“Alright!” Sean rallied, his rifle held over his head. “Then get to your posts, and keep your heads down!”
The group broke up quickly, with men and women scrambling in different directions. They were all nervous, but there was a confidence as well, earned during the past weeks of training and drilling with the militia.
David went to Sean and tapped him on the shoulder. “What do I need to do?”
Sean grabbed David by the elbow. “Have you been the back way to Clinton before?”
David shook his head.
“There’s a wood bridge about five miles up that you can get across on. Get there fast and let them know that it looks like an armed group of men are heading through the valley. Have them gather their forces and at the very least prepare a defense. If you hear gunfire and there’s any way they can afford to send reinforcements, have them send men our way through the hills on the North side of the freeway. We’ll take any help we can get, and let them know that if these guys are bad news and head east, we’ll trail them and help push them past Clinton. Just don’t get south of the freeway, I don’t want any friendly fire issues.”
David made mental notes and nodded at each instruction. “Got it,” he said when Sean finished. As he turned to leave, David felt a tug on his jacket and turned back.
“Thanks for your help, David,” Sean said warmly. “You didn’t have to do this, you know.”
“I know,” he said. “But we’re still a part of this community.”
Sean patted the young man on his shoulder, then motioned towards Clinton with his head. “You better get moving.”
CHAPTER 40
Thursday, February 16th
Deer Creek, MT
Ty joined the men assigned to the barricades by the bridge, found a place, and took cover. Over the past three months, the militia had worked hard to build two large fortifications on both sides of the road that led across the bridge. The barricades were set back about fifty feet from the river and angled at forty-five degrees to the road and consisted of long embankments that were flanked by ditches in the front and rear. The ditches were shallow but wide, and the dirt that had been excavated from them, along with a variety of other material, had been used to make the earthen berms that rose six feet above ground level and were capped with large tree trunks that lay horizontally along the top.
From where he knelt, Ty could see the dump truck and an old bus exiting the freeway and maneuvering around the dead cars the militia had placed in the roadway to slow and deter approaching vehicles. Tensions were high with his group, all of whom were watching the vehicles approach as they took cover behind the mammoth tree trunk.
On the far side of the river, the approaching vehicles came to a stop and shut down their engines, and a group of eighteen people, some dressed in military-style fatigues, exited the bus, joined by two men who climbed out of the dump truck’s cab. Sean had taken up a position a few feet away from Ty and let out a low whistle. “These boys mean business,” he said, loudly enough that everyone in their bunker heard. “But they don’t know who they’re dealing with, do they?” he continued, his voice rising.
One of the men from the bus retrieved a white flag and held it over his head, waving it back and forth for a few seconds, then began walking towards them across the bridge.
“Everyone hold your fire!” Sean called out, loud enough for the men at both berms to hear. “Let’s see what they have in mind before we do anything. I want everyone to stay down low so they can’t see what our forces are like, except for a couple people at each berm. You can stick your heads up, so they’ll see you. The rest of you stay out of sight.”
Ty stood up, volunteering to be visible, and saw the two oldest men at the far berm stand as well, one holding only a .22, the other a handgun. He nervously held his semi-automatic, wondering if it would look too staged if he dropped his rifle and held only his hunting knife. Peering through his riflescope, Ty saw the men on the far side of the river venturing off in groups of two and three to check the abandoned vehicles, but knowing they wouldn’t find anything, as he’d been on one of the teams that had salvaged everything of value and pushed the vehicles into their current positions. Even the fuel tanks at the freeway exit’s gas station had been drained with a siphon hose months ago. Nevertheless, the brazenness of the outsiders made Ty’s heart beat a little faster.
Once the messenger arrived on their side of the river, he raised a piece of paper in the air, and Sean motioned for Ty to retrieve it. Ty set his weapon down and climbed down the front side of the barricade, then hurried forward to retrieve the note. The messenger sneered confidently at Ty, assessed the men at the barricades, then quickly retreated back across the bridge.
Ty trotted back and handed the note to Sean, who unfolded the paper and read it to himself before reading it aloud.
We have no intention of harming anyone, if we don’t have to. Our demands are simple. We require 10,000 rounds of ammunition, 500 pounds of beef, 100 MRE’s or equivalent, and 500 pounds of wheat, beans or other grain. In exchange, you get to live.
You have 10 minutes to agree to our proposal, after which you will have 2 hours to fulfill our demands. If you choose to resist, we will, like we’ve done in other towns, kill who we need to and take whatever we want, women included.
We are professional soldiers trained to survive. Our group includes Army Rangers, Navy Seals, and Green Beret.
Choose wisely.
Sean folded the paper back in half and looked at the militia members around him, their numbers having now swollen to twenty-two between the two barricades. “I’m sorry folks, but I have no intention of agreeing to their terms. Any objections?”
One of the men near Ty spoke up, his voice shaking. “Some of us, maybe a lot of us, might get killed if we fight them. Sounds like they’re a lot more trained than we are.”
Sean shook his head. “I don’t buy what their note claims. In my experience, no quality soldier I know would go around the country preying on the weak. Maybe some washouts or wannabes, but no one who was actually a ranger or a seal would. Trust me.”
Ty felt a great deal of apprehension, and could tell by the expressions of others that they did too.
Sean looked around, seeing the same, and held up his hand with the note in it. “I know most of you have never taken fire, and it’s a pretty scary thing. But this isn’t just about us. If we don’t stand up to them, where will they be tomorrow? What happens when they ask something of a community who just can’t do it? We’ve got what they want, so they might take it and move on. Or they might decide they want more, until they’ve completely drained us. Then what?” He shook his head. “Some places may have given them what they want, but I say no.”
“If we can just pay them to go away, why not do that? Seems safer, if you ask me,” one of the younger men implored, his face pale, his hands trembling.
Ty shook his head vigorously. “I don’t want to get shot, and I sure don’t want to see any of you get hurt, but we have to say no. We’re strong enough to take them on and win. Besides, if we give in to them today, what will they want when they come back in a month? They’ll suck us dry and attack when we’re weaker. I’m not willing to purchase temporary security at the cost of long-term survival.”
“But they might not come back,” the first man insisted. “If we give them what they want, they said they’ll leave us alone.”
One of the older gentlemen spoke up. “We can’t trust people who use these kinds of tactics. If we give them our supplies, we’ll just show them we’re weak and afraid, and they’ll push us as far as they can. If we don’t fight them today, we’ll have to fight them some point down the line. I say we man up and get it over with, before there are fifty people getting off that bus.”