(Real places mentioned here again)
Chapter Three: The Dentist Will See You Now
As a valuable skilled professional, Alipang could have settled his family in Casper, the largest city in that part of Wyoming which was included in the Enclave; but he preferred to live where the Overseers and the satellite monitors were paying less constant attention. So his exile-home was in the town of Sussex, north of Casper, east of what used to be Interstate 25 when motor vehicles had still been freely in use by persons other than government officials.
Sussex sat on that stretch of the Powder River which ran west to east before turning northward to flow into Montana. Up until the reorganizing of America, it had not been a town at all; rather, it had been a very loosely-defined ranching area, like Mayoworth and Barnum west of it. But the Fairness Party's eagerness to change things just to be changing them had changed Sussex _into_ an actual town... at the expense of the pre-existing town of Kaycee. Those prior citizens of Kaycee who did not leave Wyoming as the exiles came in, had been transplanted to slapdash new housing in the new community. But Alipang's family, as it happened, now occupied an old two-storey rural house which had already existed in Sussex.
As part of the expansion of railways at the establishment of the Western Enclave, Sussex now had the benefit of a direct rail connection to Casper--a branch line running up from that historic main trunk line which passed through Wyoming from southeast to northwest, from Cheyenne to Greybull. Only, Cheyenne was in the south-edge strip of Wyoming NOT included in the Enclave, so the train route was cut off in that direction. Instead, the tracks turned east by northeast from Glenrock to enter South Dakota Sector, and east from Douglas to enter Nebraska Sector. The northern part was likewise cut off at Greybull, as there was also a north-edge strip of Wyoming outside the Enclave; but this part of the rail network, as well as a parallel track located farther west, fed into an east-west line which also communicated with Sussex.
It was Friday morning when Alipang rode his Palomino stallion Sammy from the Grange Hall to Sussex, a two-hour trot when not pushing the horse too hard. He continued east, along the north side of the river, until he came to the Highway 192 Bridge; crossing it, he proceeded toward his house on the south side of the river. The first greeting they received was a distant whinny from Lacey, Kim's pinto mare. The horses were named in honor of another Christian couple the Havens family knew, who had been among the first victims murdered in Virginia by the Campaign Against Hate.
The stable in which these and other horses were housed had been built by combining two old semi-truck trailers, with the undercarriages and one side each removed. (The additional horses belonged to other people, and were boarded on the Havens property, since this had open land beyond it, and Kim had experience in animal boarding.) A third trailer served as a toolshed and feed-storage shed, and another two made Alipang's dental clinic. Almost all new non-residential civilian buildings added to Enclave property since the isolation began were made from these big trailers, the trucks now being prohibited to civilians. As for human residences, many of the new houses in Sussex had been constructed using materials taken from houses in Kaycee which had been demolished as "environmentally unsound." Exiles like Alipang were not entirely sure what recompense (if any) had been made to former owners who had been moved OUT of the Enclave region.
From the several houses in Sussex that Alipang rode past before coming to his own, friends came swarming out to greet him; for there was no one living full-time in Sussex, or on any farm in his Grange coverage area, who _wasn't_ his friend. One Japanese-American gentleman, Peter Tomisaburo, who was a longtime exile but had only been in Sussex with his family for a few months, remarked, "Thank God you're back! Is there any word on your new supply of dental epoxy for fillings?"
"Not yet," Alipang replied; "but I'll get a phone call off to Dad about it before they shut off the phones for the weekend." As a measure of so-called energy conservation, most electrical power for the exiles, including power for their telephone systems, was shut off on Saturdays and Sundays. Alipang's house and clinic were fortunate enough to have solar panels, giving them some power on the weekends, and no one resented this privilege being enjoyed by a genuine community benefactor; but many functions of daily life were disrupted every weekend in the Enclave. This included their churches and synagogues not having the use of electricity on those days--which was no accident.
Arriving in front of his house, which was on the east edge of town as the Tisdale house had been back in Smoky Lake, Alipang was hardly dismounted before his children were lovingly swarming over their Papa (the Havens family having never adopted the approach of using the word "papa" to mean a grandfather instead of a father). Hugs and kisses were followed by the thirteen-year-old Wilson Havens declaring, "I'll unsaddle Sammy for you, Papa."
"I'll rub him down!" offered seven-year-old Brendan Havens. "I'll help you carry your stuff inside!" added nine-year-old Esperanza Havens. The children hastened to perform their services, giving their mother her chance to fling her arms around him.
One very long kiss, exchanged while squeezing their bodies closely together, was all Kimberly Havens would allow herself before telling her beloved: "You need to clean up right away and get to work; we've got five patients waiting, all serious cases. At least two will need extractions. Lorraine will have lunch ready when we're able to eat it."
"That reminds me," Alipang told her, "I brought home some smoked grizzly tenderloin to go onto our menu for the next few days."
"I'll take charge of that," said the middle-aged widow Lorraine Kramer, who had also emerged from the house. She and her surviving son Ransom lived with the Havens family; Lorraine performed the bulk of housewifely functions for them all, including handling much of the homeschooling for the kids, while Kim acted as Alipang's all-purpose helper in the dental clinic. Ransom Kramer was away today, working on a farm as part of the cooperative activity network the people in and around Sussex had developed without need of governmental instruction.
Alipang hurried to clean up, as Kim had said; but amid the bustle of going from one of his roles to another, he counted his blessings. They never knew whether the Campaign Against Hate was going to invent a phony pretext for a purge; but for now, one day at a time, they were able to live a life of love, friendship and Christian charity. And yes, they _were_ happier than the goons watching the spy-satellite monitor screens.