Authors: Harry Turtledove
A Freedom Party stalwart named Kirby Walker stood at Anne’s right hand. “If they try anything, we’ll be ready for ’em,” he declared. Despite the heat and breathless humidity of early summer in Charleston, he looked cool and well pressed in crisp white shirt and butternut slacks. “We know—darn well they can’t lick us.”
He couldn’t have been more than thirty years old. He would have been a little boy when the Great War ended. She wondered how long it would be till this new one put him in a real uniform instead of the imitation he wore. She also wondered if he had any brains at all. Some stalwarts didn’t—they were all balls and fists, and they didn’t need to be anything else. She said, “We don’t know anything of the sort. If they hadn’t licked us the last time, this war would look mighty different.”
“Well, but we were stabbed in the back then.” Walker sounded as positive as if he’d been there to watch the knife go home. “It’ll be a fair fight this time, so of course we’ll lick ’em.”
He talked just the way Jake Featherston and Saul Goldman would have wanted him to. He talked just the way the President and his director of communications had been training Confederates to talk ever since Featherston took the oath of office. He thought the way they wanted him to think. He was the new Confederate man, and there were an awful lot just like him.
Anne, in fact, had come to Charleston to put on a rally for the new Confederate men and their female opposite numbers. When a lot of those men would be going into uniform, and when, in due course, they would start coming back maimed or not coming back at all, they needed to be reminded of what this was all about. Speeches on the wireless went only so far. Nothing like a real rally where you could see your friends and neighbors jumping up and yelling along with you, where you could
smell
the fellow next to you getting all hot and bothered, to keep the juices flowing.
A gray-mustached man who walked with a limp and carried a submachine gun led a gang of Negroes towards a merchant ship. The blacks wore dungarees and coarse, collarless cotton work shirts. Their clothes weren’t quite uniforms. They weren’t quite prison garb, either. But they came close on both counts.
Kirby Walker followed the blacks with his eyes. “Lousy niggers,” he muttered. “We work ’em hard enough, they won’t have a chance to get themselves in any trouble this time around.”
“Here’s hoping they won’t,” Anne said.
“If they do, we start shooting first,” Walker said. “We’d’ve shot a few of ’em early on in the last war, we never would’ve had half the trouble with ’em we did. We were too soft, and we paid for it.”
Again, he sounded as if he’d been there. This time, Anne completely agreed with him. She
had
been there. The Marshlands plantation, these days, was nothing but ruins. Before the war, she’d treated her Negroes better than anyone else nearby. And what had she got for it? Half—more than half—the leaders of the Red Congaree Socialist Republic came from her plantation.
She muttered to herself. Not very long before, she’d been sure she found Scipio, her old butler, waiting tables at a restaurant in Augusta, Georgia. He’d been in the Congaree Socialist Republic up to his eyebrows, and he’d managed to stay hidden for more than twenty years after its last vestiges collapsed. She wanted him dead. She’d been so sure she had him, too, till the restaurant showed her paperwork proving the black man she thought was Scipio really was the Xerxes he claimed to be, and that he’d worked there since before the Great War.
Anne muttered some more. She hated being wrong about anything. She especially hated being wrong about anything that meant so much to her. As far as she knew, that black man was
still
waiting tables at that restaurant. What would have happened to him if he really were Scipio . . . Her nails bit into the flesh of her palms. How she’d wanted that!
And she’d been so very certain! Half of her still was, though she couldn’t imagine how that manager might have had faked paperwork that went back close to thirty years handy. Then she shrugged and laughed a singularly unpleasant laugh. Her gaze swung to the Negro work gang, which was hauling crates out of a freighter under the watchful eye of that half-disabled veteran with the submachine gun. Whether the Negro in Augusta really was Scipio or Xerxes, he might yet get his.
“What’s funny, Miss Colleton?” Kirby Walker asked.
“What?” Anne blinked, recalled from dreams of vengeance to present reality. “Nothing, really. Just thinking of what might have been.”
“Not a . . . heck of a lot of point to that, I don’t reckon,” the Freedom Party stalwart said. “You can’t change things now.”
“No?” Back at the start of the Great War, the glance Anne sent him would have melted him right out of his shoes. Now it only made him shrug stolidly. Her blond good looks hadn’t altogether left her, but they slipped away day by day. She could still hope for vengeance against Scipio and against the United States. Nobody got even with time. She sighed. “I want to have another look at the hall, if that’s all right.”
