Return Engagement (32 page)

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Authors: Harry Turtledove

BOOK: Return Engagement
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“Wouldn’t do you as much good as you think,” Morrell said. “Caliber’s different from ours, so we can’t use our own ammo in it. That was smart.” He scowled in the darkness. Too much of what the Confederates had done in this fast-moving war was smart.

If I were trying to whip a country twice the size of mine, what would I do?
Morrell scowled again. Jake Featherston’s blueprint looked alarmingly good. That remained true, even though in effective manpower the USA’s lead was closer to three to one than two to one. If you got the Negroes doing production work, if you mechanized your farming so it used the fewest possible people, if you went straight for the throat . . . If you did all that stuff, why then, goddammit, you had a chance.

“Hold it right there, or you’re fucking dead.” That challenge came from a sandbagged machine-gun nest blocking the narrow road. Morrell set a hand on the driver’s shoulder to make sure they did stop. He thought those were U.S. forces behind the sandbags. He also doubted the command car could get away.

Cautiously, he exchanged password and countersign with the soldiers. They were as wary about him as he was about them. As usual, nobody wanted to say anything very loud. “Never can tell if those butternut bastards are listening,” a sentry said. And he was right, too. But Morrell worried all the same. If U.S. soldiers spent more time thinking about the enemy than about what
they
were going to do next, didn’t that give the Confederates an edge?

He got past the machine-gun nest. What should have been a half-hour ride to his own position outside the hamlet of Steuben ended up taking close to three hours. To his relief, he found the barrels still there. The Confederate penetration farther east hadn’t made them pull back—yet.

Sergeant Michael Pound handed him the roasted leg of what was probably an unofficial chicken. “Here you are, sir,” the gunner said. “We figured you’d be back sooner or later. Any good news from the general?”

He assumed he had the right to know—a very American thing to do. And Morrell, after gnawing the meat off the drumstick and thigh, told him: “Not a bit of it. We get to go right on meeting what Patton’s got with whatever we can scrape together.”

“Happy day,” Sergeant Pound said. “Hasn’t it occurred to anybody back in Philadelphia that that’s a recipe for getting whipped?”

“It probably has, Sergeant,” Morrell answered. “What they haven’t figured out is what to do about it. The Confederates have been serious about this business longer than we have, and we’re paying the price.”

Sergeant Pound nodded gloomily. “So we are, sir. Have they realized it’s liable to be bigger than we can afford to pay?” Morrell only shrugged. The noncom could see that. Morrell could see it himself. He too wondered if the War Department had figured it out.

         

C
larence Potter was, if not a happy man, then at least a professionally satisfied one. Seeing that his profession kept him busy eighteen to twenty hours a day, seven days a week, satisfaction there went a long way toward simulating happiness.

Sabotage along U.S. railroad lines wasn’t easy to arrange. The lines were guarded, and the guards were getting thicker on the ground every day. Even so, he’d had his successes. And every railroad guard toting a Springfield two hundred miles from the front was a man who wasn’t aiming a Springfield at Confederate soldiers in the field.

He wondered if he ought to sacrifice a saboteur, arrange for the Yankees to capture somebody and shoot or hang him. That might make the United States flabble about spies and hurt their war effort.

“Have to do it so the poor son of a bitch doesn’t know we turned him in,” Potter said musingly. The idea of getting rid of a man who’d worked for him didn’t horrify him. He was coldblooded about such things. But it would have to be done so that nobody suspected the tip had come from Confederate Intelligence. He’d have a hell of a time getting anyone to work for him if people knew he might sell them out when that looked like a profitable thing to do.

If you had scruples about such things, you didn’t belong in Intelligence in the first place. Potter snorted and lit a cigarette. If he had any scruples left about anything, he wouldn’t be here in the Confederate War Department working for Jake Featherston. But love of country came before anything else for him, even before his loathing of the Freedom Party. And so . . . here he was.

The young lieutenant who sat in the outer office and handled paperwork—the fellow’s name was Terry Pendleton—had a security clearance almost as fancy as Potter’s. He stuck his head into Potter’s sanctum and said, “Sir, that gentleman is here to see you.” Along with the clearance, he had an even more useful attribute: a working sense of discretion. Very often, in the business he and Potter were in, that was a fine faculty to exercise. This looked to be one of those times.

