Zack pulled into the small yard in front of the cabin. He turned off the engine and the six travelers sat quietly in the waning light. The hunting cabin was a throwback from a hundred years ago. The siding was weather cedar that had grayed years ago. The tin roof was rusted but look to be in good shape.
Millie leaned forward. “Don’t y’all suppose we’d better get settled before it gets dark?”
Steve nodded and answered. Let’s check it out, Zack.”
The two men got out of the truck. Zack carried a crowbar and Steve a handgun. They crossed the bare packed earth to the front porch. Oak leaves danced across the faded planks of the covered porch. Windows at the front of the cabin were dusty but were crack free. The weathered wood door had a gate latch with a padlock for security. Uncovered windows on either side of the door allowed the waning light to expose the minimalistic furnishings inside.
“Someone’s hunting camp. If we’re lucky, there’s a cistern or water well.” Steve whispered as they stepped on the porch.
He pointed to his eyes with two fingers then to the window closest to Zack. He sidestepped to the window to the right and pressed his back against the rough wood logs of the wall. He leaned over the edge of the window and peeked inside.
Zack watched the procedure and repeated it at the window on the left side of the door. “Nothing here.” He whispered.
“Stay here.” Steve mouthed.
Steve stepped off the porch and stumbled around the side of the building. He followed the solid wall to the back of the structure. Looking through the back windows, he realized the structure was a single room with a ladder access to a loft overhead. The back of the cabin included barn doors on an overhead track. He made his way around the corner and a massive stack of firewood at the side of the house. He stepped back up to the porch with Zack.
“Anything?” Zack asked.
“Looks good. Let’s get inside. It’s almost dark.”
Zack picked up the padlock and shoved the crowbar through the hasp. With a snap of his wrist the lock snapped open. He pulled the lock off the door and laid it on a window sill.
Steve opened the door leading with his gun hand. He fanned his barrel from left to right and then back again as he studied the shadows inside. The building was set up with a sink, and few cabinets and a table at one end. The rest seemed devoted to providing sleeping quarters. Bunk beds and from what he could see, a couple more twin beds overhead.
“Let’s move ‘em in.” Steve commented.
Zack went to the truck, while Steve lit a kerosene lamp on the table. He limped to the sink and examined a hand pump. He pumped the handle a few time and rusty water spilled from the spout. After a few more pumps of the handle, the water flowed clear and clean. He dipped his hand in the stream and brought it to his nose. It smelled fresh.
Zack and the women walked into the cabin. Millie still holding Penny’s hand crossed to the sink when she saw what Steve was doing. “Young man, you need to sit done.”
“I’m fi….” Steve drug his arm across his forehead.
Millie interrupted. “Young man? I’m not suggesting, I’m telling.” She walked to the sink and found a pan. She filled it with water then looked in drawers until she found a dishtowel. When she turned back she glanced at Penny. “Child, tell that boy, Zack, to bring us that chair on wheels.”
With another glare from Millie, Steve settled on the chair at the table. She nodded toward the prosthetics and Steve removed the right leg then the left. Both silicone cuffs were smeared with blood when he pulled them from his legs.
Della came in carrying an armful of supplies. She saw Steve’s ulcerated legs and gasped. “I told you. How could you let it get this bad? You’re running a fever.”
Steve shrugged. “I didn’t see I had much choice.”
“Well we do now. We stay until you’re healed.” Della announced.
Millie sat the pan of water on the table and another pan on the floor at the front of the chair. She soaked the rag and dribbled water over the red angry flesh. After the first couple passes of cold water over the flesh, the shock lessened and began to numb the pain. Steve sighed in relief.
Millie looked up when Della walked in the cabin with another armful of supplies. “You got medicine for this?” She asked Della.
“Yes, mam.”
Penny came in with Zack carrying the wheel chair. He looked at Steve’s legs and cringed. “Man that looks painful.”
“A day or two and it’ll be fine.” Steve began, but Della interrupted.
“NO! You need to rest at least a week.”
“Mommy? I really gotta go to the bathroom.” Penny announced.
Darlene looked around the room, then to Steve.
He grinned. “Out house in back. We got running water though.”
“Praise the Lord for that but, an outhouse?” Darlene groaned. “Gross.”
