A NOTE TO YOU WONDERFUL READERS from this humble storyteller wannabe. First, thank each and every one of you have read my stories, especially those who took the time to write and leave comments. Each was and is greatly appreciated. I think I can see a difference between what I have just redone and published and those I first submitted. Yes, as so many of you have told me, I need a good editor or proof reader, but as yet, none have bothered to respond to my emails, so we both must suffer my mistakes. Fear not, though, as it stands right now, this two-chapter story will be the last of my submissions, at least for the foreseeable future, for try as I might, I cannot seem to find a viable topic to write about. It has been this way for a while and as I hate redundancy there will not be any sequels tossed out there. Again, thank you readers. You have no idea how much I appreciate you all.
Now, for those that asked: I grew up a country kid in Northern Oklahoma. I married young and dropped out of college at the start of the Vietnam war and joined the army, spending 6 ½ years on active duty, serving two tours in Vietnam. The first one in the Central Highlands with attached duty to almost every combat group in existence in that area being slightly wounded and lightly decorated. In my 3rd year, after 8 months of intense and specialized training I was in a much different field. My second tour was in a supervisory communications position and so highly classified that I think even the name of my clearance was classified. I became disgruntled and maladjusted like so many of us did and decided to get out. I did try several times to go back to college but could not stand the regimen, so I entered the heavy industrial construction trade and eventually worked my way up to became a successful industrial construction manager, working all over the world. My wife traveled with me...we were a family.
My wonderful and loving wife passed away suddenly after 49 ½ years together. These stories are the result of me not knowing what to do with my newly found free time, as I had suddenly lost interest in all the fun things my wife and I always did together. I miss them, but not nearly as much as I miss her.
I do hope you enjoy this story. It just sort of took its own path and wrote itself I think. If another doesn't soon..., so once more, thanks. I have certainly enjoyed the ride. I wish it could continue, or resume someday. WF06 March 2017
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It was the middle of winter and colder than Hell outside. The defroster and windshield wipers on my all-wheel drive SUV were having trouble keeping up as it was snowing like crazy out there. It could be classified as almost total whiteout blizzard conditions. No matter, as I had to keep going as there was no place safe to stop until I got to the cabin, if I could make it there at all, that is. I was heading to the mountain cabin I had inherited from my grandfather a couple of years earlier, willed to me when he passed away. The property was slightly over a full section at 720 acres. It was comprised of the slope beginning at and facing the road and small year-round stream at the bottom of the valley, extending up to and slightly over the summit. A small mountain and nothing at all like the majestic mountains you see in photos of the Rockies. The lower half of the property was likely tillable, but grandfather was not a farmer so the land lay fallow. He had bought the farm, as he called it, as his sanctuary and escape from people.
Let me explain a little about both my grandfather and myself. Grandfather had been an agent for the old CIA, stationed in Europe, during the cold war days before retiring and buying his farm, here in a rural and sparsely populated part of the state. This was his hideaway, a sanctuary from his imagined pursuers from the old Soviet Block. Yes, he was as paranoid as he could be. Of course, that condition was almost second nature for those with his background, I would assume.
Even though my grandfather was a recluse that tried to avoid contact with people, especially strangers, he took great pride in his little home and creature comforts. The home was a medium sized log cabin of about 1600 square feet. It had two bedrooms, a large bathroom with both a tub and a shower, a very nice kitchen-dining room combination, a comfortable living room, and of course the much-needed laundry room. There was an office for all his computer and electronics gear in what had been originally planned as either a pantry or a small third bedroom.
The only other structure of note, besides a woodshed for firewood and kindling storage, was a barn that he had had built to look like most any other old and weathered barn found in the area. However, the weathered look was a disguise for an extremely secure building with a few specialty features. One was a couple of well-hidden, but easily accessible safes at each end of the barn. A couple of loaded .40 caliber automatics, a buckshot filled shotgun, and a stack of cash was kept in each, in case any emergency should ever pop up. None ever did, but he was prepared anyhow.
Another feature was an equally well hidden switch that could open and close a trap door built into the wood and dirt floor of one of the barn's stalls. This trap door, when opened, would allow access to a well-lit underground vault where weapons of various types were stored. There were assorted automatic pistols, shotguns, and a few rifles hanging on the walls, with shelves filled with ammunition just below them. Other areas of the vault housed various items designed for warfare. Some were legal for civilians to own, mainly purchased through military surplus outlets; others, not so much. In fact, a multitude of national and international laws specifically prohibited anyone but the military to have them in their possession.
I have no idea where or how grandfather acquired the 8 claymore mines he had hidden in various, but logical defensive spots around the farm's lower regions. He could make entry onto the farm unpleasant and downright unhealthy for intruders, should he set them off. The master controls for these were located behind the false back in one of the cabinets in the cabin's kitchen.
I had added a couple of items to the small arsenal that I had somehow forgotten to turn in when I was released from active duty with the army and placed into the reserves. These had somehow been overlooked and forgotten about by everyone it seems. Nothing real drastic or outlandish. That is if you don't call M72 LAWS light anti-tank weapons and replacement claymores drastic and outlandish. I don't, but that's just me. I had managed to acquire and stash 6 LAWS and 4 replacement claymores in the underground vault.