Dominic Santelli - Prepper
Dominic looked over his shoulders in each direction before kneeling down on the ground. Hopefully he would have time to dig up the bucket. He’d stepped the distance from the fence corner exactly thirteen paces forty-five degrees west of magnetic north by the small compass on his leather jacket zipper fob.
The shovel he used to dig up the cache he’d recovered from the far corner of the wheat field, from under a thick layer of leaves and thin layer dirt. He’d left the entrenching tool there, double wrapped in heavy weight plastic trash bags at the end of the tree line that marked the southern end of the field when he’d buried the bucket cache five years earlier.
He wasn’t worried about the cache being out in the middle of the wheat field. The farmer practiced no-till farming so none of the farming implements penetrated the ground more than a few inches. The top of the cache was well below that level.
It didn’t take very long to dig down to the bucket and around it. Dominic had brought in several bags of mortar sand to fill the hole with, instead of the dirt he’d dug from it, which he carried well away from the hole. But it was a double bucket cache with a blind third cache. Rather than just taking the lid off the bucket where it was, and removing the items it contained, Dominic worked the bucket around some and was able to lift it free of the other bucket in the cache.
In the bottom of that second bucket was a cloth bag made from denim cloth from an old pair of blue jeans, a semi automatic pistol in a clip on holster, and six spare magazines. Dominic removed the holstered pistol and stuck it behind his belt in the small of his back, the magazines going to different pockets. He reached down into the bucket again and lifted the bag out. When he set it on the lid of the first bucket it clinked slightly.
Ignoring the sound, Dominic looked around again to make sure no one had cleared the ridge to the south. Seeing no one, Dominic stretched out on the ground on his belly and dug around the bucket still in the ground, grunting with each shovelful of sand he tossed out of the hole.
Having dug barely a third of a way down the sides of the bucket, Dominic was able to work the slightly tapered bucket free from the sand around it. There was nothing to see but more sand in the bottom of the hole. But, nearly upside down, his shoulders in the widest portion of the hole, Dominic reached down with both hands and scraped a thin layer of loose sand to the sides of the hole, exposing an eight inch plastic pipe plug.
Gripping the square protrusion on the plug with both hands, Dominic turned it, grunting at first with the strain. The plug had not been seated tightly, being sealed with heavy grease on the threads to be waterproof but easy to open.
Once more Dominic lifted something from the hole. A six-inch pipe four feet long, with a handle attached to the top, slid easily out of the eight-inch pipe. Working even more quickly now, Dominic unscrewed the plug in the top of the six-inch pipe and tilted it slightly.
As he worked the long cloth bag out of the pipe, a bandoleer of ammunition for the rifle that was in the silicone-coated bag came out with it. Then a nylon pouch slid out of the pipe, propelled by five twenty-round magazines.
Dominic winced at the thumping of the items banging into each other and the ground. Each magazine was loaded with twenty rounds of 7.62mm x 51mm 147-grain full metal jacket ammunition. The custom sewn cloth bandoleer held another one hundred rounds of the same ammunition.
Dominic took the Springfield Armory M1A out of the treated gun sock and looked it over. Not a trace of rust. He picked up one of the loaded magazines and slipped it into the magazine well and then set the gun down on the green wheat.
The rifle magazine pouch went onto his wide leather belt on his left side, and the final item out of the tube, a Cold Steel Oda knife in a scabbard, went on the right side. Dominic took the denim cloth bag and slipped it into an inside pocket of his leather jacket. Next, fighting off feelings of panic at the time he was taking out in the open, Dominic unscrewed the Gamma seal lid of the loaded bucket and pulled out a Kifaru military backpack.
It was pre-loaded. Dominic took a moment to remove one of the stainless steel water bottles and take a long drink. Replacing the water bottle, Dominic took a couple more precious seconds to refill the open hole. There was far too little sand to fill it completely, but at least it wasn’t a gaping hole the farmer might step into or drive a tractor into, or now, more likely, a team, into it.
Attaching the Cold Steel Special Forces entrenching tool to the Kifaru pack, he lifted the pack and swung it around easily onto his back. A moment to fasten the belt and sternum strap, and then pick up the M1A and fasten it into the Gun Bearer option the Kifaru pack boasted, Dominic headed for the ridge line to his north at a steady jog, carrying the two empty buckets with him.
He stopped once to adjust the pack, and the lay of the handgun hidden beneath the pack, and was then on his way again. He made it back to his simple camp, shrugged out of the pack straps, and sat down to rest, the rifle across his knees.
Dominic waited for a full hour before getting up to break camp. Apparently the men after him had given up. He wasn’t going to back track to check. Not this time. There was too much open land, planted mostly just like the field where he’d dug up the cache. The wheat was still short and green.
The silnylon tarp was rigged as an A-frame tent, the support rope slung from two trees. A poncho with Ranger Rick modified liner was beneath it as a bed. It took Dominic only a few minutes to strike the camp, bundling up the tarp, poncho, and liner around the 550 cord and MSR Groundhog stakes.
He lashed the bundle to the Kifaru Marauder cargo shelf, put the pack on, set the M1A in the gun bearer once again, and slung the large leather tear drop single shoulder ‘healthy’ pack on his left shoulder. The single shoulder pack was his GOOD (Get Out Of Dodge) bag and had carried the camp components, water bottles, Millennium ration bars, jerky, and gorp, along with a Buck 110 folding lock-blade knife and Katadyn Hiker Pro water filter.
He’d had to stretch the food and water to get to this cache, as the first cache on his route to the retreat was compromised. It was still there, as far as he could tell, but there must have been fifty people in and around the campground where it was.
The first cache was an identical leather single shoulder teardrop bag with the same gear as the GOOD bag in the top bucket, with several magazines for the Walther PPK .380 ACP pistol on his left ankle in the bottom of the second bucket.
There was no gun tube under the second bucket, but there was another pouch of gold and silver coins he really would have liked to recover. “Perhaps one of these days…” Dominic thought as he headed for the next travel route cache on his way to his retreat property down in the Middle of the Ozark Plateau. “The coins and my truck…”
Dominic’s bug-out plan had called for him to pick up supplies at home, if he was at work when the balloon went up, and drive down to the retreat property. Fortunately he had alternate plans.
The powers that be ordered an evacuation, which was fine with Dominic. That was his plan, too. However, the government planned called for the use of transportation that they arranged. That included municipal busses, school busses, the light rail trains, and trucks with semi-trailers, and commandeered personal vehicles that would still run after the HEMP attack twenty-four hours earlier.
Dominic thought about trying to make a go of it in the truck, anyway, but there were already sounds of shooting going on near the interstate. Better to leave the truck out of sight, for possible future use, than let what he was sure would be a mob get their hands on it.
He took a few minutes to disable the truck, hiding the parts in the basement shelter. The door to the shelter under the garage was camouflaged in the basement, and Dominic didn’t expect anyone to get into the house, much less find the shelter and the supplies.
Had a nuke attack occurred without warning, Dominic would have taken shelter there at the house. But St. Louis was undoubtedly a target. Better to be away from the city if things escalated.
That meant leaving on foot, with just the GOOD bag. Dominic debated on what gun to carry on the trip on foot. He had several options there in the shelter. But a few moments of thought and he decided not to become a target of the authorities for carrying a gun. The announcement about the evacuation had clearly stated that people were to leave their guns at home. But he wasn’t going to be totally unarmed. He put on the ankle holster and put the PPK in it, with a spare magazine. Two additional magazines went in the matching pouches on his right leg. He also stashed a couple in his pockets and two more in the GOOD bag.
Getting out of the city proved easier than he expected. He picked up the railroad tracks and followed them out of town. A few other people were doing the same thing to avoid the masses of people moving at a slow shuffle on the main roads.
Several of them were carrying a rifle or shotgun or holstered pistol, despite the warnings. The first secondary road crossing had two police cars sitting on it. A gunfight broke out between the armed civilians and the police when one of the men evacuating just started shooting before the officers could say anything.
Dominic dived down into the ditch running along the tracks until the first flurry of shots ended. There was screaming and yelling and crying going on. Peaking up his head, he saw his chance and made a run for it away from the fight as it resumed. He went well down the road as fast as he could run, staying low and keeping the abandoned cars on the road between him and the fight. When he decided he was far enough away, he cut back south to pick up the tracks again.
There were fewer people on the tracks now, and Dominic made good time, his long stride eating up the miles as he passed person after person, like him, carrying some kind of bag. Some had suitcases. There were a few bicycles with who knew what piled on them, being pushed down the track. The spacing of the ties made it difficult to walk for some, and very difficult with the overloaded bikes.
But Dominic matched his stride to the ties the best he could and continued traveling. He traveled for two days on the tracks. The second day he didn’t see anyone. When he came to a road crossing the tracks late the second day he took that road, headed for Interstate 55.
It too had quieted down, compared to what it was near the city. He didn’t stay on the road for long. His pack was getting the eye from more people than he liked. The first cache was just up ahead in a camp ground and Dominic took the side road to it to check on it.
It had been a bad choice, he realized now. Anything like what was happening would mean campgrounds all over the country would be full with people fleeing the cities. But he found an out of the way spot, after using the crowded facilities at the camp to go to the bathroom and refill his water bottles, set up the silnylon tarp with the poncho and liner bedroll.
Dominic took off his boots, but kept his clothing on as he had the first night. He slid into the bedroll, with the PPK under his leather jacket that he was using for a pillow. Though he woke up several times, it was the normal night noises of an over full campground. He broke camp the next morning, taking the pack with him again to use the facilities.
There was a huge line, so Dominic decided to do his business a little later in some private spot off the highway. With the PPK now in his jacket pocket, Dominic shouldered the pack and hit the road again.
He hadn’t gone far, after taking a break in the woods along side the highway, when he caught up with three men traveling together. None were carrying anything except near empty water bottles.
Dominic swung wide to go around them.
“What’s the matter, Dude! We ain’t got cooties! Why don’t you be more sociable?”
Against his better judgment, Dominic slowed his pace and let the three men come up to him. When one of them quickly looked all around, Dominic knew he’d made an error. The other two were already leaping for him.
“Give us that pack! We’ll let you go! We just want some food. You got any food?” Dominic couldn’t tell who was saying what as he fought his way backwards, away from them.
His hand dived into the jacket pocket and came out with the PPK. He pointed at the center man and kept backing away. Considering their lack of fighting skills, and how slow they were, Dominic gave himself a little more room, and then turned and took off at a lope.
He glanced back from time to time. They men were actually trying to chase him, but he was pulling well away. Dominic didn’t see them again until he was up on a ridge the interstate was crossing. They were well back. Dominic slowed his pace to catch his breath. He hadn’t run any great distance at any great speed for a long time. He was more winded than he thought he’d be.
Dominic left the Interstate and headed for his next cache. It was one he almost hadn’t planted, doubting the need for it. But having to leave with just the GOOD bag, the cache, if he could recover it, would make him feel a very great deal better.
He couldn’t believe his eyes when he stopped to rest at noon. The three guys were still on his trail. “How in the world did they know I took this road?” Dominic simply didn’t understand the impression he left on people.
With his erect posture and long stride, dressed in khaki clothing and brown leather jacket with a wide-brimmed felt hat on his head, the large leather pack slung from one shoulder, he was noticed. He was dressed as he was to avoid notice, and most wouldn’t have given him a second look. It was his demeanor and projected attitude that brought the attention.
The three men merely had to ask those on the road if they’d seen a man of his description. People had, and though many were reluctant to say anything, for reasons they couldn’t explain, enough sensed the menace to themselves if they didn’t tell what they knew. Three different people all said the same thing. The man the three were looking for had taken the side road.
Dominic frowned and cut his short lunch even shorter. Pushing himself slightly, he headed for the cache, intent on getting it recovered before the men could catch up to him. If they were able to follow him.
Now, well armed, with enough supplies for several days now, Dominic wondered idly where the three men were and what they were up to. He’d seen no sign of them since that lunch break three days previously.
Staying on the secondary roads he had scouted over the years, Dominic made good time, even catching a couple of rides on working vehicles, one of them a tractor pressed into passenger service. He got a few looks because of the rifle, but he wasn’t the only one armed and no one made any objection about it.
He went around the various road blocks the police had set up to control and direct evacuees. He’d seen one man, stripped of his weapons, handcuffed and led to an old pickup truck that the police were using in lieu of their non-functional police cars. That was when Dominic decided completely avoiding the authorities was probably a good idea.
Dominic debated stopping at the next cache on the travel route to his place in the Ozarks. He would have to buy, beg or borrow some food on the way if he didn’t. He could hunt, but that would likely draw some unwanted attention. He had a couple of traps in his gear, and could make more, but he didn’t want to take the time for trapping.
He adjusted his route to the next cache. Picking up US Highway 67, Dominic, still a bit concerned about the three men trying to follow him, checked his back trail often. There were almost as many people traveling south as there had been on I-55.
Somewhat against his better judgment, Dominic stopped to help a family of four traveling on foot. The man had a huge pack on his back, made larger with everything that was tied onto it. The woman had a much smaller pack. There were two children walking beside them. The boy had a small pack on, too. Both the children were, Dominic estimated, under nine years old and were having a hard time keeping up. The youngest, probably five, kept asking to be carried.
“Mommy! Carry me! Please!” she pleaded.
“I’m hungry!” said the boy, older. He had the leash of an Irish Setter in his hand. Even the dog had a pack. Dog food was Dominic’s guess.
The man and woman looked haggard.
“Can I lend a hand?” Dominic asked when he came up even with them.
“I don’t think so,” the man said, giving Dominic a quick look. The sight of the rifle, carried fairly unobtrusively in the gun bearer, still scared him.
“Thank you, but no. We’re…”
It was then that the little girl reached up to Dominic to be carried and the Irish Setter nosed his leg and then sat down beside him.
“John, Toby likes and seems to trust him. What do you say?” asked the woman. They were stopped in the middle of the road.
After a long pause the man nodded. “But don’t try anything. I have a gun,” the man said, drawing a startled look from the woman. Dominic was sure it was a bluff, but he didn’t blame the man for trying anything to make sure his family wasn’t harmed by some stranger.
“Here,” Dominic said to the boy. “Hang these by the handles on my pack.” Dominic gave the boy the two buckets and he dutifully slipped the handles over handy projections on the pack.
Dominic picked up the girl and settled her on his hip opposite the rifle. “How far are you going?” he asked and took a step.
“Poplar Bluff. We have family there. On a farm.” It was the boy. He seemed to be a chatty one, now that Toby, the Irish Setter, had okayed Dominic. “They have horses and cows and chickens and pigs, and…”
“That’s enough, Bobby. I’m sure the man isn’t interested.”
“But he asked…”
“He doesn’t need to know everything,” John replied, cutting Dominic a look to see how he’d taken the statement.
“You’re dad is right,” Dominic said. “Don’t want to give out too much information in a situation like this.”
“What about you?” John asked. “Where you headed?”
Dominic smiled. “Ozarks. Got a small place there where I can camp out until this situation resolves itself.”
“What do you think will happen?” asked John. “You really think there will be nuclear war?”
“Already is,” Dominic said. The little girl, Debbie, was already nodding off in sleep. Dominic kept his voice at a low conversational level. “Those HEMP devices… That is, High altitude Electro Magnetic Pulse devices were nuclear. Just very high altitude explosions. That’s what killed most of the electronics.”
“Our car wouldn’t start,” the Bobby said. “Why do some start and some not?”
“That’s a complicated thing,” Dominic said. “Too much to go into right now.”
Bobby nodded in response.
It was getting late in the day, and a good camping spot was just ahead. It wasn’t occupied yet and Dominic suggested, “That’s a good spot to camp. You want to stop this early?” he asked John.
“Please,” the woman said. “John, I don’t know if I can go much further.”
“Okay, Pattie. We’ll stop.”
Well off the road, in a small cope of trees, Dominic woke Debbie and put her down. He helped John out of the huge pack he was carrying. It was actually a medium sized pack, with many items tied on the outside. Dominic judged the weight at seventy pounds. Much more than a man in John’s obvious lack of condition should be carrying.
“I’m going to set up my camp back over here,” Dominic said. “If that’s okay with you, John.”
John hesitated, but Dominic seemed much more helpful than dangerous, despite the rifle. He looked at Pattie. She nodded. “Sure… uh… what’s your name?”
“Dominic Santelli. From St. Louis.”
“John Smithlowe and family,” John said, reaching out to shake Dominic’s hand.
“You’ve come all this way since they announced the evacuation?” Pattie sounded incredulous.
“Caught a couple of rides on working vehicles, and I have a long stride. I walk rather faster than most people.”
“Well, thank you for helping. I don’t know how we’re going to make it to my brother’s place, traveling just a few miles a day,” Pattie said. John was helping her off with her pack.
“We’ll manage, Pattie,” John reassured her. “We have to.”
Dominic went to the spot he’d selected for his camp and, with the weather still holding, put up the silnylon tarp and laid out the poncho/poncho liner sleep system on the ground under it, rather than put up his tent and use the sleeping bag that was part of the gear in and on the Kifaru Marauder.
When the simple camp was ready, Dominic walked over to where John, Pattie, and Bobby were setting up their camp. “There’s a drainage ditch down a ways. You have any water bottles you want me to fill?” He held up the two six-gallon buckets.
“We need water,” Pattie said, “But I’m afraid of drinking water from a place like that.”
Dominic nodded. “I have a Katadyn Hiker Pro water filter and MP-1 purification tablets. Double whammy. It’ll be fine.”
“Bobby,” John said, “Get all our empties and help Mr. Santelli.”
“Yes, Sir.” Bobby rummaged through their belongings and came up with several Aquafina water bottles. They were all empty. “I’m glad we didn’t throw these away. You were right, Dad. They’re really coming in handy.”
“Leave them here,” Dominic said. “We’ll carry the water back and filter it here.” With Toby along on a leash, man, boy, and dog went the eighth of a mile to the drainage ditch. The water was high, with the recent rains in the area, and looked fine, but Dominic knew that could be deceiving. He dipped up a good five gallons in each of the six-gallon buckets.
Setting them down, Dominic took the package of water purification pills and added enough for the five gallons of water to each bucket. Picking up the buckets again, the three headed back to the camp. A couple of other small groups were setting up camps in the copse.
After waiting for the chemicals to kill any bacteria or viruses in the water, Dominic and Bobby began pumping the water through the filter into the family’s water bottles, and then Dominic’s canteens, the hydration bladder from the Marauder, and an MSR ten-liter dromedary bag.
Pattie was rummaging through her pack for their food supplies as John got a small fire going. From the looks of things, Dominic decided the family had done some camping before and weren’t totally at a loss on how to travel this way.
“I’ll refill everything you empty, later,” Dominic said, standing up with the water filter, stainless steel water bottles, bladder, and bag in the empty bucket.
“Thank you,” John said. “It would have been an almost dry camp, except for that. We can have macaroni and cheese with tuna. How about that, kids?”
Debbie looked up, but hesitated. They didn’t have all that much food. Dominic saw the hesitation and quickly said, “I’m going to fix my own supper, so I’ll leave you to yours.”
He saw the look of relief on both Debbie’s and John’s faces. In his own camp, Dominic took an MSR Firefly camp stove out of his pack and connected it to a fuel bottle that already had the pump mechanism in it. A few pumps and Dominic was heating water with which to prepare his evening meal. It was a Mountain House Pro-Pack single serve freeze-dried meal. Beef stew.
Sitting on the empty bucket, Dominic savored the food after it had reconstituted with the hot water he had added. The main course finished, Dominic fished out a vacuum-sealed zip-lock bag of homemade gorp and slow ate a handful.
On the off chance that they weren’t carrying much, if any, comfort food, Dominic slipped the zip-lock bag in his jacket pocket and went back to the family’s camp.
“I’ll fill up those containers for you now, before I go to bed,” he told John.
Bobby jumped to lend a hand. He looked a little forlorn when Debbie asked Pattie for a candy bar for desert.
“Honey, we don’t have any more,” Pattie said gently. “They’re all gone.”
“Can they have trail mix?” Dominic asked. “Not allergic to nuts or anything?”
Bobby looked hopeful. Debbie was just pouting.
“Oh, Mr. Santelli! We couldn’t,” Pattie said.
“Why not? I’ve got plenty. Here.” Taking the zip-lock from his jacket pocket, he tossed it to Pattie.
Bobby and Debbie gathered around their mother to get their portions. “We’ll save the rest for later.”
Finished with the water treatment, Dominic went back to his camp, made a pit stop deeper in the copse, and then turned in for the night.
Dominic was up early the next morning, despite sleeping very lightly. Nothing had disturbed the quiet of the night. He quietly had a breakfast of two packages of instant grits, a handful of gorp from another vacuum-packed zip-lock bag, and a cup of tea.
Taking a quick look around the Smithlowe camp, and then the other, similar camps in the copse, Dominic decided on a plan of action. There had been no announcements over the NOAA alert radio that was part of the cached goods he’d picked up, so Dominic decided that perhaps they had a few more days before anything more happened. Enough to see the Smithlowe family to their destination.
But with the children afoot, and John bogged down with the heavy pack, Dominic knew it would take weeks, not days, to get there. With that in mind, Dominic broke camp, packed up, and headed out before anyone in the other camps was stirring
He traveled at a quick pace, wanting to get done what he was headed to do, and back on 67 before the Smithlowes could pass him by.
He was there by noon, looking around carefully. This particular cache was the largest one he’d deposited. It was in sections. One deep pit held ten five-gallon fuel containers with stabilized diesel for his truck. Another spot nearby had two complete spare tires. A third held the identical elements that he’d recovered earlier. He didn’t disturb them.
Copyright 2008





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