- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
"I have nothing but contempt for the lawless." --Ben Raines The Last Frontier Ben Raines--rebel leader and America's greatest survival expert--has a dream: to free the nation from the deadly grip of outlaw gangs and armies of terrorists overrunning its once great cities. The dream is about to become real. Most of the forces of lust and murder that chose to remain in the lower forty-eight have been wiped out. Those warlords, thugs, and punks who escaped have taken their gangs north to the untamed wilderness of Alaska. In their hunger to finish the job, Raines and his rebel crew ride straight into a sniper's bullet. Knowing this may be their only chance, the outlaw armies prepare to make one final all-out counterattack on the forces of freedom, whose leader now lies near death. . .
Release date: February 3, 2009
Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Print pages: 416
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz
Author updates
Courage in the Ashes
William W. Johnstone
Ben Raines and the Rebel army had wintered in Central California. So effective had been their previous campaign against the criminal element, the street punks, and Night People in the state that during these past three months not one shot had been fired in anger.
The Rebels had rested, cleaned weapons, mended gear, stored the supplies that came in on a weekly basis from Base Camp One, and did the other small things that every garrison since the Roman Legions have done and bitched about. Now, to a person, they were bored out of their gourds.
The Rebels were not accustomed to this much inactivity, and Ben knew if something wasn’t done to occupy their minds and bodies they were soon going to be fighting among themselves; it had happened before. When highly trained personnel turn on each other in anger, it can get rough very quickly—and sometimes it can get deadly.
Ben called together all his unit commanders one raw February morning.
“In six weeks we’re going to be heading into some of the toughest fighting we’ve ever faced,” he told them. “I want the troops in better shape than they’ve ever been in. That goes for everybody, and I include myself in that. We’re going to start PT, people—in the morning, and every morning and every afternoon until the day before we mount up and shove off. We’ve spent a long, lazy, loafing winter, and it’s time to shape up. We need to know who needs to be placed on limited duty for a while. Suggestions?”
“We’ll start PT in two days, Ben,” Dr. Chase said. “First we take physicals—starting in the morning.” He pointed a finger at Ben. “And you’ll be the first in line.”
“I wouldn’t have it any other way,” Ben said with a smile.
Chase stood up and looked around the large room in the old courthouse that Ben was using for his HQ. “And you boys and girls,” he said, eyeballing all the unit commanders, “will be next in line after General Raines. Tomorrow morning. 0700 hours. Sharp.”
The doctor turned to leave the room. Ben’s words stopped him.
“Of course, Lamar, you’ll take a physical, too. And if you don’t pass it, you’ll be sent back to Base Camp One with the rest of those who flunk.”
Lamar glared at Ben, knowing that Ben had just sandbagged him—again. “No one said a damn word about anybody being sent back to Base Camp One, Raines. I believe ‘limited duty’ was the phrase you used.”
“Ahhh,” Ben said. “Right you are, Lamar.”
Chase, who was in his seventies, stomped out of the room.
Ben Raines and Lamar Chase, friends for as long as any Rebel could remember, had been playing one-upmanship for years.
It usually ended in a tie.
“We’re moving toward Northstar March 15?” Ben’s daughter, Tina asked.
“Right. And that date is not to be repeated again. It’s just about two thousand miles from Seattle to the Alaskan border, and we’re going to be facing hostiles all the way up. Flyovers confirm that a lot of people are living just across the border in Canada. The planes were fired upon. It’s going to be a very interesting trip,” he added dryly. “Dan, the first contingent of your Scouts will pull out a week ahead of us. Right now, let’s start shaking the cobwebs out of our systems, people. Pass the word that playtime is over.”
“Me ol’ bones is a-achin’ awready,” General Ike McGowan said, standing up and looking like a bear.
“They’ll be aching more three days from now,” the mercenary, Colonel West, told him with a grin.
The Russian general, Striganov, whacked him on the back. “Come on, Ike, let’s us middle-aged men show these kids a thing or two.”
Laughing, the two men, who had once been bitter enemies, left the room.
Ben’s son, Buddy, who looked like he ate anvils for lunch, walked to his father’s side. “You watch that knee, Father,” he cautioned him. “You haven’t been that many weeks out of surgery.”
Ben smiled. “It’s fine, son. Better than it’s felt in years. I should have had surgery done on it a long time ago.”
