of Randall’s eye, he saw a man running down the street with a bag full of groceries and a woman and several police officers in quick pursuit. The man had stolen the woman’s groceries.

  Randall slowed down the pace on his bicycle to watch the two police officers tackle the man to the ground and restrain him. The groceries were sent flying over the ground, and several more people ran over to scavenge them for themselves.

  Randall continued on and quickened the pace on his bike, putting as much distance between himself and the scene of the crime as possible.

  While the hospital was in another part of town, Randall was certain that the situation there was full blown chaos. Patients dependent on electronic items or respirators to survive would be dying if not dead already, and the hospital staff would be completely overwhelmed with more injured people from the car accidents flooding the building. It wasn’t a sight he particularly wanted to see.

  In short, the situation was exactly as Randall had always imagined it would be.

  When it became too dark to see, Randall pulled out his Fenix E12 flashlight and held it in his mouth in order to see where he was going.

  There was some light provided by the fires from the plane crashes in the distance. An orange glow in the distance contrasted itself against the dark blue sky.

  Cars littered the roads as Randall zoomed by them. Along the way, he kept an eye out for anybody who seemed suspicious. Situational awareness was extra important now.

  Randall didn’t quit pedaling until he reached his parents’ neighborhood in Post Falls. He had been pedaling for two hours and normally his exhaustion would have caused him to rest. But today, under these circumstances, stopping to rest didn’t even come to mind.

  When Randall finally turned onto the street of his parents house, his dad’s red GMC Sierra truck was parked in the driveway as it always was. Of course, his mom’s Lexus may or may not have been in the garage, so there was no way for him to tell yet if they were home.

  Jason, his parents next door neighbor, was walking back to his house after talking to another neighbor across the street.

  Jason was a retired cop around 40 who currently worked in construction. He and his wife had three kids. They had always been good neighbors back when Randall still lived with his parents. Randall also trusted Jason and had always respected his opinion.

  Randall brought his bike to a halt. He noticed that Jason had a mid-sized Glock, likely a 19, strapped to his hip.

  “Are they home?” Randall asked.

  “Who?” Jason asked.

  “Marcus and Susan,” said Randall, pointing to his parents house. “You remember, me right? I’m Randall.”

  “Sorry, didn’t recognize you at first,” said Jason. “Been a long time. To be honest, I don’t think so. I knocked on their door earlier this morning and no one answered. I don’t know where they would be. Sorry.”

  Randall nodded his head. Inside his heart sank because he knew if they weren’t home, his search was far from over.

  “You gotta be careful being out here all alone,” said Jason. “Things are about to get real bad by the looks of it. Do you want to come inside?”

  “No, that’s alright,” said Randall. “I have a key to their house. Do you have any knowledge of what’s caused this?”

  “Nothing definitive so far,” said Jason. “I’ve been trying to listen to the NOAA weather radio frequencies, getting nothing but static.”

  Why didn’t I think to check my radio? Randall thought.

  “Zack across the street told me there were National Guard units setting up checkpoints between Coeur d’Alene and Spokane,” Jason continued. “Their progress has been slow because no vehicles are working and communication is down. It doesn’t look like this is a short term thing.”

  “Thanks for the info,” said Randall. “If I find out anything while I’m still here, I’ll let you know.”

  “Thanks,” said Jason with a nod. “Stay safe.”

  Jason headed into his house as Randall headed to his parents’.

  Randall unlocked the door with the key and stepped inside to the entrance with a split staircase heading upstairs and downstairs.

  “Hello?!”

  There was no answer. The inside of the home was dark.

  Randall raced upstairs to search the rooms, not bothering to take his shoes off. When he saw no one was upstairs, he raced back downstairs and searched all the rooms there too.

  Next, Randall opened the door to the garage and shined his flashlight in.

  The silver Lexus SUV that should have been there was missing.

  Now Randall understood: one or both of his parents had been away from home when the EMP had gone off.

  But where? Since it had been late at night when the EMP had happened, they couldn’t have been grocery shopping or running errands.

  Watching a movie at the theater perhaps? Possibly, but they would have been able to either walk back home or to his condo by then.

  They must have either gone on vacation somewhere, or they would have gone on a weekend trip to his grandparents’ cabin in Priest Lake. Those were the only two explanations that Randall could think of.

