Fort Morgan, Alabama
As electricity was restored and fuel became available, life in southern Alabama was beginning to return to something that approximated normalcy. The motel-like structures that had been built inside the walls of Fort Morgan were all but abandoned as those who once occupied the temporary quarters were now moved into an area known as “The Dunes.” Here were thirty-eight large, multi-story beach homes built on stilts. In addition there were two seven-story condos each with seventy apartments.
Bob and Ellen Varney owned a house here and were permanent residents, as were James and Cille Laney. The other homes and condo units were the property of absent owners, most of whom were trapped up north. That left their places empty, so Jake and Karen moved into a house next door to the one occupied by Bob and Ellen. The other members of the Phoenix Group moved into unoccupied homes so that now The Dunes had taken on all the appearances of a small community.
With abundant fuel, a steady supply of electricity, and even more importantly, security and freedom from the oppressive SPS and Janissaries of Moqaddas Sirata, Gulf Shores began to come back. Once again stores were selling groceries, most of it locally produced vegetables, fruits, milk, eggs, and meat.
On this March evening the twenty three men and women of the Phoenix Group, plus George Gregoire, gathered on the beach. A pig had been cooking all day on one of the grills, and potatoes were roasting in a fire on the beach. Red and gold sparks were riding the rising heat waves into the sky to join with the stars that filled the black velvet.
“Okay, folks, the meat's ready,” Bob said, and everyone lined up as Bob began carving the pork.
“Whoa, this is good!” Deon Pratt said as he took his first bite. “Where did you learn to cook like this?”
“My dad owned a fish and barbeque market in Memphis,” Bob said. “I worked for him for a while after I retired from the army, until he fired me.”
Jake Lantz laughed. “You mean your own father fired you?”
“Yep.”
“What for?”
“You would have had to know my Dad. He wasn't what you would call a very understanding man.”
Ellen laughed. “You want to tell them why he really fired you?”
“It wasn't anything.”
“Tell them.”
“One day I wrapped up some fresh fish for a woman customer. I'm not that good at wrapping things, and she complained about it, said I had done a sloppy job. So my dad fired me.”
“For that?”
“No, it was for what he said to the woman,” Ellen said. “Tell them what you said.”
“What I said was . . . âWhat the hell, lady, you plannin' on mailin' those fish somewhere?' ”
The others laughed.
“Well, I'll remember not to have you wrap any fish for me,” Tom Jack said. “But you can barbeque for me anytime you want.”
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“So, Major, where do we go from here?” Marcus asked.
“He's not a major, he's a general,” Willie corrected.
“Oh, yeah, I forgot,” Marcus said. “And I'm a captain. Nothing like getting in on the ground floor when you start building a new army. But that brings me back to my question. What are we going to do with this new army?”
“Well, our primary mission is the primary mission of any army, and that's to protect the people,” Jake said.
“But in our case, I think you have an expanded mission,” Gregoire said.
“What would that be?” Jake asked.
“The mission hasn't changed. It's to take back America.”
“Well, yes, that would be the goal,” Jake said. “But for now it is more of a rallying cry than a reality.”
“We can make it a reality,” Gregoire said.
“Tell me, George, how many other groups have you heard from that are like us?” Bob asked.
“I have heard from survivalist groups all over the country, from as far away as Washington state, and as close to us here as Pensacola, Florida,” Gregoire replied. “But I know of no other group that is quite like this one. That's why I say that we can make take back America a reality. You people, that is, we,” he said, making a circular motion with his hand to take everyone in, “can be the core of the movement. I think we should expand, invite others to join us.”
“What do you think, Jake?”
“I know that there are pockets of military gathered on the old military posts,” Jake said. “If we could get all the other military groups to join us, we could probably put together an army that was big enough and strong enough to resist anything Ohmshidi might try.”
“I think we should go beyond just contacting the military,” Bob said.
“What do you have in mind?”
“The birth of a nation,” Bob said.
“Are you serious?”
“Yes, I'm very serious. Right now we are calling ourselves United Free America, I say we make it a reality.”
“Oh, yeah, I see it now. You're the president of UFA, so you're getting power hungry.”
“Well, let's face it, Jake, it's no fun being a president, unless you have something you can be president of,” Bob said, laughing.
“How would we go about doing something like that?” Tom asked.
“First thing is, we are going to have to come up with a concept. And a constitution.”
“What's wrong with the constitution we have?” Chris asked.
“Nothing that a few amendments won't cure,” Bob said.
“What kind of amendments?”
“I tell you what, I'll write up a few amendment proposals, and a code. Then I'll run them by all of you and see where we might go from there,” Bob suggested.
“Good idea,” Jake said.