“Sure enough, ma’am. I’m here to do what you need me to do,” Walker said. He made himself a liar without even knowing he was doing it. What she needed him to do was acknowledge her as the beauty she had been. That wouldn’t happen. She knew it wouldn’t, couldn’t. Knowing was an ulcer that ate at her and would not heal.
It was, perhaps, just as well that Clarence Potter would not know where this rally was being held. The hall had belonged to the Whigs for generations. Clarence had gone to God only knew how many meetings here himself. It wasn’t far from the harbor, and it was right across the street from a bar: a good location. These days, nobody but the Freedom Party held meetings. The hall had stood vacant for quite a while. It wouldn’t stay vacant long. And the Freedom Party, unlike the Whigs, did meetings
right.
Stalwarts and Freedom Party guards and ordinary Party members started filling the place more than an hour before the scheduled meeting time. Everyone wore a Freedom Party pin: the Confederate battle flag with red and blue reversed. Most of the pins had a black border. That showed that the people who wore them had joined the Party after March 4, 1934, when Jake Featherston became President of the CSA. Members who’d belonged before that day looked down their noses at the johnny-come-latelies and opportunists, which didn’t keep them from using the newcomers whenever they needed to.
A young Congressman named Storm or something like that was the first one up to address the meeting. Anne had heard him before. He was very good on the Negro question, weaker elsewhere. Here, he didn’t get to show his paces. He’d barely started his speech when air-raid sirens outside began to wail.
“You see?” he shouted. “Do you see?” He shook a fist at the sky. “The damnyankees don’t want you to hear the truth!”
People laughed and cheered. “Go on!” somebody shouted. “Who cares about a damned air raid?”
And the Congressman
did
go on, even when the antiaircraft guns around the harbor started pounding and bombs started falling. The Freedom Party men in the audience clapped their hands and stomped their feet to try to drown out the din of war. That made the Congressman shout to be heard over them and over the fireworks not far away.
Anne thought they were all insane. She’d been through a bombing raid in the last war. Sitting here in this exposed place was the last thing she wanted to do now. But she knew what would happen if she yelled,
Take cover, you damned idiots!
The Freedom Party stalwarts would think she was nothing but a cowardly, panicky woman. They wouldn’t listen to her. And they wouldn’t take her seriously any more afterwards, either. That was the biggest part of what kept her quiet.
Resentment burned in her all the same.
Because you’re so stinking stubborn, I’m liable to get killed.
More bombs burst. Windows rattled. Not all the Yankees’ presents were falling right on the harbor. Maybe that meant the antiaircraft fire was heavier than the enemy had expected. Maybe it meant his bombardiers didn’t know their business. Either way, it meant more of Charleston was catching hell.
Finally, a man about her age whose Party pin showed he’d been a member before 1934 and who wore the ribbon for a Purple Heart just below it, stood up and bellowed, “Time to get the hell out of here, folks, while the getting’s good!”
They listened to him. Anne saw that with a mixture of relief and resentment. The veteran had a deep, authoritative rasp in his voice. Would they have paid that kind of attention to her contralto? Not likely!
“Where’s a shelter?” somebody called. “This goddamn building hasn’t got a cellar.”
“Across the street,” someone else said. He sounded as if he knew what he was talking about. People got up and started leaving. Anne wasn’t sorry to go—far from it. She had all she could do not to run for the door. Again, fear of being thought weak carried more weight than fear of death. She didn’t know why that should be so, but it was.
Out in the street, the noise was ten times worse. Chunks of shrapnel from spent antiaircraft shells rained down out of the sky. A man cried out in pain when one hit him in the shoulder. He sat down, hard, right there in the middle of the road.
Anne looked around for the U.S. airplanes that were causing all the commotion. She didn’t see any—and then she did. Here came one, over the tops of the buildings, straight toward her. It was on fire, and still had a bomb slung below the fuselage. Maybe the pilot was dead. If he wasn’t, he couldn’t do anything with or to his airplane.
“Run!” Half a dozen people yelled it. It was good advice, but much too late. The bomber screamed down. The world blew up.
When Anne came back to consciousness, she wished she hadn’t. She’d heard you often didn’t feel pain when you were badly wounded. Whoever had said that was a goddamn liar. Someone very close by was screaming. She needed a little while to realize those noises were pouring out of her own mouth. She tried to stop, and couldn’t.
