Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Hard Times: Introduction to the Novel by Jack Random

Hard Times tells the story of a man who loses his job and his home in a global economic crisis. Swallowing his pride his family is forced to move in with his wife’s elderly mother. When other family members join them there is neither enough room nor food. Stone faces a dilemma: Would the family be better off without him? His decision to leave leads him to a life on the road where he learns about himself and his fellow beings.

He joins a community under a local bridge and learns that people are not always what they seem. He learns about loyalty and companionship from an abandoned dog. He witnesses the dark side of human nature at a local farm where the boss exploits and abuses his workers. He discovers the virtues of honest labor and the resilience of hard working people under the most trying conditions. He finds a home for him and his family in a community of university students dedicated to creating a self-reliant and earth friendly society.

Stone envisions an alliance of communities trading goods and services, exchanging ideas, and committed to the greater good.

Borrowing conceptually from Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon, Cormac McCarthy’s The Road and Aldous Huxley’s Island, Hard Times is about hope and overcoming hardship.

Hard Times: Chapter 1 "Courage"

Part One of Nine: HARD TIMES

A Novel By Jack Random

Crow Dog Press
Turlock, California
Copyright 2009 Ray Miller


Chapter 1: Stone's Story

“Courage”



"We are flawed and tragic beings. Born to an end we do not desire, our primary instinct to avoid that which cannot be avoided."



At first and for a long time people helped. As long as they perceived themselves as outside the victim class, observers at a roadside accident, eyes above the fray, they tossed bones to the needy and felt better. Not the elite of course. Not those who had the most to lose. They were safe inside their gated and guarded cities. Their contribution as far as they were concerned was hiring watchmen at substandard wages or paying a Mexican for lawn care and gardening and maintenance chores around the house.

When hard times came everything changed. Not all at once but gradually. One step at a time. Those who considered themselves above the storm were swept in. The victim class grew like a nasty virus that would not let go. The elite behind their guarded walls paid more for bondable labor until they could no longer spare the extra cash. Guard stations went empty, walls crumbled and the elite were exposed to the multitudes.

It was hard times. Hard times for everyone. No one got a pass. The wealthy became survivors and survivors became homeless and the homeless became vagabonds and vagabonds became desperados and rose up or died. The power of the state broke down. Like a dam with a thousand cracks it crumbled at first break.

Not with a bang but a whimper the end days came.

These were not those times. These were the hard times before the crack when hope still resided in the heart of humankind. Scared and desperate but still beating.

When did it begin?

We were happy or at least we thought we were. We were a model of the American dream. I worked my way up in the construction industry and eventually started my own business as contractor. My wife Madge sold real estate until we had our first child, a darling little boy named Denim. Two years later we had a second child, a sweet little girl named Cheryl Lyn, Charlie for short, and we traded up, bought a new house and took out a loan on the value of our home.

How were we to know it was a bad move? Everyone we knew was doing it and everyone was making money. Stocks come and go, gold rises and falls, but real estate never goes down. It’s a game without losers. Everybody plays; everybody wins. What could go wrong?

Business went bad soon after the crackdown on migrant labor. We hired locally but we couldn’t turn a profit. Madge took a job selling fragrances at the mall but it wasn’t enough. We tapped out our credit cards and took out a second mortgage but we still couldn’t keep up.

Then the housing crash hit and we couldn’t even afford to sell out. We were caught in a trap and there was no way out. I lost my business and we lost our home to foreclosure.

Compared to thousands of others, I guess we were lucky because we had family we could turn to when times were rough. I had relocated from Denver in my college days and never went back. Colorado was close enough when times were good but now it seemed a world removed. We moved in with Madge’s mother. It was a small house but it was paid for. We sold most of our belongings to help with the expenses and set up a living space in a spare bedroom. It was more like an office space or reading room, which is exactly how Grace used it before we moved in.

I kept looking for a job with no success. It seemed I was always two steps behind the curve. I looked in the construction industry but the industry was locked up. No jobs. I looked into retraining programs and government jobs but the waiting lists were too long. By the time I got around to service jobs, counter jockeys and floor sales, it was too late. No one was hiring. Everyone was looking for work.

I can’t tell you how bad it felt. I was raised with a simple notion: If you worked hard and played by the rules you could make it. You might not get rich (that idea was pretty much dead a long time ago) but you’d have a roof over your head, clean water, a warm bed and no one would go hungry.

I was the man so I had the idea it was my responsibility. When it all broke down and I couldn’t take care of my family, it was my fault. Of course it was. You can’t go around blaming politicians or corporations or banks or anyone else. It was a man’s responsibility, a father’s duty and a husband’s job. It was all right for others to find blame where they could but not me. I was better than that. I was raised to be better than that.

Yeah right. Just another lie to put on the list of lies my father told me. Not his fault either. Nobody’s fault. Just the way it was until it wasn’t.

After a while (I don’t remember how many months, maybe half a year), I realized I was dead weight. Madge’s brother Carlin moved in with his wife and their three kids. I was okay with tools but so was he. We were living on an old woman’s retirement checks waiting for food stamps or some kind of assistance. It was a matter of numbers.

Carlin and I enclosed the back porch with found materials, two-by-fours and plywood with rags and newspaper for insulation, just in time for an aunt and uncle to show up with their hands open and their pockets empty. Aunt Mildred and Uncle Bud were more or less on the edge of the family. We rarely saw them at holidays but here they were and the look in their eyes was filled with pleading. I sat on a corner of the sofa in Grace’s cramped living room and watched her try to turn them away. There was no more room and too many mouths to feed but there was nowhere else for the elderly couple to go.

“We’ll make do,” said Grace as they all surrendered to tears.

I’m not the kind of man who turns to crime in desperation (though I have since learned it is less a moral imperative than a cultural choice) so my options were limited.

Late that night I found a quiet corner and wrote a letter to Madge and the kids. Back then it was the hardest thing I’d ever had to do.

Dear Madge, Denim and Charlie:

These are hard times and we are all going to have to make sacrifices. I never would have thought that giving up and moving out could be an act of kindness but here we are. We don’t have enough room and I take more than my share. We don’t have enough food and I need too much just to keep going.

The time has come for me to make a hard choice and I’ve made it. The best thing I can do for my family and loved ones right now is to go away. Carlin can do anything I can around the house and I can count on Denim and Charlie to help out. You’ll have a little more space and one less mouth to feed.

I don’t know how long it will take or what I’ll have to do to survive out there but I’ll come back when it’s all over and times are better. When that time comes I hope you’ll understand what I did and why.

Your loving husband and father,

Stone.

That’s my story. That’s how I came to be under this bridge with almost a hundred others. There’s another hundred or more across the river. We all have a story. Every one of us. And I write them down in little notebooks and on scraps of paper that I find in garbage dumps and alleys. I don’t know why I feel it’s important but I do. It makes me feel more human. It makes me feel like people matter even though the whole world says we don’t.

Bridges used to be mostly for transportation. Now they’re mostly shelters. A man told me that if you wait here long enough and manage to stay alive, you’ll meet everyone you ever knew right here. I thought it was funny in a wry sort of way but after a few more weeks, I came to believe it was true.

How do we survive? This river’s still got some catfish, mud daubers and what not. Everything we catch goes in the pot. There are some wild orchards around here still giving fruit and nuts. We got a makeshift greenhouse for growing vegetables. Everything goes in the pot. You don’t share you get booted out. That’s how I got my spot. Some poor soul got caught hording and he was booted out just as I showed up.

Every month or so a truck shows up with guards, handing out blankets, jackets, flour and dried fruit. Apparently that’s what remains of government service. We know they’re government because the guards carry guns. One of the last effective acts of government was to confiscate all the ammunition. Ironic, isn’t it? The second amendment to the constitution protects the right to own guns but it doesn’t say anything about ammunition.

We make do with what we have. Everyone gets a share. We even have a guest space that people can use for a few days. After that, unless a spot opens up, you have to move on. It’s all pretty orderly. I hear there’ve been a number of attempts to take the place over – thugs, gangsters and bullies – but so far they’ve been beaten back. The camp has its own collection of weapons: clubs, spears, knives, axes, hatchets, garden tools, chains, pipes and crowbars, anything you can think of.

There are camps all over town, in every park, in abandoned buildings and parking lots. The last I heard the malls were off limits but who knows. As a rule they’re a poor place to find what you need to sustain life. No food, no water and all the merchandise, clothes, blankets, generators, batteries, tools and electronics have been cleaned out. They carted everything off in trucks and stored them in remote warehouses to wait for the day when things will have monetary value again.

There’s a couple here named Johnson, Marguerite and Willie. Couples are rare unless they meet up here. Most have been broken apart like mine. I guess that makes them a love story. They couldn’t both stay so the ended up on the streets together. You never see Willie without Marguerite. They go fishing together. They work in the garden together. They eat together and sleep together. Willie damn near killed a man who tried to come between them.

Marguerite was a Mexican immigrant (legal or illegal, nobody cares any more) and Willie was a trucker. She was working as a waitress at a roadside cafĂ© when Willie stopped for coffee and a piece of pie. Thinking she didn’t speak English, Willie told her she was the most beautiful thing he’d ever laid eyes on after the Grand Canyon. A smile led to an invitation and she hung up her apron and jumped in his cab. That was thirty-six years ago and they’ve never been apart.

Willie and Marguerite, Stone and Madge: two very different stories and both without ends. If I were a praying man, I’d pray that Willie and Marguerite die on the same breath, tangled in each others’ arms, in a warm place many years from now when the harshness of these days are only memories. I’d pray that Stone found his way back to Madge in better times.

I spent a lot of my time wondering about Madge and trying to talk myself into going back but I knew it was a dead end. Without some way to help out I’d end up back on the street waiting for my old spot under the bridge. Maybe someday things will change. That’s what we’re all hoping.

There’s a man over there named Riggs. Got his kid Ronan with him. This ain’t no place for a kid but this kid is tough as nails. Works as hard as anyone out here and never complains. When I asked them how they ended up here, they both shrugged, Ronan after his dad, and Riggs said: Just lucky I guess.

I learned from his friend, someone who knew him before the crash, that he was a single father as long as anyone knew. There were rumors his wife was a drug addict who either overdosed or went back to her old lifestyle. It was obvious Riggs still pined for her.

He was a foreman at the canning plant before it shut down. He had no family in the area and he didn’t believe in government assistance so when they lost the house, he and Ronan took to the streets together. The kid was a free spirit who liked to run and as much as Riggs admired him for it he never let him out of his sight. If Ronan ducked behind a corner or disappeared behind some bushes hunting berries, Riggs would stop whatever he was doing and move to where he could see his kid. No one doubted he would kill or be killed to protect his son and that alone was protection enough in the bridge camp.

Ronan loves sports and games so someone always organizes a game of soccer or stickball after the workday before the sun goes down. He’s a good kid, the kind of kid any parent would be proud of. He’s the only kid in camp so we all look after him.

The fact is we all look after each other. We’ve become a kind of family. The trouble is we all had a family before and we all hope this doesn’t last too long. It’s the one thing that ties us all together: More than anything else we want to go home. We want to go back to a way of life that no longer exists.

Everyone has a story. Everyone had a life before this life. But it’s always a story about the past or the present. No one speaks of a future. There are few hopes and dreams in this camp. We are capable of looking back. We can see what lies in front of us. We take steps to ensure our safety, our warmth, our food supply, whatever. But we don’t talk about our plans. We’re here and that’s as far as it goes.

We’re in the middle of fall. The first days of winter are maybe four weeks away. After that there’s no traveling. It’s hunker down, stay warm and survive.

I’m thinking maybe I should hit the road. Every few days I see family members come down to the camp looking for their fathers. I listen to them talk. I watch them trying to hide their emotions. Children are the worst. They can’t understand. They don’t know what it means for a father to be a burden. It usually works. The father goes back to the family and does whatever he can to be useful. He learns to cook and clean and tries not to eat too much. After a week or two he’s back out on the streets.

