“Oh, yes, Miss Colleton. Of course. And how are you this lovely afternoon?”
Anne hesitated a split second before answering. She’d expected to hear that precise question, but not so soon. “Tired,” she told him. If she’d said,
Just fine,
the world would have been a different place. She didn’t know how, not for certain, but one response meant one thing, the other something else.
The clerk’s face showed none of that. With a sympathetic smile, he said, “You take it easy here. We’ve got fine rooms, and the best restaurant in town, too.”
“All right. I’ll try it.” She collected her room key and went upstairs, the bellboy trailing along behind her. She tipped him and the elevator operator, then unpacked and indulged in the luxury of a bath before going down to the best restaurant in town. It lived up to the desk clerk’s description. She soon saw why: a lot of the plump, prosperous men who ate there were Louisiana legislators. Talk of power and of business filled the air.
The restaurant gave a view of Roselawn, the street that led north to the Capitol. Anne was about halfway through an excellent plate of lamb chops when chaos suddenly erupted outside. Sirens screaming and red lights blazing, police cars and ambulances raced toward the statehouse.
Several of the important men in the restaurant wondered what was going on, some of them loudly and profanely. A telephone in the corridor that led to the place jangled. A waiter hurried from the corridor to one of the tables full of prominent people. A handsome, gray-haired man went back with him.
A moment later, curses as explosive as any Anne had ever heard filled the air. The gray-haired man rushed back into the room, crying, “Governor Long’s been shot! Shot, I tell you! Nigger janitor was carrying a gun! Goddamn nigger’s dead, but Governor Long, he’s hurt bad!”
Pandemonium filled the restaurant. Men sprang to their feet shouting frightful oaths. Women screamed. A few men screamed, too. Anne went right on eating her lamb chops. She was supposed to get out of town tomorrow, and hoped the state authorities would let her leave. If they started wondering what connection she had to a desk clerk and a desperate janitor . . . All she knew about was one code phrase. No. She knew one other thing. When Jake Featherston gave her this assignment, she’d known better than to ask too many questions.
“Y
ou can’t do this to me,” the silver-haired lawyer insisted. “It violates every tenet of the Constitution of the Confederate States of America.”
Jefferson Pinkard shrugged broad shoulders. “If I had the time, I could tell you there’s martial law in Louisiana, and so whatever the Constitution’s got to say doesn’t matter worth a hill of beans. If I had time, I could do that. But I don’t have time. And so—” He slapped the lawyer in the face, then backhanded him with a return stroke. Then he punched the silver-haired fellow in the pit of the stomach. The man tried to double up, but the guards who had hold of him wouldn’t let him. In friendly tones, Pinkard asked, “See what I mean?”
He wondered if the lawyer would say something stupid and need another dose. Some of these people did. They’d run things in Louisiana for a long time, and had trouble figuring out they weren’t in charge any more. They ran their mouths off, and they paid for it. Oh, yes, they paid plenty.
This one, though, seemed smarter than most. He also needed half a minute or so to catch his breath before he could say anything at all. “I get it,” he choked out, his face gray with pain.
A little disappointed, Jeff jerked a thumb toward the interior of the camp. “Take him away,” he said, and the guards did. Jeff laughed. He wondered if the men who’d voted to build camps in Louisiana ever imagined they’d wind up in them. He doubted it; people didn’t work that way.
But, whether people believed it or not, things changed mighty easily. Huey Long had imitated in miniature Jake Featherston’s system of running up prison camps to hold people who might cause trouble for him. With Long dead, with the president declaring martial law in Louisiana “to deal with the vile terrorism of black insurrection,” the Freedom Party and all its apparatus had swooped down on the state like a hawk swooping down on a plump chicken. Men who’d defied the Freedom Party since long before 1933 were finally getting what was coming to them.
The swoop came so hard and fast, state officials hadn’t had any chance to resist. President Featherston declared martial law the minute he heard Governor Long was dead. Soldiers and Freedom Party guards and stalwarts swarmed into Louisiana from north, east, and west. So many of them had been in Texas and Mississippi and Arkansas, so very close to the border, that Pinkard wondered if they hadn’t waited there for Long’s assassination. He wondered, but he kept quiet. Men who shot off their mouths about things like that didn’t run prison camps; they got locked up in them. And besides, Jeff was more inclined to see this whole operation as good planning than as an invasion.
