The GPS indicated that he had eleven miles before he reached Hale Ridge. The GPS also said it would take another half hour, but after a mile and a half, Clint saw a line of cars stopped dead ahead of him. A huge oak tree, at least eighty feet tall, had fallen right across the road. The root ball was enormous and lay partially on the eastbound lane. Clint backed up, turned around, and drove to the fire station. He couldn’t imagine there’d be too many fires to put out with it raining like this. He opened his car door and was soaked before he got out. The water was already standing at least an inch on the blacktop. He walked through the glass door and found a couple of fireman sitting at a table in the break room. They were both alert, ready for action. One of them, an older fireman, seemed genuinely happy to see him.

“Howdy,” he said. “Help ya?”

“Yeah,” Clint began, “I’m trying to get down to Hale Ridge road.” The older fireman began shaking his head immediately. “My GPS says I have to go down Warwoman but I didn’t get two miles and there’s a huge tree across the road.”

“There’s a whole mess of them down,” the fireman said. “We got a few calls before phones went down of trees across the road on Warwoman ’tween here and Hale Ridge.”

The younger fireman jumped in. “Shoot I can’t imagine what Hale Ridge is gonna look like. Might not even be there tomorrow,” he said.

“Look I really need to get over there. Is there another way?”

The older fireman looked at Clint. “Son, there ain’t no way you’re getting there. In twenty-four hours or so, maybe you can take a boat.”

The younger fireman spoke up: “You can get to the other side of Hale Ridge from up at Sky Valley or Scaly Mountain.”

“Really?” Clint asked. “Where’s that?”

“Of course it’s likely to be a lot worse that way.”

The older fireman looked down at his younger counterpart. “A heck of a lot worse,” he said to him before turning his stare back to Clint. “Son, you ain’t getting there. Do you have any idea what kind of road Hale Ridge is?”

“No...not really,” Clint admitted.

“Well I understand it might look just like any other road there on your map. But it ain’t. That’s a narrow dirt road winding up, through, and around ravines on the backside of Rabun Bald. With this wind and rain, ’specially if it comes like they say it’s a coming—that’s the last place on earth you wanna be.”

Clint said nothing. He walked over and looked at the large street map on the wall of Rabun County. The older fireman walked over to him. “You ought to go home yourself ’for it gets real nasty out there. After this storm passes the town will get the roads cleared, but a lot of towns are gonna be a mess for a while.”

“Thanks,” Clint said, and then walked out the door to his car.

He sat in the car and looked out his window at the amount of water standing in the parking lot. Leaning over the steering wheel, Clint looked through the sheet of water on the windshield trying to see the mountain peaks around him, peaks that were hiding in the cover of low hanging clouds. He tried to visualize the sheer volume of water that could funnel down those mountains if it kept raining like this. A loud clap of thunder shattered his concentration. He put the car in gear and started south on 441, heading for home and out of Rabun County. And heading right into the direction of the approaching storm.

• • •

Blake stared out the sliding glass door, barely able to see anything as the water pelted the glass and formed a thick, foggy sheet. The sky brightened with a terrific burst of light, followed almost instantly by a thunderous crash. Instinct thrust his right hand to shield his eyes as the lightning struck something close by. A series of pops rattled through the house as the television snapped off. All electric lights were snuffed out except for two small emergency lights that were plugged into outlets that came on when the power was out.

“Wow, did you see that?” Blake said.

The girls screamed and jumped into Angelica’s lap, knocking the Connect 4 game on its side, spilling its pieces. “It’s okay, girls,” Angelica said as she pulled them closer. “Just nature throwing a little party.”

Blake looked over at her. Most women—hell most men for that matter—would be scared out of their wits in these conditions, but Angelica seemed calm, at ease. As if she had long ago surrendered herself to nature, to God, and was now going through life as if watching a movie. Watching it happen and enjoying most parts, tensing sometimes at the scary parts. But this part, this torrential rain and lightning—this part didn’t seem to scare her.

Angelica got up and walked to the closet. She pulled out two kerosene lanterns and lit them with a match from a kitchen drawer, adjusting the wick to get the light the way she wanted before placing one light on the kitchen bar. She took the other light with her to the living room. The girls’ rosy cheeks glowed in the light as the flame entranced them the way only fire can hypnotize a child.

“This is how my grandparents lit their house,” Angelica said to the girls, omitting the fact that they only did that for fun once in a while. Blake realized that if the storm knocked out all the power and it never returned, Angelica would be one of the very few happier people. No gas, no electricity, no telephones. Just the sun, the moon, family, God and nature. He walked over and sat on the sofa with Angelica and the girls. One of the girls moved over and jumped in his lap the way she would have jumped in her father’s lap if he had been there. She curled up and laid her head against Blake’s chest.

Angelica looked at Blake and smiled broadly. Blake clumsily reached his arms around the child as if he might break her. Angelica laughed. “Just hold her and love her,” she said.

Blake did. He closed his eyes and felt the warmth of the child, the love of the child. She wanted nothing from him other than protection and love. She wasn’t chasing him, taunting him, or pursuing him. Instead, she needed him. He pulled her close and stroked her hair as Angelica moved close to him and pulled a blanket over the huddled family.

The howling wind and pounding rain continued through the night.

***

Clint awoke Friday morning, but thought it was still night. Rain pummeled the driveway at his Sandy Springs home under skies as dark as soot. Looking at the clock to see it was 7:30, he was a little surprised that the power was on at all. After he got up, brushed his teeth, used the bathroom and went to the living room, he flipped on the television and turned to CNN.

The video footage on the screen was horrific. At first Clint wasn’t sure if he was looking at a weather segment or a nature channel commercial. The camera angle was from the air, presumably from a helicopter flown by a brave pilot. The eye had made landfall over twelve hours prior, but the winds were still gusty. It looked as if the pilot was over the open sea, but debris was littered near and far. The caption read that the pilot was hovering over what had been Ossabaw Island, where the eye had crossed as the Category 4 storm made landfall just south of Savannah. There were hundreds...thousands of dead bodies floating in the water. Bloated, black bodies drifting aimlessly. Clint leaned to peer closely and realized that they were all pigs. The camera zoomed into a group of twelve piglets that were actually swimming toward the roof of a building. Clint watched as the piglets made it. They climbed up and joined at least a hundred other pigs stranded on the roof.

One of the reporters came back on and described what had happened. A twenty-eight-foot storm surge had hit the coast. Ossabaw Island, at only three feet above sea level, was wholly submerged, as were several other islands on the Georgia coast.

Downtown Savannah was a disaster. Video footage of when the 148 MPH winds hit the city showed every billboard being flung into the wind like a sheet of tissue in front of a fan. Skyscrapers stood, but nearly all of the glass windows were shattered or had altogether vanished in a rain of glass. Weaker buildings, especially along the river, collapsed completely. The helicopter flew over a swath of house walls that had been stripped of their roofs. Over eighty percent of Savannah was flooded. Roofing, sticks of lumber, tires, boxes, and bodies floated. The scene was too much for any human to take in, the destruction and loss of life and property too much to contemplate.


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