I don’t want that to happen to me. I think about it every night, all night, and most of the day. I’m sure Madge understands but the kids are still too young. It’s only a matter of time before Charlie shows up, pleading with her wide beautiful eyes, crying when I resist, arguing when I try to explain. I know I would have to give in but I also know how it would turn out. The hammer of destiny.

If I saw my children going hungry because of me, I know what it would do to me. I’d rather be a bum than a thief. And I’d rather be out here than in some jail. It’s not so easy to get thrown in jail these days anyway. The cops would rather shoot you than give you free shelter and food. They take you out of town and tell you to keep moving. They catch you again they give you a beating and take you ten, twenty miles out. The jails are full. No one gets in unless someone gets out. So much for the zero tolerance three-strikes laws. If it were easy to get locked up, half the population would be there. Maybe more.

So I’m thinking of traveling east, going to Denver to see my folks, to see how things are going there. I tell myself it might be different. Maybe the government is still functioning there. Maybe food and clean water are more plentiful. Maybe I could help. The last I heard everyone was fine – or at least they said they were.

I know I should have called while the lines were still working but I was afraid it would cut off my options. As long as I could believe it might be better, I could keep my spirits up. A traveler needs strength – especially if he has no money.

I hear the roads are jammed with hitchhikers. It’s a basic law of human nature: irrational optimism. It has to be better down the road. Or maybe we’re beyond that. Even if it isn’t better, it’s best to keep moving. As long as we’re moving, we’re alive and that’s all the hope we can get.

I’ve talked to some people who’ve been out there. They all say the same thing: Don’t go. It’s better here than it is out there. It’s dangerous, dirty and shelter is hard to find. But if I’ve got my mind set, they tell me to stay off the main highways as much as possible and don’t take every ride.

There’s a man here named Sugar who traveled from Indiana looking to hook up with his son and daughter-in-law but when he got here they were gone. Scattered like dry leaves in an August wind. He liked to talk about his adventures on the road.

“You develop a sixth sense and you learn to trust it,” he said in a chiseled voice. “Listen to it. If it tells you something’s wrong, something’s wrong. Lots of people out there are looking to take whatever you got.”

He told me there were people in the woods everywhere you went. Set up shelters built of plywood and sheets of tin, tents and corrugated cardboard.

“Most of them will take you in for a night but don’t overstay your welcome. That’s what they’re afraid of. The moment you see that hint of fear and worry, it’s time to move on.”

He told stories of being stranded on desert highways, being surrounded by a pack of wild dogs, no-gooders who shook him down for a roll of postage stamps and abandoned him by the roadside in the middle of god awful nowhere.

“People are good at heart,” he reflected. “I still believe that. But when hard times come something takes hold of them. People that never stole anything in their lives will take your last crumb of bread. It’s a cold world out there, boy. You got to keep your head up and your senses alive.”

I took his advice like it was the gospel truth. He told me places to go and places to avoid. He told me what to pack and what not to bother with. The premium was weight and durability. Dried goods and sardine cans and hard candy were good. Cans of soup and fruit and vegetables were too heavy. “Eat ‘em and leave ‘em,” he said. A pouch for water instead of a canteen. “Got to have water,” he said.

We spent a lot of time talking about weapons or what could be used to defend yourself from desperate humans and hungry beasts. He advised me to get a good strong walking stick. It doesn’t threaten people but it gives them pause if they’ve got a mind to roll you.

“A good knife will serve you but keep it strapped to your leg and out of sight. It’s there if you need it but don’t show no one your hand before it’s played.”

He showed me how to roll your stuff up in a couple of good light-weight blankets, bind them with strips of leather and hang it over your shoulder.

“You’ll want a good hat,” he said. “One with plenty of brim that clings to your head in a strong wind. Can’t say enough about a good hat.”

I spent a lot of time gathering things I thought I’d need, including maps I pulled out of the dumps. Then one day Sugar took stock of all I had and gave me a wink.

“You’re ready,” he said. “As ready as you’ll ever be.”

I shook his hand and set out walking due east the next morning at the crack of dawn. A teenage kid was staking my spot the moment I checked out. I tipped my hat and wished him well. There was a lot fear in his eyes – like he was afraid I’d change my mind.

I almost did. I wasn’t easy leaving behind a place of safety and it occurred to me it might be the dumbest thing I ever did. Once I walked out, there was no turning back.

I got out of town and walked all day on a country road heading more or less east, stopping only when I saw an opportunity for food. I found some berries along a creek bed and some peaches just short of ground rot in an old orchard. I sat down to eat and rest my bones. By the look of the sun there was no more than an hour or so in the day. I figured I walked a good twelve hours at a decent pace, covering thirty miles or more. My legs ached, my feet were sore and my mind was clouded with second thoughts so I decided to call it a day.

All day long I had seen only four vehicles on this road: three of them heading the other way, the other an old Ford pickup. I don’t know if it was the price of gas or the fact that gas at any price was too much but the problem of traffic congestion disappeared. Most gas stations had gone out of business and those that were left were only open a few days a week.

The driver of the Ford, a man maybe a little older than me with a green John Deere cap, slowed down to look me over. It seemed to me he was worried that I was walking in the direction of his home and wanted to be sure I wasn’t a threat. I tipped my hat but I didn’t stick my thumb out. I wasn’t ready for a ride. I wanted time to think without having to deal with other people. In the back of my mind maybe I didn’t want to go too far in case I had a change of heart.

I gathered some wood and kindling for a fire and laid out my blankets. I had an old copy of George Stewart’s Earth Abides (I traded The Grapes of Wrath for it on the grounds that it weighed less) for company but I didn’t feel like reading so I just sat there gazing at the sun sinking in the western sky.

I lit the fire as the sun went down (more for light than warmth) and after a spell I got the feeling someone was watching me. I pulled out my knife and started whittling and kept my walking stick at hand just in case. A while later I heard a whimpering and I realized there was a dog sitting in the dark, keeping its distance, scouting me out, looking for someone to partner with. Dogs and cats, pets of all kinds, had it bad when hard times hit. The pounds and shelters were full and charging fees so people discarded them in the country. It made me mad until I thought it through. What else could they do? If times got worse god forbid people would start eating their animals and the animals would turn on them.

I got on my haunches and made a clicking sound, holding my hand out to call it to me. It moved slowly out of the shadows into the light of the fire and I could see she was a small to medium dog, golden with white patches and floppy ears, maybe a border collie mix. She was not a pup but young and scared. She backed off twice before she came to me, licked my hand and looked me straight in the eyes. We connected and both of us knew we had a partner like it or not.

Growing up the family had a couple of dogs and I had a dog as a younger man, all of them mutts. I like dogs. I admire them. That kind of loyalty might be bred but it’s an amazing thing to behold. A dog will go up against a mountain lion to protect its human. A dog will walk a thousand miles to get back home. A dog will stay with you when you’re sick and run with you in bad weather. There are all kinds of dogs and all kinds of dog people but the best dogs are those that choose you – like this dog chose me.

Now I had a new line of problems to think about: dog problems. Giving her a good name, making sure she got enough to eat and keeping her out of danger. I thought about a leash but that seemed ridiculous under the circumstances. I was not her master, her owner or even her protector. She was a free agent just like me. Any time she wanted to move on, that was her business. I had no say.

It occurred to me as she lay with her head on my lap while I scratched behind her ears that she would keep me warm when the weather got cold. I had no idea how a dog like her would fare in the wild. Probably no better than a city man like me. But maybe I was getting the better end of the deal. She was a good dog and as long as she stayed with me I would never be alone.

I tried to remember the dog’s name in the old Harlan Ellison story A Boy and His Dog without success. In the days before the crash you could look up information like that on the web. Not now. The web was down. There was no one to man the stations for an enterprise that produced nothing of tangible value. I guess that means the age of information is over. Maybe it’s for the best. A dog should find its own name or at least it shouldn’t be saddled with something from the past.

I slept with one eye open most of the night. When I woke up the dog was gone. I figured she must have moved on. But then she came running up with her tail up, bright eyes, smiling like a dog smiles. She had something in her mouth and placed it in my hand. It was a blueberry. That’s a good dog. She had learned to scavenge and saved one for me. I thanked her and pulled out a piece of jerky I’d stowed away. We split it down the middle.

Things were looking up.

My plan was to turn south and I figured it was no more than a few miles down the road. There are no easy ways to cross the Sierras or the Rockies so I decided to cross the desert at Death Valley, follow Route 66 to New Mexico and turn north to Colorado.

That was the plan but in the back of my mind I understood that all things are malleable. I was resolved to remain open to whatever experiences unfolded. My destination was Denver but I had no expectations. In all likelihood I would stay a few days or a week and go my way. I had no intention of imposing on my blood family any more than I had on my married family. Times were hard everywhere and the best I could do was to not add to the burden. If I could help I would do anything I could. If not, I would move on.

I had a dog now and I decided to name her Cinnamon after the Neil Young song. The song always gave me a lift. Walking down the road trying to keep my senses open she jogged before me like she was royalty. She was full of joy and hyped with energy. It must have broken someone’s heart to let her go.

After an hour or so we turned south and kept walking. Another hour and a truck came up behind us and slowed. It was the man who passed me the day before.

“You want a ride?” he said.

“I’ve got a dog,” I replied.

“I noticed.”

I looked him over and decided he was okay. We both jumped in the cab, Cinnamon in the middle. His name was Frank. He was a little fidgety and strange as if unaccustomed to casual conversation – at least with strangers. He explained that he was delivering food packages to town and apologized for not picking me up the day before. I shrugged and said I’d probably have done the same. I hoped it wasn’t true but it probably was. Hard times teach you to be cautious. Everyone wants something. Everyone has an angle. Everyone except my dog and me. He said he had a farm in the country. It was a cooperative with about two dozen people. They grew apples, pears, peaches, almonds and assorted garden vegetables. They were self sufficient he related with a measure of pride.

He asked where I was from and I told him. He asked my story and I gave it to him in abbreviated terms. He nodded and kept looking in the rearview mirror to catch my eyes. I had a vague sense of being interviewed and I wasn’t sure I liked it. He started rambling about the good they were doing, living in harmony off the land, working together in a common enterprise, how food and labor were the only things that mattered now.

I asked if it was a commune and he laughed. It was his land, his farm, his equipment and the people who worked it were working for him. I asked how much he paid and he looked at me like I was out of my mind. They work for food and shelter. No one has money he said. It’s all about surviving in hard times.

Maybe but I didn’t think he was delivering food to town for free. He volunteered that they only got enough money to keep things running: fuel to keep the generators going, clothes, blankets, light bulbs, stuff they couldn’t grow.

We drove on for about forty-five minutes when he pulled over to the side of road.

“This is where I turn off. The farm’s about ten more miles down there,” he explained pointing to the west. If it was a job interview I figured I did all I could to scuttle my prospects but he gave me one more chance.

“You’re welcome to join us,” he offered with a weak smile. Cinnamon was crawling over me to get out the door.

“I appreciate that,” I lied. “We’ll take our chances on the road.”

Maybe I was wrong but I had a bad feeling about the whole venture. These were hard times, sure, but I wasn’t ready for slavery. What else could you call working for food and shelter? Of course, it wasn’t slavery if you were free to leave any time you wanted but I wasn’t willing to take that chance ten miles down the road and neither was Cinnamon.

He pulled a couple of bags of dried pears and another of trail mix and handed them to me like a peace offering. I thanked him most sincerely and he drove off with a nod of his head.

“Good luck, you’ll need it.”

I watched him drive down a one-way road kicking up dust and I had to wonder: I may come to regret that. Cinnamon yelped and started down the road south. I could tell she was thinking what I was thinking. Something wrong about that man.