“Send him in.” Potter took a last drag at the cigarette, then stubbed it out. The smoke would linger in his office, but he couldn’t do anything about that. At least he wouldn’t be open in his vice.

“That gentleman” came in. He was in his fifties: somewhere not too far from Potter’s age. He was tall and skinny, and carried himself like a man who’d fought in the Great War. Potter was rarely wrong about that; he knew the signs too well. The gentleman wore a travel-wrinkled black suit, a white shirt, a dark fedora, and a somber blue tie. “Pleased to meet you, General Potter,” he said, and held out his hand.

Potter took it. The newcomer’s grip was callused and firm. “Pleased to meet you, too, ah. . . .” Potter’s voice trailed away.

“Orson will do,” the other man said. “It was enough of a name to get me across the border. It will be enough of a name to get me back. And if I need another one, I can be someone else—several someones, in fact. I have the papers to prove it, too.”

“Good,” Potter said, thinking it was good if the Yankees didn’t search Orson too thoroughly, anyhow. “You didn’t have any trouble crossing into Texas?”

Orson smiled. “Oh, no. None at all. For one thing, the war’s hardly going on in those parts. And, for another, you Easterners don’t understand how many square miles and how few people there are in that part of the continent. There aren’t enough border guards to keep an eye on everything—not even close.”

“I see that. You’re here, after all,” Potter said.

“Yes. I’m here. Shall we find out how we can best use each other?” Orson, plainly, had had fine lessons in cynicism somewhere. He went on, “You people have no more use for us than the United States do. But the enemy of one’s enemy is, or can be, a friend. And so . . .”

“Indeed. And so,” Clarence Potter said. “If Utah—excuse me, if Deseret—does gain its independence from the United States, you can rest assured that the Confederate States will never trouble it.”

The Mormon smiled thinly. “A promise worth its weight in gold, I have no doubt. But, as it happens, I believe you, because no matter how the war goes the Confederate States and Deseret are unlikely to share a border.”

Not only a cynic but a realist. Potter’s smile showed genuine good nature. “I do believe I’m going to enjoy doing business with you, Mr. . . . uh, Orson.”

“That’s nice,” Orson said. “Now, what kind of business can we do? How much help can you give a rising?”

“Not a lot, not directly. You have to know that. You can read a map—and you’ve traveled over the ground, too. But when it comes to railroads and highways—well, we may be able to do more than you think.”

“Maybe’s a word that makes a lot of people sorry later,” Orson observed.

“Well, sir, if you’d rather, I’ll promise you the moon,” Potter said. “I won’t be able to deliver, but I’ll promise if you want.”

“Thanks, but no thanks,” Orson said. “Maybe isn’t much, but it’s better than a lie.”

“We’re going in the same direction—or rather, we both want to push the USA in the same direction,” Potter said. “It’s in the Confederacy’s interest to give you a hand—and it’s in your interest to work with us, too, because where else are you going to find yourselves any friends?”

“General, we’ve been over that. We aren’t going to find any friends anywhere, and that includes you,” Orson answered calmly. “Do you think I don’t know that the Confederacy persecutes us, too? We’ve also been over
that.
But it’s all right. We’re not particularly looking for friends. All we want is to be left alone.”

“Well, Jeff Davis said the same thing when the Confederate States seceded,” Potter answered. “We have a few things in common, I’d say. And you haven’t got any more use for niggers than we do, have you?”

“Depends on what you mean,” Orson said. “We don’t really want to have anything to do with them. But I don’t think we’d ever do some of the things you people are doing, either. I don’t know how much of what I hear is true, but. . . .”

Clarence Potter had a pretty good idea of how much of rumor was true. Here, he didn’t altogether disapprove of what the Freedom Party was up to. He hadn’t trusted the Negroes in the CSA since 1915. He said, “You can afford to take that line, sir, because you can count the niggers in Utah on your thumbs, near enough. Here in the CSA, they’re about one in three. We have to think about them more than you do.”

“I don’t believe, if our positions were reversed, that we would do what you are doing, or what I hear you’re doing,” Orson replied.

Easy enough for you to say.
But the words didn’t cross Potter’s lips. That wasn’t for fear of insulting Orson. He could afford to insult him if he wanted to. The Mormon was a beggar, and couldn’t be a chooser. On reflection, though, Potter decided he believed Orson. His people had always shown a peculiar, stiff-necked pride.