  If they were at Priest Lake, that was good news. For one thing, it would mean that his parents and grandparents were together. His grandparents’ cabin was the designated bug out rendezvous point anyway (his family had set a bug out location based on Randall’s suggestion from his writing), and it was stocked with supplies.

  But the downside was the cabin was over a hundred miles away. That was an issue Randall had brought up, but everyone else insisted it be the bug out location.

  Randall checked his analog watch. It was now almost twenty four hours since the EMP had gone off, and it had been nearly double that since he had gotten any sleep.

  He was exhausted and he needed to rest before resuming his search the next day. If Randall were to travel all the way to Priest Lake on bicycle or on foot, it would be a major commitment and he would have to gather more items and supplies from his condo before heading north.

  He would also need to search for his brother, Thomas, in town so they could work their way together towards the cabin.

  Randall stepped into his old bedroom. It was now a guest room, but his old bed was still there against the wall where it always had been.

  He plopped down on the bed, sinking into the soft mattress, and quickly feel asleep.

  * * *

  Randall woke up early the next morning to a disturbance: someone was knocking on the door.

  He had gotten six hours of deep sleep, but he was still tired. Nonetheless, he pulled himself out of bed, drawing his Beretta from his shoulder holster in the process.

  Considering the situation, Randall knew he had to be on full alert regardless of his mental or physical state.

  Randall held the Beretta behind his back as he walked to the front door and cautiously opened it part way.

  Thomas stood there.

  “You have no idea how glad I am to see you,” said Randall, relieved.

  Thomas quickly stepped inside and they embraced, glad to see
the other was safe.

  “Mom and dad here?” asked Thomas.

  “No,” replied Randall.

  “Any idea where they are?”

  Randall quickly explained his belief that their parents had gone up to Priest Lake. Thomas agreed that it was likely, based on what they could tell, but not certain.

  “Still,” Randall said. “It’s the best place for us to go. It’s always been our plan if it ever hit the fan, right? Everybody get to the cabin and we’ll make a stand as a family there.”

  “What if mom and dad aren’t there, though?” Thomas asked.

  “We need to hold to the plan. It’s been more than twenty four hours since the EMP. At any moment the whole situation might tumble into complete chaos here. We can either get caught up in it, and do nobody any good, or we can bring ourselves and whatever supplies we can carry up to the lake. It’s uncomfortable math, but there’s safety in numbers, and we’ve set up the cabin for exactly this kind of situation. The more of us that get to the cabin, and the faster we get there, the better the odds we all have of surviving together.”

  “But mom and dad could be just a day from here. Why not try to find them?”

  “A day in which direction, Thomas? We have to trust that they’re following the plan, too. If they’re not here, they should be making their way towards the cabin. If so, our best chance of helping them out will be to head the same direction they’re going.”

  Randall could tell that Thomas wasn’t happy with the logic, but he also couldn’t argue with it.

  Finally, Thomas asked, “I came over without my bug out bag. You?”

  “I left it at home. I wanted to move quickly to get here, and to not attract attention to myself.”

  “Same. So, split up to get our weapons and gear and meet back here, or go together?”

  “Together,” Randall said immediately. “Things are close to the tipping point, so it’ll be best if from here on out, we use the buddy system. We need to start watching each other’s backs.”

  Thomas nodded in agreement. “My place is closer, let’s go there first.”

  Chapter Three

  The Woods of North Idaho

  Randall and Thomas turned to see three men with semi-automatic rifles and shotguns aimed at them.

  It was pretty clear they meant business, so Randall and Thomas both raised their hands.

  “Drop them,” one of the men said.

  He was tall and ruddy with a full mountain man beard, and appeared to be the one in charge judging by the way the other two men stood to either side of and a little bit behind him.

  The man to his left was shorter with fair hair and three days of stubble. The one to his left was tall, thin, and sported a neatly trimmed goatee.

  All three of the men were dressed in hunting camouflage, and carried pistols at their belts in addition to the long guns they held in their hands.

  Thomas and Randall both took a knee, carefully setting their rifles on the ground, and then slowly took the sidearms they were open carrying out and set them down as well.

  There was no need for either of them to reveal the presence of their holdout pistols.

  The man in charge looked at the guns on the ground and then at his prisoners. Randall watched the track of his eyes closely as the man scanned across his chest and waist.

  If the roles had been reversed, Randall would have been matching up weapons and magazines. That was exactly why, in his writing, he always advised hiding a concealed weapon’s spare magazines.

