The snow had stopped but the steps to Alvi's caravan were still coated with
a sheen of ice when Donovan knocked on his door. Alvi answered, no longer
wearing his colorful gypsy attire, but dressed in soft gray pants and a
sweater. With his tousled hair sticking up in all directions, he looked like a
boy playing campout.
The wagon was more spacious than it appeared from the outside. Shelves full
of goods lined the walls, and a board on a hinge could be swung down to serve
as desk or workbench. Sturdy wicker chests ran along the perimeter, and
colorful cloth, trinkets, shoes and specialty foods were set out like jewels on
display. Light came battery-powered wall sconces, charged during the day by a solar panel on the roof. The wagon was heated by a brazier that
Alvi had filled from the kitchen stove after dinner.
"Nice place you have."
"It's home." Alvi gestured around the tiny room. "Please take
your time. I don't sleep well, so I'm always up late."
As Donovan examined some of the cans and jars, he noticed the man had
dropped his exuberant air and salesman's patter. "I think I just want some
of the beef jerky. I don't even know what some of these other things are."
Alvi had started to sit down, but now came closer. "Those are
olives," he said, pointing. "Sort of like pickles, but with the
texture of a mushroom." He grinned when Donovan made a face. "They're
an acquired taste, but very good."
"I'll take your word for it."
He pointed to a tin with a scene of horses and snow. "Maple syrup, all
the way from Maine."
"Didn't Maine
secede?"
"Yes," Alvi said. "That actually makes their syrup easier to
get. The Feds won't let them go because they want the timber, so there's a war
up there. The soldiers send maple syrup home and the army makes sure it doesn't
get stolen on the way. They don't want men moaning and possibly defecting because their families
aren't being taken care of, you know."
"Is there a true civil war going on?" Donovan asked. "I mean,
across the nation? Or is it just a few local rebellions?"
The peddler pulled a couple of folding stools from pegs on the wall and took
a bottle of whiskey out of one of the wicker chests. "Have a seat,"
he said, grabbing glasses from one of the display shelves. "I didn't want
the ladies to hear it because I know how hard it is for them to keep their
spirits up, but there's no reason you shouldn't know what's going on."
Donovan pulled up a stool and accepted a glass of whiskey. “This is good.
Where do you get it?"
"Don't make me reveal my secrets. My sources are how I make my
living."
"I won't criticize. So what kind of news have you been hearing?"
"They say someone detonated a nuke in Washington," Alvi said. "I've
heard a lot of different stories on who did it, but it really doesn't matter.
The dead were mostly civilians, not government people. Everyone important is
hiding now and no one's sure if they're still alive, dead, or sick from
radiation poisoning."
"Who's running things?"
"We think the elected officials are, from a bunker somewhere, but
there's no way to be sure." Alvi shrugged. "Some people say the Feds
set off the nuke themselves so they could go into hiding and not have to answer
to the people. Regardless of which story is right, it's likely we're living
under a dictatorship."
"How has this impacted the wars?"
"Not much. The wars pretty much run themselves any more."
"Even the civil war? What about Texas?"
Alvi scowled. "I don't know why the Feds are bothering with Texas. Three years of
drought across the South have damaged their crops, the aquifers are running
dry, they still haven't recovered from the hurricane that damaged their only
remaining deep-water port, and the ordinary civilians are too busy squaring off
by race and religion for them to do much in the way of nation-building. I say
let them go. They'll be back in a few years when their problems amplify to where they realize can't make it
alone. But some people say that's why they did it— seceded, you know. There's a
philosophy these days that secession will end the race riots by forcing people
to work together to fight the common federal enemy."
"It's a bad way to make people get along. Wars kill people and damage
the land."
Alvi reached for the whiskey bottle and topped off their glasses.
"Well, they went and did it, regardless of what we think about it."
He capped the bottle and sat back. "I'm telling everyone not to be
surprised if they send some units through the countryside looking for recruits
to fight in Texas."
"You mean to kidnap and draft people." Donovan pondered this
information. "That's going to be tough on me."
"Yes, you're a deserter, aren't you?"
"Is there nothing the girls don't tell you?"
"I doubt it," Alvi said, taking the question more seriously than
it was intended. "I was naive when I got into this business. I knew
nothing except that there was an old man who did well in this region and had
died. Carina, Amalia and their parents treated me kindly. In fact, my first
summer as a peddler was spent on this farm while my burro healed from an
injury. They treated me like family and I will always be in their debt."
He fixed Donovan with a steady eye. "There is nothing I wouldn't do for
them, you understand?"
"They saved my life. I understand perfectly."
Alvi took another sip of whiskey. "Then you know why they sometimes
tell me a little more than they should. Their secrets, and yours too, are
completely safe with me."
The two men nursed their drinks. Outside, an owl called from the mulberry
tree. "So how are you avoiding the draft?" Donovan asked. "You
look like the kind of guy the Guard would pick up without hesitating."
Alvi grinned. "I'm older than I look, but thank you for the compliment.
I'm 4-F and have the letters to prove it." He patted his chest. "I
wear them on me at all times."
"No way." Donovan's eyes widened. "I’m more 4-F than you, and
they'd take me off the street in a minute."
"It's all about who you know. You don't really think the big guys care
who wins the war, do you?" Alvi took a gulp of his whiskey and wiped his
mouth with his sleeve. "They're in it for the money. Supply them with what
they're really after and they don't care if you fight their stupid war or
not."
Donovan could scarcely contain his excitement. "What do those papers
cost? If I can't pay now, I can get the money."
"I don't do credit, not on this type of deal. Nothing personal, it's
just if I come
back in six months and you're gone. . .well, you know how it is."
"Tell me how much the papers cost."
Alvi leaned back and quoted a number. "In gold," he added.
Donovan drew in his breath. "Can you do it on a down
payment? I can give you two thirds now and the rest when you bring the papers
on your next trip through."
Alvi considered. "I wouldn't normally agree to such a thing for someone
I just met, but I suppose you're family now. I can spot you the balance
until I return."
They shook hands and Alvi settled back onto his stool. Donovan suddenly felt
relieved, as if he already had the papers in his hand. Only six more months and
he would be out of danger forever. The thought of what he could do with his
freedom made him smile.
"I see this has made you happy. Or is it just the whiskey?" Alvi
topped off their glasses again.
"The whiskey helps, but knowing I'll have papers soon. . . I had no
reason to think I'd ever get such lucky break."
"If you don't give up hope, your lucky day eventually comes."
Donovan tossed back the rest of his whiskey and stretched his arms overhead.
"I'm starting to believe that maybe it does."
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Tuesday, November 5, 2013
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This will be long six months for Donovan. Let's hope he can blend in for that time and not upset anybody. You certainly paint a bleak picture of the US in the future but it can so easily happen if big business really messes up and money runs out., etc., etc. You can see why big cities would be the worst place to be in a real crisis.
ReplyDeleteI hope he can really trust this man. Donovan will have a long six months waiting and wondering.
ReplyDeleteI bet the papers come just after he needs them.
ReplyDeleteWars often end up running themselves..in so many ways..strange and probably will become true how we will hold onto papers and conventions no matter if the world (as we know it) ends..
ReplyDelete