Kirby Walker lay a few feet away, gutted like a hog. He was lucky. He was already dead. Anne looked down at herself, and wished she hadn’t. Consciousness faded. Black rose up to swallow it.
II
S
omewhere down below Major Jonathan Moss was Ohio, somewhere Kentucky. He saw the ribbon of the Ohio River, but could not for the life of him have said which side of it he was on, not just then. He’d just broken off a dogfight with a Confederate fighter pilot who’d run into a cloud to get away from him, and he didn’t know north from his elbow.
Then he saw shells bursting on the ground, and he realized that had to be Ohio. The CSA had kicked the USA in the teeth, attacking without bothering to declare war first. The Confederates had the edge right now. They were across the river in Indiana and Ohio, across with infantry and artillery and barrels, and they were pushing forward with everything they had.
No Great War army had ever moved like this. Moss knew that from experience. Going from Niagara Falls to Toronto had taken three long, bloody years. The Canadians had defended every foot of ground as if they were holding Satan’s demons out of heaven. And, with trenches and machine guns, they’d been able to make every foot of ground count, too. Moss had started out flying a Curtiss pusher biplane, observing the front from above. He’d imagined himself a knight of the air. He’d ended up an ace in a fighting scout, knowing full well that his hands were no cleaner than any ground-pounding foot slogger’s.
Living conditions were better for fliers, though. He hadn’t got muddy. He’d had his own cot in a barracks hall or tent out of artillery range of the front. He’d eaten regularly, and well. And people with unpleasant attitudes had tried to kill him only every once in a while, not all the time.
So here he was back again for another round, something he never would have imagined when the Great War ended. He’d spent a lot of years as a lawyer specializing in occupation law in Canada. He’d married a Canadian woman. They’d had a little girl. And a Canadian bomb-maker had blown them up, maybe under the delusion that that would somehow help Canada toward freedom. It wouldn’t. It couldn’t. It hadn’t. All it had done was wreck his life and drive him back to flying fighters.
He pushed the stick forward. The Wright 27 dove. The ground swelled. So did the Confederate soldiers and barrels in front of Lebanon, Ohio—he thought it was Lebanon, anyway, and if he was wrong, he was wrong. He wasn’t wrong about the advancing Confederates. Thanks to the barrels, they’d already smashed through trench lines that would have held up a Great War army for weeks, and the war was only a couple of days old.
Someone down there spotted him. A machine gun started winking. Tracers flashed past his wings. He jabbed his thumb down on the firing button on top of the stick. His own machine guns spat death through the spinning disk of his propeller. Soldiers on the ground ran or threw themselves flat. That damned machine gun suddenly stopped shooting. Moss whooped.
Here and there, Confederates with rifles took potshots at him. Those didn’t worry him. If a rifle bullet knocked down a fighter, the pilot’s number was surely up. He checked six as he climbed. No Confederate on his tail. In the first clash, the CSA’s machines—they were calling them Hound Dogs—seemed more maneuverable, but U.S. fighters had the edge diving and climbing. Neither held any enormous advantage over the other.
The Confederates had some real antiaircraft guns down there. Puffs of black smoke appeared in midair not far from Moss’ fighter. They weren’t quite round; they were longer from top to bottom than side to side. “Nigger-baby flak,” Moss muttered to himself. With extensions of gas out from the main burst that could have been arms and legs, the smoke patterns did bear a certain resemblance to naked black dolls.
A bang said a shell fragment had hit the fighter somewhere. Moss’ eyes flicked anxiously from one gauge to another. No loss of oil pressure. No loss of coolant. No fuel leak. No fire. The controls answered—no cut wires or bad hydraulics. He breathed a sigh of relief. No damage done.
Trouble was, he hadn’t done the Confederates on the ground much harm, either. They would keep right on pushing forward. They weren’t trying to break into Lebanon, which looked to be heavily fortified. They were doing their best to get past it and keep pushing north. If it still had some U.S. soldiers in it afterwards . . . well, so what?
Neither side had fought that way during the Great War. Neither side could have. That had mostly been a war of shoeleather, with railroads hauling soldiers up to the front and with trucks lugging supplies. But no army then had moved faster than at a walk.