“You also tell lies from time to time,” Tina told him.
“I get no respect from my kids,” Ben said, smiling. “Me and Rodney Dangerfield.”
“Who’s Rodney Dangerfield?” a young Rebel aide asked.
The world was in the middle of the second decade since the planet had exploded in germ warfare and limited nuclear warfare. When the clouds of devastation were swept away, all that remained was a world filled with anarchy. Then along came Ben Raines.
Ben hadn’t wanted to command an army of survivors. He ran from that job for months. He had tried to tell those who sought him that he was the wrong man. But they knew he was the right man.
Ben finally agreed, and when he did, he threw himself into the job, forming the Tri-States. The Tri-States represented everything that liberal politicians had been saying for years wouldn’t work. It worked. And the newly formed dictatorship that governed the United States from the new capital of Richmond couldn’t stand it. They destroyed Ben’s Tri-States. But Ben wouldn’t give up. He formed another army, fought the dictatorship, and beat it. Then the plague came and once more ravaged the earth. From out of the ashes of despair came one man and a small army of dedicated men and women: Ben Raines and his Rebels.1
They fought against anarchy, fear, darkness, devil-worshippers, cannibals, thugs, punks, street gangs, and all forms of lawlessness. Rebels lay buried from coast to coast, border to border—men and women who had willingly given their lives in pursuit of a dream of freedom and a life free of crime. Their names were inscribed on a marble wall back at Base Camp One, so they would always be remembered.
Down south, the Mexicans had banded together behind one man, General Payon, and were busy restoring their country—in a manner patterned after the rules and regulations laid down by one Ben Raines.
Canada, except for its westernmost province, was clean. And that westernmost area would soon be cleared, once the Rebels crossed over the border.
Alaska was the last frontier the Rebels faced in the Northern hemisphere.
During the winter, the entire Rebel army had been restructured from top to bottom. With the many new Rebels coming into the ranks, just out of training at several locations around the country, it had to be.
Ben commanded First Battalion. Ike led Second Battalion. Third Battalion was Cecil’s. West’s mercenaries made up Fourth Battalion. Striganov commanded Fifth Battalion. Rebet took over Sixth Battalion. Danjou commanded Seventh Battalion. Thermopolis was in command of Eighth Battalion, which included Emil Hite and the bikers called the Wolfpack. Tina commanded Ninth Battalion. Dan Gray and his Scouts remained independent, able to roam at Ben’s command. Ben’s son, Buddy, led what Ben called the Rat Pack, a hundred or so highly trained and expert manhunters and woodspersons, who usually got the toughest jobs.
Each battalion contained 850 personnel—more or less. And each battalion had armor assigned to it, which made them much more mobile and independent.
But soldiers are soldiers, whether they are a ragtag bunch of reactionaries or an army as well-trained and highly motivated as Raines’s Rebels. They’re going to bitch when faced with physical training. And bitch they did.
Physicals over—and something like ninety-seven percent of them passed—the bitching stopped when Ben stepped onto the raised platform and faced the huge army. He walked to the microphone.
The men and women of the Rebels fell silent.
“You’ve done what many felt was the impossible,” Ben’s voice boomed over the training and staging area. “You’ve cleared the lower forty-eight states of crud and crap and scum. And you’ve done it with your blood and sweat and courage. We’ve all seen friends fall; we’ve stood in silence over their graves. They did not die in vain. America is once more on the road to becoming a nation of law and order. Back in the fall, after Southern California became ours, I promised you a time of R & R. You’ve had it. Now it’s time to get back to work. For you new people just joining us from Base Camp One and other training centers around the country, welcome to the Rebels. If I haven’t met you all personally, I will. I want to shake your hands and look you in the eyes and know your faces. I’ve very proud of you all ...”
Thermopolis, Ben’s hippie-turned-warrior friend, stood with his wife, Rosebud, on the edge of the crowd. He smiled at Ben’s words. “He’d have made a great evangelist. I can see it now: Brother Ben. Waving a Bible under the television lights and screwing the flock off-camera.”
“Hush,” Rosebud told him. “I want to hear this.”
Therm sighed.
