QHR
Jack was just about asleep on the sofa when the telephone rang. “Great! What now?” he grumbled as he fumbled for the telephone receiver behind his head.
“What?” he asked, his voice harsh with fatigue.
“Quebec, Hotel, Romeo. Stand-by One.” Jack sat up, holding the telephone receiver tightly against his ear. After perfect silence for several seconds, a voice he knew as well as his own boomed in his ear.
“Verify Quebec, Hotel, Romeo.”
“Verify Quebec, Hotel, Romeo. Tango, Tango, Foxtrot. Go.”
“Jack, it’s General Smith-Worth.”
“Yes, sir. I recognized your voice. What’s up with a QHR alert? I’m not service any more. Seriously. That other time was a mission essential ruse.”
“I know that, Boy. Just wanted to give you a few minutes warning. The President has just given the launch codes to the nuclear forces. Take care of my family. It’s been a pleasure knowing you.”
The dead silence of a secure line came back and Jack hung up the telephone slowly. But that was the last thing he did slowly for some time. In under three minutes he had his three INCH (I’m Not Coming Home) totes and four bags loaded into the back of the Suburban. He left the key to the apartment on the bed, grabbed the last two-liter bottle of almost frozen Classic Coke from the fridge and left the apartment for the last time.
They were waiting for him when he got to the house. They were obviously worried, but Kathleen was more than just worried. She was angry. “I do not know why Father insisted you come along,” were the first words out of her mouth.
“Yeah. I missed you, too. I see you’re ready. Let’s go. You lead.” Jack took just a moment to hug his four year old son, Charles, barely awake, sitting on his personal BOB (Bug-Out-Bag). He held the leash of his recent birthday present from his Grandfather. A pure-bred German Shepard. Male.
“I’m sleepy, Daddy! And so is Ruff.”
“I know, Son. You can get some sleep in the truck. Ruff, too.”
“Where are we going, Daddy?”
“Somewhere safe, I hope.”
“Don’t scare him, Jack,” insisted Kathleen.
“He’s not scared. He’s just curious.” Jack gathered up Charles and his BOB and headed for Kathleen’s Suburban. It was nearly identical to Jack’s own vehicle, minus a few of the modifications Jack had done on his.
Sara, Kathleen’s mother and the General’s wife, followed carrying two suitcases. Jack had Charles buckled up firmly in his child restraint seat and ran back to the house. “What else?”
“Those two are it,” Kathleen said, pointing her chin toward the two large wheeled ice chests near the door.
Jack grunted when he picked up the handles of the two chests. He decided to leave one on the porch while he loaded the other. He came back for the second ice chest as Kathleen started to lock the door of the house.
“You sure you have everything? Insurance, license, pictures?”
Kathleen paled in the light from the porch bulb. “No. I’ll be right back!”
She ran into the house and up the stairs while Jack loaded the last cooler. He had one foot inside his Suburban when Kathleen came out of the house, turning off lights as she did so. She turned off the porch lamp and then locked the front door of the house.
Only when she was in her Suburban and the back-up lights flashed as she put the truck in gear did Jack get into the Suburban and buckle in. Kathleen pulled out of the driveway and turned right onto the street. Jack followed, keeping plenty of distance between them so each would have maneuvering room when the panic started.
“Jack?” came Sara’s voice over the MURS radio sitting on the seat beside him.
“Yes, Sara?”
“Jack, Kathleen wants to know if this is another drill?”
Jack keyed his radio and said, softly, “No. This is real. Tell her to just concentrate on driving. We’ll be all right.”
“She says okay, Jack.”
He set the radio down and said a prayer of hope for Kathleen to keep it together until they got to the retreat. St. Louis might not be a target, but the General and Jack didn’t take chances. There was a hardened shelter at the General’s future retirement home and current retreat, in the Ozarks, right on Table Rock Lake, in one of the small sections of private land surrounded by a section of the Mark Twain National Forrest that was spread out all through the Missouri Ozarks.
Kathleen picked up the speed from her usual sixty-eight miles an hour on the open Interstate to just a notch over eighty.
They were in Springfield in three hours and stopped in a truck stop to fuel up. They parked on each side of one of the islands that had small vehicle diesel. Kathleen and Jack got out of their respective vehicles. Sara, with a still sleepy Charles in her arms came around the front of Kathleen’s Suburban.
“I’ll fill them up,” Jack said if you three want to make a pit stop.”
Kathleen took Charles from her mother and gently waked him as she walked to the C-store part of the truck stop. Ruff was whining loud enough to be heard and Sara went to take him for a walk and drink of water.
It took almost fifteen minutes before everyone was settled once again in the vehicles. Jack kept looking to the northeast and then slightly west of north. They were perhaps an hour from the retreat when he saw what he’d been looking for in his rear-view mirror.
Kathleen must have seen the same thing for she swerved slightly and increased speed significantly. “Slow down, Kathleen,” Jack said over the radio. “We have plenty of time. There are going to be vehicles stopped all over the road…”
He saw her swerve again and he dropped the radio to put both hands on the steering wheel. He had to swing wide, too, to avoid the car stopped in the middle of the traffic lane. Before he reached for the radio again, Kathleen had slowed down and was now maneuvering around the stopped traffic much more carefully, as people were getting out of their vehicles and looking around or talking.
When he saw her brake lights flare for a long time, Jack picked up the radio and barked into it. “Don’t stop! For anyone or anything, Kathleen! Think about Charles!”
The brake lights went out and a few moments later Jack went past the same accident with people lying on the ground, being tended by others.
Jack could only shrug it off when Kathleen’s voice came over the MURS radio. “I hate you for this, Jack! I’m a nurse! I should have stopped.”
“You’re a mother, too, and if you won’t take care of getting Charles to safety, stop and I’ll take him the rest of the way. Without stopping.”
Kathleen didn’t reply. But she didn’t stop or try to stop again, either, until they turned onto the fire road that led to the retreat on the lake. She slowed and waved Jack around her, not confident of the road ahead.
Jack flipped on the auxiliary lights mounted on the crash bars on the front of his Suburban, and those on the roof rack that extended from the rear of the Suburban to the windshield.
He stopped to open the gate that marked the edge of General Smith-Worth’s property, let Kathleen drive through and then relocked the gate. Taking the lead again, Jack took it slow enough for Kathleen to keep up without shaking them up too bad in the process.
Jack triggered the remote that opened both of the sixteen feet wide garage doors and drove into one side of the garage. Kathleen parked in the other double-wide bay. The garage lights had come on when the doors opened. Jack triggered the doors down and hurried to get Charles out of his restraint seat.
There was an entrance to the basement from the garage and Jack led the way down, then over to the large entertainment center that was the centerpiece of the family room. He swung one side of it away from the wall, exposing a vault type door. Jack worked the combination from memory and went through the airlock to another, identical door.
With Kathleen carrying the German Shepard pup, and Sara behind him, Jack opened the door to the doorway into hardened shelter the General had installed when it became available commercially, and his finances allowed it. Jack ushered the others in and handed Charles to Sara. He went back to unload the two vehicles. He closed the airlock doors behind him.
It took perhaps twenty minutes to get everything moved from the vehicles to the basement. Uneasy why the caretaker, Jonas Williamson, or his wife, weren’t in evidence, Jack took a few minutes to check their small bungalow right next to the track that came out of the forest. The house was locked and he couldn’t raise anyone.
Going back to the basement, Jack picked up Charles’ BOB and the pup’s bag, and went into the shelter.
Jack locked the inside airlock door and turned around to help with Charles and the pup when the shelter shook slightly. Kathleen and Sara gasped, but Charles and the pup both slept through the ground shock. There was no more sensation, and Jack wondered why there was no attendant blast wave shortly after the ground wave.
“Jack?” Kathleen asked. She was braced against the counter on one side of the fiberglass elliptical caterpillar design shelter.
“I don’t know. Springfield maybe. Or an errant warhead off course. I don’t think we’ll ever know for sure. Might even have been the New Madrid Seismic Zone giving way. I didn’t hear the blast valves click closed, so it is more like to have been that than a nearby hit like I thought at first. That’s good. In a way.
“Jack, what do we do?”
“Just settle in. Try not to get on each other’s nerves for the sake of Charles, Sara, and Ruff. I will try my best.”
Kathleen nodded and said, “We have to. For how long do you think?”
“Won’t know until the radiation peaks and starts dropping off. I can calculate shelter stay time, then. For now, it’s early in the morning. I think we should all get some sleep. I’ll make sure the systems are all working the way they should and turn in myself.”
Again Kathleen nodded. She turned to Charles, where he was sitting on the floor, cuddling Ruff. But she stopped and looked at Jack again. “Jack,” she said, “I’m… I’m glad you’re here. We’ll be better of for it. Thank you for coming.”
“Thank you for letting me come,” Jack replied, deciding telling his ex that Charles and the puppy would have come with Jack, by force if necessary, would be counter productive. He kept the peace.
Sara asked about Jonas and his wife.
“No sign,” Jack said. “House is locked and their pickup is gone.”
As Kathleen and Sara got Charles and Ruff settled in and explored the shelter, Jack sat down at the communications center. He checked the remote reading radiation survey meter. Still only back ground radiation. Not wishing harm on others, Jack still hoped the shock they had felt was an earthquake rather than a nearby nuclear detonation. It would make all the difference in post event recovery. For those here, anyway. He couldn’t imagine the complications a major earthquake could cause those in the earthquake affected area.
Jack wanted information in the worst way, but connecting one of the outside antennas to a radio was just risking serious damage to equipment from a HEMP (High altitude Electromagnetic Pulse) blast. It wasn’t worth the risk. Especially considering that the atmosphere was probably highly ionized with the debris from the detonations. The General would not have warned him if he was expecting a single incident.
He waited until the others were settled in before he went into the bunkroom area of the shelter and laid down to try to get some sleep. It didn’t come quickly or easily, but Jack finally slept.
When he did fall asleep, it was that of the exhausted. He’d been up for thirty-six hours prior to the General’s call. The smell of coffee and a full bladder woke him up. He needed the bathroom in the worst way. Fortunately it was empty. Next Jack checked the outside and inside radiation levels. Well under one hundred r/hr outside and not even a quiver on the needle for the inside meter.
“Hi, Daddy,” Charles said. He was sitting at the small table in the kitchen area, eating cereal with milk. The pup was curled up with one of his toys in an out of the way spot, still sleeping.
“Hi, Sport! Quite an adventure last night, huh?”
Between spoonfuls of cereal, Charles began asking questions, some that Jack had a hard time answering.
“Where are we, Daddy?”
“In a very safe place your Gramps had built for us.
“Is Gramps in a safe place, too?”
Though Sara took the question calmly, working by her daughter’s side at the kitchen counter, Kathleen turned her face away, tears beginning to fall.
“I think so, Son. About the safest place a person can be.”
“Heaven?” Charles already knew about heaven. At least as much as a boy his age could.
“Yes, Charles. I think Gramps is in heaven.” Fortunately it was enough answer for an inquiring four-year-old.
“Can I go outside after breakfast. I should take Ruff outside like I do at home.”
“Afraid we cant’ do that right now. Ruff will have to learn to use the papers for number two, like he does for number one.”
“Will you help me learn him, Daddy? He doesn’t always do what I want.”
“Teach him, not learn him. And, yes, of course I’ll help you teach him.”
That seemed to satisfy Charles and he began to concentrate on getting the last of the cereal from the bowl.
Jack thankfully accepted the cup of coffee from Sara. I see you two have been busy. Sorry I slept so long.”
“You only do that when you’re totally exhausted,” Kathleen said, sliding a plate of pancakes onto the table in front of Jack.
“Did have some long hours before… before the General called me.”
Kathleen was getting Charles cleaned up after his breakfast while Jack ate his. “It’s probably bad, if he broke security to call us, isn’t it?” asked Sara.
Sara was sitting at the table now, pretending to eat her single pancake.
Cutting his eyes to Charles, now in the process of waking the puppy, and then back to Sara he replied. “I think so. He said the president had released the nukes. And those flashes we saw behind us were most certainly nukes at St. Louis and Kansas City plus Whiteman AFB, unless I miss my guess. Sara… I’m sorry. I don’t think he had a chance.”
“He knew as much and so did I,” Sara said. She reached over and put her hand on Jack’s. “Thank you for being here for us. For him. Harold always thought highly of you, despite your and Kathleen’s problems.”
“I always respected him. He was a good soldier and father,” Jack replied.
“Good husband, too. I’ll miss him. Excuse me…” Sara headed for the bunkroom end of the shelter, sobs shaking her shoulders.
Jack got up and put his empty plate and flatware on the counter and went over to where Kathleen and Charles were trying to extend Ruff’s paper training a step further.
“I’ll see what I can do,” Jack said. “You might want to check on your mother.”
Kathleen gave Jack a hard look, but stood and went to the bunks, closing the curtain dividing the areas.
A very happy Ruff and Charles, and a relieved Jack, saw Kathleen come back into the main section of the shelter. “She’ll be all right,” Kathleen said. “She’s reading her bible.”
Jack nodded.
“Is Grammum sad?” Charles asked.
“Yes, very sad,” Kathleen said.
“Because Gramps is in heaven?”
“Yes, Charles. But I don’t want you worrying about it,” Jack’s voice was soft but firm. Your mother and I have a big job to do taking care of you and Grammum. Your job is to take good care of Ruff.”
“Okay, Daddy,” Charles said. He had to laugh suddenly as Ruff, eager to play, licked him on the face, with his tail swinging back and forth wildly.
Jack helped Kathleen with doing the few dishes used during breakfast. They worked silently, side by side for the few minutes it took to finish them. Suddenly after she put down the dishcloth, she turned to Jack and went into his arms when he opened them. “Hold me? Please?”
“Of course,” Jack said, his hands went around her and her head went down onto his shoulder.
After several minutes Kathleen stepped back and wiped her eyes. “I’m sorry. I just…”
“It’s all right, Kathleen. I won’t take it as more than it was. We both needed it.”
Kathleen nodded. “I didn’t sleep well last night. I think I’ll lie down for a while if you’ll keep Charles entertained.”
“Sure.” Both looked over at the little boy playing with his pup. “I think he’s good for a bit. But I’ll keep him occupied.”
Jack, with regular glances at Charles, opened up the laptop computer Jack had prepared with data for such an event and began going through the thousands of pages of information it contained.
“Watcha’ doing, Daddy?” Charles came over and asked a few minutes later. It seemed that Ruff preferred to devour some puppy food at the moment, rather than play with him.
“Studying,” Jack replied. He picked up Charles and put him on his lap so he could see the computer.
“Learning some things we will need to know when we leave the shelter.”
“Like what?”
“How to garden. I’ve never done it before, but we’ll need to learn so we can grow our own food.”
“But Mommy buys food at the store!”
“There may not be very many stores left…”
“Toy stores!”
“I’ll learn how to make toys, too,” Jack assured his son. “And you can learn how to help. Even make some of your own.”
“That would be fun, I think. Can I get down now, Daddy? I need to go potty.”
“Go to the bathroom. Yes, you may. Do you need some help?”
“No, Daddy. I can go by myself now.”
“Good boy. But if you do happen to need some help, just call out for me. I’ll be right here.”
“Okay, Daddy.” He slid off Jack’s lap and headed for the little bathroom on one side of the shelter.
Jack kept an ear cocked for Charles’ call, but it never came. Charles came out a few minutes later. “There’s no sink, Daddy. I need to wash my hands.”
“Over here, Sport,” Jack said. He got up and held Charles up to the kitchen sink so he could wash his hands.
“Can I have a toy now, Daddy?” Charles asked.
“Sure you can. Where’s your BOB?”
Charles ran over to get the small teardrop pack and carried it over to where his father was sitting again at the computer.
“One for now. This is a small place and we have to keep things put away. So just one at a time. Okay?”
“Okay, Daddy. Umm… The fire truck!”
“No sirens,” Jack cautioned as Charles took out a Matchbox toy fire truck. “Mommy and Grammum are resting.”
“Okay, Daddy.”
Charles went to his knees and then sat down on the floor to play. Jack went back to his studying, checking the outside radiation meter from time to time. Since he hadn’t stayed up to catch the peak reading and the reading one hour after the peak, he had to back into the seven/ten rule to find out when they could safely leave the shelter.
Charles played with his fire truck for a little while, making his siren sounds very, very softly, and then curled up on Jack’s lap for a nap. Jack continued to read the computer screen as he held Charles.
He didn’t notice when Sara and Kathleen came through the curtain from the bunkroom. They stood and watched in silence for several minutes. Jack finally looked around.
Quietly Kathleen said, “I’ll take him and put him down for the rest of his nap.”
Jack nodded and gently handed Charles to Kathleen. Jack searched Sara’s face. “How are you doing now, Sara?”
“Better, Jack. A good cry and some time with the Good Book does wonders for the heart and soul.”
Jack nodded and turned back to the computer.
Things went about the same for the following week. Jack checked outside, suited up in PPE (Personal Protective Equipment), after a week had passed and the outside radiation was down under 0.25 r/hr.
He decontaminated in the house and left the PPE in the basement. Sara and Kathleen looked at him expectantly when he came back into the shelter proper. “Nothing,” he said. “No signs of anyone having been on the property at all. The radiation is almost non existent in the basement. It’ll be okay to use it for a few hours a day, as long as we keep the security shutters down and don’t go upstairs. Another week and we should be fine outside part of the day.”
“That will make things easier,” Kathleen said.
Another week and Jack checked again. “Down to under 0.10 r/hr. We’ll be fine now. I just want to sleep in the shelter until I can decontaminate the entire property. And wear dust masks when you’re outside until then.” He looked down at Ruff. “Ruff will have to stay in a small area that I decontaminate first. He’s close to the ground and might breathe in the dust. That wouldn’t be good.”
“Ruff,” Charles said, speaking carefully to the puppy, “You have to stay right where I tell you or you’ll breathe stuff. Bad stuff.” He looked up at Jack. “Right, Daddy?”
“That’s right. It will be your responsibility to see that he does when he’s out with you.”
“Okay, Daddy. I will. Can we go out now?”
“Let me get an area cleared first. You can bring him out this afternoon.”
“Okay, Daddy. I’ll take a nap so I’ll be good and ready.”
“You do that, son. See if Ruff will take a nap, too.”
“I’m scared, Jack,” Kathleen said when she returned from putting the two little ones down for their naps. “What if… I don’t know! There are so many what ifs…”
“I know, Kathleen. We’ll all just have to do the best we can. Which brings me to a touchy subject. Are you still… reluctant… to have and use a sidearm?”
“Reluctant, yes,” Kathleen said. “But considering the circumstances in which we will now be living, I’m determined to take care of Charles by any means necessary. So, get me a gun you know I can use. I’m sure you have several.”
Jack ignored the last little dig, and nodded. “I’m sure I have something suitable. Sara?”
“I have Harold’s original issue Colt Officer’s Model, leather gun belt, and holster. It suits me just fine. I only have two spare magazines for it. I wouldn’t mind having a few more.”
Copyright 2008





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