Instead, the Confederate Intelligence officer said, “And how are the Indians who used to live in Utah? Will you invite them to join your brave new land?”

Orson turned red. Potter wasn’t surprised. The Mormons had got on with the local Indians no better than anyone else in the United States did. The USA might have a better record dealing with Negroes. The CSA did when it came to Indians.

“What do you want from us?” Potter asked again, letting the Mormon down easy. “Whatever it is, if we’ve got it, you’ll have it.”

“Grenades, machine guns—and artillery, if you can find a way to get it to us,” Orson answered. “But the first two especially. Rifles we’ve got. We’ve had rifles for a long time.”

“We can get the weapons over the border for you. If you got in, we can get them out,” Potter promised. “It’s just a matter of setting up exactly where and when. How you get them to where you use them after that is your business.”

“I understand.” Orson snapped his fingers. “Oh—one other thing. Land mines. Heavy land mines. They’re going to throw barrels at us. They didn’t have those the last time around. We’ll need something to make them say uncle.”

“Heavy land mines.” Potter scribbled a note to himself. “Yes, that makes sense. How are you fixed for gas masks?”

“Pretty well, but we could probably use more,” Orson answered. “We didn’t have to worry much about gas the last time around, either.”

“All right.” Potter nodded. “One more question, then. This one isn’t about weapons. What will Governor Young do when Utah rises? What will you do about him if he tries to clamp down on the rising?” That was two questions, actually, but they went together like two adjoining pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.

Orson said, “There are some people who still think we can get along with the USA. We’ll take care of them when the time comes. We have a list.” He spoke without anger but with grim certainty. He didn’t name Heber Young—one of Brigham’s numerous grandsons. On the other hand, he didn’t say the governor wasn’t on the list, either.

“That’s good,” Clarence Potter said. “I was hoping you might.”

The Mormon—nationalist? patriot? zealot? what was the right word?—eyed him with no great liking. “Occurs to me, General, that it’s just as well we won’t share a border no matter how things turn out. You’d be just as much trouble as the United States are.”

“You may be right,” Potter said, thinking Orson certainly was. “But what does that have to do with the price of beer?”

Beer.
Orson’s lips silently shaped the word. Potter wondered how badly he’d just blundered. The man in the somber suit undoubtedly didn’t drink. But Orson could be practical. After a small pause, he nodded. “Point taken, sir. Right now, it doesn’t have anything to do with anything.”

“We agree on that. If we don’t agree on other things—well, so what?” Potter said. “I’m going to take you to my colleagues in Logistics. They’ll arrange to get you what you need when you need it.” He got to his feet.

So did Orson. He held out his hand. “Thank you for your help. I realize you have your own selfish reasons for giving it, but thank you. Regardless of what you’re doing here in the CSA, you really are helping freedom in Deseret.”

I love you, too,
Potter thought. Whatever his opinion of Orson’s candor, it didn’t show on his face. But as they walked to the door, he couldn’t help asking, “Would the, um, gentiles in your state agree with you?”

Orson stopped. His face didn’t show much, either. But his pale eyes blazed. “If they’d cared what happened to us for the past sixty years, maybe I would worry more about what happens to them. As things are, General . . . As things are, what do they have to do with the price of beer right now?”

“Touché,”
Potter murmured. He took the Mormon down the hall to Logistics. People gave the obvious civilian curious looks. He didn’t seem to belong there. But he was keeping company with a brigadier general, so no one said anything. And, even if he didn’t belong in the War Department, he had the look of a man of war.

Logistics didn’t receive Orson with glad cries. Potter hadn’t expected them to. They parted with ordnance as if they made it themselves right there in the War Department offices. But they’d known the Mormon was coming. And they knew one other thing: they knew Jake Featherston wanted them to do what they could for Orson. In the Confederate States these days, nothing counted for more than that.

 

G
eorge Enos, Jr., found himself facing the same dilemma as his father had a generation earlier. He didn’t want to join the U.S. Navy. He would much rather have stayed a fisherman. If he tried, though, his chances of being conscripted into the Army ranged from excellent to as near certain as made no difference. He relished the infantry even less than the Navy.

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