Grantville Gazette 38
The Game of War
'Strategy without tactics is the slowest route to victory. Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.'
Klaus Gremminger stared into the lifeless eyes of General Herman Dettwiler and imagined victory. The arrogant, brash, but well-respected leader of von Allmen's small army was lying dead in his
Gremminger turned quickly and pointed a long, sharp finger at a youth standing beside the flap of the tent. 'Get the men ready, Amon. We're going to follow those bastards all the way to Davos.'
The expression on the boy's face left a cold sting in Gremminger's heart. So too did the cool air flowing into the tent. He winced. It had been mild just this morning, but something had changed. 'What is it?'
The boy swallowed and said, 'Sir, Captain Galli reports that snow is falling on the Wisshorn and that soon it will be upon us here.' He swallowed again, apparently unsure of how to continue. 'We cannot pursue in this weather . . . so he says, sir.'
Gremminger slammed a fist onto the table where Dettwiler lay, jarring the dead man and jostling his head left to right. He pulled his hand back. Was he still alive?
And now with those devil Americans, who had literally fallen out of the sky in an event being called the Ring of Fire, the
A courier burst into the tent and stood at attention, a dusting of snow melting on his dark wool coat. The light-haired boy caught his breath and held out a scrap of paper. 'A note from Tarasp, My Lord.'
Gremminger took it and read it quietly. It was a short note, scribbled hastily with a rich man's quill. Gremminger read it again, and again, and the cold spot in his heart warmed. He was surprised at what the note contained, surprised at who had written it. Then again, the political and military situation in Tarasp, in Austria, and even in Tyrol was infinitely uncertain these days. Competing Hapsburg interests lay everywhere. Who was a friend, a foe? Who knew? He looked at the note again. He was surprised, but pleasantly so. 'Do we know yet who has taken command of Dettwiler's men?'
The two boys shook their heads. Amon spoke. 'No, sir, not for certain, but we suspect Captain von Allmen. He was the general's personal assistant.'
'Thomas von Allmen? Gregor's runt?'
The boy nodded.
Gremminger huffed. 'This gets better and better.'
He turned back to Dettwiler and smiled into the pale, stiffening face. He read the note again. 'All right, Amon,' he said. 'Spread the word: We'll set camp here and wait out this snow. And then, in a few weeks when the passes reopen, we'll face von Allmen . . . and bleed his army to death.'
The boys left the tent. Gremminger looked at Dettwiler's face again, making sure his eyes were closed. They were.
He read the note again. He loved the words. They were like poetry, verse for the heart. Four little words, initialed by a captain.
****
Thomas von Allmen dreamed of Vietnam. It was a recurring dream and one that he had begun having after his return from Grantville. It was a war that had not yet occurred in his time, in a place a world away, dealing with strange, exotic people he had never seen. Yet the dream was always there: the places where Americans and Viet Cong clashed in dense, lush jungles and where bombers rolled like thunder, dropping napalm to scorch the ground in hellfire. The Battle of Bong Son. The Battle of An Lao. The Tet Offensive. Ripcord. Saigon. Men clashing with weapons and materiel only magic could conceive. It was a waste of time for him to lose precious sleep on such a dream when there were far more pertinent ones he might be having. The American Revolution. The Napoleonic Wars. Even the American Civil War was more appropriate to his situation. But perhaps that was why he dreamed of Vietnam, for it took his mind off the reality of
He awoke and the white dice clasped in his hand tumbled to the ground. He was not as sweaty as he usually was after such a dream, but perhaps that was because the flap on his tent was open and cool air swept in. It was getting warmer, and the late snows were melting away, but up here among Alpine rock, with the Silvretta Range in view, a cool breeze was a welcome change from the bitter wind that had plagued his disgruntled army.
The truth of it was just as strange now as it had been when he took command three weeks ago, after General Dettwiler's bitter and untimely death. Despite the odds against it, he had managed to rally the general's routing men and put them into a defensive position around a small village just ten miles east of Davos. Von Allmen shook his head at the memory and scooped up the loose dice.