“... We’ve got a tough campaign ahead of us,” Ben continued. “And a tougher one still after that. We don’t know what we’ll be facing once we start the Northstar campaign. We don’t know how many of the enemy we’ll be facing. But we will be outnumbered. Get used to that. The Rebels are always outnumbered. The terrain will be rugged. Many times the weather will be working against us. Alaska is a place of contrasts, so we’ve all got to be in top condition before we strike. And we will be,” he said without a smile. “Those that are not, will not go. It’s just as simple as that. All right, company commanders, let’s get this circus on the move.”
Rain or shine, cold and wet or miserable and tired, the Rebels worked out for the next month. They were already in good physical condition, but if the lax months had put any fat on them, it was soon gone; hard muscle took its place as the instructors pushed the troops with a vengeance.
When they weren’t training, they were getting equipment ready for the long push north, boxing and packing supplies and the thousand other things required before an army moves out.
Bitching and cussing, General Ike McGowan, an ex-SEAL and one of Ben’s closest friends, managed to drop fifteen pounds from his stocky frame. He still looked like a friendly bear. But in combat Ike was anything but friendly.
With a week to go before the Rebels began their push-off, Ben called a halt to the training and stood his people down. There was nothing more that could be done as far as readiness and preparedness were concerned.
“Don’t push them any more,” Dr. Chase warned Ben. “They can eat nails now. How’s your knee?”
“Fine,” Ben told him.
“You’re probably lying; but I expected that.” The doctor poured a cup of coffee and sat down, taking his place among the unit commanders gathered in the room.
Ben said, “All right, Dan. What have your Scouts reported?”
Colonel Dan Gray, a former British SAS officer, stood up and took the pointer, moving to a large wall map. “We’re going to hit some stiff resistance about fifty miles inside Canada.” He pointed out the area. “Malcontents control a sector from Cache Creek all the way over to Golden. A lot of them are survivors from our assaults against Seattle and Vancouver. I would imagine they have smartened up and toughened up. We can expect a fight.”
“How are they equipped?” General Striganov asked.
“Light weapons for the most part. Some mortars and heavy machine guns. My people could see no sign of tanks or heavy artillery.”
“The Scouts halted their advance and backtracked,” Ben added. “They came back across the border.”
“Must be a sizeable force,” Cecil Jefferys said.
“Quite,” Dan told him.
“We’ll eyeball the area once we get it in visual,” Ben said. “But we’ll probably shell it and smash on through. I don’t intend to lose Rebel life unnecessarily. Lamar, did the lab people come up with a good insect repellent?”
Summer in Alaska was bug season, which included not only mosquitoes, but black flies and a pest called no-see-ums, also known as punkies. They all either bit or stung.
“We couldn’t improve much on Diethyl-meta-toluamide,” Chase said. “Better known as DEET. It’s very effective against mosquitoes; less effective against the other bugs. A slight breeze and low humidity is our best hope.”
“Make sure there is plenty of mosquito netting,” Ben said to Beth, who was one of the people permanently assigned to him, part of a personal team which included Cooper, his driver, Corrie, his radio operator, Little Jersey, his bodyguard, and Linda Parsons, a trained nurse who was the team’s medic. Smoot, his husky pup, rambled around the room, stopping every now and then for a friendly pat or a scratch behind the ears.
Ben said, “Let’s double-check everything, people. Lamar, is everyone up to date on their shots?”
“Yes. I had records finishing up their checking on that yesterday.”
“Corrie, order the planes up from Base Camp One.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Commanders, put your people on low alert.”
That was acknowledged.
“No one leaves the staging area.”
That was noted.
“Who spearheads, Ben?” the Russian asked.
Ben’s reply was a smile, although he knew he would never be allowed to do that.
Dan Gray nixed it. “Not a chance, General. As usual, my Scouts will spearhead all the way.”
“Then I’ll be right behind you people,” Ben said.
“There will be a buffer of tanks between you and the Scouts,” Ike told him. “And a team between the tanks and you. That’s the way it’s got to be, Ben.”
Ben shrugged his shoulders. “I had to try.”
The Rebels all knew that Ben Raines would personally take the point if they didn’t watch him. So they always watched him closely, doing their best to form a net around him—a net that Ben always managed to find a hole through.
“We met no resistance all the way to the line,” Ben’s son, Buddy said. He and his Rat Pack had just returned from a recon mission to the Canadian border. “We found survivors in many areas—they seemed to have crawled out of the woodwork, so to speak—after the area was cleaned of the criminal element last year. But they showed no desire to join in our network of outposts.”