Long’s wardens had used a little more imagination on the names of their prisons than the Freedom Party bothered with. This one, just outside Alexandria, was called Camp Dependable. That amused Jeff, not least because the fellow who had been in charge of this place was now an inmate here.
So was one of Huey Long’s brothers. The other had suffered an unfortunate accident shortly after the forces necessary for martial law began entering Louisiana. Jeff had heard—unofficially, of course—that the “accident” involved a burst of machine-gun fire. That wasn’t in the papers or on the wireless. He couldn’t prove it was true. But he wouldn’t have been surprised, either.
He went out to the perimeter of Camp Dependable. Freedom Party stalwarts were strengthening it with more barbed wire. It already had more machine-gun emplacements than Long’s people had been able to afford. Martial law had been declared to put down the Negro insurrection in Louisiana. That insurrection still simmered, and still needed defending against. Somehow, though, just about all the inmates in the prison camp were white men who’d backed Huey Long to the hilt.
“Everything tight?” Pinkard asked a helmeted Freedom Party guard who manned a machine gun.
“You bet, Warden,” the man answered. “Tight as a fifty-dollar whore’s snatch.”
Pinkard laughed. “That’s the way it’s supposed to be,” he said, and continued on his rounds. “Freedom!” he added over his shoulder.
“Freedom!” the machine gunner echoed. That greeting hadn’t been heard much here since Huey Long seized the reins. With martial law in place, though, with Louisiana being brought into line with the rest of the Confederate States,
Freedom!
here now had the importance it deserved.
A few hundred yards away, motorcars rolled along the highway that ran down to New Orleans. Governor Long had done a lot for the roads in the state. Building roads meant lots of jobs. Out in the rest of the CSA, President Featherston’s dam-building program did the same thing.
Only after he’d tramped the entire perimeter did Pinkard relax a little. He’d got into the habit down in the Empire of Mexico. There, he hadn’t been able to rely on the guards as much as he would have liked. If he didn’t see things with his own eyes, he couldn’t know for sure how they were going. He still remained convinced he had a better chance of heading off trouble if he kept an eye on everything himself.
With a couple of guards, he also strode through the interior of Camp Dependable. Having an escort was part of regulations. Where he didn’t make the rules, he followed them. Making people follow the rules was the point of a prison camp, after all. But, rules or no rules, he didn’t much worry about being taken hostage. New prisoners had tried that once with another warden, a couple of days after Governor Long died. The ensuing massacre showed what they could expect if they tried it again.
“Hey, Warden!” somebody called. “Can we get better food?”
“You’ll get what the regulations say you get,” Pinkard answered. “And you’ll be sorry if you whine about it. You understand?”
The prisoner didn’t answer. He wore his striped uniform—regulation in Louisiana—with an odd sort of pride. He’d sounded like an educated man when he asked the question. Jeff wondered what he’d been before Huey Long’s rule collapsed. A lawyer? A professor? A writer? Whatever he’d been, he was only a prisoner now. And he hadn’t really figured out how to be a prisoner, or he wouldn’t have kept quiet when the warden asked him a question. Pinkard nodded to the guards. He needed to do no more than that. They fell on the man and beat him up. He howled, which helped him not at all. The other prisoners nearby watched, wide-eyed. None of them said a word or tried to interfere. They were learning.
When the beating ended, the guards stepped back. They weren’t even mussed. Slowly, painfully, blood running down his face, the prisoner struggled to his feet. “You understand?” Jeff asked him again.
“Yes, Warden,” he choked out.
“Stand at attention when you speak to the warden, you worthless sack of shit,” a guard growled.
The prisoner did his best. It wasn’t very good, since he could hardly stand upright at all. Here, though, making the effort counted. “Yes, Warden,” he repeated, and then, warily, he added, “Sorry, Warden.”
“Sorry doesn’t cut the mustard,” Pinkard snapped. “What are you?”
“What—?” The prisoner frowned. One of the guards snarled in hungry eagerness. He snarled a little too soon, though, and gave the man a hint. “I’m a worthless sack of shit, Warden!” he blurted.