I started walking but my mind stayed behind on that truck to the farm and the fidgety man who wanted to recruit us. Why? Surely there was no shortage of desperate people willing to work for food and shelter. In fact, there were too many. If he showed up at one of the camps in town looking for volunteers it might start a riot and everyone would know about it. Someone would follow the trail and the location of a critical source of food would be known. If times really got tough, townspeople would converge on the farm and take what they needed. I decided he had to pick up strays – individuals like myself who for whatever reason wandered from the crowds.

I had a desire to turn around, go back and walk down that road just to see for myself what was going on. I weighed the options. If I went back it would take at least two days probably three and the winter would be that much closer. Then again, I had no real expectations of my journey to Colorado. In all likelihood I would find the same situation there as I had at home. I would be a burden on my family. It would be a cold winter in Colorado so it really didn’t matter if I never made it out of California. I had already accomplished my objective. I was out of the way. My wife and children could not find me. Even if I settled on a farm in the country it is unlikely they would track me down.

Just the same, if I went down to the farm and found what I half expected to find, what could I do about it? The authorities (such as they were) would not want to intervene. The farm was providing food. If they were doing so on the backs of slave labor that was just an unfortunate effect of the times. On the other hand, my job if I had one was to tell the story. If I did not go down that road the story might never be told.

I was still hesitant to turn around. There was something in my head about the code of the road, the cardinal law of every pilgrim, journeyman and wandering hobo: Don’t turn back. Whatever happened, whatever went down, I wanted to honor that code. Keep on moving. Keep on keeping on.

My self-imposed dilemma was resolved when we came to a dirt path, a walking path that meandered off in a westward direction. I knelt down and took Cinnamon by the ears: I know you don’t want to go down there, girl. I don’t blame you. But I’ve got to go down there and have a look. You’re free to follow or free to go.

I know she understood. Her tail stopped wagging and she stared into my eyes, trying to change my mind until she realized it was hopeless. I started walking down the path and she stood there on the road for maybe thirty seconds before she trotted up behind me. I knelt down, gave her a good petting and kissed her head. She made her decision: She would stick with me no matter what and for that I would always be grateful.

We spent the day walking through the woods, taking time to hunt for berries and sitting down for snacks from our varied food supply. Finally we came to a clearing: a small valley below the ledge where we were. It was late in the daylight hours and people were still working the gardens and orchards below us. The workers looked tired from the day’s labor but there was nothing remarkable about their appearance. Some were picking fruit or vegetables and putting them in baskets or bags. At the far end of the valley there was a large two-story white wood house and to its side a row of small structures – cabins or shacks – and behind them two large structures that I figured were a barn and a warehouse. Three workers were building a new shack for what I assumed were the workers quarters. Another medium-sized structure I figured was used for drying and packaging. There were workers carrying bags and baskets from the fields out back for processing. A couple of workers were running water from a well to the house. All in all, it looked like a well-planned, well-run operation.

At sunset a woman emerged from the house and rang a bell as all the workers walked from their stations to their living quarters. A while later lights went on in the shacks and the big white house. I could see two generators, one by the house and another by the first shack. About an hour later another bell rang and all the workers went out back for what I assumed was a group meal. Another hour and they were back in their quarters. Another hour and the lights were replaced by flickering candlelight everywhere but the big house. I saw that the workers cabins were segregated by sex with three or four assigned to each one.

I was determined to go down for a closer look. No one was standing guard (an indication no one knew about the place) but several people lingered on the porch of the big house. A couple (probably the man from the truck and his wife) was on the balcony upstairs. Under the light of a half moon, we followed the trail all the way around the fields to the back of the house where the trail ended in a descent to the valley floor.

We took a quick look inside the warehouse where row after row of boxes were neatly stacked, waiting for delivery to needy townspeople. I resisted the temptation to stock up on dry goods. Keenly aware that the time might come, I was not ready to make that leap. I would hold on to my sense of decency as long as I could. We looked in the second building and saw it was divided into two sections, one for drying and packaging, the other with a complete kitchen and tables for serving meals. We moved over to the cabins away from the big house and saw that they were constructed with plywood walls painted in uniform gray. They were definitely not up to the standard of cabins. The walls were thin enough that we could hear the voices of the workers clear enough to understand most of what was said.

I motioned to Cinnamon to be quiet as we settled behind a shack where a man was talking about the segregation rule. He was angry that two willing people were not free to share a bed. He was angry at being confined to a small space shared with others he did not choose. He was angry at the authority held over him by the man who ruled the farm. Another man was trying to talk him down, urging him to be quiet, reminding him that life outside was hard. The man didn’t care. He wanted to leave. He wanted to leave first thing in the morning.

“No one leaves,” the other man said. “You think you can leave. They tell you you can but you can’t. They put you in rehab and the keep you there until you change your mind. The only ones who leave are the ones who can’t carry their weight. Too old or too sick. Too stubborn or feeble. Then they tell you to leave.”

The first man thought about what he said before he offered a final comment: “Ain’t a man alive can keep me here against my will.”

A knock came on the wall, probably a signal, the candle was snuffed and silence.

Almost immediately Cinnamon began to growl. Before I could bolt I was staring at a flashlight. I made out three men silhouetted in the darkness as I slowly stood. A voice ordered me to drop my walking stick and Cinnamon went crazy. She dashed toward them and began a side-to-side maneuver. She was fast and quick as the punch you never saw coming. I knelt back down and called her. I was surprised when she came. She recognized the man with the flashlight before I did. It was the man in the truck that gave us a ride.

“Well, well,” the man began. “Did you change your mind or did you come here to steal some food?”

“Why would I do that?”

I had no need for any more food than I could carry. Any fool would know that but I explained it to him slow and easy. As I was talking, a group of people came up behind me and one of them spoke out as I calmed Cinnamon.

“Let him go,” a man said. It was the same voice we heard talking inside the workers shack, the one who wanted to leave if he couldn’t room with a woman. Two more men and a woman were behind him. Maybe more behind them, I couldn’t tell.

“This man’s trespassing,” the boss man said.

“Call the police,” someone said and everyone behind us laughed. What police was left couldn’t be bothered with something like this. Anything short of a riot got a pass unless it was in the finest of neighborhoods.

I related my situation, told them how the boss man picked us up and asked me to work on the farm and why I turned it down. I explained why I decided to come have a look for myself, because I felt a duty to tell the story.

“No harm, no foul,” the man from the shack said. “You were right about this place,” a woman said. “Ain’t nothing but a slave operation.”

Suddenly the boss man was on his heels, a little concerned with the turn of affairs and the possibility of a workers revolt was staring him in the face. Who knows on which side the two larger men behind him would turn?

“Alright!” the boss man protested. “I’ve told you all a dozen times or more: Every one of you is free to go! But if you go you won’t be welcomed back.”

You could feel the pull of his words. These were hard times and this was a place where they were pretty much guaranteed the two things they needed most: food and shelter.

“Even slaves could couple up,” the workingman said.

“You’ve got a point,” said the boss man. “We’ll talk about it in the morning.”

“This man free to go?”

The boss man nodded and started walking back to the big house. I tipped my hat to the working people and thanked them two or three times.

“I wish we could build a fire and offer up some warm food and drink but that would stir up more trouble than it’s worth,” said the man who spoke up for us.

“I understand,” I said and I did. The last thing I wanted to do was to create a problem for these good people. We shook hands and I started walking out the way we came in with Cinnamon tagging along behind me.

“Fuck it!” the man said.

I turned around and he was waving us back. He introduced himself as Leon and his buddy as Buck. The rest of them threw in with their own names and we followed them to a clearing east of the worker shacks. They gathered wood and lit a fire not for warmth but for the kind of camaraderie a campfire builds. One by one as the fire burned the rest of the workers came out and joined our circle. I told my story and they told me theirs. Half of them had the same story. Too many mouths to feed. Too many bodies to shelter. The other half was forced out. No hard feelings. Just the way it is when the lifeboat is treading water.

We were the outcasts. Every one of us had one thing in common. We were alone when the boss man picked us up and offered us a job. No one knew anyone else at the farm. Every one of them started out alone. Any bonds they made they made after they started working here at the farm.

The work was hard and the days were long but no one was complaining about that. They were worried what would happen if they left the farm. They were worried that the boss man wouldn’t let them leave. Two of them had tried but they were tracked down before they could get to a town or far enough that they weren’t worth tracking. Each related a similar story: They were put in isolation out back of the house. They were sleep deprived and fed a broth with white bread three times a day. A counselor talked to them every waking hour of every day and night. Talked to them about how hard the world outside had become. Talked to them about how lucky they were to have food, shelter, clothing and someone who looked after them. After days and days of this, they couldn’t tell how long, they were weak and tired and too desperate to resist. They promised to be good workers. Loyal workers. True and honest and strong.

Only then did the boss man come in and inform them that they could leave if they still felt the need. Only then did he tell them they were free. They didn’t believe him but they never tried again. Life wasn’t that bad here. That much was true.

Leon’s problem was that he had fallen in love with a woman named Marge. Her problem was that she fell for him. They wanted to shack up together but that was against the rules. The boss man wouldn’t allow couples or alliances that could be used against him. Leon wasn’t serious about leaving the place. He wasn’t about to leave Marge and she wasn’t ready to hit the road with anyone. He just liked to grovel about it and did so every night as Buck would attest.

They brought out some trail mix and canned fruits and made some hot chocolate that we all shared. Someone even had a can of dog food that Cinnamon devoured. They all agreed that things were going to change starting in the morning and they invited us to stay.

I decided to sleep on it and see what developed in the morning. I threw down my blankets and we slept until dawn. By the time we roused the workers were already assembling for their morning meal. Buck came over to invite us along. Maybe it doesn’t seem like much but it was the best breakfast I ever had: fried veggies, hash brown potatoes and a slab of bacon. These were not things we took for granted anymore. Back at the camp we had a lot of oatmeal and trail mix, grains, nuts and dried fruits. Anything that kept was at a premium and anything that didn’t was rare. I don’t know where they got the meat. There were no pigs on the farm, no chickens or cows, so they must have traded for it.

I noticed that some of the men and a few of the women were carrying hardwood walking sticks or lengths of pipe and someone was stationed outside the dining hall. There was a feeling of apprehension but nothing was said. At least nothing I noticed. Buck asked me if I could use a hammer and saw. I said I could and he invited me to work on the construction crew if I was staying. I asked him what was going on and he told me I’d see for myself if I hung out. He said they were not planning on confronting the boss man but they were going to make changes. He gave a wink and introduced me to the foreman of the construction crew, a stout man with a healthy gut and huge hands who went by the name of Joe.

We went about our business, finishing up the shack and starting another when the chimes rang at the end of the workday. That’s when I noticed the first change. Leon grabbed a few of his things and moved in with Marge. The two women who roomed with Marge moved into the new shack and couple of others shifted as well.

They hadn’t asked permission. They just did it and waited to see what would happen. It was the same with me and Cinn. They didn’t ask if we could stay. They just invited us. I stayed for another week and watched a number of changes happen. The workers were taking charge of the work assignments and they were making sounds about opening the books and sharing the profits – if there were any. The boss man made the rounds, a couple of his thugs always in tow, but it was clear things had changed. He made requests but he gave no orders. He just went along with things.

I got all the story I was going to get and that’s what I came to find. We walked out the way we came in and my head was full of thoughts. Had we already arrived at the place where ordinary people would give up their freedom? Was it worth it? When it came down to it, the people had the power to overthrow the masters but they needed some sense of order, they needed an authority figure – especially now when the traditional authorities were no longer around.

We built a small fire off the trail and slept through most of the night. The last thing we wanted was to see the boss man again. I didn’t think he’d follow us but I was not in the mood to take a chance. We were the unwitting catalyst to change so you never know when the desire for irrational revenge will overtake someone. When morning broke we found a different trail, one that ran parallel to the road heading south, and we took it. The next day we were back on the road.