Things looked different here. Barrels were a lot faster than they had been a generation earlier. Trucks didn’t just haul beans and bullets. They brought soldiers forward to keep up with the barrels. The internal-combustion engine was supercharging this war.
His fighter’s internal-combustion engine was running out of gas. He streaked north to find another airstrip where he could refuel. He’d started the war in southern Illinois, but they’d sent him farther east right away. For the time being, the action was hottest along the central part of the Ohio River.
The strip he found wasn’t even paved. He jounced to a stop. When he pulled back the canopy and started to get out of the fighter, a lieutenant on the ground shouted, “Can you go up again right away?”
Moss wanted nothing more than sleep and food and a big glass of something strong. But they didn’t pay him for ducking out of fights. He said, “Fill me up and I’ll go.”
“Thanks—uh, thank you, sir,” the young officer said. “Everybody down south is screaming for air support.”
“Why aren’t they getting more of it?” Moss asked as groundcrew men in coveralls gave the fighter gasoline. Another man in coveralls, an armorer, wordlessly held up a belt of machine-gun ammunition. Moss nodded. The armorer climbed a ladder and went to work on the airplane’s guns.
“Why? ’Cause we got sucker-punched, that’s why,” the lieutenant said, which fit too well with what Moss had seen and heard in the past couple of hectic days. The younger officer went on, “God only knows how many airplanes they got on the ground, either, the sons of bitches.”
“No excuse for that,” Moss said. “No goddamn excuse for that at all.”
“Yeah, I know,” the lieutenant answered. “That doesn’t mean it didn’t happen. Some heads ought to roll on account of it, too.”
“You bet your—” Moss broke off. Antiaircraft guns south of the airstrip had started banging. Through them, he heard the rising note of fighters. They were Confederates, too. The engine roar was slightly deeper than that of U.S. aircraft. And he was standing in what was at the moment a bomb with wings. He got out of the cockpit and leaped to the ground as fast as he could, shouting, “Run!”
None of the groundcrew men had needed the advice. They were doing their best to imitate Olympic sprinters. When bullets started chewing up the airstrip, some of them hit the dirt. Others ran harder than ever.
Three bullets slammed into the armorer’s back. He was only a few bounds ahead of Jonathan Moss, who saw dust puff out from the man’s coveralls at each hit. When the bullets went out through his belly and chest, they took most of his insides with them. He crumpled as if all his bones had turned to jelly. He was surely dead before he stopped rolling.
Moss wanted to go flat. He also wanted to get as far away from his fighter as he could. When he heard a soft
whump!
behind him and felt a sudden blast of heat at his back, he knew he’d been smart.
The Confederates came back for another strafing run. By then, Moss was on the ground, in a wet, muddy ditch by the side of the hastily made airstrip. Cold water helped fear make his balls crawl up into his belly. The lieutenant lay a few feet away from him, staring foolishly at his right hand. He had a long, straight, bleeding gouge along the back of it, but his fingers all seemed to work when he wiggled them.
“You’re lucky as hell, kid,” Moss said, glad to have something to talk about besides the pounding of his heart. “That’s only a scratch, and you’ll get yourself a Purple Heart on account of it.”
“If I’d been lucky, they would have missed me,” the lieutenant said, which held more than a little truth. If he’d been unluckier, though, all the infinite cleverness and articulation of that hand would have been smashed to bloody, bony ruin in less than the blink of an eye.
Ever so cautiously, Moss stuck up his head. The Confederate fighters—there’d been three of them—were streaking away. Futile puffs of flak filled the sky. He’d hoped to see at least one go down in flames, but no such luck. His own machine burned on the strip. The ammunition the luckless armorer had been loading into it started cooking off. Bullets flew in all directions. He ducked again.
“You have transportation?” he asked. “I’ve got to get to my unit, or at least to an air base with working fighters.”
“There’s an old Ford around here somewhere, if the Confederates didn’t blow it to hell and gone,” the young officer said. “If you want to put it on the road, you can do that. We don’t exactly have control of the air right here, though.”
That was a polite way to put it—politer than Moss could have found. What the shavetail meant was,
If you start driving around, the Confederates are liable to shoot up your motorcar, and we can’t do a whole hell of a lot to stop ’em.
“I’m not worth much to the country laying here in this goddamn ditch.” Moss crawled out of it, dripping. “Point me at that Ford.”
