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Apocalyptic Daria:
Scarlett’s Tale
Part 17
“Well, here we are,” George Williams said from his seat and pointed out the personnel carrier’s front windshield. “Welcome to bedlam, otherwise known as Taylorsville.”
Both Roger and Scarlett looked out the windshield at the same time. People could be seen everywhere - the sidewalks, parts of the streets, and on virtually every lot and parcel of land within the town and the area just outside the town itself. The teen gasped and gripped her companion’s right hand tightly. He simply sighed and shook his head as he said, “Good Lord.”
The vehicle rolled to a stop at the top of a hill and the government agent spoke quietly into a radio. Then he looked back at his guests. “I’ve always heard it said that San Jose is a thousand villages in search of a city,” he said. “Well, Taylorsville is about ten thousand homes in search of a town.”
Scarlett swallowed and shook her head in disbelief. Several years before, she had seen a documentary about the Woodstock concert. Looking at the scene before her eyes, she thought, Compared to this, Woodstock was an orderly county fair.
Inside the cat carrier, Smokey made an odd sound, as if she were trying to talk. But the teen girl understood her clearly. --Let me out! Let me out!--
The girl ignored the cat and stared out the windshield.
“Where did all these people come from?” Roger asked.
“We have a few from the Philadelphia area,” George said, “but virtually all the rest are from the Washington fallout zone itself. Nobody from Pittsburgh has made it here - yet.”
Tents, makeshift shelters built out of plywood and tin scraps, and assorted vehicles of all shapes and sizes were set up haphazardly amongst the homes and buildings that made up Taylorsville.
“I didn’t think that there’d be that many people here,” Scarlett said, her voice reflecting her awe.
George looked at the teen. “There’s at least two million people who have been displaced from eastern Maryland and Delaware alone. That’s a lot of people to absorb...and move on out.”
“What do you mean by ‘move on out’?” she asked.
“Taylorsville is just a way station for refugees, at least until better and more permanent shelters can be set up,” he said. “You could say that Taylorsville is giant triage station, as are many other places around the destroyed cities. Frederick, for instance, is crammed full of refugees right now, as are both Hagerstown and Westminster.”
For a brief moment, the government agent’s calm facade disappeared and he appeared tired. Then his features tightened up and he continued, “We have to find new homes for these people. We really have no choice in the matter. After all, most of the fallout zone will never be habitable again, not within our lifetimes. We won’t even be able to send troops into the bombed areas, because they’ll be deadly for centuries.” He sighed and closed his eyes. “Or millennia.”
“What about the dead in Philadelphia and Washington?” she asked. “Will there be an effort to bury them?”
George looked quickly at the teen and slowly shook his head. “I’m sorry, Miss Hawkins,” he said. “That’s neither practical, nor safe. Besides, many of the dead were vaporized when the bombs exploded.” He watched tears fill the redhead’s eyes. “It will be a small comfort, I know, but if your parents really were in Philadelphia itself, the end came very fast for them.” He looked away. “I’m sorry.”
Before Scarlett could break down, Roger turned towards her and guided her face to his right shoulder. She released the cat carrier and wrapped her arms around Roger as she cried.
**********
Despite the heavily crowded state of the town, the streets were actually clear of obstructions, with what looked like the normal amount of parked cars one would find in a town of its size.
“Good traffic control,” Roger said. “I expected a lot worse.” Scarlett’s face was still buried in his shoulder and his right hand gently stroked the back of her head.
A Marine captain, who sat on Roger’s left side, turned towards him and said, “That is our doing. It makes helping these people a whole lot easier.”
“How did the residents take having all these refugees show up?” Roger asked.
A smile appeared on the Marine’s face and he chuckled. “They had up barricades when we showed up late on Black Saturday itself,” he said. “Plus, they had already turned away about a hundred vehicles before we showed up. Well, it only took them twenty-seven minutes to dismantle all of the barricades.”
“Really?” Roger asked.
“Yup. You’d be surprised just how motivated people become when several machine guns are aimed at them. The missile launchers we aimed at their barricades kinda helped in that regard, too.”
“I can see that,” Scarlett commented into Roger’s shirt and sniffled.