“Before I go any further, I'd like to get a feel from this group. If we are going to start a new nation, then I look at you people as George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, James Madison, and Thomas Paine. You're our founding fathers.”
“Where does that leave me?” Deon asked. “There weren't any brothers who were founding fathers.”
“That's where you're wrong, Deon. There were as many as a thousand black soldiers who were wounded at the Battle of Bunker Hill and one, Salem Poor, performed so well that he was given a citation signed by fourteen officers. No, if we do this, we are all in this together.”
“May I make the motion?” Sheri Jack asked.
“Absolutely, you may make the motion,” Bob said.
“I move that we reach out to others like us, and that we band together to form a new nation.”
“I second that motion,” Julie Norton said.
“All in favor?”
The vote was unanimous.
“Good,” Bob said with a broad smile. “Our future is laid out for us.”
“Now,” Jake said. “As long as we are gathered here, I've got an announcement to make, and an invitation to issue.”
Everyone stopped eating and chattering, and looked toward Jake.
“Karen has decided to make an honest man out of me. So one week from now, we are going to be married. You are all invited.”
Jake's announcement was met with an enthusiastic response, and congratulations.
Holy Spirit Episcopal Church, Gulf Shores, Alabama
Judge Roy Moreton had made national news back in the pre-O time by allowing the Nativity scene to be erected on the courthouse grounds. When he refused to remove it, even after a federal court order, he was arrested, and removed from the bench.
He was one of the first judges to offer his service to the fledgling group of freedom fighters once the Phoenix Rising group broke away, and it was he who issued marriage licenses to Jake Lantz and Karen Dawes. Father Ken Coats conducted the wedding at Holy Spirit, which was particularly meaningful since it was a meeting at Holy Spirit that had allowed the little group of survivalists to expand beyond their initial base at Fort Morgan, to encompass all of Pleasure Island.
After the wedding, a reception was held in the parish hall.
“Hey, Major, I've got something for you,” Deon Pratt said. “It's a wedding present.”
Jake Lantz was no longer a major. In fact, in a recent organization of their group, Jake had been made a general in the provisional army of United Free America, but Deon, a martial arts and weapons expert, was one of the original members of the group. And because Deon had served with Jake in the pre-O days of the US Army, he often called him major, as did the others of the original group.
“You didn't have to get us anything, Deon. Just having you here is enough.”
“Oh, this isn't for both of you. It's just for you,” Deon said. He was carrying a paper sack, and reaching down inside, he pulled out a can of root beer.
“Oh, my God!” Jake said. “I can't believe it! A root beer? Where did you find it?”
“It?” Deon said. He laughed. “It's not just âit.' Tell him, Captain. Or should I say, Mrs. Lantz?”
“We now have a whole case of root beer back at the house,” she said.
“It's been almost two years,” Jake said. He popped the top of the can, and it began to spew out. He covered the spew with his mouth, quickly, so as not to lose any of it.
“Jake, it's hot. Don't you want it cool first?” Karen asked.
“Hot, cold, it doesn't matter,” Jake said and, as he turned the can up to his lips, the others laughed and applauded.
“Where are you two going on your honeymoon?” Barbara Carter asked. Barbara was a very pretty girl with long blond hair and big brown eyes. Eighteen years old now, she was seventeen when she and 96 other youngsters were rescued from Youth Confinement and Enlightenment Center Number 25. Barbara now worked as a secretary for Jake.
“I don't know,” Jake replied with a smile. “I heard about this place called Fort Morgan, which I understand is right on the beach. That might be a pretty good place to go for a honeymoon.”
Barbara laughed. “It might be.”
Barbara left and Jake took another swallow of his root beer. His love for the soft drink was well known, and in the pre-O time he always kept a refrigerator full of the beverage.
“When Deon told me he had found a source for that, I knew it would make you happy,” Karen said.
“A source? You mean there's more?”
“Yes.”
“Fantastic.” Jake took another swallow, then looked at Karen. “Are you upset that we aren't really going on a honeymoon?”
Karen laughed. “Jake, it isn't like we have to get to know each other now, is it? We've been sleeping together for three years.”
“Shhh! You would say that in a church?”
“You mean you would rather me lie?”
“Ha. I guess not.”
Bob Varney came over to congratulate them.
“Thanks,” Jake said. He held up the can of root beer. “Did you hear? Deon found a source for this.”
“This is your wedding day, but you're excited because you've got root beer?” Bob teased.
“Bob, you wouldn't tease if you knew how addicted he was to the stuff,” Karen said.
“Well, yeah, but you've had almost two years to go cold turkey. You'd think it would have kicked the habit by now.”
“You'd think,” Jake said.