The Macro Event. Andrew Adams
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Название: The Macro Event

Автор: Andrew Adams

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Триллеры

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isbn: 9781633389656

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СКАЧАТЬ really. I will ask around the people here. And is there anything else I can do for you guys before you ride off into the sunset?” Carl replied.

      “In case we end up walking and taking several days, is there any food you can spare? Lee here is stockpiled well, but I did not bring much to the party,” Jake asked of Carl.

      “Well, you guys should go grab a burger before you head off. I will ask the kitchen to make some sandwiches for you also,” Carl said. “But you know you two guys are welcome to stay here and see what develops. We could even put you to work.”

      “We appreciate your hospitality, Carl, but I know Lee wants to get home, and I am certain they are going to need me at Irwin,” Jake replied.

      Jake and Lee then went to the counter, where a cheery middle-aged lady handed each a plate with a cheeseburger, fries, and salad. Knowing it might be a long time before they would have fresh beef again, the two travelers cherished their meal.

      Carl came over as they were finishing eating. He was carrying a small box containing six sandwiches and six bottles of water and some emergency food packages similar to the ones Lee had in his BOB. Jake packed most of the stuff into his backpack. Then using triple layers of plastic bags, he and Lee duct-taped some stuff to the handlebars of both bikes.

      Lee and Jake said their goodbyes and thanks to Carl. The men wished one another good luck for the uncertain future. Hearty handshakes sealed the respect all around. Carl was one of the good people the country was going to need desperately in the coming days, weeks, and months. Lee wondered if perhaps he felt the same about Jake and him. Jake and Lee then climbed on the bikes, and as they started to ride off, Jake saluted Carl, who returned it and said, “Stay safe out there.”

      Lee and Jake rode off and worked their way south out of the town, picking up the Sandy Valley highway and turning west. Just as they got on the road, an old or vintage military truck known as a “two and a half ton,” or “deuce and a half,” roared past them headed to town. Behind that was an old Ford pickup truck. Both trucks were packed with people. Some waved, but most looked stunned and desperate. Lee and Jake kept moving.

      Chapter 12

      1330, Day 1, Garrett Household, Agua Dulce, California

      Melinda and James reached Madison with the two-way radio at around 9:30 a.m. The couple had slept through the EMP unaware until morning and waking up to no power. Going outside and finding their neighbors milling around, trying to start their cars was all Logan needed to know that something drastic had occurred. He and Melinda pulled the two-way radio from a closet and set it up using Lee’s instructions just as the other family members had done. Once working, James contacted the main Garrett house.

      The two-way radios provided the Garrett family a lifesaving advantage as a method for the three households to communicate. Although the Garretts were not yet aware of the extent of power and communication outage countrywide, they knew the radios Lee had set up provided their family a link for communicating. Cell phones were as dead as landlines, and widespread panic was surely occurring. Fear for loved ones gripped everyone. James and Melinda began to realize how important this HAM radio was. The two felt bad about all the kidding and harassment the family had given Lee over his obsession with setting up the radios at the three households.

      Using the radios, a discussion of choices went back and forth. The final agreement was for Melinda and James to sit tight until later in the day. Then assuming Lawrence and Richard Silva made it to the house, they would send out a rescue party the ten miles, driving Lee’s old Mustang.

      Meanwhile, Logan and Madison started taking stock of their emergency items and food supplies. A mostly buried shipping container up the hill from the house contained most of the emergency food. Although only under a few feet of dirt, the buried container remained at a nearly constant sixty-eight degrees. The hard volcanic rock of the Garrett property had proven difficult to excavate, but once completed, the nearly solid rock provided for strong walls and minimal reinforcement for the sides of the container. Steel beams and an added layer of galvanized sheet metal added strength to the roof. Besides food, the container had a large supply of other essential items including ammunition, batteries, stoves, fuel, medical supplies and about everything any well-versed Prepper would have a supply of. The container also had air ventilation pipes coming from two remote locations into a void below the floor. An air intake in the floor provided filtered air for one of three different air systems. The primary powered unit was an added HEPA air pump. If the outside environment became contaminated, the pump and filter combination created a slightly positive pressure in the container, ensuring no contaminants could leach into the container. A small dehumidifier and a portable air conditioner were also inside the container. A bank of 12-volt batteries powered a 48-volt inverter that could run any of the ventilation units. Solar panels arranged on the hill kept the batteries charged and ready. The ventilation pipes contained HEPA filters at the hidden intakes. HEPA filters could stop a multitude of dangerous things, including chemical, biological and even radioactive dust particles. Lee had designed the container for possible use as a short-term “survival shelter.” He argued there was little chance of using it for something like a nuclear or biological event. However, its use as a fire shelter in the fire-prone Southern California high desert was a real possibility. The buried, insulated, and dual entrance door shelter would be impervious to any raging fire and could easily provide clean, cool, and filtered air for a dozen people if needed.

      The Garrett property was a constant rising slope from the entrance gate up to a rocky ridgeline along the north end of the plot. The highest point of the hill was eighty feet higher in elevation than the house. Large rocks at that point provided a perfect and natural location for an observation point. Lee and Logan had taken bags of premixed concrete up the hill with the tractor and poured and smoothed out the mix between the rocks to create a flat floor. They drilled into the rock using a concrete bit and hammer drill and installed eyebolts using a chemical two-part epoxy.

      Logan found a tarpaulin and net in the storage shed he and his Dad had put together at the same time they built the OP. It consisted of a brown metallic tarp with a military camouflage net layer over the outside and connected to the inside layer with plastic wire ties. The combination unit would provide both shelter from rain and some concealment. Logan hiked up the hill and installed the net over the makeshift observation point. Then following instructions contained in the emergency book, Logan rolled out a multiconductor wire from the top of the OP down the hill to the house. Lee had already prepared a “phone” system using two old dial telephones. Following instructions available on Prepper sites, Lee rewired the phones and installed a lantern battery on each one. To make them quick and easy to set up and use, Lee had installed simple plastic connectors on each end of the cable. Once plugged to the phones at each point, simply lifting one phone’s handset caused the other phone to ring. The cheap phones provided clean, easy, and undetectable two-way communication similar to expensive military field phones.

      Logan also took other items up to the OP, including bottled water, a large pair of binoculars, two small folding chairs, blankets, and a spotting scope. Plus, he carried up a small ammo-box of AR15 rounds and another of AR-10 rounds. He wanted the ammo and other items preplaced. If someone needed to man the post, they would only need to take weapons and personal items.

      Madison had started looking over the short- and long-term food stores. She wanted to conserve the fresh and perishable food as long as possible. So she planned to supplement all meals with the long-term freeze-dried, canned, and dehydrated foods from the food container. The food container did contain a mixture of canned and bottled items, which they periodically rotated out of their daily diets. Far more importantly were the long-term products. These items had shelf lives of up to twenty-five years. She also found ten cases of MRE meals. The MRE meals did not have as long of shelf life but were quick and easy to use. She brought two cases of the MREs down to the house.

      One СКАЧАТЬ