Pinkard answered with a brusque nod and a handful of words: “Grits and water—ten days.”
He waited. If the prisoner protested, if he even blinked, he would be a lot sorrier than he was already. But he only stayed at attention and tried to look as if he’d got good news. Pinkard nodded again and walked on. He would have less trouble from here on out with everybody who’d watched and listened.
No one gave him any more lip till he got to the infirmary. Then it came not from a prisoner but from a white-coated doctor. “Warden, if these men keep getting rations of hominy grits and a little fatback and nothing else, you’ll see more cases of pellagra than you can shake a stick at.”
“What else am I supposed to feed them?” Jeff asked.
“Vegetables. Fruits. Wheat flour,” the doctor said. “They haven’t been here very long, but some of them are already starting to show symptoms.”
“Feeding ’em that other stuff’d cost more money, wouldn’t it?” Pinkard asked.
“Well, yes,” the man in the white coat admitted. “But pellagra’s no joke. It will kill. It’s only the past few years we’ve found out that something missing from the diet causes it. Do you want to burden yourself with a lot of disease you can easily prevent?”
Jeff shrugged. “I don’t know about that. What I do know is, these people are enemies of the Confederate States. They don’t deserve anything fancy. We’ll go on the way we have been, thank you very much.”
He waited. He couldn’t punish the doctor the way he’d punished the prisoner. The doctor was only trying to do his job. He was supposed to be politically sound. He took a look at the guards standing behind Pinkard and visibly wilted. “All right,” he said. “But I did want to keep you informed.”
“Fine,” Pinkard said. “I’m informed. Freedom!” This time, the handy word meant,
Shut up and stop bothering me.
“Freedom!” the doctor echoed. He couldn’t say anything else.
Barbed wire separated the warden’s office and quarters and the guards’ quarters from the prisoners’ barracks. Pinkard nodded to himself when he passed out of the area where the prisoners lived. They were nothing but trouble. That was even more true here than it had been in Alabama. There, Whigs and Rad Libs had guessed for a long time what would happen to them once the Freedom Party came out on top. Not here in Louisiana, not after Long got in. The Rad Libs here had thought they’d stay on top forever.
As Pinkard went up the stairs of the mess hall to grab himself a snack (
he
had a lot more choices than grits and fatback), a flight of aeroplanes buzzed by overhead. They were painted in bright colors. Instead of the C.S. battle flag, they had
CONFEDERATE CITRUS COMPANY
painted on wings and fuselage. But they meant business. When Confederate forces entered Louisiana after Governor Long was gunned down, a few state policemen and militiamen had tried to resist. They didn’t try for long, not after those
CONFEDERATE CITRUS COMPANY
machines bombed and machine-gunned them from the sky. And the aeroplanes had been useful since, too, pounding Negro guerrillas who hid in swamps and bays inaccessible except from above.
The Confederate States weren’t supposed to have aeroplanes that carried bombs and machine guns. That was what the United States had been saying since 1917, anyhow. President Smith had sent President Featherston a note about it. Jeff remembered hearing about that on the wireless set in his quarters. And President Featherston had written back, too, saying they were armed only for internal-security reasons, and that the CSA would take the weapons off as soon as things calmed down again.
So far, the USA hadn’t said anything more. It had been two or three weeks now since the first protest. As far as Jeff could see, that meant his country had got away with it. He grinned as he went into the mess hall. The damnyankees had been kicking the Confederate States around for more than twenty years, but their day was ending. The CSA could walk proud again. Could . . . and would.
A colored cook fixed him a big, meaty roast-beef sandwich with all the trimmings. He got himself a cup of coffee, rich and pale with cream and full of sugar. Mayonnaise ran down his chin when he took a big bite of the sandwich. Life wasn’t bad. No, sir, not bad at all.
E
very time Clarence Potter put on his uniform, he looked in the mirror to see if he was dreaming. No dream: butternut tunic, a colonel’s three stars on each collar patch. The cut of the tunic was slightly different from what he’d worn in the Great War. It was looser, less binding under the arms, and the collar didn’t try to choke him every time he turned his head. Whoever’d redesigned it had realized a man might have to move and fight while he had it on.