Winds of Ares: An Apocalypse Thriller Druga, Jacqueline (top 5 ebook reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Druga, Jacqueline
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âStop.â Alice the trucker approached him. âLook, itâs dangerous out there. I get it. You need to find the kidsâ grandpa. Heâs out there. Probably searching through rubble. Leave the kids, let me drive you in my rig. That road with a twister threat ainât no place for a Barbie camper.â
Liza added. âIâll watch them. I swear. Iâd feel better if they didnât go.â
I hated the thought of leaving the kids behind, but it was safer.
âWait.â Lane held up his hand. âYouâre offering to drive us to Wilderado in your truck?â
âYes.â Alice nodded.
âYou just watched me haggle with Skip-a-roo here, why didnât you say anything then?â
âBecause the man needs paid,â Alice said. âNow are you taking my offer or what?â
Lane looked at me and I glanced to Carlie.
âWill you be alright?â I asked her. âWatch your brother if we leave you behind?â
âDonât be long,â she said. âPlease.â
Alice replied. âWe wonât be. Now are we going or what?â
Lane wiped up and secured the RV keys, placing them in his pocket, my guess, in case Skip changed his mind. âWeâre going.â
âœâœâœ
In my mind, we were going to locate Martin somewhere in Wilderado, probably digging through rubble, trying to calm Rosie.
Poor Rosie.
I hoped her daughter and grandchildren were alright, that they made it to safety before the funnels hit.
By my calculation the phrase, âlightning doesnât strike the same place twiceâ, didnât apply to Wilderado.
I was confident weâd find him, and he had missed all the destruction that rained down on the western part of the state.
Lane didnât say much on the drive. He kept looking out the window. There was so much rubble and debris, stuff lifted in the storm and tossed everywhere. It was a litter field of household appliances, cars and furniture.
Alice didnât drive fast, she drove cautiously, swerving around things that could potentially cause problems if we ran over them or into them. Like a large, stainless steel, stand-up freezer set perfectly straight up in the middle of Interstate Forty.
It wasnât long, shortly after we passed the âWilderado Ten milesâ sign, before Alice stopped.
Police lights flashed ahead. It was the first emergency vehicle I had seen in it all.
He was pulled sideways across the road and stood by his squad car. Two other cars were parked near him, and several people stood there.
The officer waved his hands.
We had stopped a good distance from him before he started waving. I didnât understand why he was flagging us.
Alice put the truck in park and opened her door at the same time as Lane.
As Lane helped me out of the truck, I heard Alice.
âAfternoon, Officer, can we get through?â she asked.
âNo one is getting through,â he replied.
With Lane, I stepped around to the front of the truck where Alice stood with the officer. I saw the reason.
âJana, this is insane,â Lane said with awe, stepping forward.
I followed him. Walking through a mine field of dirt and concrete scattered about the road. Stepping closer to the people, it was hard not to see the huge gap in the road. It was ten feet wide, and shallow, but deep enough to be too dangerous to drive across.
It reminded me of the indentation a scooper made in a fresh tub of ice cream. There was no way around it. To the left and right it went as far as the eye could see.
âTwister came through here,â the officer explained. âIt came from the south and went straight.â
âAnything on the radio?â Lane asked.
âNothing.â
The rip in the road was concerning, but it didnât make me tremble like what I had seen on the horizon.
It brewed quickly. It was hard to tell how far away the storm was. Thick, ominous clouds swirled violently, mixing in shades of gray as lighting snapped horizontally through it at a steady rate.
It was hard to see if bolts were striking the ground. More than likely, they were.
I felt Lane reach down and grab my hand. He squeezed it firmly and held it that way.
We werenât going any farther. We werenât finding Martin.
The only choice we had was to turn back.
NINE â PILGRAMAGE
It wasnât a matter of âifâ Martin would come back, it was a matter of when. To me, at least, and I wouldnât let the kids think any other way.
Lane was more grounded. It wasnât as if he wasnât close to Martin. He was just as close as any of us. Martin was like a second father to him. But he believed if Martin was going to return it wasnât going to be in a time frame conducive to getting the kids to safety. If indeed the Jupiter Project was real.
My husband was believing me more and more. When I didnât have the binder, he did. Although we both looked for two different reasons. He was looking for what was coming, what was next and when it would occur.
Me, I looked for reasons it wasnât going to happen yet. That Juliusâ time frame of two more weeks was the correct time frame and what we were witnessing was the beginning, but it wasnât the big hit.
Not yet.
It was probably more wishful thinking, but I was sticking to it.
For over a year I had been planning and preparing. There was no reason I couldnât come up with a plan that included waiting and maybe even searching for Martin.
First things first. We had to get the kids to the ranch. The house was gone, but the shelter was there should another storm hit. When we returned to the diner after our futile trip, the police officer and six others from the highway followed us.
It truly was one of the only places standing, just as Alice and the injured traveler had said when they arrived.
When we left the diner to head back to the ranch, we left behind twenty people. I didnât tell them what we knew, nor did I tell the kids how discouraging the trip to find
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