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These dogs were a huge asset; better than a machine gun or surveillance cameras. Or both.

Grant asked Dan, “So this is what you did in the Air Force?”

“Yep. Base defense,” Dan said. “I worked with dogs the last eight years of my twenty-five years in. Now I train the Sheriff Department’s K9s on a volunteer basis. When I was in the Air Force, I did the usual stuff, which included law enforcement on base. But a lot of what we did was more like infantry, except that we were more defense-oriented than typical infantry, which is offense-oriented. We had a big ol’ air base to defend with fences and mines sometimes. That’s where the dogs come in. They can find intruders and attack them. Arabs are terrified of dogs, which came in handy…where I was a couple of times.” The U.S. used air bases in various countries that did not want it known that they were helping the Americans, so the locations of the bases were secret. Dan, out of habit, wasn’t saying where the bases were.

Dan petted a dog and said, “Dogs are perfect for defending an area. Perfect. Detect and attack. You can’t ask for anything more than that when you’re repelling bad guys.”

Dan looked out at the gate and the surrounding area and drew in a deep breath. “This is exactly what I’ve trained to do, and I’m glad to be doing it again. Not that I want any of this to be happening, but at least I can add something here for my neighbors.” Grant remembered from their earlier conversation that Rich knew Dan from Oath Keepers. That meant that Dan wasn’t just a guy with some experience and some dogs—Dan was a Patriot who was in this for all the right reasons.

Grant and the guys were afraid to pet the dogs. Dan said, “Go ahead, pet them. Let them know your scent and that you’re okay.” The dogs seemed to sense Dan’s acceptance of the guys and instinctively knew that they weren’t a threat.

They heard some activity at the gate, so Grant went outside to see what was happening. A pickup with some guys was waiting to re-enter Pierce Point. The guards waved and someone moved the car blocking the entrance. The pickup slowly drove in, and the guys got out and started to visit with the guards. They looked like good ol’ boys in work clothes with hunting rifles and various pistols.

Grant came up to the group just in time to hear one of the guys say, “It’s getting bad in town.” A crowd was gathering around him. People were starved for information about conditions out there.

“Here’s the good news,” the guy said. “As you come into town just after the city limits, right at that little park, there is a roadblock kind of like this one. Lots of men with guns,” the guy motioned with his hand toward the guards, “like this, but more guys.” He paused and then said, “They have blue strips of cloth tied around their arm.” People were organizing themselves to solve a problem; no government was needed for this. “I saw one cop in uniform there with them so I guess it’s a posse or something.”

The guy continued. “They were checking IDs. They saw that we were from here so they let us in. They told us to be armed because they couldn’t keep control of everything going on in town. We went down Strauss toward Martin’s.” Martin’s was the name of the local grocery store. “There was a pickup load of some pretty mean looking Mexicans. They didn’t bother us, but I wouldn’t want to piss them off. Lots of people are carrying guns, which looked weird. But what looked weirder was the people who didn’t have guns. Who walks around town now without a gun?” The idiots who didn’t own a gun, Grant thought. Even out there in the rural part of the state, plenty of households didn’t own one.

One of the guards asked, “How are the shelves at Martin’s?”

“Pretty bare,” the guy said. “We waited in a long line in the parking lot to go in. There were a few of these blue ribbon guys walking around the parking lot to control the crowd. People were pretty calm, but some were bitching about the line and the lack of this and that. It was pissing me off. Shut up. It’s hard enough to go through this shit, but to have some welfare queen complaining…the fatter they were, the more they bitched.” Like any other rural part of America, there were plenty of welfare recipients in Frederickson. Most were white.

“When we came up to the door at Martin’s,” the guy continued, “we had to check our weapons. We left them with Jimmy,” he said pointing to one of the guys from his truck. “I ain’t trusting those things to anyone. Hey, tell them what someone said to you while we were inside.”

Jimmy said, “Some guy, some yuppie lookin’ guy, asked how much we wanted for Derrick’s .357. He said he had $1,000 in cash. Can you believe that?”

Everyone looked over at Derrick, who had his .357 in a holster. He pointed at his .357 and said, “A week ago, I would have said, ‘sold!’ But now there’s nothing worth buyin’ for $1,000. There’s almost nothing left in Martin’s.”

The guy who had been telling this story said, “Yep. Shelves are pretty much bare. Just stuff that no one wants to eat. Health food shit. Oh, and the racks of greeting cards are untouched. No one wants to send a birthday card now,” he chuckled. “Besides health food, about the only stuff left is weird shit like Chinese food.” The guy saw Pow and said, “No offense.”

Pow shot back, “No problem, bro. I like steak and fried chicken.” That lightened up the mood.

Grant asked the guy, “What are prices like?”

“Dunno,” the guy said. “We didn’t find anything we wanted to buy. They had a sign up about the $200 limit. We left. What a big waste of time. We went around town some more just to see what was going on. I mean, I wanted to come back with something. But we got nothin’.” He thought for a second and then said, “I even heard a couple of shots. Sounded like a pistol. ‘Pop!’ ‘Pop!’”

“Well,” he continued, “the gas stations were closed. That’s when I got pissed. I had wasted all that gas to come to town and there’s nothin’ to buy.” For the first time the guy started to look concerned.

“We’re screwed if this doesn’t straighten out soon,” the guy said. It got quiet. Real quiet. People had been busy with the camaraderie of guard duty and all the excitement about defending their community. Now it was sinking in. There was nothing in town. They were on their own.

Chapter 103

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(May 10)

The good news kept coming in to Camp Murray where Jeanie Thompson had been working almost non-stop for several days. People were upbeat as they got ready for the 7:00 a.m. briefing.

Jason came in wearing the same suit he had worn a few days before. Jeanie was reminded that her quickly packed suitcase only had a couple of changes of clothes. Oh well, they were saving lives so fashion would have to take a back seat. Besides, everyone else—except the Governor—only seemed to have a few changes of clothes.

Jason had a smile for the first time in days. “Well, we have some good news,” he announced in the conference room where the morning briefings took place. “Actually, quite a bit of it. The first polling since the beginning of the Crisis is in.” He was smiling.

“People are looking to their government for help,” Jason said with a huge grin. “They want us—by a 78% majority—to exercise emergency powers. That’s right: They want us to do what we’re doing and probably do more of it.”