Buddy had told the people that if they did not join with the Rebels, they would receive no help from them—in any way, shape, form, or fashion. Ben Raines’s way was a hard one, but it had to be if the country was going to get back together. The nation would never be whole if everyone pulled in a different direction.
“Children?” Ben asked.
“No infants,” his son said.
“Then to hell with them,” Ben summed up the Rebel position.
The dawn of March fifteenth in central California was unusually cold. As was his custom, Ben had been up for several hours before the eastern skies began turning a gray shade of silver.
“Do you realize, General,” Jersey said as she looked around the now-barren room, “that this is the longest we’ve stayed in one spot in months and months?”
“Does it make you long for a husband and motherhood?” Ben asked with a grin.
“Hell, no!” the diminutive Jersey said. “I guess I’m what I read about in those old magazines we find: a liberated woman. I like men, but on my terms.”
“You can have me anytime you want, Jersey,” Cooper said. “I’m yours, darlin’. Just name the terms.”
Jersey picked up her M-16 and Cooper got a worried look on his face. Jersey grinned at him and he relaxed. “You ain’t my type, Coop. I like the serious, scholarly type, like that guy over in Five Battalion who quotes poems. Real pretty ones.”
“He used to teach English Literature at a college in upstate New York,” Ben told her. “A PhD type. He’s a nice fellow. I wondered where you’d been slipping off to at night.”
Cooper started humming “Rockabye Baby.” Jersey chased him out of the room, cussing him with every bootfall.
Ben looked around the room, checking to see if everything had been packed up. Linda joined him, and together they inspected each room of the home. Ben had found a family picture album during the first week of his stay and had placed it on the mantel of the fireplace in the den. They passed the now-cold hearth and Ben paused, picking up the photo album and looking at it in the light from the lantern. A man, a woman, and three kids stared out at him from the fading family portrait.
“I wonder what happened to them?” Linda asked, standing close to Ben.
“God only knows. They certainly look like they were a happy family.” He closed the photo album and placed it back on the mantel. “You ready to go to work?”
“Where you lead, I follow,” she said with a twinkle in her eyes.
Ben looked heavenward and smiled. He looked around him. “Where’s Smoot?”
Linda said, “I swear, Ben, I think you care more for that dog than you do me.”
Ben’s smile widened. “That’s what a fiance told me once. I told her she was probably right.”
Linda poked him in the ribs, and together, laughing, they walked out of the house and into the gray misty light of early dawn.
Standing by the big nine-passenger wagon, Linda asked, “Is that story true, Ben? About the fiance, I mean?”
“Yep. She didn’t like dogs. I’ve always liked dogs. When the bombs and the germ-carrying pods hit, I was without one. But it didn’t take me long to find one.”
“A husky?”
“Uh-huh. I named him Juno. We had a good long life together. He was a very old dog when he was killed during the assault against Tri-States. But he tore the throat out of a goddamn government soldier before they killed him.”
“You loved that old dog?” she asked quietly, noticing that all of Ben’s personnel team had gathered around, listening.
“Sure,” Ben’s voice was low-pitched. “I’ve loved all my dogs.”
“Do you think dogs go to heaven, General?” Corrie asked. She held Smoot on a leash.
“Personally? I think so. In Psalms it says, ‘Man and beast thou savest, O Lord.’ Ecclesiastes reads, ‘For the fate of the sons of men and the fate of beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the same breath, and man has no advantage over the beasts; for all is vanity. All go to one place; all are from the dust, and all turn to dust again. Who knows whether the spirit of man goes upward and the spirit of the beast goes down to earth.’ In the New Testament, the Apostle Paul proclaims salvation for all creatures, including dogs. And learned theologians agreed that Paul indicated from that passage of his in Romans that he meant that animals are to be renewed.” Ben looked up at the Methodist chaplain who had just walked up to join them, a cup of coffee in his hand.” Morning, Tom.”
“General,” the chaplain said. “I didn’t know you were that familiar with the Bible.”
“I find great comfort in reading the Bible, Tom. Especially the Old Testament. And you have to remember, I used to be a writer, and writers do a lot of research.”
“Mind if I add something to your statements?”
