Iraq-Kuwait war, some of them had been guided munitions. But even as far back as World War II, she knew, the bombers had some kind of superb bombsights.
Her bombsights had been her eyes, looking down over the lip of the gondola, while two of Franchetti’s crewmen held a bomb on the same lip, waiting for her signal.
What she hadn’t considered, until the bombs started hitting, was that her bombing platform was almost stationary. She’d told Franchetti to maintain just enough power to keep the airship from drifting. Both of the airships that followed her after the Albatross unloaded all its bombs had done the same.
And none of it had taken very long. Once Rita saw that the bombs really didn’t need to be “aimed” at all, she’d told the crewmen to just start pitching them over the side as fast as they could.
Another deadly factor had been her decision to make the run at a much lower altitude that the airships normally flew over enemy troops. At her husband’s insistence, the airships had stayed at least two thousand feet high most of the time. They never dropped below a thousand feet.
But Rita had decided, just this once and to hell with what Tom said about it afterward, that they’d come in not more than the length of two footfall fields over the target. That was still within range of seventeenth-century musket fire, technically speaking. But at two hundred yards the fire would be wildly inaccurate. Besides, although Rita didn’t know the exact formulas, she knew from things her husband had said that smoothbore round shot lost its muzzle velocity much faster than rifled bullets did. She figured that even if a bullet fired from a musket six hundred feet down did manage to hit the envelope or even the gondola, it probably wouldn’t be moving fast enough to do a lot of damage. Barring a really lucky shot, anyway.
In the event, only two cavalrymen shot at them, and both of them used wheel-lock pistols. She had no idea where those bullets wound up going. Nowhere close, for sure.
This was just a massacre. She felt sick to her stomach.
Once she stopped screaming and brought her panic under control, Ursula got up and looked around. She had to get up because in her frenzied race away from the inferno the village had become, she’d eventually tripped on something and sprawled flat on the ground.
She’d come a long way from the village, she realized. At least a quarter of a mile. She wasn’t sure. She hadn’t been thinking about anything except get away! get away!
She looked up. Now, the things in the sky did look like monsters to her. You could still see all of them very clearly, since the sun hadn’t fully gone down yet. Its red hemisphere glowed above the western skyline.
She stood there for a while, gasping to regain her breath and trying to figure out what to do. Going back to the village was…unthinkable.
But where else? She looked around, more slowly this time, and realized she was the only person in sight.
She was cold, she suddenly realized. Very cold. The temperature was already below freezing. Within a few hours no one would be able to survive out here without some way to stay warm better than a coat and a pair of shoes. Even a good pair of shoes.
Noise drew her attention back to the sky. The first of the airships had turned and was now coming…
Right at her.
She screamed and started running again.
“What do you think is happening, sir?” von Haslang asked the colonel. Von Schnetter lowered the eyeglass and shook his head. “It’s too far away to see much. Something is burning, though. A whole village, I think, as bright as it is even from here.”
Both of them now looked above the glow in the distance. The airships in the sky were quite visible, even this far away.
“Do you think…?”
Von Schnetter sighed. “I don’t know, Heinrich. But…it could be, yes.”
He looked around at their own camp. “Better make preparations, Captain. Just in case we have to move suddenly.”
Tom Simpson was even farther away. But because of the radio, he didn’t have to wonder what had happened.
What he was starting to wonder about, though, was how much more his wife could take. There’d been a ragged edge to her voice that he’d never heard before.
There were a lot of ways in which Rita resembled her older brother Mike, but other ways in which they were not alike at all. One big difference was that Mike Stearns-as nice a guy as he was, and Tom would vouch for that- also had a ruthless side to him. As wide and deep as the Mississippi, sometimes.
Rita just plain didn’t. She was the sort of person for whom healing and nurturing came easily and killing did not.
At all.
Tom was starting to worry that she was going to come out of all this with a lot more scars-and a lot worse ones-than the one left on her arm by a splinter from an exploding door.
She hadn’t fired the first bullet. But she’d fired some of the ones that came after, including a gigantic bullet that had just taken out dozens of men and the whole village they’d been in.
“Look there!” said one of the Albatross ’s crewmen. His first name was Luca, but Rita couldn’t remember his last name. It wasn’t Franchetti but she thought he was somehow related to the Franchettis. Like most up-time businesses had been in a small town like Grantville, seventeenth-century companies were usually family affairs. The families got pretty big, too.
Luca was leaving over the rail of the gondola, pointing at something on the ground ahead of them. Rita went over and looked herself.
At first she didn’t see anything. It was now getting dark down on the ground, if not up here where the last of the sun was still visible.
After a few seconds she spotted a flash of movement that drew her eyes. It took her a few seconds to realize what she was seeing.
“It’s a woman, I think,” said Luca. “Hard to tell from here.”
Rita thought the figure on the ground was a woman herself. She didn’t know why, exactly. You really couldn’t distinguish body shapes from this far up, much less facial features. It was winter, too, when people wore bulky clothing.
But something, whatever subtlety of movement or posture, led her to think Luca was right.
He shook his head. “She might make it through the night, if she can find one of the abandoned villages and get inside. Probably not, though.”
Rita stared at him. Then, down at the woman below.
That was a woman, she was almost sure now. But even if it wasn’t, that person certainly wasn’t a Bavarian cavalryman.
“Fuck that,” she muttered. She turned to Franchetti. “Take the Albatross down, Filippo. All the way to the ground.” She pointed to the figure herself. “We’ll pick her up. We’ve got room and plenty of weight allowance, now that the bombs have all been dropped.”
“But…signora…”
“Oh, stop worrying! There’s nobody else down there. Not within half a mile, at the very least. We’ve got plenty of time to get down, pick her up, and get back in the air before anyone’ll be able to come at us.”
“But… signora…”
“ Just fucking do it!”
She took a deep, ragged breath. “Please, Filippo.” She had tears in her eyes. “I am so sick of killing people.”
In the end, what saved Ursula’s life was her own despair.
She ran from the monster. Ran and ran for a while. But it kept pursuing her, coming closer and closer to the