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  • REMNANT Is Expanding

    If you're looking for Episode 11 and wondering why it hasn't appeared in your podcast feed yet, nothing is wrong.

    Starting now, Survival Dispatch Remnant is moving to a subscriber-first release schedule.

    Episode 11 is already available for paid subscribers at SurvivalDispatchRemnant.com. One week later, that same episode will be released publicly through Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, Podcast Addict, and every other major podcast platform.

    That means paid subscribers get every episode first, while public listeners receive it one week later.

    ## Why I'm Making This Change

    Before Episode One ever launched, I had already written 104 complete episodes.

    Not outlines.

    Not concepts.

    Complete episodes.

    I knew where this story started, where it was going, and how it unfolded long before the first episode aired.

    What I didn't know was how strongly people would connect with it.

    The first ten episodes did exactly what they were supposed to do.

    They introduced the Smith family, Camp Ridge, the Black Vultures, and the world these characters now inhabit.

    Nothing about those episodes changes.

    Nothing is being rewritten.

    They remain the foundation for everything that comes next.

    ## What's Changing

    Starting next weekend, every new Remnant episode will be expanded and released across the weekend in two parts.

    Part One and Part Two are not separate episodes.

    They are a single expanded episode released across one weekend.

    Part One releases Saturday at noon Eastern for paid subscribers.

    Part Two releases Sunday at noon Eastern for paid subscribers.

    One week later, those same installments release publicly through the podcast feed on Saturday and Sunday evenings.

    This is not a temporary experiment.

    This is the format moving forward.

    ## The Story Is Just Getting Started

    As I looked ahead at the story already written, it became obvious that what is coming is much larger than what you've heard so far.

    The world gets bigger.

    The threats get bigger.

    The stakes get higher.

    The consequences become heavier.

    And the story deserves more room to breathe.

    Because what you've heard so far is only the beginning.

    Camp Ridge is not the destination.

    The Black Vultures are not the full threat.

    Several of the most important storylines are only beginning to reveal themselves.

    After writing 104 episodes before launch, I can tell you with complete confidence that the best parts of this story are still ahead of us.

    ## What Paid Subscribers Receive

    Paid subscribers receive immediate access to every new episode one week before the public release.

    They also receive companion articles that expand the story beyond what you hear in the audio drama.

    In addition, paid subscribers receive invitations to the Remnant Roundtable webinars where we discuss the story, the characters, major decisions, and the future direction of the series.

    Because those conversations happen while the larger story is still unfolding, subscribers will have opportunities to influence parts of the story as it develops.

    Remnant has always been more than an audio drama.

    It's a community.

    And paid subscribers are helping build that community alongside me.

    If you'd like immediate access to Episode 11, every future episode one week early, the companion articles, and invitations to the Remnant Roundtable webinars, subscribe today at SurvivalDispatchRemnant.com.

    The best parts of this story are still ahead of us.

    Godspeed,

    Chris Heaven

    CEO, Survival Dispatch

  • The truck came back. Not everyone in it did.

    Day Two of a seven-day probationary week, the Smith family rolls out of Camp Ridge on the camp’s regular supply route and into a country grocery store that has been turned into a trap. The men inside the store are inside the favor of the man the camp has only just put a name to. The shooter on the roof across the road is on a clock that is not the foray’s clock. The road home is not the road in. And by the time the convoy turns onto the gravel lane back at the camp, a Camp Ridge man is in the bed of the second truck under a jacket, and Sarah Smith is at the door of the medical bay with her sleeves rolled to the elbow because she has been at that door for an hour already and the work is the work.

    What changes in this episode is not the threat picture. The Black Vultures were already a known faction by the end of Episode 8. The change is the moral weight the Smith family is now carrying. They walked into Camp Ridge the day before as petitioners. They are leaving Day Two with another camp’s blood on their hands, in the sense that a son from somewhere else paid the bill for food the family ate at dinner. Pastor Calloway leads the camp in prayer at dusk. The Smiths stand with strangers in mourning anyway, because that is what the camp does. The pastor watches them through it.

