
What to tell the children? How to make them understand? How do you
convey the enormity of it to a seven year old that has hardly ever
known anything else? People looked so much older, especially women
since they couldn't get chemicals to change their hair. The black or
grey fissures spread open from the tops of heads down to ears and
beyond. It was difficult to remember when men's facial hair was a
novelty. People seemed hollow and reedlike the way that their clothes
hung on them with billowing folds. People were however quite content,
once you surrendered to it, once you accepted it.
Some wouldn't ever give up the past. The Memories we called them.
People that would go on and on about how they lived and what they had
and the way things were. We all laughed at Jacobsen when he ranted on
about his car and how much better it was.
I like our car; it's just wide enough for all three of us to sleep
side by side. Only one small window is broken and it's positioned at
the perfect angle for the winter sun to warm us in the morning. Life
is good on this hill, water flows almost year round from the pipe
that placed into the rocks. The soil is deep and the foraging is
good. I know this hill very well now. How many times had I driven by
this hill and never noticed it? Sped by and failed to sees the lush
grass and berry patches. What made the hill ideal was its relative
isolation; marshland on all sides, the highway bridge burned, so
there was only one way to approach along the road. Once a quick drive
in a car, now a couple of hours walk the long way 'round and few ever
made the journey.
Others sometimes came because we're so near to the city. We
discourage them from staying unless they can feed themselves from the
land.
I found the hill because the car ran out of gas right next to it on
that last futile drive to find food. Passing car after car along the
side of the road, people just sitting in them dumbfounded, others
frantically trying to stop cars. The inevitable stumbling and dying
of the engine came almost as a relief. I coasted to a stop struggling
to pull onto the shoulder with no power steering, putting on the
hazards automatically. The last sweet sentiment of a bygone age.
People walking ahead along the shoulder had turned and run toward the
car, lunging, racing-a real competition to get there first to see
what I had. I fled the car and miraculously found a path through the
undergrowth. Just twenty feet away I could hear over the sound of my
heart but not see them pulling my car apart looking for food.
I found serenity on the hill; and food too. Berries, a plum tree ripe
with fruit, how had it gotten here? Climbing the heights I could see
the entire length of the road in both directions. This was a good
place: convincing Patricia to bring our child to the hill was not
difficult because of the chaos and fear in those days.
The first big rain of the year fell as we left the house. I wish I
knew what ever happened to it, I've never been back--it's too
dangerous to go that way. We used our last pint of lamp oil to burn
the highway bridge after we crossed. The rain would swell the marsh
and make it difficult for people to come that way.
For the last two winters the hill has been good to us but we have to
leave. There must be something better out there. We can't stay here
for the rest of our lives. We're going crazy from boredom. Charles
cried when we left. He loved the hiding places that he had made in
the brush, the rhythms that he had established with nature and the
toys we made him from car parts; all this would be left behind.
"There's a whole new world out there, just waiting for us." I didn't
sound very convincing. "But you said that it was gone forever-it was
no good", he pleaded. "You must see what we left to be able to
appreciate what we have lived".
I was terrified of what we would find. No one ever had a coherent
answer of what lay beyond the marsh. We packed the essential and were
ready to leave in short time. Carrying water was the most difficult
thing. It was springtime and the streams would flow for a few more
months in the open but once one got near the urban areas they would
be gone or polluted.
The trip across the marsh was uneventful, the hidden raft was still
there. We crossed the water. Charles grew more excited as we
approached the hills that he had only seen from a distance. He
remembered the world as it had been, he was too young to have
remembered the panic and scarcity, things just were, and then it was
gone, replaced by the our existence on the hill. He had enough of a
memory to ask for certain foods, such as ice cream; he wanted some of
that.
We found the first trash pile as soon as we stepped onto dry land.
Charles eagerly snatched up the plastic bottles filled with moss and
brackish water attempting to carry them all. "Leave them, they're
cracked from the sun". I said quietly.
The trail soon became a dirt road and then asphalt carpeted with
weeds. The first house was burned to the foundation, then the next
and then a trailer stripped to the chassis. We continued walking and
turned a corner and there they were. It was a cluster of motor homes,
or what was left of them, just the shelter components.
A knot of people worked among them engaged in the activities of those
who have nothing but time and survival and few possessions. We eyed
each other for what seemed like eternity.
"We have our own food and water" I declared. There was an almost
palpable relaxation. A woman stepped forward. "Hello, have you heard
anything that's going on? My name's Laura"
-"No, we don't have any information".
A little guy with thick glasses and no front teeth volunteered -"We
got batteries and a solar charger but there's nothing on the
radio."
-"Nothing?"
-"Oh, there's shortwave stuff, but it's just people saying hello and
asking what's going on"
_"what's goin' on...?", "what's goin' on...?" a recently young woman
with white hair and too eager a manner sang the old Motown
song..."how about those 'niners?! Hey,..who won the superbowl?" she
leered at me..."Who won!?" Her face quickly grew pinched and she
slowly turned and squatted on the ground lost in her own internal
universe. We watched her fondle the pages of a tattered magazine.
Laura stepped forward. "Well, come sit down...tell me about
yourselves." She led us to a home made bench. -"This is my wife
Patricia and my son Charles." Patricia silently nodded. Charles gazed
upon the novelty of everything. -"Have some dandelion wine...it's
delicious" -"Wine?...Real wine?" I took the cup she handed to me,
looked at the liquid, closed my eyes, smelled it, looked again,
closed my eyes and sipped its glorious flavor. I gave the cup to
Patricia, she took it and drank, watching Laura's every move.
-"What's that daddy?" Charles ran his finger over the writing on the
mug. -"AM 78 in the A.M"...."advertising, ...it's a kind of hypnosis
that people used to get other people to spend money--I told you about
money, remember?" -"I have moneys" Charles pulled several wrinkled
hundred dollar bills out and proudly lay them on the ground. -"Your
money's no good here Charles" Laura said sweetly. -Everyone laughed
except Charles and then a long silence. -"This was a recreational
vehicle dealer's lot wasn't it? They're all the same...I pointed over
my shoulder at the sleek hulks on their flat tires. -"Yeah", the
dealer must have had a cash-flow problem or something" Laura
indicated the radio man "that's him over there, Donald the guy with
no teeth, my husband".
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