As the vehicle moved slowly into the town, the teen pulled her face out of her companion’s shoulder, wiped her eyes and looked around again. So many people, she thought and winced. So many thoughts. Thank you, Dad, for showing me how to block it all out. I miss you and Mom so much.
Then the girl stopped herself and stared at a man outside in a food line. He was tall and skinny, with dark hair and a small beard on his chin. A guitar was slung over his back, and she could see the evidence of a pistol holster on his right hip. There were earrings in his left ear and some sort of tattoos were visible on his upper left arm. As he stood in the line, he spoke with a woman with dark and curly hair. Two little girls stood real close to the woman, both apparently scared.
“What’s wrong?” Roger asked Scarlett.
“I’ve seen that guy outside before,” she said and pointed. “He’s from Lawndale.”
“Considering the chaos with the evacuations, I’d be surprised if you didn’t see more people you knew. Do you know him?”
She shook her head. “No. But, I went to school with his sister, though.”
--Let me out, please! I need to get out!--
The teen picked up the carrier again and held it close. Smokey looked around anxiously and the girl smiled at her. “You just wait, O.K.? I’ll let you out as soon as I can.”
--This scares me!--
“It’s O.K., girl. It’s O.K.”
The vehicle rolled to a stop outside a series of mobile home trailers set up in an elementary school parking lot.
“We’re here,” George Williams said as the door was opened and Marines moved out, one at a time.
Finally, Roger and Scarlett grabbed their belongings and stepped out with the government agent. They followed both George and two Marine corporals as they walked up to and into the trailer nearest them.
Inside what would normally be a living room, a large desk was set up. The desktop itself was clean, but an 8 x 10 photo showed George, a redheaded woman about his age and two children, one tow-headed boy of around seven years of age, and a redheaded girl, who looked to be ten or eleven. The boy held a puppy, and the girl held a cat.
A side desk had a middle-aged woman sitting behind it. She was keying information into a computer, and nodded at her boss briefly before turning back to her job. She, like George, wore a conservative business working suit, but she also had a government ID tag on a lanyard around her neck.
George looked at the secretary and asked, “Marie, any calls for me?”
“No, sir,” the woman said, her eyes still on the monitor, “but I bet you have a lot of e-mails.”
He laughed briefly, then took off his jacket and hung it on a coat tree near his desk. He looked at the two civilians and said, “Take off your coats and set your belongings on the floor.” He pointed at an open door, where a young corpsman dressed in cammies waited. “Miss Hawkins, please follow that young corpsman into that room, where he will scan you for radiological contamination.”
Scarlett held up the cat carrier and asked, “What about my cat?”
“I’ll watch her,” Roger said and took the carrier.
“Leave her inside the carrier, Roger,” George said. “The corpsman will scan her after he finishes taking care of both of you.”
The corpsman cleared his throat and said, “Sir, we’re not supposed to waste time or food on pets. We're just supposed to euthanize them.”
The redheaded teen frowned at the sailor and started to speak, but stopped when she saw the government agent tense up. She could sense a surge of fury flow through the man and backed away from him a few inches.
Roger noticed her reaction and saw the secretary shake her head and sigh. He tensed up himself.
When George spoke, his voice was calm and sounded slightly softer than it had earlier. “How many pets would you say that you’ve euthanized in the last two days, Doc?”
“Oh, about ten or twelve, sir,” the corpsman said.
“I see,” George said, crossed his arms over his chest and sighed. “Did you know that I countermanded that particular order two days ago?”
The corpsman nodded, and replied, “Yes, sir, but Chief Zimmer said that we weren’t bound by your orders and told us to carry on with it.”
George turned to the female Marine and said, “Angie, I want you to tell Sgt. Major Cawthorne that I want to see him NOW!”
“Yes, SIR!” The Marine left the trailer and could be seen moving at the double.
The corpsman realized then that he had made a terrible mistake. “Uh...sir?”
“Shut up,” the agent said and the young sailor closed his mouth. “Bring your scanner out here and scan these two civilians AND their cat.” He moved his face to an inch of the younger man's. “I outrank Chief Zimmer, you little shit, and if you ever disobey another order I give you, I will personally shoot you myself. Do I make myself clear?”
The corpsman shot to attention. “Yes, sir!”
“Now, do your job!”
The corpsman hurried to obey the government agent and George looked at his visitors. “You’ll have to loosen your pants, and be prepared to have the probe go inside your clothing.”