    And then the bell on the north perimeter rings, and the count is not three.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

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  • Day Two of probation at Camp Ridge opens before sunrise. Three Black Vulture spotters were in the north tree line at midnight, counting. John Moon held the second sandbag position, let them read him, and watched them walk back through the dark without an engagement. By five-forty the camp's cooks were moving faster than they had moved the morning before. The morning brief inside the church was the first time Mark Smith saw the working operational map from across a small table, and the first time he heard the name Pryor said in a room with the door closed.

    Calloway accelerates the camp's posture. The supply route the camp has run nine times in three weeks runs for a tenth, and the new family volunteers for it. Mark. John. Justin. The seventeen-year-old. The dog. The store on the corner of Henley Road and County Road 142 is not as empty as it has been on the first nine runs. Pryor's people are already inside it. His spokesman is on the front floor with his hands clear and a sentence prepared. His Shepherd is in the gap between the buildings, reading the foray, reading the boy, reading the new family in the cab of an F-250.

    What comes back to camp at nine fifty-two is a haul, two unmarked prisoners, and a name a pastor in a country church now knows is being put through an evening rotation two miles up the road. The funnel did not engage. The empty was the message. The next step is not the camp's to take.

    Trust is earned by what you bring back. And by who comes back with you.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • The Smith-Moon truck is forty yards into a gravel lane when the dog locks on the tree line and does not breathe. Camp Ridge is ahead. The man at the gate is a former pastor named Calloway. And somewhere in the trees between the truck and the wire, a Black Vulture forward observer is reaching for a radio he will not get to use.

    Episode Eight resolves the cliffhanger that closed Episode Seven and opens the next chapter of the collapse: the Smiths and the Moons arrive somewhere on someone else's terms. Calloway has rules. Calloway has a seven-day probationary protocol. And Calloway has a notebook pulled off the dead man in the lane with the Smith name written in tight engineering hand on the fifth page.

    Pryor knows their name. The Black Vultures have been reading the approach. The probationary clock starts the moment the gate closes behind them, and Mark Smith — the man who has run his family on his own conviction for nine days — sits down on a folding cot in another man's wire and understands, for the first time since Day Zero, that he is not the one holding it all up anymore.

    The Bug Out arc closes here. What comes next is the longer kind of pressure.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • The smoke comes before the fire does.

    It starts two houses down — a flicker in a second-floor window that no one moved fast enough to stop. By the time the roof catches, the block is already becoming something else: a heat trap, a panic funnel, a killing ground where frightened people are moving without direction and desperate men are watching for exactly that kind of confusion. Canton is no longer a neighborhood. It is a box with no lid and not enough exits.

    Mark Smith has run every calculation about staying. He has hardened this house, buried supplies in its walls, told his family it was worth defending. Now the house next to him is throwing embers into the dry October air and the wind is not running in his favor, and none of the math he has done adds up anymore. Sarah already knows what he is working toward. The argument that follows is not about whether to leave — it is about what leaving means. About whether moving is running. About whether a man who built everything inside these walls gets to decide, in one minute, that none of it matters anymore.

    He makes the call.

    When the Smiths cross the front threshold for the last time and load into the vehicle, they are not the same family that came home through that door on Day Zero. They are something harder and less certain, pointed at a road that does not promise them anything. The collapse has finally pushed them off the one position they thought they owned.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • The dormer is empty. The figure that watched from across the street is gone — out the window and into the neighborhood before anyone could stop it. What it left behind is worse than its presence. Two maps, drawn by hand with the patience of someone who had all the time they needed. The cul-de-sac. The store. Positions marked before the shooting started. The ambush wasn't a coincidence and the evidence doesn't allow for any other reading. Mark folds the maps into his jacket and says nothing out loud that everyone in the room isn't already thinking.

    Then the second wave comes.

