people in sporty clothing. Out ahead of even the most vampirical papirazzi and died-in-the-wool war correspondents. "Let's just call it a day and hike back to the "Last Chance Texaco" and, I dunno, get a burrito."
Warriors came up out of the sand.
"You think the dust storm went this way and blew like, some people out this way?"
"Did someone say burritos?"
Quickly children. A busload of children was hurried towards us.
"Start vahlking," a gun was pointed at "Secret Service" people who'd been stripped of their shoes. One old timer communications person took a local U.S. newspaper out of his rain/trenchcoat. "Maybe it has to do with the prison riots on this side and that side of this strip of sand."
"Really Jim, I could care less right now." Angry to have had personal firearm taken away and then needed, a man stopped walking, grabbed the newspaper, crumpled it up, and then mashed it into the quarter of an inch of sanddrift on the tar road.
"Okay, okay, keep walking at this pace. Minimize talking."
Bulldozers and backhoes and chains and straps pulled at containers trapped in sand. Grown wealthy men pitched silent movie fits as machine guns trailed the "path to stay on" beside them. Figures in black swarmed. Motorcycle'd people corral'd the down flight'd that got up off the ground. Black Knights on horses grabbed heads with hair and dragged them. Helicopters commandeered were divvied up like pirate's treasure. Orders issued in multiple languages.
"How many?" A tanker climbed out and asked. "See those Town water tanks moving behind us?" The person looked in binoculars. "Thought it was a mirage." Those are just picked up and carried. "By who?"
"Volunteers I guess. That gas station still open?"
"It was stripped and set ablaze about forty minutes ago."