It was old, all right—so old, it was a Model T. Moss had never driven one in his life. His family had had too much money to get one. After the war, he’d gone around in a lordly Bucephalus for years—a make now extinct as the dodo, but one with a conventional arrangement of gearshift, clutch, and brake. He tried the slab-sided Ford, stalled it repeatedly, and had a devil of a time making it go. Finally, a corporal with a hard, flat Midwestern accent said, “Sir, I’ll take you where you want to go. My folks are still driving one of them buggies.”
“Thanks.” Moss meant it. “I think I’m more afraid of this thing than I am of Confederate airplanes.”
“All what you’re used to.” The corporal proceeded to prove it, too. Under his hands, the Model T behaved for all the world as if it were a normal, sane automobile. Oh, it could have stopped quicker, but you could say that about any motorcar of its vintage. The only way it could have gone faster than forty-five was by falling off a cliff, but that also turned out not to be a problem.
Refugees clogged every road north. Some had autos, some had buggies, some had nothing but shank’s mare and a bundle on their backs. All had a serious disinclination to staying in a war zone and getting shot up. Moss couldn’t blame them, but he also couldn’t move at anything faster than a crawl.
And the Confederates loved shooting up refugee columns, too, just to make the madness worse. Moss had done that himself up in Canada during the Great War. Now he got a groundside look at what he’d been up to. He saw what people looked like when they burned in their motorcars. He smelled them, too. It put him in mind of roast pork. He didn’t think he’d ever eat pork again.
C
olonel Irving Morrell had always wanted to show the world what fast, modern barrels could do when they were well handled. And so, in a way, he was doing just that. He’d never imagined he would be on the receiving end of the lesson, though, not till mere days before the war broke out.
He would be fifty at the end of the year, if he lived that long. He looked it. His close-cropped sandy hair was going gray. His long face, deeply tanned, bore the lines and wrinkles that showed he’d spent as much time as he could in the sun and the wind, the rain and the snow. But he was a fit, hard fifty. If he could no longer outrun the men he commanded, he could still do a pretty good job of keeping up with them. And coffee—and the occasional slug of hooch—let him get by without a whole lot of sleep.
He would have traded all that fitness for a fat slob’s body and an extra armored corps. The Confederates were putting everything they had into this punch. He didn’t know what they were up to on the other side of the Appalachians, but he would have been amazed if they could have come up with another effort anywhere close to this one. If this wasn’t the
Schwerpunkt,
everything he thought he knew about what they had was wrong.
His own barrel, with several others, lurked at the edge of the woods east of Chillicothe, Ohio. The Confederates were trying to get around the town in the open space between it and the trees. Morrell spoke into the wireless set that connected him to the others: “Wait till their move develops more fully before you open up on them. That’s the way we’ll hurt them most, and hurting them is what we’ve got to do.”
“Hurt them, hell, sir,” said Sergeant Michael Pound, the gunner. “We’ve got to smash them.”
“That would be nice.” Pound was nothing if not confident. He wasn’t always right, but he was always sure of himself. He was a stocky, broad-shouldered man with very fair skin and blue eyes. He came from the uppermost Midwest, and had an accent that might almost have been Canadian.
He should have commanded his own barrel. Morrell knew as much. But he didn’t want to turn Pound loose. The man was, without a doubt, the best gunner in the Army, and they’d spent a lot of time together in those periods when the Army happened to be interested in barrels. Pound had also done a stretch as an ordinary artilleryman during that long, dreary dry spell when the Army stopped caring that cannon and armor and engine and tracks could go together into one deadly package. Trouble was, the package was also expensive. To the Army, that had come close to proving the kiss of death.
It was, in fact, still liable to prove the kiss of death for a lot of U.S. soldiers. Even though the factories up in Pontiac were going flat out now, they’d started disgracefully late. The CSA had factories, too, in Richmond and Atlanta and Birmingham. They weren’t supposed to have been working so long and so hard. But the Confederates were using more barrels than anybody in what was alleged to be U.S. Army Intelligence had suspected they owned.
Here came three of them, a leader and two more behind him making a V. They didn’t look much different from the machine he commanded. They were a little boxier, the armor not well sloped to deflect a shell. But they hit hard; they carried two-inch guns, not inch-and-a-halfers. All things considered, U.S. and C.S. machines were about even when they met on equal terms.