Having my wife at my side with our little community growing and prospering was probably the best couple of months of my entire life.
But I knew it couldn’t last.
Around Christmas time I was feeling edgy and restless.
It had been almost 3 months since anyone had been to town, and we badly needed intel about the Changelings and where they were laired up.
Pete Johnson told me to relax, that with the mountains full of snow during the winter, the Changelings would be starving to death in Billings.
I wasn’t so sure about that.
Pete was thinking in terms of humans.
But the changelings weren’t human anymore.
“Melissa, I have to go scout out Billings,” I told her one night in early January, “We don’t know what the Changelings are up to, and for all we know they may be spreading out of town looking for food.”
She put her hands flat over her bulging belly protectively, “We can’t let them find us here.”
“I know,” I said. “That’s why I’m going out tomorrow to do another recon. I need you to be in charge here while I’m gone.”
‘What about the baby?” she asked. “Will you be back in time?”
“I’ll try,” I assured her. “But you know I can’t give any guarantees.”
Early the next day I was ready to go, my horse saddled and my gear packed as best I could against the cold and the snow.
“We’ve got to be crazy,” remarked Pete Johnson as he saddled his own horse. “It’s gotta be 10 below out here, and it’s a good three days ride to town as deep as the snow is.”
“Well, you can always stay behind if you don’t like the odds.” I told him.
Pete just chuckled as he rechecked the cinches on his saddle. “Hell boss, you gotta let a man bitch once in a while.”
He stepped up into the saddle and gathered the reins, “Bitching about the weather and other conditions has been a soldiers right since the dawn of time.”
I turned my horse and led the way out of the barn and down toward the tree line where the snow wasn’t as deep.
I didn’t need to look back to know that Pete was right behind me. I knew he would be there no matter what came up.
It took us a full week to reach Billings. We took our time the last couple of days.
Scouting outlying ranches and homes, but finding no sign of Changelings anywhere.
“Where the hell are they bossman?” Pete asked finally.
“I don’t know, and I don’t like it either,” was all the answer that I could give him right then.
We settled on an isolated house that sat on a hill a couple of miles from town.
From there we had a good view of Billings and the surrounding countryside.
On the second day in our observation next, Pete called me to the front room.
“Holy shit Mike!” I heard hi exclaim. “You gotta see this!”
I hurried to the front room where Pete had set up his 60X spotting scope on its tripod.
There must have been 8 or 9 hundred Changelings milling around near what had been a school athletic field.
I couldn’t make out what they were doing, but I was worried.
From what I had been told of Changelings, they NEVER gathered in packs of more than 20 or 30.
Then I got a good look at the focus of their attention.
A Changeling wearing clothes appeared to be speaking to the mob.
Changelings always went naked.
Changelings talking?
And gathering in one place without the usual internecine warfare?
This was not a good sign.
“Pete, Take the horses and ride like hell back to Carltown and bring at least a dozen fighters and supplies for a 2 week campaign.” I ordered.
Pete didn’t argue at all, he simply donned his coat and hat, then slipped out to the barn where the horses were stabled.
I waited for him to get gone, and then I shrugged into my battle harness and boots.
There was only one way to find out more about the Changeling’s new developments, and that was for me to go in for an up close and personal look.
I eased down the hill, keeping to brush as much as possible and working my way at an angle towards a group of burned out buildings.
It took me the better part of 4 hours to travel the 2 miles to the ruins, and another couple of hours to reach a point where I could see and hear what was going on.
There was a Changeling wearing clothes all right. And the noises it was making sure sounded like speech to me, but not in any language that I had ever heard.
Since I had no way of understanding what was being said, I backed away silently and made my way downtown, keeping to cover when possible, and doing my best to avoid any stray Changelings that might have decided to skip the monster pep rally.
I was about ready to exfiltrate the town, having noted a dozen major lair sites.
There was a drainage ditch running roughly North-South that offered a route out of town and back toward the observation post with a minimal risk of detection. I slipped down into the ditch and headed North, my H&K held ready for any surprise visitors.
I heard a commotion approaching from the west, and I flattened myself with my back against the west slope of the ditch.
The thick band of dead weeds and bushes lining both rims of the ditch had served to catch and hold the snow, thus further blocking any possible view down into the ditch..
The concrete bottom of the ditch was cluttered with random debris but largely free of plant growth, or anything else that might offer concealment.
I lay without moving as the noise came closer and closer.
Then a body hurdled the snowdrift on the rim of the ditch and crashed to the concrete bottom with a sickening thud.
The noise from above got louder, now holding a note of triumph in the cries.
I pulled the pins from a couple of grenades and gave them a toss up and over the snow bank above my head.
One was a fragmentation grenade, the other was white phosphorous.
The frag grenade blew with a flat crack that was followed by screams and much thrashing around.
When the white phosphorous grenade went, there were suddenly a lot more screaming voices and confusion above.
I shoved myself to my feet and started on down the ditch to take advantage of the chaos to cover my escape.
The commotion would bring every damn Changeling in earshot on the run.
As I neared the Changeling crumpled on the floor of the ditch, I damn near jumped out of my skin when it moved.
I was swinging the H&K around to finish it off when it saw me.
Instead of attacking instantly like every other Changeling I had seen so far, it cowered away from the gun with a cry.
“Don’t shoot me!” it pleaded.