force much greater than yours, in any battle for which you are prepared. But-'

His hand swept in an arc. The broad gesture indicated not simply the hills in the immediate vicinity, but the entire region. Rolling, hilly, heavily wooded Thuringia. 'You can not guard against everything. Especially an opponent which can move quickly. I have said this to you before, but I will repeat it. Do not think for a moment that these slow and clumsy tercios are all you will ever face. Or that all of your enemies will line up so neatly for your rifles. I wouldn't. The Finns wouldn't. The Croats wouldn't.'

Mike sighed. 'I know, Alex.' He took a deep, slow breath. 'There's too much of a tendency, for us, to think we can handle everything with our modern weapons. Or new ones we could design, if we devoted enough resources to it. But you're right. That road leads to folly.'

He smiled whimsically. 'Probably wouldn't work anyway. Be a good idea for us to keep Little Big Horn in mind. Not to mention Vietnam. Hardware will only get you so far.'

Mackay's face was blank. The names meant nothing to him. But Rebecca nodded. She had been devouring books on American history for months.

The whimsy faded from Mike's face, along with the smile. His expression became almost bleak. 'And even if it did succeed-'

'That would be even worse,' stated Rebecca, completing the thought.

'Yes,' said Mike firmly. 'Win the battles and lose the war. This world does not need another set of conquistadores. I want to bring America into it-my America-not some English-speaking version of Prussia.'

Mackay's face registered confusion. 'Prussia? The Prussians aren't-'

Mike chuckled. 'Not today, Alex, no. Sorriest Germans around, this day and age. But just stick around for a couple of hundred years.' The bleakness in his face deepened. 'If we don't succeed-you'll see all of Germany under a boot heel, soon enough.'

'And worse,' whispered Rebecca. Her father had never been able to finish Morris Roth's book on the Holocaust. She had.

Mike shook his head, as a horse shakes off flies. 'Over my dead body,' he muttered. 'What we need is a political solution.'

He gave Mackay a shrewd glance. 'You'll be reporting to Gustav Adolf soon, I imagine.'

The Scots officer nodded. 'Yes. Not sure when, though. There's no point in galloping all over the countryside until the king sets up quarters somewhere. But soon, yes.'

'Put in a good word for us, Alex, if you would. I'd just as soon not get the Swedes on our backs.'

Mackay smiled. 'I shall,' he replied firmly. 'The best word possible.' Beneath his lips, his tongue ran over his teeth. 'Got no choice,' he chuckled. 'You've got the only dentist I know of.'

Ed Piazza emerged from the door. 'The meeting's about to start,' he announced.

Mackay turned away. Although he often attended those meetings, he would not on this occasion. The Americans, he knew, were coming to a turning point. Like any family, they needed a moment of privacy.

'Good luck,' he said.

***

'What was that about?' asked Rebecca, as she and Mike walked down the corridor to the committee's conference room. 'Is Alex having some problems with his teeth?'

She grimaced. Rebecca's own teeth had been in splendid condition, by the standards of the day. But she had still spent a few hours in that torture chamber. Luckily, she had moved on the matter very quickly-before the anesthetic was entirely gone.

'Poor man,' she sympathized.

Mike laughed. 'Poor man, my ass! There's nothing at all wrong with his teeth, Becky, other than cosmetics. It's his heart that's the problem.'

Startled, she glanced up at him. Mike was grinning very broadly. 'Oh, yes. The Scotsman is a smitten man. I know.' He reached his arm around her waist and drew her close. 'I recognize the symptoms.'

It didn't take Rebecca more than two seconds to understand. She tucked her own arm around Mike's waist, and matched his grin. 'Poor man,' she concurred. 'Mind you, I am a bit surprised. I thought he would be scared off. Once he saw past those magnificent knees.'

Mike shook his head. 'Not Alex. A very substantial fellow, he is.'

'Do you think-?'

'Who knows? Her uncle thinks well of him. And even her father, it seems. But God forbid the girl should listen to the voice of wisdom and maturity.'

Rebecca snorted. 'What woman in her right mind would listen to such?' She smiled slyly. 'This requires feminine sagacity.'

They were at the door, and relinquished the embrace. Rebecca paused before entering. 'I will speak to the lady,' she announced.

Mike eyed her skeptically. 'And say what? Your own words of wisdom?'

'Absurd,' she replied. Idly, her fingers stroked her hair. 'I said nothing of 'wisdom.' Only sagacity.'

She swept through the door. Over her shoulder: 'You would not understand, Michael. You do not read enough poetry.'

'Not any,' grumbled her fiancй. Thereby, quite unknowingly, proving her point.