As before the traffic was sparse but I was noticing a trend. The vehicles (mostly trucks and vans that could carry things) were getting older, not newer. I would later ask an auto mechanic about this. He told me someone with a sense of how things worked could repair the older vehicles. The newer vehicles required technological wizardry. No one was going to pay a hundred bucks to hook their car up to a machine so they could tell you you needed a part from a plant in China that no longer existed. The hybrids were popular for a while but once the battery ran dry there was no replacement.

We walked for a couple days, making camp by night off the road without any trouble. On the third day a storm was coming in and the air was noticeably crisper, marking the end of summer and the beginning of autumn. We sought refuge in an abandoned cottage maybe a hundred yards from the road. That was another trend. People were letting go of their homes in the country. It was too difficult to survive out there. It was easier to band together and share the burdens.

We waited the storm out for two days before we got back out on the road. We turned down a ride from a man who was obviously drunk and looking for trouble. He was mad as hell but we just backed off and walked the opposite way until he lost interest and drove on. A little later we took a ride from a couple in a blue van. They were dressed in jeans and work shirts, his plaid and hers khaki. They both had long hair tied back but that no longer carried any cultural meaning. Cutting hair had become an inconvenience that was often ignored.

They were heading for a community called Paradiso they had heard about in the foothills somewhere near Madera. It was squatters land and a group of college students and idealists were trying to create a sustainable and self-sufficient lifestyle with solar energy and environmentally conscious design. They weren’t sure they had enough gas to get there but they were willing to try. Gas was a problem even if you had money. It was rationed and the only gas stations were controlled by the state. They were hard to find and were generally dry three out of every four weeks. There were abandoned vehicles everywhere but almost all of them had been siphoned.

I told them it was my intention to keep on moving but I wouldn’t mind visiting the place to learn their story and pass it on to others.

His name was Holly and hers was Janis and they both thought it was a great idea. They wondered what I had learned thus far so I told them about the bridge camp and the farm cooperative. While I hadn’t come to a rock hard conclusion I was favoring the view that kindness and cooperation were the best means of surviving these times. Those who tried to impose order or authority over large groups of people were fighting a losing battle. As long as the state was weak and could not enforce its will, there was a possibility that thugs and miscreants out for their own gain could take control. It wasn’t happening because the common, decent people were banding together. They were figuring out how to make things work in a lawless society. They were finding a way to establish their own kind of order based on kindness, charity and mutual respect.

I could see conflicting emotions in their expressions even as they nodded and gave encouraging remarks. I realized I was expressing an optimism that was grounded more in hope than fact. There were rumors of communities taken over by gangs and outlaws. Everything was uncertain. The future was a maze of possibilities and at least half of them were dark.

We passed a few solar crawlers on the road – improvised vehicles with solar panels that crawled along in the daylight hours at anywhere from five to fifteen miles per hour. They were becoming more common and I figured it was because there was no longer any time pressures, no deadlines and no destinations that couldn’t wait. That and the gas-rationing situation. Crawling along the road at a snail’s pace on the power of the sun seemed as good a way to pass the time as anything else.

We turned on a two-lane road heading east that became one lane filled with potholes. We crept along like a crawler navigating around the potholes. People had taken to filling holes and repairing roads on their own but this road hadn’t been tended to in a long time.

Janis noticed a flag hanging limp on windless day but there was something odd about it. As we drew nearer we could see it was an old American peace flag but it was hanging upside down. It was a sign of distress. We slowed even more and discussed what it could mean. Holly suggested it might just be a way of the keeping the riff raff out. Janis thought it was more serious. Combined with the state of the road, we decided it probably meant the community had been hit with a serious sickness.

We pulled over to discuss it. Getting sick these days could cost your life. There was a shortage of drugs and medical supplies. The government passed a law requiring doctors and nurses to treat the ill and injured regardless of their ability to pay. It resulted in doctors and nurses going underground. Who could blame them? Once you started treating the needy it never ended.

Janis had some nursing experience and they were both determined to press forward but they couldn’t ask me to go along against my will. I looked at Cinnamon and told them we were in. Whatever hardships lie ahead, I wanted to bear witness, help out if I could, and Cinn was sticking with me for better or worse.

We pressed on for another hour before we came to the place. There was large octagonal structure with a sign reading “Paradiso” carved in wood over double doors. It was obviously a community center where people would gather for meals and evening discussions. There were a handful of cottages surrounding a courtyard and a large windmill at its center. There were signs of other structures down walking paths out of our immediate view.

There was no one to greet us and no one in sight. It was late in the day but the sun was still up. There should have been plenty of activity to close a working day but there was nothing going on. The only sounds were crows feeding on vegetables in the community gardens. There was something definitely wrong.

We knocked on the door of the community center and knocked again. We heard no sign of activity on the other side of the door. We discussed going in and decided we would but Holly gave it one more try. He pounded it firmly like a police officer might do in a former time. (If the police came to your door these days they had no intention of knocking.)

Just as we were going over our options for knocking the doors down or finding another way inside, the door opened a crack and a woman with the eyes of sorrow and fatigue peaked through.

“Can I help you?” she mumbled.

Holly explained why they had come and Janis quickly added that she had nursing experience and if anyone was sick they were willing to help. The woman squinted her eyes and looked each of us over. She signaled someone inside before closing the door behind and asking us to join her at a picnic table not far from where we stood.

Her name was Jo. We would later learn she was in her late twenties but she looked much older with her puffy yellowed eyes and what seemed a greenish tint to her dark skin. She wore moccasins, loose fitted jeans and a cotton work shirt with a quilted shawl over her shoulders. We joined her at the table and she told us the story.

They had three visitors less than two months ago. They knew someone who knew about the place and they just wanted to see what was happening. After a couple days they moved on but they left something behind. One of them had a cough. He said he was recovering from a persistent cold and no one thought much of it at the time but within twenty-four hours several people were sick. Within forty-eight hours most of them were sick and within a week everyone was sick.

That was five weeks ago and things had only gone downhill. At this juncture only she and one other were able to stand long enough to take care of the others. They got word to the local authorities and someone from the Center for Infectious Diseases came out long enough to inform them that the illness was not tuberculosis, as they had feared; it was a persistent and resistant strand of a flu virus. They left some aspirin and some antibiotics but there was little to no hope that they would work.

They were right. They didn’t work. The only things they could do were the normal measures for the flu: try to keep the fever down, lots of fluids, cold compacts, and lots of soup. After a week of suffering almost everyone tried to get up and help care for the others but they almost invariably fell back down. There were only two people caring for twenty-nine others as we spoke and both of them were feeling weak – too weak to go out and tend the garden, which they desperately needed to survive not only the illness but the winter ahead.

If we stayed, she confided, we would certainly get sick. She would give no assurances. Not one had recovered yet and three had already died: a man, a woman and an infant child. They were buried in shallow graves out back. The poor woman cried saying that she did not know what they would do with the next corpse. They did not have the strength even to drag the body out. Despite all this, if we stayed they would be eternally grateful.

“If there is a god,” she said, “god would be grateful, too.”

I admit I was having doubts. I could have used Cinn as an excuse. But Holly and Janis were quick to offer their help in any way they could. They were staying and I was staying, too.

I was a little relieved when Jo suggested that we remain outside to tend the gardens, haul water from the well, and do whatever we could without coming inside. The longer we could remain healthy the better it would be for everyone.

Jo offered us one more out, speaking with a reluctance that revealed the strength of her character. She said they had heard a rumor that this sickness never leaves. Some survive, the rumor said, but they are always sick, always weak, and always struggling with the cough, the fever, the aches and pains.

She coughed into a rag she held in her hand and apologized each time she did. “If I were you I would not stay.”

Fair enough. We all understood. I think Cinnamon understood better than we did. She stayed away from the community room even when we approached and she kept her distance from Jo. She could smell the sickness, maybe even the death it promised.

Jo quietly extended her hand down low and Cinn came to her as if she held an irresistible treat. She rubbed behind her ears with whispers of good girl as only dog lovers can.

“Dogs thank god cannot get the human disease.”

She informed us that the cottages were empty and we could settle there. She told us she would bring us some bread and vegetable stew before nightfall and ambled back to the community room like an old woman too tired to say any more.

“If you decide to stay,” she said, “we’ll work things out in the morning.”

Janis volunteered to help with the evening meal but Jo threw up her hand. She had already explained we could only help if we remained healthy and we could only remain healthy if we remained out of contact with the sick.

We huddled together like lost souls until she reemerged with a tray of food along with everything we needed: silverware, bowls, bread and honey, a covered pot of stew, salt and pepper, plastic glasses and a pitcher of tea. She even brought a can of dog food and a bowl for Cinn. She was as kind as an only child’s grandmother yet she was clearly sick and tired. Her smile was difficult to sustain. She asked if we needed anything else and quietly returned to her duties, caring for those more ill than herself.

It was a virtual feast – even better than breakfast at the farm and as good as any I could remember since hard times came to be. The bread was fresh and home baked. The stew was delicately seasoned and full of fresh vegetables: potatoes, carrots, cabbage, broccoli, sweet corn and radishes, all grown in the gardens and a greenhouse out back. The tea was sweetened with honey. We ate everything before us and Holly wondered if they were trying to entice us to stay.

We talked until the sun went down, leaving us in the light of a half moon, until we were too exhausted to carry on. Holly and Janis were more determined even than before to make this place work. They would make their stand here no matter the cost.

They chose the nearest cottage while Cinn and I chose a place across the courtyard, mindful that the couple would need their privacy and space. The cottage had a thin layer of dust but it was otherwise clean. It was basically one room with a bed, a table and desk, and a small bathroom with a sink and toilet. There was a hot pan, a coffee maker and a row of shelves full of books. There was a lamp, an overhead light and a small room heater. We would later learn that electricity ran on solar arrays mounted on the roofs of each structure and an additional array out back. There were a handful of oil-powered generators for backup.

The bed was soft and comfortable with two pillows, a thick warm quilt and a stack of blankets in the closet. I settled on the bed with a copy of Cormac McCarthy’s post apocalyptic The Road and Cinnamon snuggled close for warmth.

I kept thinking what a beautiful place this really was: Open land with groves of valley oak, plenty of green plant life and fertile soil before the land turns hard and rocky in the foothills to the east. This land had given itself to growing fruits, nuts and vegetables for as long as anyone could recall. It was an ideal place for a group of like-minded people to come together and create a fruitful and sustainable life.

It would require a special breed of people who could bridge the gap between intellectual curiosity and the realities of surviving on and by the land. They would need a deep understanding of human nature and a willingness to work hard and struggle and suffer disappointments and keep working.

McCarthy’s story as only he could tell it was grave and relentless. Humanity was stripped of its human values down to the level of rank survival. A man and his son roamed the barren landscape of ruins searching for food and drinkable water. The social order was gone and what remained was ugly: violence without remorse, killing and cannibalism. I wondered if we would ever reach that place and if so how long it would take. I wondered if I even wanted to survive to live in such despair.

We awoke in the early morning and went outside to find no one waiting. We explored the surroundings with Cinn taking the lead. There was a creek nearby running along the east side of the compound. There were gardens on three sides and an orchard of almond, cherry, olive and apple trees. There was a tool shed and storage directly behind the community building and a large greenhouse next to it.

It was clear they had planned every detail of the community in advance. Everything had a purpose and each element of the plan was placed and plotted for maximum efficiency. These were not hippies on a utopian crusade. They were serious people given to serious thought. The courtyard was an outdoor gathering place and the community building served the same purpose for during the winter months or rainy seasons.

We picked apples, almonds and olives along the way, enjoying the fruit of other people’s labor. When we wondered back to the courtyard we found Holly and Janis waiting along with Jo’s partner in caretaking.

His name was Zar, short for Balthazar (although Jo would later tell us she thought it was short for Zarathustra; Zar had been a philosophy student deep into Nietzsche but he wanted to leave all that behind). He explained that most of the original group had been students at the University of California at Davis when everything went to hell. They lost their funding and could no longer sustain the student life so they banded together to form the community of their dreams, a paradise, a sustainable lifestyle, a life that left the earth unharmed yet fostered all the pleasures of human existence: arts, crafts, science, intellectual pursuit, knowledge, communications. They wanted it all.

It seemed like a good idea at the time and indeed it was but now the sickness consumed them. Every hour of every day came down to surviving the sickness. Zar wanted to talk. He wanted to talk about philosophy, idealism, values, art and literature. He wanted to talk about science or baseball or the weather – anything but what was happening here and now. He wanted to just talk like people used to talk but it wasn’t possible. People were depending on him and now they were depending on us.

“We’re grateful you’re here,” he said. “And we hope you’ll stay but we’ll understand if you don’t. This isn’t your fight.”

We repeated our assurances but the doubt would remain for a long while. It was just too much to ask of outsiders. It was too much to believe that someone in this bold new world would sacrifice their own interests, their own chances of survival, to help people they had never known. Maybe they were protecting themselves from expectations. It was hard enough to keep their spirits up from day to day through the drudgery and struggle, never knowing if the sickness would once again knock them to their knees. Maybe they were protecting themselves from the possibility that we would be stricken. If they were all going to die they did not want the deaths of three more on their shoulders.

Janis pleaded with him to let her inside to care for the sick. In what would be a daily ritual he refused to discuss it. They had made their decision. If it changed they would let her know. Until then we would remain outside. Janis demurred as she always would but she inquired about the situation inside. Zar told her as best he could. The sick were arranged in a circle on beds and cots around the periphery of an open space. The kitchen was separate and isolated by a doorway which they kept closed as much as possible. Janis asked about ventilation and he told her there was a fan to pump the air out in the ceiling. Janis suggested they open the doors as often as possible while the weather still permitted and Zar agreed to discuss it with Jo. From that point forward they would open the doors in the morning, at noon and in the evening when they emerged to bring us food and collect the fruits of our labor.

Zar had jotted down a list of chores that we could build into a routine. They pumped water from the creek to the gardens, the greenhouse and the community building by means of wind and solar power. It was an automated system but it needed maintenance to check for and repair breakdowns and blockages. That would become my primary duty. Janis and Holly would spend most of their time in the gardens, weeding and repairing the wire fences that protected them from scavenging animals. The rest of the time was spent planting and tending plants in the greenhouse. They did not know how long the weather would hold but they would depend on the greenhouse and the foods that were preserved in canning jars and stacked in a storage warehouse out back. We all spent time in the canning process.

We established a routine and the days went by almost unnoticed. The weather began to turn. We depended more and more on the backup generators but we did all we could to minimize our usage. There was an ample supply of candles and sometimes we spent time reforming the wax into new candles.

It was a workable plan. In the morning we shared a breakfast of fruit and nuts or occasionally oatmeal and coffee (a rare commodity in hard times). Around noon and again in the evening, Jo or Zar or sometimes both brought us meals and we supplied them with all the fruits, vegetables, spices and various items they might need. With the cold coming on, we added woodcutting and stacking to our chores. As much as they wanted to avoid burning wood they had not been able to find an option that would keep them warm enough in the winter months. Instead, they had worked on a filtering system to minimize the damage. Anything else would have to wait until spring.

Cinn was growing attached to the place as dogs do. They love to run and explore but they’re wired to find a home and root in. She loved Jo and Zar. It helped that they were the suppliers of food and treats but they loved her too. There were a couple of strays hanging around before the sickness hit but they wondered off in search of more reliable humans.

A week or two into our stay the first of the sleepers awakened and was allowed to come outside. She was young and bright eyed despite the lingering effects of the illness. Her name was Oleander and she had been a student of sociology before “the crash” as she called it. She was genuinely overjoyed to see us. We connected her to the outside world. She wondered as I did what was happening back home. Before the illness hit, they had participated in a communications project, a kind of pony express with bikes and motor scooters and solar crawlers instead of horses, but they had to drop out when they could no longer carry their weight.

We told her what we could, that times were hard everywhere, that people were finding all kinds of ways to adapt but this was the first place we found that was hit by the virus. It was something we all wondered. Was this an isolated sickness or had it spread throughout the valley and beyond? There were fears that it was a kind of modern plague for which society such as it was, was ill equipped to fight.

My thoughts wondered constantly back to my family, my wife and children, with that same fear. I always ran through the possibilities – sending a message, going back either to stay or to visit or just to observe – but I always came to the same conclusion: there was nothing I could do to help. I could only get in the way.

I went to sleep early that night with Cinn snuggled at my side and awakened in the darkened, early hours of the morning with a cold sweat covering my body. I struggled to get up and throw some water on my face but I lost the battle. The next thing I knew I was in the community room on the cot that Oleander had occupied. Suddenly, instead of caretaker I was among the cared for. I would learn firsthand the horrors of this virus that crept into the body and held it hostage for as long as it could.

At first I fought back, refusing to believe that I had fallen victim. Again and again, as Jo or Zar tried to talk me down, I tried to get up but my body refused. The pain was so acute and ran so deep that any movement triggered a cascade of agony. The fever took hold of my mind so that I no longer knew where I was or why or how I got there. Often enough I could not remember who I was. At times I was certain I was being held hostage by people who wanted to enslave me or steal the organs of my body. I was being tortured. I was being held against my will. They were injecting me with drugs that stopped me from moving.

The only thing that could bring me back to earth and reality was the worried gaze of my loyal friend and companion. Cinn was with me all the time. She liked to lay her head and paws on my chest and I never doubted her purpose was to comfort and heal me.

The sickness came in waves, washing over me, drowning me, dragging me through a dark landscape with shadow creatures, yellow eyes and snarling, scowling lips, surrounding me and devouring me. I was blue flame hot and shivering cold. Then, just as I thought I could not bear any more, it would release me, offering a glimpse of wellness before it resumed its punishing march.

I died a thousand agonizing deaths before I finally found my footing. When I did and when I could maintain my balance, Cinn was there, licking my face, welcoming me, and Janis was tending to me. Only a handful of people were still sick. The others had recovered and joined the outside world. I would learn in the next few days that one more had died, an older man who had been a professor to many of the people who formed the community. They were in mourning and would remain so through the winter.

I had missed Christmas but there was good news: They had sent a crawler to my hometown. They found a letter I had written but never sent. They made no contact. They were afraid that if they told my wife how sick I was, she would insist on coming and nursing me. They were afraid their actions would leave my children orphaned. The good news was my family was safe. They were struggling like everyone else but they were safe.

The air seemed fresher, the sunlight brighter and the whole world was a better place. I resolved to go home as soon as I was able. We would work it out. For better or worse, we would work it out.

Hard Times: Chapter 2 "Strength"

MADGE’S STORY

“Strength”



There’s an old song that says: You don’t know what you’ve got ‘til it’s gone. I never realized how true it was until hard times came to our house.

We were leading a good life though we may not have appreciated it at the time. We were buying our home, a fine house in a good neighborhood. Our children went to a good school. We had to mind our budget of course but we had everything we needed and anything we wanted we could get if we set our minds to it.

I never dreamed it could happen to us. My husband Stone and I were content and secure. We played by the rules. We worked hard and always tried to the right thing. We bought a house when we were able and when we thought the time was right we traded up. We found the house we thought would be our family’s home until we were old and retired and the children moved out into the world on their own.

Was it a bad decision? In hindsight, yes. Was it our fault? We had a financial advisor. We trusted him. He had never been wrong before. All those people who told us we were dreaming, living beyond our means, taking too many risks, where are they now? Is it their fault everything went to hell? No. It’s no one’s fault. It hit us like Katrina hit New Orleans. Maybe we should have known better. Maybe we should have been more cautious but, really, it would only have delayed the inevitable.

When we lost our house and moved in with my mother, I was still confident that everything would work out. It was only a temporary move. It wouldn’t take long. Stone would find a job and we would find an apartment. It was only a setback, nothing to be worried about. But weeks turned to months and Stone couldn’t find work. There was no work. He was trying as hard as he could but no one was hiring. Everyone was cutting back and taking care of their own.

When my brother Carlin moved in with his family everything changed. What was difficult before became all but impossible when Uncle Bud and Aunt Mildred moved in. What else could we do? They had no place else to go. Looking back, that was when Stone changed. He always had hope. Even when things were falling down all around he was solid. He never gave up. He always had encouraging words.

“Don’t worry, babe, we’ll make it work.”

I still remember the day I came home with two bags of groceries worried that we would not have enough to last the month. It was a familiar dilemma: whether to buy more macaroni and cheese products that lacked nutritional value but were cheap enough to last or to try to ration nutritional foods. With electricity sporadic fresh fruits, vegetables and meat would go bad within a week. The garden we planted in the back yard never produced enough. Nuts and grains were best but it was difficult to get the children to eat enough of them and the price kept going up.

It was a constant struggle but at least it gave me an opportunity to think about something other than the problems we were having trying to live together: too many people and not enough room. Carlin was having male competition troubles with Stone. The kids were constantly fighting, yelling, screaming. In normal times it would have all washed over. Kids are kids and men are men. But these were not normal times. Two families and an elderly woman in a small two-bedroom house was relentless pressure.

I was beginning to quarrel with Carlin’s wife, Joan. She was the kind of woman who thought it her duty to stand up for her own regardless of right and wrong. No one seemed to realize that we would all have to make adjustments and we were not alone. Everyone had to make adjustments.

Joan’s idea of parenting was a low-pitched drone. She was on her little boy Nathan and her little girl Shannon all the time but if anyone else admonished them in any way she went on the defensive. No, she went on the attack. Things had gotten so bad that my mother withdrew to her small room, a converted study, for most of the day. Carlin refused to intervene and Stone wanted nothing to do with it.

That was what I came home to that day. I put away the groceries, checked on the kids playing outside, and went to the family bedroom where I found the note from Stone. I read it three times before it registered and I began to cry.

I cried for a long time and then, when my tears were all spent, I got angry. A father does not abandon his children under any circumstances. We needed him. We needed him now more than ever. He could offer all the excuses in the world but it couldn’t erase the fact that it was selfish. He was looking after himself. What kind of man was he? Had I been fooled all these years?

No, he was a good man. He was doing what he thought was right. But I needed my anger to make it through the days. Isn’t it strange what we need? No matter how irrational we hold on to it because there’s nothing else. We hold on to it until we find something else to hold on to or we go insane. Sometimes we need to hold our anger. I know I did.

I needed someone to blame and Stone was my someone. I spent the next month in constant rage, railing at my kids, arguing with Joan, pleading with my mother to stand up to them, stirring up trouble and looking for it. It was horrible. I was becoming someone I didn’t know and didn’t like. I re-read Stone’s letter every night as if it was hiding some secret, as if I could change the ending by discovering the code but of course I couldn’t.

It was my job in those days to take the kids to school and I held to it as if it was all that mattered. Kids have to have an education. At least that’s what we were taught. You have to have a good education to get a good job, to secure your future, to become a good and useful human being. It never occurred to me back then that the future might not be the kind of place where an education was still valued.

I still believed in the old ways so every day I got them up at half past six, got some food in them and marched off to Johansen Elementary. The schools fought hard to stay open. Even after the money ran out they stayed open. Even after the janitors left they stayed open. They lost the vice principles and deans and the specialists and they stayed open. The teachers lost their pay and they hung on as long as they could. We took up collections and struggled on but in the end it was a losing battle. Teachers have families and loved ones too. They finally gave up, hugs and kisses and tearful goodbyes with promises that they’d be back as soon as times got better. But they didn’t get better and the schools were lost to vagabonds and homeless people. It only fed my anger. I was angry at everyone. I was angry at the governor and the president. I was angry at the school board and the city council. A group of us parents organized and marched on the streets but after a while there was no one left to protest and no one left to hear us.

I remember when people always criticized the schools. Teachers were overpaid and got too much time off. But when hard times came, they hung on longer than the police, the firefighters, the prisons and the hospitals. I was angry at all of them.