  “I don’t know where you two are from or where you’re going, but you just wandered into someplace you don’t need to be.”

  The man looked at the weapons on the ground in front of him again, and gave the brothers a hard, appraising look.

  The weapons Thomas and Randall had set on the ground were quality and obviously well-used. And both men had plenty of spare ammunition in practical rigs – no mall ninja garbage – and full rucksacks on their back.

  “Take off your belts,” the man said. “And drop your rucks and the rest of your gear.”

  After Randall and Thomas set the rest of their gear on the ground, the man said, “Now take three steps back, nice and easy.”

  The man gestured to his two companions to pick up the weapons and ammunition. They both dropped their aim as they bent over to pick up their ill-gotten loot. There was a very narrow window in which only one gun was covering both Randall and Thomas.

  Randall knew that he wouldn’t be able to quickly get to his Beretta, which was in the shoulder rig under his zipped jacket. He glanced over at Thomas, who seemed to be doing the same math, and whose small Glock was easily accessible in its concealed hip holster.

  “Hey!” Randall said to the man who was picking up his M1A. “Careful with that. The scope’s worth more than you are.”

  The man taking Randall’s gun, the short blonde, looked up, scowling angrily. The leader of the captors swung his rifle to aim it directly at Randall.

  This gave Thomas the barest window of opportunity to act. His right hand snapped down to his waist, dropping right onto the grip of his Glock.

  It was a gamble that the man would turn to engage Thomas’s active threat instead of shooting Randall first, one that fortunately paid off.

  Not only did the muzzle swing away from Randall without a shot being fired, but the longer heavier weapon was harder to bring to bear on its target.

  It gave Thomas the opportunity to take a proper shooting stance and take aim. The young man was still turning when Thomas fired, hitting him square in the chest and knocking him back.

  Randall did not stay idle. He sprang into action, charging the blonde man who was still on a knee, holding the M1A in his right hand and a shotgun in his left.

  He had both weapons by the stock, thus had no chance of getting a finger on a trigger and taking aim in a timely manner.

  Randall didn’t bother trying to get at his Beretta, choosing instead to open his arms wide and take the guy down in a two-armed grapple.

  Thomas saw the leader of their foes still staggering backwards, and smoothly squeezed the trigger again, putting another round into his chest.

  Like the man taking Randall’s guns, the guy going for Thomas’s gear was also holding his semi-automatic shotgun by the stock as he reached out for the AR-15 on the ground.

  He reacted quickly to the sound of gunfire, and gave up on trying to steal the weapons in front of him, staggering backwards instead while trying to bring his shotgun to bear on the gunman in front of him.

  Thomas switched aim to engage the one with the black goatee and squeezed off three quick rounds. Unfortunately, between the distraction of his brother grappling with an armed man to his left, and the sudden surge of adrenaline after having just shot a man for the first time in his life, Thomas’s aim had gone jerky.

  There was no sign that any of the bullets had hit their target.

  Meanwhile, Randall’s opponent had broken free of the grapple, but had been disarmed in the process. When he realized he was no longer held, but that he also had no weapon, he scrambled to his feet and reached for his holstered pistol.

  Randall was just a hair quicker at picking up his Colt from the ground and snapped off a couple of quick shots. They were enough to rattle the blonde man’s nerve and he threw himself behind a tree for cover instead of returning fire.

  Randall kept his pistol aimed at the tree the blonde had ducked behind, picked up his AR-15, and found some cover of his own. The four men were now in a stalemate, each behind a tree, with the fifth man unconscious and dying in the middle of them.

  It was quickly apparent to Randall that the two men he was facing were definitely followers without a leader. Neither of them moved from where they were, and they were constantly talking to each other from cover.

  On the other hand, Randall and Thomas’s parents had always pushed their sons to be able to think and act in any situation. The boys had spent their childhood running through the woods together, cha
sing each other, playing hide and seek.

  And unlike many of the neighborhood kids whose parents actively discouraged it, Thomas and Randall played Army all the time. This childhood play translated into useful skills when it came time for their parents to take them out hunting together.

  They had learned early on how to signal each other silently as they moved into position when stalking wild game. It looked like their years of play and hunting together just might save their lives.

  Using hand signals and good buddy awareness, Randall managed to move sideways far enough to get cover behind a tree where he could see the goateed man that was watching Thomas, all without exposing himself for more than the second it took him to dash to the next spot of cover.

 

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