“Not at all.”
“Methodist John Wesley had no doubts about dogs and cats going to heaven. Wesley outlined what dogs and other animals would experience in Heaven. Personally, I believe that only human arrogance and ignorance stands in the way of people accepting that salvation extends to animals. I think a lot of people who are deliberately cruel to animals are going to be weeping and wailing come Judgement Day.”
“I hope so, Tom,” Ben said. “I certainly hope so. But in the meantime, when I see someone abusing an animal, I’ll see that person gets to a grave much earlier than they anticipated.”
Smiling and shaking his head, the chaplain walked away.
The chaplains from all faiths blessed and prayed for those in the column and returned to their vehicles. Ben looked at Corrie. “Give the orders, Corrie. Let’s roll.”
The column stretched out for miles. Almost ten thousand fighting men and women and hundreds of vehicles. Fighting machines of every description. Tanks from the huge 50-ton Abrams to the almost petite Dusters. APCs and Hummers and Jeeps and tanker trucks. And for the very first time in the history of the Rebel army scores of attack helicopters now drummed the sky overhead. Cobras and Apaches, old Huey gunships that had been found and carefully brought back to combat readiness slapped the sky overhead. Their pilots had just graduated from a long schooling. The Rebel ways of war were changing.
The Rebels had not previously used choppers because they had no one to fly them and no one to teach others how to fly them in combat. Only during the past two years had people with the right qualifications been found. A program was immediately launched, and now the Rebels had valuable air support as well as the finest ground support on the continent.
Some of the Hueys were equipped with 7.62 Gatling guns mounted on each side of the ship, as well as seven-shot 2.75 rocket launchers. The AH-64s and AH-1 Cobras were equipped with cannon, rockets, and machine guns; some of the Apaches carried 30mm chain guns with 1,200 rounds available on demand.
The Rebels had always been a force to be reckoned with. Now they were awesome.
They made over a hundred miles the first day. The column was so long that the final vehicle was over two hours behind the point. They were moving at dawn the next day and rolled into southern Oregon by noon, staying on the old Interstate 5. They passed by the towns that lay silent and deserted on either side of the highway and they rolled past the cities they had destroyed during the Rebels’ purge of the nation.
The Rebels were aware of eyes on them. More often than not the eyes were unfriendly. But those people who had decided to not join with the Rebel movement committed no hostile acts against them. They knew to do so would be suicide. The Rebels would have chopped them into bloody pieces in seconds.
“I don’t understand them,” Cooper said, as they passed a small group of men and women. The watchers did not wave, did not smile, did nothing except stare in silence. “We’re offering them safety, food, medical care, schools . . . the whole bag. And they won’t take it. Why?”
“Our way is too complicated for them, Coop,” Ben said.
“But our laws aren’t complicated! It’s the simplest form of government that I’ve ever studied. And you know I’ve been reading history and the study of civilization. It’s fascinating.”
“It’s so simple it scares them, Coop,” Ben said. “Before the Great War, people were used to government telling them what to do. We had so many laws that contradicted each other no one really knew what they could or couldn’t do. The use of common sense had been removed from our daily lives and from the administration of justice. Now that we virtually have no form of law—outside of the Rebel system—many people just don’t know what to do. Many of those folks we’re seeing aren’t bad people; they’re just scared people. They’ve heard so many things about us they don’t know what to believe. Many of those folks have lost all faith in any form of organized government. And with good reason, when you understand that our system prior to the Great War was terrible.”
“Scouts report resistance up ahead, General,” Corrie said, receiving the news through her headset. “Large force of heavily armed men have blocked the interstate and are refusing to let us pass.”
“Get us up there, Coop. Let’s see what we have.”
Buddy met his father about a half a mile from the blockade. “They say they have formed their own government and claim this area as part of their territory,” Ben’s son told him. “We are not welcome here.”
“Are you in radio contact with them?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Give me the mike.” Ben lifted the mike and said, “This is General Raines. You will kindly remove that blockade from the interstate and stand aside.”
“You go to hell, Raines!” the reply came back.
“Are you insane?” Ben asked him. “My God, man, look around you. Look in the sky. Those are attack choppers hovering above you. One word from me and none of you will be alive ten seconds from now.”
“We do not like your form of justice. We do not approve of you. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...