My anger finally played itself out when Charlie, my youngest, only five and still as innocent as the day she was born, apologized for dropping her spoon on the kitchen floor. I realized that I was just about to go off. I realized the damage I was doing to her young mind and to Denim, her older brother, as well. It was not possible. It was not acceptable. It was not me.

I started blaming myself. I didn’t understand when Stone needed me to understand. I didn’t give him enough support when he was down. He was a man. He was supposed to be strong and I leaned on him when he needed someone to lean on. I turned myself inside out and I began to look for him.

At first I didn’t know where to look. Every park in town was a camp of homeless people. Every public building, every abandoned storefront, every shopping mall was a shelter for the growing number who lost their homes. Every foreclosed home for that matter was now just another roof for whomever claimed it. I went to see our old home and found it falling apart with overgrown weeds, broken windows and doors. It was trashed. I wondered why they bothered to kick people out of their homes when the result was obvious. There was no place for us to go.

I started looking in the parks. I made a copy of a picture and handed it out. I stapled some to trees and telephone poles. I asked everyone I came across: Have you seen this man? If you do, tell him to come home. Tell him we love him and we need him.

The things I saw frightened me. Every park was barren. A few patches of grass, makeshift gardens, tents and cardboard shelters, mounds of garbage everywhere, people crowded together, men, women and children. The kids had no room to play, no place to bath and not enough food or drinking water. Some of the trees were being chopped up for firewood. And the smell, the stench emanating from the restrooms. They must have stopped working months ago. People did what they had to do. They designated an area and buried their waste with a shovel. It was horrifying. They were destroying their own living space but what choice did they have? In the beginning, the police tried to keep order but they soon gave up. By now, there were so few police they never bothered to come to the parks or the shelters unless there was a riot.

There were riots. That’s what people do when they’re hungry. That’s what people do when the authorities let them down. That’s what fathers do when they can’t take care of their families. It’s what mothers do when their children have no safe place in the world – no schools, no parks, no playgrounds.

You learn not to see. You learn to filter it out. I had a purpose. I was looking for my children’s father. That’s all I could do. I taught the children at home every day: two or three hours of reading, writing and math. I made lunch and saw to it they ate. Then I went out to the parks. When I covered the nearby parks, I got on a bike and went to the others. At first Denim went with me but it made him so sad when we came up empty. I was relieved when he decided not to go. His young tears were more than I could handle.

I rode all over town. I made a grid and covered it methodically. I rode by the stores I used to shop in, the restaurants we ate at, the novelty shops, art galleries, department stores, card shops, bakeries, fast food stops, office supplies, banks, clothing and jewelry stores. All of them were closed, boarded up and looted. The malls were a disaster. I couldn’t believe how fast it happened. All of these places were once the center of someone’s life. How could it all crumble so quickly?

There were stacks of plastic containers, bags and broken down appliances on every street corner. It wasn’t as bad as one would think. After the early days when the stench of raw sewage overwhelmed, people learned. Everything that could be burned was either burned or stored for later. There was very little edible garbage or refuge. People ate what they had and what couldn’t be eaten was used in gardens. Human waste was buried. Gardens were everywhere there was soil. It was a new way of life. People worked in them and protected them from harm. Water and containers were reused.

They say there’s always good in bad times and I guess this was it. The scent of fresh fruit and vegetables on the vine traveled down the lanes and roads, breathing hope into the people that we would survive.

I met all kinds of people along the way. I tried to stand off. The last thing I wanted was to get involved in other people’s lives but I couldn’t help caring. People who had come from high paying jobs were working alongside people who had worked with their hands all their lives. They were pulling together, working together, taking care of each other’s children. In many ways it warmed my heart.

Finally, someone recognized the man in the picture. I was at a park in the north end of town and a man who was busy repairing fabric for tents took a look and looked again. Yes, he had seen that face and if memory served him it was at the bridge camp across the river on the south end of town. He couldn’t be sure but he thought it was his face and he thought that was the place.

It was too late in the day to make it to the bridge camp before nightfall so I decided to go home. On the ride I thought things through. My emotions were mixed. I understood why he did what he did but I also knew that many families managed to stay together. There was joy in the possibility that I knew where he was but there were also misgivings. Months had passed since we were together. What if he was with someone? What if he didn’t want to come home? I couldn’t be sure of anything, even that he would be there, so I decided not to tell the kids or anyone at home. I would stick to my schedule. Take care of the kids, work in the garden and then I’d ride to the bridge camp to see if my husband was there and wanted to see his children.

I couldn’t sleep that night. I knew I would dream of him and I didn’t want that. I wanted my mind to be clear and open. I wanted to look in his eyes and see if his love was still there. I wanted to be sure of my own love for him. I wanted to listen without judgment. I wanted no anger, no retribution and no blame. I went over and over it in my mind. How I would look and what I would say. I tried not to bend the conversation to my will. I tried to see the world from his eyes and use the thoughts and words that came from his heart.

I was pretty much a zombie in the morning but I went through the motions and got through the day. I kissed Denim and Charlie before I left and they gave me that strange look that tells you they know something is up. I wanted to tell them but I couldn’t. I couldn’t risk the disappointment.

Riding through the old neighborhood on my way to the bridge was a blur. I had to stop to gain my bearings. An older man asked if I needed help and I almost panicked. The more I thought the less I understood. When I finally reached the old bridge with its statuesque guardian lions, worn and cracked with age, the only thought I had left was that I wanted my husband back.

I walked over the bridge trailing my bike alongside. My heart was throbbing like a migraine. I couldn’t see for the tears that I couldn’t stop. I had to sit down and breathe as soon as I cleared the bridge. I could see some of the people from the camp below going about their business, gathering wood, collecting berries, tending the gardens and doing whatever it was they had to do to survive. They looked like regular people, not the haggard homeless bunch we used to ignore as much as possible.

A woman noticed me and smiled. She stopped her gardening and walked up the dirt trail to where I was still sitting, unable to stir. Sitting beside me she asked my name. It put me strangely at ease. How rare it was to have someone ask your name these days. Her name was Solar. We were of the age when unusual names were common.

It was a pleasant day, still warm though autumn was winding in, and we sat and talked about the weather and how good it was for the gardens and the people working to survive the coming winter. We talked about the change in our lives and how it wasn’t all bad. People were learning to live together. People were returning to the earth. The poisoning of the air and water had all but stopped and the planet was healing.

Finally I told her why I was there and showed her the picture. She didn’t hesitate. She knew Stone and knew him well enough to know his name. She said that Stone was in camp when she arrived. He was honest, hard working and giving. He helped her set up when a spot opened. He was alone but he never tried to impose. She felt warm toward him and wouldn’t have minded if he had. He was always a gentleman.

Stone left yesterday morning. Solar got up early just to say goodbye and wish him well. She asked me how we were related and I told her. She just nodded. It was a story she had heard dozens of times. Many families were torn apart. She was living with a man herself when hard times hit. They didn’t last two weeks. He left to be with his family and she was out in the streets. She found the bridge camp and was lucky that someone had just left. She had her place, she felt safe and she was comfortable but she was worried about surviving the winter outdoors. They were building a wall to block the western wind and they had plenty of wood for burning but she was still worried. They all were. They knew all of them wouldn’t make it. They only hoped that most of them would.

“You should talk to Sugar,” she said suddenly.

Sugar was an older man who became close with Stone. Solar explained he was a kind of teacher. He taught survival skills. He helped Stone prepare for the road. If anyone knew where he was going it was Sugar.

She helped me down the hill, sat me down at her campsite and heated up some tea while we waited for Sugar. He was working on a new greenhouse and shelter in the orchards up river. I was worried that I wouldn’t make it home in daylight but I felt I had to talk to the man. I had to know where Stone went and what he was thinking. I couldn’t go on if I didn’t know.

Sugar came walking into camp with a couple others not long before sundown. We walked out to meet him and he seemed to know who I was without asking. His expression slowly changed from joy to sorrow as he realized why I had come.

“You missed him by a day and a half,” he said.

His gaze was downward, as if studying the ground beneath his feet, and his remorse was so sincere that for a moment I thought he must be to blame. But anyone with half the sense of a blue jay could see his remorse was riding on sympathy, not guilt. Like Stone, he was decent man doing the best he could to ease the burden on his fellow travelers. He had the kind of face that revealed the hardships of years of struggle. Life had not been kind to Sugar but nothing he had encountered so far could defeat his gentle giving spirit.

We sat in his campsite in the cool of the evening, a soft wind singing through the trees, more thoughts than we could manage to speak. Sugar told me Stone’s story, his reasons for leaving reflecting his love and good will, and I told him mine. Solar listened, remaining silent, letting the words flow on a warm current of empathy. Sugar’s story ended with Stone departing camp on his way south with instructions to take the untraveled roads. He had a vague idea of returning to his blood family in Colorado but Sugar thought it was unlikely he would cross the desert.

“Most likely he ends up in some camp. He’ll find shelter for the winter and then he’ll come back home in the spring.”

We let that thought settle as the camp came to life with people preparing for dinner. I thought about following Stone’s path south on the hope that I could still find him if fate was on our side but Sugar advised against it. It was a hard road even for a well-traveled man. It was far too dangerous for a woman alone. Solar nodded in agreement, as if the road had been cruel to her as well, and reminded me of the children. Of course, I thought. Fate had already made its play. I would go home to be with my children and Stone would travel on alone. It was not what I wanted, not what I envisioned, but I still had hope that the road would wind back home. I would wait for the spring.

The sun was falling from the sky, a mellow sunset just blooming over the trees and foliage to the west. They told me it was too late to ride back home and asked me to stay the night. I realized they were right. My children would worry but they would be all right. They saw to it that I was fed and fixed up a place for me to sleep, a couple of wool blankets and a makeshift pillow. There was a camp bonfire with music and singing and good times. Sugar pulled a few beers out of his stash and shared them with Solar and me.

I felt good. I felt warm and wanted. For one night there were no expectations, no struggles with my family, no arguments or pressure. For one night I let all the emotions I kept contained inside float out into the last of a summer breeze. Solar and I talked into the late night – mostly about the future we envisioned, the one we could paint with the brush of our desires – and then I slept. I slept soundly and deeply, as I hadn’t in many months.

In the morning I thanked them and promised I would come back to the camp whenever I could and I would bring my children to meet them. They smiled as if I was only being polite but I meant it. I wanted them to be a part of our lives. I wanted my children to see how other people lived. If their father never came back, I wanted them to be a bridge to his memory. Children need to remember the good.

I rode back to my mother’s house and called Denim and Charlie into our room. I told them a story of their father. It was a different story than the one they knew. It was a story of a man doing his best under the most difficult circumstances, a man who loved his wife and children enough to take on the hardships of the road. I told them he would return as soon as he could. I told them that spring was the best we could hope for.

They seemed pleased with my story. Denim had that look of knowing that children develop at a certain age. He was glad I came to terms with his father’s absence but he didn’t believe he would return. Charlie believed. Her eyes shined with delight even through her tears when I said we would wait for spring. I wiped her tears away, kissed her on both cheeks, and prayed she would not be disappointed.

We settled back into our daily routine as best we could. I resolved to be a peacemaker in our home as much as possible. I tried hard to understand everyone’s point of view. I complimented Joan every chance I had though it was not easy to find opportunities. I worked extra hard to win over her kids. They were sweet kids really. All kids are sweet. They just wanted to know the rules. I worked on my relationship with Carlin and encouraged Uncle Bud and Aunt Mildred to engage in family decisions.

We all made an effort to give my mother the respect she deserved. This was her house and it was not her fault the whole world turned upside down. If she wanted something, someone got it for her. If she made a decision, it was up to us to carry it out. Eventually, she came out of isolation and became the strong and loving woman I had known before.