“Why?” Roger asked.
“If you are severely contaminated, then it will show up in your perspiration and around your buttocks.”
“What if we were severely contaminated?” Scarlett asked.
George sighed. “We would recommend that you accept euthanasia, as a mercy. We’ve already had to euthanize probably a hundred and ten to a hundred and thirty people.”
The corpsman returned with a Geiger counter and moved up to Roger. He looked at George warily, but said, “Sir, you need to loosen your pants, please.”
“I know,” he said and did so. He held up his jeans by the waist and waited.
Scarlett looked at the secretary, who ignored the exam, then at George. He was busy going through a filing cabinet and also ignored the exam. The two Marine corporals watched with detached and bored expressions on their faces.
The corpsman ran the probe very slowly up and down Roger’s legs. Then he said, “Lower your pants slightly, sir.”
Roger did so and Scarlett watched as the Navy sailor scanned first the front of Roger’s underwear, then the back.
She then looked up at her companion’s face and saw that he was watching her at the same time. She smiled at him.
His return smile was weak.
Smokey let out a loud meow from inside the carrier and batted the carrier door with one of her front paws. --You said that you would let me out!--
The redhead opened the carrier and the cat stretched as she stepped out in the open. --That is much better!--
“You can pull your pants back up, sir,” the corpsman then said to Roger.
The private detective did so and buckled his belt. “O.K., what now?”
“Lift your shirt slightly, please.”
Roger pulled his shirt up and the corpsman ran the probe over his belly, then his back.
“Roger?” Scarlett asked and he looked at her. “X, Y, Z, Roger, X, Y, Z.”
The man blushed as he dropped his shirt and quickly zipped up his pants.
She laughed and smiled at him.
The corpsman then ran his probe over Roger’s head and said, “You’re clean, sir.” Then he glanced at Scarlett. “Your turn’s up, Miss.”
The teen blushed, stood up and opened her jeans. As before, both George and the secretary looked away, while the Marines appeared bored.
“Lower your pants, please.”
She exposed her panties and stared straight ahead as the probe was moved over the front of her underwear, then her backside. Then she looked at Roger.
“Hang in there, Scarlett,” he said and smiled at her.
“O.K., miss, you can pull up your pants, but hold up your shirt slightly.”
She quickly yanked up her jeans, buttoned them, then zipped them up. When she held up the shirt, she glanced at Roger again and stuck her tongue out at him.
His smile widened and he winked at her.
The corpsman finished that part of the scan and moved the probe to the girl’s head. When he scanned that, she crossed her arms over her chest and asked, “Well?”
“You’re clean, too, Miss.”
George then turned back around and said, “Miss Hawkins, you can pick up your cat and this young man will scan her.”
The corpsman turned to the government agent and said, “Sir, I was just following orders!”
George put his hands on his hips and said, “I am the equivalent of a Navy captain and you still disobeyed me in order to obey a chief petty officer instead?”
“But you’re a civilian, sir!”
“You’re an idiot. I know for a damned fact that they teach you boys and girls at Great Lakes all about the chain of command and the order of rank.”
The male Marine corporal coughed and spoke up, “Sir, he is a Navy sailor. They tend to be a little slack on that kind of stuff.”
George snorted and said, “Apparently so, corporal. Apparently so.”
The corpsman frowned at the two, but kept any responses to himself.
Scarlett moved up with Smokey in her arms. “O.K.,” she said. “Go ahead and let’s get this done.”
As the cat was scanned, Sgt. Major Cawthorne returned with two armed Marines and an angry Navy chief who wore a khaki uniform.
The door opened and the chief stormed in. “What the hell do you want, Williams?” he asked, his voice angry. “I’ve got work to do! I don’t have time for you or your idiotic bullshit!”
Two men in business suits stepped just inside the door and waited.
George pointed his right index finger at the non-commissioned officer. “I am in command of this rescue center, Zimmer!” he said, his voice angry. “You have been told that, and you were given orders that you disobeyed. You will show me the proper respect and when I tell you to do something, I damn well expect you to do as I tell you!”
“I report to Commander Engle and not to you, you son of a bitch!”
The government agent sighed and shook his head. “You know, I’m not even going to waste any more time on you. We’re under martial law and your time is now up with me.” He looked at the two men who had just came in. “Mister Jones, Mister Smith, get this bastard out of my sight. I never want to see him again.”
The chief fought as he was handcuffed out drug out of the trailer. “Get your damned hands off of me.” He looked at the sergeant major. “John! Get over here and help me!”
The Marine ignored the man, while the junior corpsman’s right hand shook.
The door was shut behind the three and the chief’s loud protests could still be heard as he was drug to a dark, four-door sedan and thrown in the back. The sergeant major then nodded at George and left as well.
“What’s going to happen to him?” Roger asked.
George glanced at him. “I’d like to simply shoot him, but we need him and other dirt bags like him for scrubbing any contaminated buildings. He’ll be kept busy.” Then he looked at Marie. “We’d better see who’s next in line to be senior corpsman, Marie. Make sure that whoever it is has the SMDR training.”
“O.K., boss,” the secretary said.
“What’s ‘SMDR’?” Scarlett asked.
“‘Senior Medical Department Representative,’” George said. “It’s the highest Navy enlisted medical position on a command where there isn’t any medical officers. In our case, we do have doctors, but we still have the senior corpsmen around to supplement them.”
“If he’s been trained as an ‘SMDR’, wouldn’t it be better to keep him around for his expertise?” Roger asked.
The government agent laughed and shook his head. “I have no billet for a fat ass idiot who sits around and drinks coffee all day. From what I could see, that’s all he ever did.”
**********
The female corpsman who had examined Roger’s arm before they arrived in Taylorsville returned with medical kit and said, “The surgery is backed up right now, Mr. Williams. I’ll have to sew him up here.”
George turned to Roger and said, “Follow that young lady into the next room, Roger, and she’ll sew up that arm for you.”
Scarlett watched as her companion left the room, closed her eyes and waited in silence. The thoughts of the secretary and the two Marines came through to her mind clearly.
--...a few more hours and I’ll get back to my room and take a nap. Maybe read a little. I wish that Family Feud was still on and...--
--...you’re a pretty one, Red, but not as pretty as Angie here. Maybe she’ll let me do another ‘inspection’ of her again, only this time, I’ll...--
--...probably want to do another 'inspection'. Gawd, you’d think he’s never seen a woman in a bra and uniform pants before, the way he drooled. What a...--
Oddly enough, she could only get a word or two every several seconds from George himself. You have some sort of device blocking my powers, she thought. I have no idea what it could be - or just what government agency you work for to have such a thing.
“Going to sleep?” George asked the teen.
Scarlett opened her eyes and yawned. “I’m just waiting until Roger gets back in here,” she said.
“Kind of old for you, isn’t he?”
The teen just stared at him.
“O.K., you gave me a look just like my daughter does. when I say something she considers wrong.”
She blinked. “You’re not the one who’s chosen him. I am. He was injured trying to protect me from those raiders the night we met. I just hope that my youth doesn’t turn him off.”
The man looked down briefly and a light blush appeared on his face. “I’m sorry if I said anything to offend you, Miss Hawkins. I did not mean to pry in your affairs.”
“Roger’s a good man, Mr. Williams. I don’t understand why a simple investigation into someone would get him threatened.”
The government agent gave the girl a wry smile. “I see that Roger told you of our first encounter,” he said. “Did he also tell you about Bruno?”
Scarlett blinked again. “Yes.”
“Your ‘boyfriend’ is a persistent investigator. That’s why he came up against us in the first place.”
When he said that, he turned his attention to a telephone and made a call. He turned his back on the girl and spoke in low tones.
**********
After Roger returned, a large bandage over his right forearm, Scarlett sat beside George’s desk. She watched as the government agent took a list of questions out of a side drawer. Then he sat behind the desk and pulled his chair in.
“Do you normally interview refugees?” the teen asked him. “Since you’re ‘in charge’ of this rescue station, how do you even have time for it?”
“I don’t,” the agent admitted and slightly loosened his tie. “I conduct one or two interviews a day, though, just to keep my hand on it a little. And, since Roger and I are already acquainted, I decided to interview you two myself.”
Scarlett saw Roger roll his eyes and looked down briefly. “O.K.,” she said. “I’m ready when you are.”
“You ready, Marie?” George asked his secretary.
“Ready, boss.”
He turned his attention back to the teenager and asked, “What is your full name?”
“Scarlett Leann Hawkins.”
“Your age is seventeen?” She nodded. “What is your birthday?”
“August the fifth.”
George cleared his throat, opened a bottle of water and took a drink. “Where is your birthplace?”
“Whitley Memorial Hospital, Columbia City, Indiana.”
“What’s your parents’ full names? For your mother, give her maiden name.”
The redhead looked down briefly. “Conrad Daniel Hawkins and Jennifer Lynnette Kennedy.”
“Prior to Black Saturday, what was your address?”
She sighed. “418 Wellman Drive, Lawndale Maryland.”
“Where do you plan to go after you leave Taylorsville?”
“The Warren, Indiana area.”
“O.K., now what is your level of education, Scarlett?”
“I’m...I was a junior at Lawndale High School.”
The questions continued for several minutes, until it was Roger’s turn.
He and Scarlett switched places and, as Roger sat at the desk, she picked up Smokey and held her on her lap.
--I need to walk around some more.--
“Mr. Williams?” Scarlett asked.
The government agent looked at the teen and responded, “Yes, Miss Hawkins?”
“Would it be O.K. for Smokey to walk around in here until we leave?”
“Certainly. She shouldn’t be cooped up all the time, anyway. I happen to be a cat person myself, and I miss Snickers right now.”
“Is that your cat’s name?”
He smiled. “Actually, Snickers belongs to my daughter, but she thinks all four of us belong to her.” He shrugged. “Cats are that way, you know.”
“Yeah,” Scarlett smiled as she set Smokey back on the floor. “Don’t leave this room, girl.”
George turned his attention back to Roger. “Shall we get started?”
“Why do we even have to answer any of these questions?” Roger asked. “What does it matter anymore? Why is it even your business?”
The agent leaned back in his chair and looked at the private detective for several seconds. Then he said, “The United States has been hurt, Roger, and hurt bad. We’re trying to stabilize the situation as best as we can, and it’s not easy. We don’t know for sure how many citizens we’ve lost yet. In addition to figuring out how many we’ve lost, we’re going to try to find out who we lost. As far as the dead are concerned, we may never know who all of them are - but we’re going to try.”
“Uh, huh.”
George nodded. “Yes. There’s also another thing for you to keep in mind. In fact, it concerns Scarlett, as well.”
“Oh?” she asked and looked at him.
“You’re wanting to accompany Scarlett to Indiana. She’s a Hoosier native, and should have no problem going back home. You, however, are a Virginia native, if I recall correctly. The State of Indiana may balk at accepting you.”
“But Roger is with me!” Scarlett spoke up loudly. “We’ve saved each other’s lives! We’re a cou--” The teen stopped suddenly and blushed as she looked at the floor. “I’ve lost my family. I can’t lose Roger, too.” Tears ran from her eyes. “I can’t,” she added, her voice a whisper.
“Scarlett,” Roger said and looked at her. “I won’t leave you. That I can promise you.”
“Miss Hawkins, I just want you to be prepared. Some states are balking at accepting any refugees - period. They’re about to find out that the federal government didn’t disappear with the bombs. Some states, such as Kentucky and Utah, aren’t allowing live-in lovers to move in right now. Indiana could just join them in that move.”
The teen blushed. “How would he be allowed in, then?” she asked.
“They might require you two to be married.”
Roger and Scarlett looked at each other, their expressions both shocked. He looked at the agent and asked, “How can they even enforce that?”
George smiled and said, “They can’t, and in the long run, it will fail. But right now, under martial law, they’ve got the bull by the horns and they’re taking advantage of it. Scarlett actually has an advantage, though. You’re still a child in the eyes of most adults. Roger can be seen as your guardian.”
“That’s not how I see him,” the teen said.
“I know that, Scarlett,” the agent said and smiled. “In reality, under Maryland law, you are at the age of consent. Considering your orphaned status, you can now be seen as an adult.”
Then he turned his attention back to Roger and returned to the questions.
**********
The room they were in was once a school teacher’s office, from the days before cubicles became popular. It was small, but with the desk moved out, Roger and Scarlett had room to lay straight on the floor.
The couple had been given several days worth of Meals, Ready to Eat, and those sat on the floor with their backpacks. Both had already ate supper and Scarlett even set up a make shift litter box out of a plastic bag. She spread out a large sleeping bag and two blankets.
They ate a meal in silence and laid back on the sleeping bag after he finished.
“What did you think about what he said?” Scarlett asked him as she sat on the sleeping bag.
Roger looked up at the girl. “You mean the part about us having to get married?” She nodded. “It’s a bit early in our relationship for that.”
“Would you even want to get married?” she asked.
He reached up and stroked her left cheek. “I’ve thought about it some as I’ve gotten closer to thirty,” he admitted. “I wasn’t ready at eighteen, mainly because I was way too immature.”
“So what does that make me?” she asked, a frown on her face. “A child?”
He sat beside her and pulled her into an embrace. “When I was eighteen, the most stressful things I had to deal with were tests and family gatherings being way too boring. You, on the other hand, are just seventeen and have dealt with three would-be rape attacks since that...Black Saturday, I think...and you’ve survived each, a little older, wiser, and more of your innocence taken away. You’re not a kid, despite the fact that I’ve called you that. You are a young woman now, and I would be honored if you would allow me to accompany you to Indiana.”
She laid her face against his shoulder and wrapped her arms around him. “What if they make us get married?” she asked.
“I wouldn’t be as worried about getting you pregnant as I would be before.”
“Roger!” She looked up at his face, a shocked expression on her face.
He smiled and kissed her forehead. “Sorry. A small attempt at humor.”
“Very small.”
He chuckled and kissed her lips then. “Scarlett, if it means that you would get to your old home, I’d marry you. After all, I find that I like being with you more and more.” He laid back down and pulled the redhead down with him. “Why don’t we go to the restroom, then get ready for bed. Then, we’ll snuggle.”
She looked him in the eyes and said, “If we start...I mean, if we get to the...oh, crap, I don’t know what to say!”
“Just come out and say it, Scarlett. After all, you are a young woman, and if we are partners, I want us to be equal partners.”
“I don’t want us to have sexual intercourse yet!” she said quickly and blushed. “I know that you would like to, but I’m not ready for that.”
“I am a patient man, dear. Snuggling doesn’t have to involve going all the way.”
She looked at him for several seconds, then said, “I wish that I could read you.”
Roger propped himself up slightly and moved his face over hers. “Maybe you will one day,” he said and moved his lips closer to hers, “when we’re together longer.” They kissed.
When he broke the kiss, Scarlett said, “I hope so.” Then she returned his kiss.
**********
Roger flicked on the small flashlight as the teen turned off the overhead light. She had on a long T-shirt, while he was dressed in his T-shirt and underwear. As she got under the covers and adjusted them on her body, he turned off the flashlight.
Smokey stretched out at their feet and yawned loudly. Her cat carrier sat in a corner, the door open just in case the feline wanted to curl up in there.
Scarlett felt Roger move onto his left side and his hand moved to right over her the T-shirt over her belly. At the same time, his lips found hers and they kissed.
Then he moved his hand under her shirt and fondled her belly gently as they continued to kiss.
When his hand moved further up her shirt, she broke the kiss and inhaled slowly.
“This doesn’t bother you, does it?” he asked.
Her response was to slap her left hand onto his and hold it to her. “What do you think?” she asked.
They kissed again.
**********
Finally, sleep started to overtake the couple and Scarlett turned onto her left side and moved against Roger spoon-style.
He wrapped his right arm over her side and his hand rested on her waist just off her hip. “Do you have the pushdagger in your hand?” he asked.
The girl pulled the sheathed weapon out from under her pillow and held it tightly in her left hand. “I do now.”
“Good night, then, honey.”
“What if I hurt you, Roger? I don’t want to hurt either you or Smokey.”
“You won’t, honey, you won’t.”
“How do you know that?”
He sighed in the darkness. “I have faith in you, Scarlett. You know that I’m not a threat, and I’m betting that whatever is taking control of you knows that already.”
“Roger, if something happens...I love you.”
He held her tightly and kissed the side of her face. “I love you, too, Scarlett,” he said.
She pulled the blankets up to her neck again and closed her eyes. She felt her hand heat up as she held the weapon.
(To be continued...)
_________________ Sing along now, boys and girls, OK?
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