    The Smith family spends the daylight hours turning a suburban house into a position — sheeted windows, blocked doors, extension cords knotted into a drop route and anchored to the bed frame, fields of fire established in rooms that used to hold birthday parties and Sunday dinners. The work is physical and tedious and the family does it without drama because drama is a luxury that the night ahead cannot support. When dark comes, so do the men who have been watching this house, cataloguing its occupants, and deciding it is a target worth taking.

    What happens between dark and first light is what separates a house from a position. The defensive stand holds. The line holds. Everything that holds it costs something that does not come back, and by the time the last threat breaks and the neighborhood goes quiet again, the psychological distance between who the Smith family was a week ago and who they are now is not a gap anymore. It is a permanent condition. Mark sits in the dark after it is over with something in his shirt pocket he has not shown anyone and does not intend to — a piece of folded notebook paper that is going to matter long after tonight is finished.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • Water ran out before dawn. That single fact collapsed every other option the Smith family had left, because in a world where the grid is gone and the stores are stripped and the neighborhood has become something unrecognizable, thirst doesn't wait for a safe window. It creates one — or forces you to move without one.

    The dormer across the street hasn't gone dark. Whatever watched them from the Halverson house the night before is still there, patient and quiet, and the pressure from two directions at once is what finally pushes the family out the front door. Nine blocks to the closest store. A route they've driven a hundred times. A run they've been dreading since the last jug went dry. What's waiting for them in that parking lot isn't panic and opportunism — it's something more deliberate. Organized. The kind of threat that has already figured out where desperation sends people and was in position before the family stepped off the curb.

    This is the episode where the cost of resources becomes visible. Every gallon of water is a target. Every trip outside the house is a calculation with consequences that don't announce themselves until the shooting starts. Sarah moves into triage the moment the situation demands it — not because she decides to, but because eight years of emergency nursing doesn't leave when the hospital does. And in the middle of a parking lot ambush that nobody planned for, a new face arrives in the group's orbit: a man who walked five days through a collapsing metro area to find his family, and who is already proving that his skills are exactly the kind the camp didn't know it needed.

    The dormer is still occupied when they get back. And now they know what that means.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • The man at the mailbox is dead. What stands on the porch now is smaller, quieter, and harder to shoot. A child with bare feet on the welcome mat, a small palm pressed flat against three inches of solid wood, and a door that should not be creaking under that little weight. Across the street, a candle burns in the dormer of a house where the only resident is now under a guest-bed sheet on the Smiths' back patio.

    The Smith family has eight days of collapse behind them and one night of demonstration ahead of them. The hard tap on the door is not a knock. It is a question. The candle in the dormer is the answer somebody is waiting on. And the rule Sarah laid down at the dining room table that morning — we don't open the door — is about to be tested by every instinct that makes a parent a parent.

    What unfolds inside the house over the next five hours teaches Mark and Sarah something the man in the dormer wanted them to learn. The altered survivors are not random. They are not alone. And whoever is moving them has been doing it long enough to make it look easy. By morning, the question is no longer whether to stay or go. The question is how fast they can leave.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • The neighborhood looks almost normal that morning. The grass is still cut. The mailboxes still stand at the ends of the driveways. And three houses down, a man is standing at his mailbox who has not moved in four minutes. He is not opening anything. He is not holding anything. He is not waiting for anyone. Emily is the first one in the family to notice that the angle of his head is wrong.

    The collapse killed most of the country in the first ten days. The people still walking are not all the same kind of people anymore. Most of them are simply terrified civilians trying to figure out what comes next. A smaller number are not. The Smith family does not yet have a word for what is standing in front of Mr. Halverson's house, and the moment Mark steps off the porch to check on him is the moment the threat landscape of their entire lives changes.

    This is the episode where the rules change. Up until now, the Smiths have been surviving a collapse — supply chains, panicked neighbors, looters, fallout, the long slow horror of watching the country fail. Those threats are still here. But there is something else moving through the streets now, and it does not respond to the cues the human brain expects to read off another human being. Mark spent twenty years analyzing risk for a living, and the risk model he is operating on has just been invalidated by a man in a bathrobe at a mailbox. Casey knows before any of them do. The dog almost always does.

    The cost of this episode is the death of a particular kind of innocence — the suburban American assumption that the people on the other side of the fence will always, fundamentally, be people you can talk to. Some of them still are. Some of them are not. From this point forward, the family has to learn to tell the difference before the difference reaches them.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • The refrigerator stops humming at 6:47 in the morning. By the time Mark Smith understands what that silence means, the country on the other side of his kitchen window is already gone. No power. No phones. No sheriff coming. And forty miles south, past a tree line his family has looked at every day for fifteen years, a city of six million people is no longer a city.

    Day One is not about what happens. It is about what stops happening. The Smiths lock the doors, inventory what they actually have instead of what they thought they had, and begin absorbing the hard arithmetic of a morning that unplugged from the century. Sarah, who has been quietly running a two-year preparedness rhythm while her husband made jokes about it, becomes the steady hand the whole house moves on. Mark begins, slowly and uncomfortably, to become a man he has not yet met.

    The Moon family comes through the front door before noon with Grace shaking and Olivia holding on too tight. Justin walks home four miles from a gym that no longer exists. Neighbors knock who should not be turned away and who have to be turned away anyway. And somewhere between midnight and dawn, something stands at the end of the Smiths' driveway, watches the house, and does not move the way a person moves.

    This is the first day of a life nobody prepared for. It will not be the worst one.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • The sky over Georgia turned the wrong color at 7:42 in the morning, and by noon the Smith family was sealed in a basement with the world they knew gone and something they could not yet name moving through the street above them. What started as a flash on the horizon became a second, then a third, then a fourth — and then a pressure wave that cracked the living room window and put drywall dust in the kitchen air.

    Mark Smith spent his entire adult life believing that the things on the news happened to other people in other countries. On Day Zero, he learns the cost of that belief in real time, while his wife — who had quietly prepared for this exact morning — runs a calculation he was never willing to admit she had been running. The highways are already a trap. The broadcasts are cutting out mid-sentence. The man across the street in the bathrobe has not moved in forty minutes, and nine-year-old Emily is the first one to notice that his chest is not rising the way a chest should.

    By the time the family reaches the basement, four columns are visible from a single suburban backyard. By the time the doorbell rings for the first time, they understand that whatever the survivors of the next three hours are going to look like, some of them are not going to look entirely right.

    This is the opening movement of the collapse. Everything after this is a consequence of what happened today.

    Remnant drops Saturdays and Sundays at 1200pm ET for paying subscribers — seven hours before the public feed.

    Subscribers also get the companion article that expands the story beyond what the audio carries, plus access to the community where Guardians work through what each episode means for their own families.

    Everyone else waits until 700pm ET.

    Subscribe HERE — don't wait on the story that's already being told.

  • A post-apocalyptic audio series from Survival Dispatch broadcasting at 700pm ET every Saturday & Sunday.

    Subscribers get the podcast at 1200 ET every Saturday and Sunday, plus access to the Remnant community on Substack, and extended show notes for each episode. Lock in 20% off before launch the launch on April 25th, 2026. Only $5.60/mo or $56.00/yr on our Substack:

    https://SurvivalDispatchRemnant.com/subscribe

    Most people think the end of the world is a single moment.

    It’s not.

    It’s a cascade.

    Systems fail. Communications go silent. Supply chains choke. And the people waiting for someone to fix it realize they’re on their own.

    Survival Dispatch Remnant is a post-apocalyptic audio series built on real-world collapse scenarios - following the Smith family as they fight to survive in a world that doesn’t care about normal anymore.

    No fantasy.

    No shortcuts.

    No perfect decisions.

    Just consequences.

    The world ended.

    They didn’t.

    Godspeed,

    Chris Heaven, CEO

    Survival Dispatch