My thinking changed on schooling the children. Yes, reading, writing and math were important, very important, but there were new skills the children needed just as much. We studied gardening and alternative energy systems. We studied nutrition and water conservation. I went to the library every Thursday (the library was still functioning with volunteers who believed that books were the most important legacy we could preserve for future generations) and brought home a selection of books for reading: Science books on greenhouse effects and climatology, books on the sun and the stars, history books on the Great Depression, industrialization, immigrant movements, the pilgrims, slavery, women’s rights, civil rights, the Civil War, the World Wars, the displacement of indigenous tribes and westward migration. I wanted my children to know that every generation has challenges and they too could overcome.

I brought home great books of literature: The Grapes of Wrath, Blood Meridian, A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, The Lord of the Rings, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Don Quixote, Moby Dick, The Wizard of Oz, The Last of the Mohicans, Invisible Man, Frankenstein, The Three Musketeers, Robinson Crusoe, 1984, A Brave New World. I didn’t care about the level of reading. I wanted them to appreciate the words and the stories. We took turns reading the words aloud for their sound and rhythm and then we retold the story in our own words.

I don’t know if it was my efforts that made a difference. I’m sure if I asked Joan she’d say it was something she did. But things got better around the house. The adults were more respectful of each other and the children became friends. Maybe it’s inevitable. When people realize there is no other viable choice, they begin to adjust.

In November we received word that a nasty virus was hitting communities in the northern part of the valley. It was headed our way. Whole communities and camps were laid out. A lot of people had already died. The medicines we had (even if they were available) could only ease the suffering. Antibiotics didn’t work. (They hadn’t really worked for a long time.) No one knew where it came from or why but everyone was afraid it was a modern version of the plague. We got together with our neighbors and decided to put up barriers at both ends of our street to keep the vagabonds out. Some of our neighbors wanted to keep everyone out, friends and family included. We voted them down. I was not only one who was waiting for a wandering family member to return. We agreed that if someone got sick we would quarantine the house. Before it was over two houses were quarantined and three people were dead. Two of them were children. That’s the great shame of illness. It takes the young and innocent along with the old and weak first. It’s the way of the world and though it was hard on all of us, it made us tougher, stronger and more determined.

We knew those children. They were a little younger that Charlie but she played with them often enough. I can’t tell you how many times she asked why she couldn’t go to the Parker house any more. She couldn’t understand that some sicknesses were deadly. She couldn’t wrap her mind around death. Even after they were gone, she asked about them.

What do you tell a child who has no concept of death? I told her the truth. They were dead and buried. They were not coming back. I’m afraid Charlie still didn’t understand but she appreciated my trying to explain. She welcomed the comfort of my voice and the warmth of my embrace. Only when I cried did she.

Denim got it. He knew people were dying all the time. He’d seen them on our bicycle journeys. I was afraid he was becoming too hard, too immune to the emotions that a child his age should have. I suppose everyone grows up faster in hard times. We worked hard. We had no time for grief or mourning. We went on. It was our job to keep moving.

When the wind brought the first chill of winter we were prepared. We had a good supply of fruits and vegetables we canned ourselves. The greenhouse was up and running. We had a solar panel that Carlin salvaged from an abandoned house, a generator and a small supply of gas. We had a wood stove and plenty of wood cut to size.

Come December, two weeks short of Christmas, we were beginning to feel assured. We were beginning to have confidence that we could make it through the winter and if we could make it through the first winter, why not the second and the third? That was when the tornadoes hit. There was no television or radio so we had no warning. The weather turned unseasonably warm and anyone who had ever lived in Oklahoma or Missouri could tell you it looked like tornado weather.

It was late afternoon and I was out in the garden, weeding, hoeing, checking the drip system and pulling a few of the remaining tomatoes for supper when the temperature dropped and a shadow drew over me. I could hear the wind but I couldn’t feel it. I heard what sounded like pebbles dropping on the plastic covering of our greenhouse and roof. I looked up and the clouds were writhing in spectacular formations with flashes of turquoise and streaks black. I got up and walked out into the yard where I could a clear view and I saw two then three funnel clouds racing in our direction. The wind began to sing as I rushed inside to tell everyone to take cover. We didn’t have a basement or a storm shelter. This was California where things like this never happened. Well, they never used to happen. We all crowded into the bathroom and Carlin pulled two mattresses from the beds and we pulled them over us as the windows shook and the storm’s rage screamed so loud we had to cover our ears. The children were all crying and my mother was breathing so hard I thought she was having a heart attack. It passed in no more than thirty seconds but it felt like the end of the world. We waited in case it was the eye of the storm.

Some said it was a series of nine twisters, one after another, some weaker, some stronger, but they tore whole neighborhoods and camps apart. Buildings twisted like children’s toys, homes and trees uprooted, cars, vans and trucks tossed onto roofs. It sounded like locusts but it was so loud and so relentless. When it got close it rumbled the earth.

We were lucky. Our house was untouched. Tornados are like a roulette wheel. They twist and wind and crack like a whip and when they pass and the shock of the pounding volume subsides and the pressure that steals all sense of balance eases, we are left to see who the monster claimed. In our neighborhood it claimed a house on the corner and one across the street. It could have been us. We were lucky or blessed or marked for another trial – whatever your beliefs allow.

The people in the houses were lucky too. They still had their lives. They were badly bruised and scraped up but the monster had no appetite for human flesh. It wanted only brick and mortar in our corner of town.

The neighbors took them in – the ones that still had room – and we all agreed to contribute food, wood, whatever it took to make up for what was lost. Our confidence was shaken. The whole town was hit. We had no way of knowing how much damage was done. We had no way of knowing whether anyone in the government could help or if they even knew what was happening.

Overnight our supplies did not look so plentiful. We went back to work expanding our greenhouses, collecting and cutting wood, making repairs and improvements. The twisters had shaken our confidence but they did not weaken our resolve. If anything we were more determined than before. We were conditioned by now to expect adversity. We would not back down.

We celebrated Christmas as a neighborhood in the backyard of the Bannister place, the largest house on the block. We had home grown wine and the finest array of garden vegetables and fruit pies ever assembled. We had catfish and nuts and cashews and chocolates from the Caribbean and coffee, sweet delicious coffee from Columbia. We had music and dance and olives and grapes and bakery delights with sliced almonds and rare spices.

There was no turkey and no ham. Since food became scarce people stopped raising animals for meat. It was more efficient and economical to raise crops for direct consumption. People still ate meat but it came from hunting and trapping rather than poultry farms or pig farms or cattle ranches.

The children all had gifts from Santa. There was licorice and cotton candy and jelly babies and fudge and strawberries and blueberry jams and dolls carved of wood and models of castles and log cabins. There were books: whatever book a child desired was hers or his forever.

It was a beautiful Christmas. It was the most beautiful Christmas in the history of the world. We had peace. We had our basic needs fulfilled. We had a good idea of what tomorrow would bring and we were ready to face the challenge. It was the Christmas of hope. With so much loss and so much suffering we had a rebirth of spirit.

Everywhere I went it was the same. I brought my children to the Bridge Camp on Christmas Eve. We brought gifts of fine foods and spirits. We brought the thanks and blessings of our family and friends. We brought the spirit of unity and we received more than we gave.

“And in the end the love you take is equal to the love you make.”

I will never forget that Christmas as long or as short as I live. It will be one of my last memories. My youngest Charlie was blooming as a person. She found her rhythm, her step and her calling. She became a dancer, a singer and a person with opinions. My son Denim matured before he should have. He discovered the joy of life that is Christmas for the first time and it would never abandon him again.

After Christmas we settled in, mending our clothes, tending the greenhouse, making household repairs, canning and stocking and finding ways to spend the night. Without television and radio or the internet we learned how to carry on conversations. We found board games stored away in the garage – monopoly, checkers, chess, trivia – and we played for hours before we retired for the evening. It was like those old pioneer movies and television series that no one can quite remember. It was quiet. It was so quiet that you could hear a dog barking blocks away. You could hear a neighbor’s argument or someone walking on the street with hard-heeled shoes. No one could move around outside at night without drawing all eyes and ears. It was strangely reassuring.

The winter was so mild that we hardly ever had to light a fire. We wore layers of clothing and wool sweaters and draped a blanket over our laps. The children huddled with their parents and grandparents, exchanging the warmth of their bodies.

We were almost comfortable and content when the visitors came. Looking back it was probably inevitable. There were those who prepared for the winter and those who didn’t. When the food ran out they came looking. Some said they were gangsters from the big cities migrating to the valley where less people were competing for more resources. Others said they were the last phase of the prisoner release, hardened criminals, violent and unprepared to survive in the world by any other means. Whoever they were and whatever their reasons we were not prepared for what they offered.

Three of them showed up one evening when everyone was inside. They banged a couple of garbage can lids together until we came outside. They were not tall but broad, wearing leather jackets and carrying clubs, chains and knives. Once we were assembled, our men and a handful of women with baseball bats and garden tools, they told us there was trouble coming and they were offering protection. In exchange, they wanted food.

We heard their appeal and we all understood: They wanted to feed themselves with our produce, fruits and vegetables we had grown with our own hands, canned and stored, and in exchange they would protect us from themselves. It was a shakedown and once it began it had no end. They would take a little at first, and then more and more, until neither we nor our children had enough to eat.

We looked at each other in fear and skepticism and a man who considered himself one of our leaders (and I suppose he was) spoke for us all: He told them we needed time to talk it over. The three of them smiled and rattled their chains, playfully tapped their clubs in their hands, and one of them informed us they would be back in a couple of days to learn our decision.

“Talk all you want,” he said. “These boys are coming and they’re not like us. They’ll take everything you got and they won’t ask you nice.”

Thankfully none of our men acted on their impulse to challenge them. Big John and Jose were biting their lips. They felt like their manhood was threatened. But we needed time no matter what we decided to do. There were the children and the old folks to think about.

We called a neighborhood meeting first thing after dinner. We gathered at the Bannister’s and every house was represented. We all agreed it was a shakedown and they couldn’t be trusted. There was no guarantee they would keep their word. In fact no one believed they would. Still, we could not agree on what to do. The men led by Big John and Jose wanted to fight. Several of them had fancy hunting bows and arrows. They wanted to collect weapons and set up defenses. The women were divided. Some thought we had no choice. We had to fight. If we gave in god knows what would happen: rape, kidnapping, child abuse, it all came out. Others thought we could try negotiating. At least it would give us more time to prepare. Maybe the authorities would come to our aid. Maybe we could get the children out.

We decided we would send a runner to the only remaining police center. Who would have thought that a city of this size would be down to one police station? In the beginning, when things went bad but the police and firefighters and public health people still had paying jobs, and the police were still holding on to their old authority, they thought it was their responsibility to protect the rich. But the rich never reciprocated, never shared the wealth, never even thought about the families of the people that protected them. So everything changed. When the money ran out it was all volunteers. Volunteers ran all of the public services now. They received extra food and gas coupons and that was fine because money had no real value. Some people hoarded it in anticipation of a return to normalcy but even that expectation was fading. There would have been thousands of volunteers except there was a strict limit. There wasn’t enough food and gas was a luxury. The police that remained were obviously overstretched. They were ex-police officers, security people and military personnel. We had asked for their help before – to deal with thieves mostly – and they never came. We didn’t expect help this time either but we had to try. If they didn’t come for this we could be sure they would never come.

Not having made a decision and not knowing what would happen with the police, we started working on our defenses. Carlin was in the military so he got involved in the planning, training and preparations. They had four high tech bows, three of them the smaller hand-held variety and one traditional bow. Each had a dozen arrows. They set up targets and started practice in the back yard of the Bannister house. The plan was to place them on roofs at each end of the street, looking down on the barricades.

We gathered a dozen or so baseball bats, wood and metal, and distributed them to able-bodied men and women. We had chains, golf clubs, stones and baseballs, clubs fashioned from the handles of brooms and garden tools. We had axes and hatchets and butcher knives. We strengthened our barricades with old stoves and refrigerators, cars and trucks.

