Although the spring thaw had finally begun a few weeks after Easter, roads still tended to refreeze during the night. It usually took all day for the roads to thaw. Winter was not yet willing to yield to Spring. A snow storm had blown through during the night to deposit several, hopefully final, inches on the icy roads. It was almost a repeat of the Spring of twenty-twenty-four. Illuminated by the reddish glow of the setting sun, Illinois One-seventy-three looked like a Norman Rockwell painting, but without any horse drawn sleighs. Except for a few animal tracks, the expanse of pavement was concealed by a layer of virgin snow.
A cluster of vehicles that had obviously been abandoned over a year ago forced George to slow down. To ensure that his tires didn't loose traction on the snow covered, icy road, George gently downshifted the diesel Dodge pickup from fourth gear to third without using the clutch. The truck was a family heirloom that was almost half a century old. George hadn't driven it much since he'd been in college. However; he hadn't lost his touch. He modulated the throttle to precisely adjust the revolutions so that he could gently slide the transmission out of fourth gear. He then increased the revolutions just enough so that he could gently slide it into third without breaking traction on the icy, snow covered road. The clutchless shift had taken barely a second.
The archaic pickup was a blessing. The diesel engine had no ignition system. The truck also had an old fashioned mechanical fuel injection pump rather than a modern electronically controlled fuel injection system. The pickup didn't have a modern automatic transmission which would be electronically controlled either. Unlike the more modern cars that obstructed the road, the diesel Dodge had been immune to the electromagnetic pulse attack that had put most Americans afoot.
The dump trucks in the convoy a mile behind them had remained functional only because they too were archaic. The dump trucks had mechanical fuel injection pumps and manual transmissions. They too had been immune to the electromagnetic pulse attack.
There were other reasons why the dump trucks were in the convoy. It had been common to build dump truck beds out of T-one armor plate. The walls of the dump beds would stop pistol bullets. Depending on the range and angle of impact, the steel plate would fend off armor piecing rounds from thirty caliber rifles or machine guns. Given the sandbags that were sandwiched between the walls of the dump beds and a second layer of steel plate, the dump beds would even resist fifty caliber. The cabs of the trucks had also been up-armored with steel plate. The dump trucks had become expedient armored personnel carriers and weapons platforms.
The prospect of an ambush dissuaded George from slowing down very much. Someone might intend to exploit the serendipitous roadblock. The snow on the shoulder was deeper and the ice was thicker and slicker. Fortunately; the surface was gravel rather than pavement which enhanced traction. "So much for Anthropogenic Global Warming theology," George muttered to himself as he maneuvered off the road and then along the snow covered, gravel shoulder to get around the stalled cars.
Of course the nuclear winter theory was also being disproven by the arrival of Spring, even if it was somewhat belated. In spite of the thousands of nuclear weapons that had been detonated so enthusiastically around the world, primarily in Asia as well as Europe, the Earth hadn't been enshrouded by an impenetrable layer of soot and dust that had blocked out the sun. While the Canadians, who'd always had to contend with brief growing seasons, had been freezing their asses off even during most of the summer, the last two winters in Illinois had not been that extraordinary.
The demise of the nuclear winter theory was hardly surprising. The catastrophic eruption of the Tombora volcano two centuries earlier had been ten times more energetic than all of the nukes in all of the arsenals of all of the belligerents combined. The volumes of ash and gases that had been injected into the atmosphere by the volcanic eruption had been orders of magnitude greater than the dust and smoke that had resulted from the nuclear wars. The famed year without a summer of eighteen-sixteen had been far more devastating than the climatic aftermath of the global thermonuclear war. At worst, there had been a nuclear autumn.
George was one of the few people who had actually seen the radar data. No one knew if that first salvo of missiles that had targeted America had been launched from surface ships or submarines. However; the acceleration profiles had made it obvious that the missiles had been derivatives of the ubiquitous Scud missile. First the Soviet Union then the Russian Federation had engaged in missile prostitution. They'd sold the design for the Scud missile to nearly anyone. America's erstwhile European allies had been prostituting themselves for decades by eagerly marketing the machine tools and technology to actually manufacture such missiles. The Scuds had ensured the anonymity of America's attacker.
Fortunately; the single stage ballistic missiles hadn't had the velocity and hence the range to reach the American Midwest. With only one notable exception, only cities on the East coast and West coast had been nuked. Flyover country had remained largely unscathed from that first nuclear attack.
The Gulf coast had been lucky. An Arleigh Burke-class destroyer had fortuitously been in position to launch interceptors. The attacking missiles had been engaged while they were still in their boost phase and thus most vulnerable. The USN Mahon had expended the interceptors in its vertical launch cells to fend off the attack. The destroyer had even downed two of the birds with its five inch gun! The guided, anti-aircraft projectiles that had initially been developed for electromagnetic railguns then adapted to conventional artillery had proven themselves. Only two of the ballistic missiles had reached their targets. Only New Orleans had been nuked. The Texas Gulf Coast had been spared.
Whoever had nuked America seemed to have been a bit ignorant. Alternatively; they had been waging a nuclear war on a limited budget. With three notable exceptions, even the cities that had been targeted had been targeted by only a single nuclear weapon.
It had been predictable that the beltway would be a primary target. Along with nuking the Capitol, the missiles had targeted the Pentagon and the headquarters of the Central Intelligence Agency. The headquarters of the Federal Bureau of Investigation had been nuked by the same bomb that had destroyed the White House and the Capitol building.