Zack laughed. “I saw it out back. It’s close to the shed. I thought I’d check it out so I’ll show you.”
They walked to the barn doors and unlatched one door and opened it. Zack pulled a LED light from his pocket. He led Darlene and Penny through the back door.
“Let’s cover the front windows and close the door when we get everything inside. I don’t want to advertise we’re here.” Steve announced.
Della placed a tube of ointment on the table with two rolls of gauze. “We have what we need inside. I’ll cover the windows.”
Two hours later, Millie had schooled Zack on starting a fire in the wood stove in the kitchen. They had found kindling in a bucket by the stove and wood at the side of the house. She pulled a pot from a cabinet and dumped an assortment of cans in it and added a can of diced chicken.
All remains of the day slipped into night as the small gathering sat around the cabin eating bowls of Millie’s concoction.
“Do you think we’re safe here?” Darlene asked.
“Safer than we’ve been since we left Utopia.” Steve answered. “Everyone needs to get some rest. I’m beat.”
He rolled the chair to one of the windows. “I’ll wake you at midnight, Zack.”
“No problem.”
Della helped Millie to the other lower bunk beds. Zack decided he wasn’t trying the top bunk and pulled the mattress from the top bunk on one of the bed to a place near a window. Della took the bunk above Millie while Darlene and Penny made their way to the loft. Within a short time Steve could hear both Millie and Zack snoring.
The warmth of the cabin was unbearable. Finally, Steve opened the front door and rolled the wheelchair outside. The handgun rested in his lap. He looked out over the valley beyond and realized how high on the bluff they had driven. He could see a few lights and wondered if what he saw was fires or people running generators.
At midnight Zack stumbled through the opened door wiping sleep from his eyes. “All quiet?”
Steve nodded then answered. “Not much to see out there. I saw a few fires in the distance. There must be a blacktop about six miles north. I saw a few headlights heading west.”
“Get some rest, I got this? Use the bottom bunk. I opened the back windows and with this door open it’s not so hot. I’ll be out here.”
“Thanks.” Steve handed Zack the handgun. “Wake me or aim for the head and pull the trigger.”
“Got it.” Zack laid the gun next to him on the top step of the porch. “I’ll get you if I hear or see anything.”
Steve rolled inside and pulled himself into the bunk. He closed his eyes.
The sound of whispered voices woke Steve. Dust motes danced across the first rays of the sun shining through the opened back doors. The smell and sound of something cooking filled the little cabin. Steve threw his arm over his eyes and listened to the voices coming from the kitchen. His stomach rolled.
“Now, this canned meat is poor folk’s best friend. That garden out back looks to have been cared for last fall. Got volunteer vines up on the side of the shed. Might be something we could use.” Millie commented.
“Penny and I can look around and check it out.” Darlene volunteered.
“I figure to take the young man with me and show him how to set a few snares. I don’t know if we’ll catch much, but I know we don’t have food for more than three days.”
Zack chuckled. “Me? Trapping? Just call me Daniel Boone.”
Despite the warmth radiating from him, Steve slid out of the bed and onto the wheelchair. He rolled toward the back door. “Zack, can I roll this to the outhouse and shed?”
“I’ll go with you. You’ll need a little help.” Zack answered.
“Let’s see what’s in the shed while were out there.”
A few minutes later, Zack rolled the wheel chair at the door of the shed. The owner of the property had put up a shed and used another padlock to secure the door. Zack pulled the crowbar from his belt and performed the same procedure as before to pop open the lock. When he was done, he threw the door open. He gave a low whistle.
Inside the shed was ATV parked against one wall. Zack flicked on the LED light. He looked from one side of the shed to the other. He saw garden tools propped in the corner, some fishing gear, and a variety of hunting equipment. In the back corner was something covered by a tarp.
“We need to see what’s under there.” Steve commented. “But first, I think I need to go inside and lay down for a bit. I’m not feeling real well.”
Zack stepped behind the wheel chair and pushed it toward the cabin. “You don’t look so good man.”
“If we had enough supplies it would be a good place to rest up but we don’t. We can’t sit around and wait for my legs to heal.”
“I’ll check out the shed in a while.” Zack answered.
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