***

Once he entered the room, Mike pulled up a chair and sat down at the conference table. Glancing around, he saw that the entire committee was already gathered except Frank Jackson.

'Frank will be along later,' he explained. 'Along with Gretchen Higgins. They're seeing to the new prisoners.' He turned back to Rebecca, who had taken her usual seat next to Melissa. 'I'd like to start the meeting with a report on the Swedish movements.'

Rebecca clasped her hands on the table, as she always did when giving a report. Then:

'Gustav Adolf left a garrison in Erfurt-after stripping the town clean of all its hard currency-and marched straight south. He passed through Arnstadt on the seventh. Yesterday. He did not stop, however. According to reports from some of the hunters, he was driving his army very hard. By now they must be south of the Thuringenwald.'

Rebecca's face was creased with worry. 'The Swedes have stripped the entire central province of the bulk of its stored food. They paid for it, mind you. There was no looting.' She laughed harshly. 'Except for the archbishop's gold in Erfurt, of course, which is what they used to buy their provisions.'

Willie Ray Hudson snorted. 'Great! So everybody in central Thuringia's got a pocket full of money and no food. Except us, and Badenburg. We were apparently too far east for the Swedish quartermasters to reach in the time available.'

'And winter's a-coming,' muttered Nat Davis.

Mike held up his hand. 'Later for that. I want to get filled in on the political situation first. Who did Gustav leave in charge of Thuringia?'

'Well, most of it officially belongs to the Saxe-Weimar brothers,' said Rebecca. 'But Bernard, according to reports, is staying with the Swedish army.' Again, that harsh laugh. 'It seems he has developed a bit of a military reputation and finds that profession more interesting than taking care of the people he supposedly rules.'

'What a surprise,' sneered Underwood. 'Goddam noblemen!'

Mike grinned at him. 'Hey, Quentin-it's okay by me. The fewer noblemen hanging around here the better, as far as I'm concerned.'

Rebecca cleared her throat. 'Wilhelm, on the other hand-he is the oldest-stayed behind. He has set up his headquarters in Weimar. But the word is that he will not be staying long. He is supposed to recruit eleven thousand men. Field Marshall Banйr is to raise an equivalent number in Erfurt. Added to the forces Banйr already has, the Swedes think that should be enough to go after Pappenheim while the king himself continues south after Tilly. Pappenheim is apparently running an independent operation now.'

Mike did not press Rebecca for an explanation as to the sources of her information. He didn't need to. Her father and uncle were both experienced spies, and by now they had created a network throughout central Germany. The network was broader than that, actually. Working through the Jews scattered all over Europe, the two brothers had informants penetrating large parts of the entire Holy Roman Empire.

He tapped his fingers on the table. 'It sounds as if Wilhelm will be leaving soon also.'

Rebecca nodded. Mike's finger tapping turned into a decisive little rap. 'So. The long and the short of it is this.'

His eyes slowly scanned the room, while he held up his fingers one at a time.

'One. The war has now moved south of Thuringia, over to the other side of the Thuringenwald. Two. Official 'order' has been restored in Thuringia-and is about to be removed again. Three. Most noblemen in the area-the ones active in political life, anyway-are either gone or going. The Catholic ones will have fled and the Protestants are seeking fame and glory with the Swedes. Four. The economic situation in the province is going to be desperate in a few weeks. Five. On the other hand, the area is flush with hard currency.'

He turned to Rebecca. 'That about sums it up, I think.' Again, she nodded.

Now, Mike slapped the table top with his palm. The hard, cracking sound matched his voice.

'Wonderful! Couldn't have asked for anything better!'

Everyone was staring at him. Mike laughed gaily. 'And will you look at you?' he demanded. 'Problems, problems-that's all you see.'

He clenched his fist and held it half-raised. 'Now's the time,' he stated firmly. 'While the cat's away, the mice will play. The war's come and gone until next spring, at the earliest. Probably next summer. The only thing that's going to matter between now and then-six to eight months-is who can keep this province's people alive. Alive-and by God well!'

Quentin Underwood was the first to see Mike's point. That was not surprising. As often as he and Underwood clashed in the committee meetings, Mike had found that his former mine manager usually had a better grasp of economic realities than anyone. Moreover, unlike most of the Americans, Quentin's hardheadedness did not lead him to flights of fancy concerning American military supremacy. As a young man serving aboard an aircraft carrier in the South China Sea, he had gotten a good lesson in the limits of hardware. The technological disparity between the aircraft which flew off that carrier and the men they bombed in the forests below had not been substantially different from that between Grantville's Americans and seventeenth-century Germans. Once before, in another universe, Quentin Underwood had seen

Вы читаете 1632
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату