Felix The Cat
Felix ‘the Cat’ Thompson was called ‘the Cat’ more for his ability to land on his feet, under any circumstances, than he was because of his name. Felix never thought about it much. He just did what he thought was right, whenever a sticky situation came up.
And things were getting sticky, for sure, for just about everybody. At least, that’s what Felix thought. “This must be how some people felt, a while before WW II started,” he said to himself as he helped get Mrs. Gunderson and her wheelchair up the steps to church.
The church used to have a ramp, but vandals had trashed it a few days before, the same night the cemetery was vandalized. That wasn’t the reason he was feeling the way he was… well… not the main reason… just a remote one… The real reason he was feeling the way he was, was due to the world political situation. It was bad.
The global warming was bad, sure. Especially since it seemed to be creating as much cold weather as hot. And the risk of Avian flu was higher than ever. Of course, volcanic and earthquake activity seemed to be on the rise. Not to mention the increase in the number and severity of hurricanes and tornados.
But it wasn’t those things on Felix’ mind. It was India versus Pakistan. North Korea versus South Korea. China versus Taiwan. Israel versus most of the rest of the Middle East. Nearly everyone versus the US.
Nukes in North Korea. Nukes in Iran. Nukes in Pakistan. Nukes in India. Nukes in South Africa. Nukes in Venezuela. Nukes in Israel. Nukes in Russia. Nukes in the Republics. Nukes in Great Britain. Nukes in France. Nukes in China. Soon to be nukes in Japan. Probably nukes in Germany. Likely Nukes in Syria.
Seemed like every country that had issues with another country also had nukes and were just waiting for a good excuse to use them. Felix had read history. There’d always been wars. There’d always be wars, probably. And just maybe another one soon. Most likely China. They’d already tried to reduce the population of the United States with poisoned foods and defective products. And it looked like they might just try to destroy the US economy by manipulating the world financial markets.
Yes. Felix felt like there was a war coming. With China.
“Thank you, Felix, John,” Mrs. Gunderson said when she rolled her way into the church after Felix and John set the wheelchair down.
“I’ll have the ramp repaired by next Sunday,” Felix told his minister, Malcolm Roberts.
“Thank you, Felix,” replied the minister. “We are blessed to have you in our congregation.”
Felix turned red and hurried into the church. Being the center of attention wasn’t something he particularly enjoyed. Especially when he was the center of negative attention. Such as when he brought up preparing for the worst to the church elders in one of their open meetings.
“Come now, Cat!” Alissa Manchester said. “Our emergency preparations are perfectly adequate for our needs. We’re too far inland for hurricanes to be a problem. Tornadoes are a risk, but minimal. We haven’t had a flood in a hundred years. You don’t really expect we’ll have to deal with something like nuclear war, do you? And…”
“Forget I said anything,” mumbled Felix. He left the meeting room, the sound of laughter ringing in his ears.
The reaction just reinforced his commitment to preparing himself. He’d always planned to have some extra supplies to share with church members, friends, and neighbors. He didn’t have any family to worry about.
Every day he watched the news networks and read the major online newspapers. “Why can’t more people see what’s coming?” he wondered often. There were some groups on the internet that did, and he spent much time on their websites and in their forums, picking up as much information as he could. He read the recommended books, and adjusted his lifestyle slightly to accommodate what he learned. And he spent every spare penny on preps.
With Joel Harrison’s help, a local Amateur Radio Operator, Felix got his Amateur General License and put together a very capable radio shack. It wasn’t limited to just Amateur gear. He could monitor every legal frequency from the lowest beacon frequencies to the Ultra High Frequency Band.
He could talk legally on the Amateur frequencies, along with CB, FRS, and GMRS. He had the two-way equipment for Marine, Aircraft, and Business Band, but was not licensed to use them for transmit. Felix decided that it wouldn’t matter in a major catastrophic event if he was licensed or not.
As things continued to deteriorate, Felix realized his occasional attempts to get the church to do more preparations for its members had marked him as one that probably was doing it on their own.
The occasional comment about if something happened, “I’ll just come to your house,” was coming more frequently, and the looks on the peoples’ faces saying it were no long quite as humorous as they had at first.
At least a few asked Felix his opinion on what they should do to get ready for some of the things he talked about. He gladly gave them his advice and web addresses where they could get more information.
Because of the comments, and those people that he gave advice to, Felix began reworking some of his prep storage. He kept his pantry pretty full, but moved much of the food and other consumables from where he had them stacked willy-nilly inside the house to at least marginally better hiding places in and around the house. His being an avid gardener made it easy to bury some rather large leak-proof containers in the yard, garden, and under the greenhouse floor.
Felix built false walls in the basement, just far enough from the existing walls to stack one tall row of boxes and buckets. Everything went into the cavity after the studs went up but before the finish wall was applied. To gain access to the stored items the walls would have to be dismantled, or more likely, just demolished.
A few of his buried caches were created with a double blind aspect, even third blind. They were smaller caches, made with six-gallon plastic buckets he obtained here and there around town for free or a nominal expense.
Instead of just burying a bucket full of supplies in likely places, Felix dug the hole somewhat deeper than would be need for a simple bucket cache would need to be. In the bottom, he placed a container just smaller than the diameter of the bottom of the bucket and loaded it with the waterproofed items he most wanted to keep hidden. A layer of dirt was added to the hole and then a bucket was set down on the dirt covered container and carefully filled around almost to the top.
Then, having measured the buckets carefully, Felix made up a packet that would fit in the space between the bottom of one bucket and the bottom of one inserted into it. With a bucket loaded with the rest of the things he wanted in the cache, he set it inside the first bucket and then filled the hole and camouflaged it as necessary.
The reason he did the caches as he did, was the fact that most people, if they discovered the cache by chance, would dig down to the bucket top and, hopefully, just take the top off the bucket and remove the contents. The items cached between the bottoms of the buckets would likely be missed.
Even if someone did dig down far enough to pull the full bucket up, which was what Felix planned to do if he opened one of the caches, they would find the second cache. But it would be very unlikely for anyone to then take the difficult step of digging out the second bucket on the chance there could be something under it.
That third cash sometimes was a small container with precious metals. Sometimes a handgun and ammunition. And in a few cases, because of the possibility of a gun grab in the near future, a deeper hole would be dug with a posthole digger and a pipe-in-a-pipe cache made for long guns, instead of the shallower third level cache.
Though it increased the risk of finding the cache, Felix usually put enough metal in the top bucket to sound a metal detector. The thought was that if the cache was found, and a reason for the metal detector to have indicated the place, the detector wouldn’t be used on the open hole after the contents of the bucket, or bucket itself was removed.
To reduce the chance of someone with a metal detector finding a specific cache, Felix salted the area with metal objects, and even occasional single bucket caches with only rice and beans in them.
Working for the city the way he did, Felix was able to put several caches on public property with no one the wiser. A few went up to the areas where he went hunting.
There was an overlay map for the caches around the house, one for those around the city, and three for the hunting areas. They were only good if used on specific maps, of which he had several copies hidden here and there in books and what not. There were plenty of other similar maps that it would take someone a significant amount of time to pin down which overlay went with which map.
When Felix and a couple of the other members of the congregation repaired the wheelchair ramp, Felix took the opportunity to cache all the 6-gallon Super Pails of various items from Walton Feed he could fit under the ramp as it was built, with no one the wiser.
With an almost empty bank account, Felix, thankful his modest property and vehicles were paid off, hunkered down for the long haul. He converted almost every dollar he took home into more preps.
The city was cutting services, but his job as general maintenance man was fairly secure. Not only did he have seniority, but the job itself was critical to the operation of the city. The city fathers might not be doing any new projects, but keeping the city’s infrastructure going was very high on the list of budgetary considerations.
Felix was very good at his job, and could stretch a city dollar further than anyone else, making him part of the essential personnel the city would keep, no matter how tough the times.
The regular times. Felix had no illusions about still having a job if one of the big balloons he was concerned about went up. There might come a time when the city had no dollars he could stretch. Oh, he wouldn’t leave them in the lurch, but he wasn’t prepared to try to support the whole city. Just a few of his friends and church members.
As the days passed, and then weeks, and then six months, Felix was getting more and more amused looks about his desire for the city to prepare for war. Possibly nuclear war. He wanted larger fuel tanks, extra tires and maintenance items for the city vehicles. He wanted the mothballed diesel fired city power plant activated. Among other things. He didn’t get any of it and was at a point where some of his supporters in the city administration began to avoid him.
Felix, seeing the handwriting on the wall, gave up his campaign and simply did his job the best way he knew how. He continued to stretch the shrinking city budget dollars allotted to his department as the economy tanked.
Almost a year after helping Mrs. Gunderson up the steps at the church, some of Felix’s dire predictions started becoming apparent to some of those around him. Fuel prices had skyrocketed, as had food prices. Rumors, some that even Felix wasn’t sure had any truth in them, started becoming facts.
China was ready for war with the US over the control of the whole of the Western Pacific from just west of Hawaii to the shores of Asia. Including Japan, Indochina, and even Australia. Slowly, the US government began a campaign to prepare the public for war.
The recommended supplies for three days, in case of natural disaster, was upped to a full two weeks. Home gardening was touted as a way to reduce food costs for everyone that had even a couple of square feet of space on which to grow something. Fuel rationing began.
In no time the regular suppliers that Felix bought most of his supplies from were out of stock of just about everything, with literally a year or more of back orders, assuming production wasn’t diverted to the war effort. Tires began to become hard to get. Tire retailers were instructed by the government to not change tires simply for tread wear, unless they were verging on bald. The old Lincoln penny heads depth of tread was reduced to half that before new tires could be installed.
Then the news broke that the Federal Government, in cooperation with State, County, and Local governments, were again evaluating buildings and structures for possible use as fallout shelters. The private shelter builders went the same way as the Prep suppliers. Sold out and back logged for years’ worth of production.
Felix became the man of the hour. People that had openly ridiculed him for his beliefs were now begging for his help. But there was very little he could do. Advice to stock up long-term storage foods was useless. There were no suppliers that still had any.
And food rationing became the norm, at first by a few stores voluntarily, and then government mandated. People were struggling to feed themselves and families on a daily basis, much less store up two weeks more of food.
Felix was at his desk, doing some of the massive amounts of paperwork now required to order replacement parts for the city’s equipment and infrastructure when the lights went out. He didn’t think too much about it, since there had been rolling blackouts to conserve electrical power now for several months.
Then Felix looked again at his blank computer screen. “But they always announce those…” Hurriedly, Felix got up from the desk, grabbed his coat and hardhat, and went outside. Pandemonium reigned at the City Hall. Not only was power out, but so were the telephones, including cellular. And traffic had come to a standstill. Not because of the lack of working traffic signals, but because all most all of the vehicles on the streets had come to a slow rolling halt.
“EMP,” Felix muttered.
Despite his early attempts to get the city to do what the Feds were now mandating, Felix had been left out of the sheltering work. “He was too valuable elsewhere,” was the answer when he volunteered to help both in finding shelter space and utilizing it in case it was needed.
He could have gone to the shelter in the City Hall, which many people were already doing, but Felix decided on the spot he didn’t want the hassles. He went to his old Chevy pickup and climbed in. It started right up and he headed home.
Barely had he left the City Hall parking lot when the sky brightened to the north. The high altitude EMP weapons had been the lead to the rest of the attack. People froze at the sight of the mushroom cloud rising.
Felix slammed the brakes on and killed the engine of the truck. Opening the door he rolled out of the truck and under it, reaching up to close the door. He saw someone running toward the truck and reached into the pocket of his Carhartt jacket and pulled out the highly illegal concealed weapon he always had on him.
But he didn’t have to use it. If the man was going to try to steal the truck, he didn’t have a chance. The blast wave caught him and blew him several feet down the street. He didn’t get up after the blast wave reversed and then stopped.
Felix had been lucky. Lying on the ground kept the blast wave from direct effects on him, but it pushed the truck almost four feet, the left rear tire nearly running over him. Scrambling up, Felix got back into the truck and started it up again. He headed home once more, dodging abandoned vehicles and dead bodies on the street.
A few people tried to flag him down, but Felix knew, deep in his heart, that he would be able to do a lot more good in the aftermath, than what he could do now. He ignored everyone and kept on the route to his home. He triggered the garage door opener and drove the pickup inside the garage when the security shutter and then the garage door opened up. The garage door came down when he hit the close button. So did the security shutter.
“Auxillary power is working,” Felix muttered as he got out of the truck. He took a couple of minutes to take everything from the refrigerator and freezer down to the shelter before he locked himself inside, wondering about Mrs. Gunderson and several other people he knew didn’t have much of a chance to live through the attack and the aftermath.
Seriously considering going back out to try and help some of those people, particularly Mrs. Gunderson, the shelter shook for several seconds. “No way, now,” he whispered. Another nuke had hit somewhere in the general area. Going out would be suicide.
Felix put a fresh battery in the CDV-717 remote reading radiation meter. The needle leaped off the peg on the lowest range setting. The area was already getting fallout. After turning on the laptop computer kept in the shelter, Felix activated the surveillance systems. He had his fingers crossed. It didn’t help. There were more than a dozen people outside around the house trying to get in at every door.
“Criminey!” Felix muttered. “I guess some of them really meant what they said. Going to a large gun safe, Felix opened it and took out a Remington 11-87P riot gun. Taking an M-9 bayonet from a shelf in the safe, he locked it in place on the shotgun.
After throwing the strap of a musette bag over his head, Felix added a box of 00 buckshot to the pouch and then four magazines for a Glock 21. He took the Glock from another shelf in the safe and put it in the waistband of his pants at the small of his back.
Finally, after slipping a CDV-742 dosimeter in his shirt pocket, Felix left the shelter and went upstairs. He opened a window, and then a view port/gun port in the heavy laminated shutter. “Go find shelter! The fallout has started!” He yelled through the opening.
“Let me in, Cat! Please! You and I are buddies! You always said I could come here if something happened.”
“You told me that, too!” yelled someone else that was out of his field of vision.
“I didn’t tell anyone that!” Felix yelled back. “Some of you just assumed you would be welcome. You aren’t. I don’t have the space for all of you!”
“Take me, Cat.”
The voice startled Felix. It was just beneath the opening. He couldn’t see the person but he recognized the voice. It was Judith Wilson, one of the secretaries at the City Maintenance offices. You’ll be glad you did,” she said.
“No, Judith! I told you to find a place to shelter.” Then, louder, Felix said, “All of you need to go find shelter elsewhere before it is too late!”
“Let us in or we’ll break in!” screamed Joe Pulaski, one of Felix’s coworkers.
“Aw, Joe! Don’t say that! I just can’t jeopardize…”
Suddenly something hit the shutter just to one side of the vision port, causing Felix to lunge back. Someone had a gun and knew how to use it. If Felix hadn’t reacted to the first shot, the second would have killed him as it flew threw the vision port and put a hole in the wall on the other side of the room.
“Jeez!” Felix said, feeling a bit faint at first, and then more than a little annoyed as more shots rang out, banging against the gravel filled walls of the house and the laminated shutters, creating a huge racket.
But apparently no one had a very powerful rifle, as the shutters stopped everything fired at them. Felix wasn’t worried about the walls. With almost six full inches of gravel confined in plywood clad metal stud walls, it would take something extremely powerful to penetrate them.
“Everyone clear out of here or I start shooting!” Felix said, now using the PA system from the kitchen. His voice boomed outside and was met with screams of rage and fear. Turning on the computer in the kitchen, Felix switched from one outside camera to another.
Suddenly Felix muttered a soft, “Oh, no!” Angela Fitzsimons and her brood of five children were out there, just standing and crying. And then he spotted Jeremy Hughes. He, too, looked dejected, but wasn’t involved in the wholesale attack on the house by the rest of the people.
Felix hung his head for a moment and then keyed the PA system again. “Jeremy! Angela! The two of you and the kids come up to the front door. The rest of you back off or I will start shooting!”
Felix stayed and watched for a few seconds until he was sure Jeremy, Angela, and the children were moving toward the front door. He ran into the living room and touched the front door security shutter open button and began to fire the shotgun from around the edge of the doorway after opening the front door.
Jeremy and Angela ducked down as shots passed back and forth over their heads. Half a dozen people charged the open door, several steps behind Jeremy and the others. Jeremy had picked up the smallest of Angela’s children and carried the screaming child the rest of the way into the house, followed immediately by Angela, ushering the other four children in front of her.
Steeling himself, Felix fired repeatedly into the charging group with the shotgun. Almost by a miracle, one man was on Felix, despite taking two pellets of the 00 buck. Felix thrust with the shotgun and the bayonet slid between the man’s ribs. The man screamed, but it was cut off when Felix fired the shotgun again, to free the bayonet from the man’s ribcage where it had lodged between two of the man’s ribs.
Firing the last two rounds in the extended magazine of the 11-87P, Felix dropped it and pulled the Glock from behind his back. Bullets were whizzing into the house through the open door. Felix was still protected somewhat from the door facings as he fired the Glock until it was empty.
He managed to reload the Glock before anyone could get to the door, but it was a near thing. The second time he emptied the gun, there was no time for a reload. But there was just enough time to pull the little hideout gun that Felix carried illegally everywhere he went, except when flying commercial. He pressed it against the man’s belly, tilting the little Beretta Model 21 up under the man’s ribs that was on him, trying to push past Felix to get inside the house. Felix pulled the trigger three times before the man fell back, a surprised expression on his face, the three tiny bullets having punctured his heart.
Felix gave the man a little extra impetus with a kick to the belly, sending him clear of the door. With five more people approaching at a run, Felix slapped the close button for the front door shutter and then emptied the Beretta into those approaching. He wasn’t hoping to stop anyone with the .25 ACP rounds, just slow them down until the shutter closed. He accomplished his purpose.
Falling back against the entry hall wall, feeling totally spent, the Beretta empty now, too, Felix blocked out the screams of the injured and those still trying to gain entry. After only a few seconds, Felix picked up the shotgun and reloaded it from the musette bag, and did the same with the Glock.
He took a magazine for the Beretta out of a pocket and reloaded the it before dropping it into the pocket he’d taken it from.
Jeremy, Angela, and the kids were all huddled down on the floor, most of the kids crying and the adults staring in fear. “Okay. Everybody up and down into the basement. You’ll be safe there.”
Trusting in the construction of the house, Felix led the way. “Now, you’ve all been out in the fallout and will need to decontaminate.” He opened a cabinet and said, “There are plenty of towels in there and some lightweight coveralls.
“Use the bathroom through there, and everyone shower and put on a pair of the coveralls and then we’ll run your clothes through the washer and you can put them back on. Make sure you wash your hair really well. I’m going back upstairs to keep an eye on things.”
“But the radiation…” Jeremy asked.
“At the level we’re getting right now, you’re perfectly safe for the moment. Help Angela with the kids, will you?”
Jeremy nodded. He was still shaking.
Thankful the computer was still working, Felix checked around the house using the camera system. There were still people outside, live ones as well as dead. The fallout was coming down hard enough now to be able to see it on the monitor. Felix wanted to use the PA to tell everyone out there that they needed to get into shelter before it was too late. But he was afraid it would just lead to a more concerted attack.
Finally, after a few more futile attempts to broach the shuttered doors of the house, those still living and able began to leave and look for shelter elsewhere.
It was some time before Jeremy came upstairs rather tentatively and told Felix, “Cat, we’re all showered and changed.” He was wearing one of the simple coveralls Felix had acquired at the thrift shop for such situations.
“Okay. I’ll come down and we’ll get your clothes washed.”
“Are you going to be all right?” Jeremy asked. “Will you die from all the radiation you’re getting?”
“The way the house is built, even up here there is significant protection. In the basement, much more so. And in the shelter proper, we’ll pick up little, if any.” Felix took a moment to look through the dosimeter. “I’ve only picked up a tiny dose. Nothing to worry about. However, the rest of you were in that fallout for some time. I don’t know what the consequences will be. I’ll try to figure it out based on the averaged radiation level during the time. I don’t think you’ll have serious effects from the exposure. At least for many years.”
Jeremy paled slightly, but nodded and went back down to the basement, with Felix following behind, carrying the shotgun. He had to be careful not to poke holes in the ceiling with the bayonet.
Angela was sitting on the sofa in the family room, the children grouped around her. They were praying together. She jumped up when Felix came into the basement. “I don’t know how to thank you, Cat, for what you’ve done. I didn’t know what else to do…”
“It’s all right, Angela,” Felix said. “I have the means to take care of a few people. The problem was how many wanted in. I just couldn’t let everyone in.”
Angela bit her lower lip and nodded.
“Come on. I’ll show you the washer. Can’t use the dryer, as it’s electric and I don’t want to overload the power system.”
“How can you have all this working? The power is out everywhere else…”
“I was wondering that, too,” Jeremy said.
“I have a power system that can go entirely off grid. It’s a combined system of photo voltaic cells on the roof, twin generators, three battery banks, and a controller system. I could actually run the dryer, but would have to turn every other thing off. But we can hang dry the clothes, here in the basement with a fan on them. The dehumidifier will remove the moisture from the air in the basement.”
“What about water?”
“I still have the old well before this area was annexed by the city. Not legal, but I keep it in good shape and it is fine. The city sewer here will be all right for several days, and then we’ll dig out the old septic tank and hook back to it.”
Felix smiled. “I cheated somewhat when we got city services here. Septic tanks were supposed to be removed or filled in. I filled mine in, all right, but pumped it out and cleaned it thoroughly first. Then filled it with sand. I can dig it out in a couple of days and then hook back up to it. The disposal field was in really good shape at the time we got city sewer, and should still be.”
“Wow!” Jeremy said. “Cat, I knew you were kind of preparing for the worst. I had no idea you had something like this. And Cat… Thanks for letting me in.”
“It’s okay, Jeremy.” Felix smiled again. “You’ll be working your tail off because of it, after we get out. Now, let’s get the laundry started and get everyone in the shelter.”
Copyright 2008





Reply With Quote