I remember looking at the assortment of weapons and the people that were supposed to use them and all I could think was what a disaster it would be if we really had to fight. I waited until the day was over and dinner was done to ask Carlin what he thought. He was tired and agitated and the sweat from his hard work and worry made his skin shine in the candlelight. He shook his head and his face turned dark. He didn’t want to say it was hopeless. In his mind there was no choice. If these people had a large force and they were allowed in, he was certain they would take everything. He believed they would move the people out or use them as they pleased: slaves for cooking, cleaning, farming, sex, sport. He knew we were not ready to face them down. Maybe we would never be ready. We were not fighters but we were survivors. His one hope was that we could put up enough of a fight that they would choose to move on. There were many other neighborhoods that had as much and more than we had and many of them would open the doors of negotiations. If we put up a resistance, if we made them take casualties, if we showed we were willing to fight, that might be enough.

He felt strongly that the women, children and the elderly should be evacuated even though he had no clue where – anywhere but here was his only thought. I told him we should think of our own family first and we should start thinking now while there was still time.

All the adults were at the table. The children were playing in the living room. Everyone was quiet, waiting for what Carlin said next. All the weight of the family was falling on his shoulders and I wished Stone were here to lighten his load. Carlin was not born to be a leader. He felt things deeply but he had learned to hold it in. He became stoic over the years and others counted on him to remain cool and collected. He was feeling the pressure now and it registered on his face. He was anguished and slow to speak. When he did we were all the more ready to listen.

He said that if we were having this discussion we could be sure that others were as well. He said we had to think beyond tomorrow. Even if we could find a place where we would be safe for a day or two, we would still have to survive the winter. Even if we survived the winter we would have to start over with nothing. He told us that things looked grim but we at least had a plan. If we stuck together we had a chance. If we fell apart there was no chance.

Everyone nodded in agreement and I had to give in. He said that we would find a temporary safe haven in the morning. He assured us we would find someplace within the area. We would give food for shelter and someone would welcome us. Then we would transport the children, the old people and mothers. He said that he had broached the subject with Big John but there wasn’t enough time. He was sure everyone would agree.

I felt better knowing we would try to get the children out but I also knew there were a lot of problems and I could see most of them. The roads weren’t safe with these criminals roaming around. How could we transport children and old people? If they hit our neighborhood, why wouldn’t they have hit others in our area? How far would we have to go? How much food would we have to promise? Why would they believe us? If we lost the neighborhood, there would be no food. Some of the old people couldn’t walk. Some were sick. Some of the children were only babies. There were so many problems and so little time.

Late that night we received good news. Our runner returned with word that the military was on its way. The police center had a short wave radio connection to the military base. They were tracing the movement of the Folsom gang (named for the prison that was their home). They started out as thieves and thugs, taking what they needed and moving on. As they made their way south they got bolder and more violent. By the time they hit our town they were taking over whole neighborhoods as they intended to do with ours. They left a trail of blood and horror wherever communities decided to fight back. They were not afraid of losing some of their own. It was a price they were willing to pay. They were picking up recruits as they went along. What began as a predominantly Latino gang was now multi-ethnic and diverse, its members virtually unidentifiable. They were becoming a threat to the established order (such as it was) which is why they became a target.

The military decided to make a stand with us. They rolled in three transport vehicles in the early morning hours and evacuated everyone but a handful of men. Carlin was one of those who stayed in the neighborhood. They were needed to carry out the plan. Big John, Jose, Carlin and a couple of others would greet the gangsters at the barricade to inform them that the neighborhood had decided to refuse their offer. Then they would wait for the gang to assemble in full force.

We were taken to a large warehouse with a concrete floor, metal walls and a high metal roof. They put up barriers to shield us from the soldiers as they did their training exercises. It was cold – not physically but emotionally. There was no human touch. They did what they could to make us more comfortable: laying down rugs, bringing out toys, books, small chairs and tables for the children and board games for both children and adults. They served us warm meals and an officer gave us periodic updates about what was happening at home. It was always a little vague and stiff as if he had rehearsed and performed these duties a hundred times before.

He told us there little chance of anything going wrong. They not only had guns and ammunition, they were the elite soldiers of former wars. The Folsom gang was no match for them. He never said there would be a massacre. It didn’t need to be said. They were criminals and there were no prisons or jails to put them in.

We were trapped inside. They wouldn’t allow us to go out – as if we would give away their location, as if anyone would choose to attack them. They set up a walkway indoors, barricaded so we couldn’t see what was going on, so we couldn’t tell anyone about the weapons they had. It was strange and cold. I spent all my time with the children, reading and playing games and teaching them the wonders of a life they might never know again. I told them about the Grand Canyon and the ocean and zoos and the Yosemite waterfalls. I told them about running in the parks when the parks were still clean and green and full of squirrels and dogs without leashes. I saw the wonder in their young eyes and I realized how wondrous life really was before the fall. I wished Stone were there.

On the third day our information officer told us the Folsom scouts had come back to our neighborhood where they were told their offer was refused. The officer said it was only a matter of time. They would be back and soon it would all be over. Three days later it was. We were told that our loved ones were safe and the Folsom gang would never bother us again.

We packed what little we had, climbed in the transport vehicles and headed back home. For some reason I paid attention to the direction we were going and the amount of time it took. We traveled east, where we took some turns and made some stops that I surmised was designed to disorient us, and then we went east again and then south. I figured out why they wanted to keep their location secret. They were not afraid of an assault. They weren’t afraid of anything. They didn’t want anyone to know their response time. It would take them a good 90 minutes to reach our town and another thirty to an hour to get to our neighborhood. An outlaw gang would have a good two hours to take and do whatever they wanted before the army could get there. Add a day or two for the information to travel and an outlaw gang would pretty much have free reign as long as they kept moving. No wonder the military wanted a showdown. It was the only way they could stop them.

As we neared our destination, the transports stopped and an information officer informed us that there was some collateral damage. Collateral damage: That was the phrase the military used whenever a large number of civilians were killed at war. Collateral damage had names like My Lai, Fallujah, Abu Ghraib, Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The use of that phrase was calculated to brace us for bad news. Some our homes were hit by fire bombs. Apparently it was a contingency they were not prepared to counter or if they were they didn’t think it was worth the effort. The information officer informed us that some of us would have the option of returning to base until other living arrangements could be made.

I knew in my gut that our house was one of the damaged. I guess others felt the same way and some of them were right. Three homes were burned beyond repair and ours was one. I didn’t know what to feel or rather I didn’t know how to handle the anger that I felt. Should I be grateful that Carlin was unharmed? Was it enough that the family was still together?

Carlin told us later that he had to be restrained when the gang started their assault. The military wanted more numbers in the center of the street where they could mow them down with automatic weapons from the rooftops. They wiped them out. They killed them all and took the bodies away before we arrived. They washed down the streets. Dozens, maybe a hundred people were killed and I couldn’t help feeling sorry for them. The crimes they were held accountable for they hadn’t had a chance to commit. Maybe they had in some other community but not here. How did we know what they had done besides upsetting the natural order?

It seemed that Carlin would never be the same. His stoicism before was a way to hide his feelings. Now it was real. There was something missing in his eyes. He was always somewhere else. He told us what he’d seen down to the gory details, the shock in their eyes, the blood flooding the streets, the screams and the horror. Then he didn’t speak of it at all. It was always in his mind but he wouldn’t let it out.

The neighbors offered to take us in but we knew there wasn’t room. We stayed the night at the Bannister house. In the morning we looked through the rubble to see what we could save. There wasn’t much. I found a picture of Stone in a metal frame and a handful of books. That was all. My mother lost everything. We cried a while but she was strong. As a child she had known her share of hard times – a sharecropper’s daughter, an Oklahoma refugee, she outlived everyone in her family but her dear sister, whom she might never see again. She worked most her life and watched her husband and her oldest son (my brother) die. I guess she was prepared for anything life could throw at her. She said she was just happy that we were all safe but she looked so tired. I wondered how long she had left and how much more she could suffer. She had been stronger than all of us for so long.

We went back to the military base only this time they put us in one of the barracks – one of those shelters that looks like a giant barrel or tin can. There was plenty of room for our three families, each of which had children. They set us up as they had before only this time they let us go outside. I don’t know why they changed their minds. I guess some of them had hearts. Some of them had wives and children of their own. Ours were allowed to play with theirs and they all attended school on the base. It was taught by the parents but it was still school and I was grateful for it.

At any other time or at least before the fall I would have been incensed. It was as if all the books they had and all the stories they knew were biblical. It was like Sunday school five days a week. When had the Christian fundamentalists taken over the military? Maybe it happened a long time ago – during the Crusades that we kept insisting was a war for democracy – and no one noticed. When I asked one of the mothers about it she just shrugged and said it was all they knew. They didn’t object when I took my turn teaching and told them a story out of the Great Depression: the westward migration of the Dust Bowl refugees. The children were fascinated by a story that came so close to home. We drew pictures of old trucks and cars stacked with belongings, broken down on the long road west, bankers with police forcing people off their farms, people lined up for work, living in camps and sharing soup out of a large metal pot.

Some of the parents choked up when they recognized their own families and friends pushed out of their homes by greedy bankers. It was as if we had lost that part of our history. We all became so inwardly focused, so determined to survive within our small circles, that we refused to see what was happening to us all. We had forgotten that other people were our brothers and sisters. It sounds sophomoric but it’s true: we were losing our sense of belonging to a greater community. At the same time we were developing a sense of community on a smaller scale. The military families on this base had a community and we had one at home – our neighborhood community.

That was something we had lost before hard times came. We lived in neighborhoods but we didn’t really belong to them. If some misfortune struck a neighbor we made a great show of empathy but we felt no responsibility. We shrugged and went on with our lives, relieved that it wasn’t us. We paid taxes and relied on society to overcome hardships and rebuild broken lives. Now that there were no taxes to pay and no government agencies to come to our aid we were beginning to understand that we had to help each other.

The weather was turning warmer and the rains began to fall. You could smell it before you could see it: life struggling to be reborn. We had stayed longer than we expected and I was beginning to worry that the children were becoming attached. How many times could they be uprooted without doing harm? It was a way of life for so many people – men, women and children alike – but I didn’t want it to happen to us.

One evening after dinner Carlin said he thought we should go back home and rebuild. I cried and gave him a hug. It was the first sign that he was looking forward since the massacre. I think Joan was disappointed but she didn’t say so. She liked the base. She liked the fact that they took care of us and we were safe but even she recognized what it meant for Carlin and the family. We needed him. Without Stone we depended on him. The children needed a father and we all needed a strong man. Uncle Bud wasn’t up to the job. He was a fun loving man, funny and pleasant and willing, but he was old and feeble. He and Aunt Mildred were looking older every day.

Carlin talked to our information officer who talked to the commander. The word came back that they wanted us to consider staying. Some of the families had grown attached to us. They wanted us to join their community and they wanted the men to sign on as soldiers. It would have been tempting but after Carlin had seen them in action, after what he had witnessed, it was not possible. The other families decided to stay so we said our goodbyes and packed our things.

The military did right by us. They loaded up a separate truck with cut lumber, tools, nails and screws, coils of wire and various supplies, a new generator and a ten-gallon jug of gas. I’m not sure why they treated us so well. I think they knew how Carlin felt and maybe they wanted to make it up to him in some twisted way. We thanked them and counted our blessings.

The gardens and peach blossoms were in bloom the day we left. It was early morning and magpies and crows were out in force and the birds of spring were singing. The air was crisp and moist. Everything seemed to breathe possibilities and the kind of love that urges you on danced in our hearts. It was a good life and a good day to remember why.

We rode to the old neighborhood not knowing what tomorrow would bring but willing to believe all would be well. When we arrived there was a bearded man in well-traveled clothes with a walking stick and a dog sitting on the porch where my mother’s home once stood. It took a good long moment to recognize him.

It was Stone, dear god. He’d come home.