'There? A demonstration.'
That would be Piccolomini's task. The Italian general leaned over and studied the area indicated.
'If it's just to be a demonstration, yes. Anything more-'
Wallenstein shook his head. 'Please. I am not a cardinal, who thinks war can simply be counted in coins. He may choose to shrug off the accounts, but I do not. Every army which has gone straight at the Americans has been broken like a rotten twig. And those accounts come from Tilly's veterans, not a pack of stinking monks and priests.' He resumed his study of the map. 'I do not expect you to actually take Suhl. This is just a feint, to draw off some of their forces.'
The generals around the table relaxed. Not the least of the reasons Wallenstein had become the greatest military figure in the Holy Roman Empire was that he commanded the allegiance of his own men. If for no other reason, because he did not ask mercenaries to attempt the impossible. All of those officers had personally heard the reports. Impenetrable steel vehicles, without even horses to be slain; a preposterous rate of fire; rifles which could kill unerringly across a third of a mile; even some kind of gun which could pour out bullets like a rainspout.
'Simply a demonstration,' Wallenstein repeated. He gave Piccolomini a sharp glance. 'A genuine demonstration, you understand? They'll get suspicious if there's no contact at all. There must be a reasonable number of casualties.'
Piccolomini shrugged. 'I can spare a few hundred. I'll use those Swabian fucks. They've been nothing but a pain in the ass since they got here, anyway. Do them good to be bled.'
Wallenstein nodded. Keeping his right forefinger on Suhl, his left forefinger moved across the map to the west, coming to rest on the spot marked 'Eisenach.'
'The Spaniards should manage to take Eisenach. If they fail, they can retreat into the Wartburg.'
General Gallas sniffed. 'I still can't believe the Americans haven't stationed a garrison in the place. Old as it is, the Wartburg's still the strongest castle in Thuringia. Idiots.'
Wallenstein shook his head. 'I do not share your attitude, I'm afraid. If the United States is not stationing a garrison there-so obvious!-there must be a reason for it. And I think it would be foolish to assume the reason is simple incompetence.'
'Short of troops, probably,' mused Piccolomini. 'Every spy we've sent into the area reports that they maintain only a small permanent army.' He sniffed himself, now. 'Merchants and bankers-and, God help us,
Wallenstein rose to his full height. He was a tall man, very thin. Now at the age of forty-eight, his dark hair had receded to form a widow's peak. A long and prominent nose was offset by high cheekbones and, beneath a slender mustachio and above a goatee, a mouth whose lower lip was so thick and out-jutting that it suggested Habsburg bastardy. It was a forbidding face, cold and unexpressive. The face, combined with the stature, gave Wallenstein more than a passing resemblance to the popular image of Mephistopheles.
'I don't think like a soldier either,' he said. His dark eyes scanned the officers around him. Coldly: 'That's why you work for me, not I for you.'
The officers did not bridle at that cutting remark. Partly, because it was the simple truth. Mostly, because bridling at Wallenstein was dangerous. The Bohemian general-military contractor was a better term-would tolerate discussion, argument, even quarrel. He gave short shrift to officers who couldn't learn to accept his authority. And when it came to 'short shrift'-there, too, Wallenstein did not think like a soldier. The man had the soul of an assassin, not a duelist.
'It doesn't matter,' he stated forcefully. 'Whatever the reason-whether it's incompetence, lack of men, or, as I suspect, because the Americans know something we don't-it'll be the Spaniards who make the discovery. Not us.'
His officers nodded in unison. The collective gesture exuded all the satisfaction of mercenaries who expect to collect their pay while others do the dying.
Wallenstein leaned back over the table. Again, his two forefingers spread wide. 'The Spaniards, in force, at Eisenach. Piccolomini, you here-in a solid demonstration at Suhl. That should be enough to draw aside all significant opposition. Then-'
He removed his finger and slashed up the map with the edge of his right hand. 'The Croats-right through the heart of the forest. The hunters we hired assure me there is a good trail, passing through uninhabited terrain. The Croats should get within striking distance before they're even spotted. Nothing to oppose them but the town's constabulary.'
He leaned over the table and reached for a smaller map. Grasping it between thumb and fingers, he drew the map to cover the larger one.
'Here,' he said, pointing. He cocked his head at Gallas, under whom the Croat light cavalry served. 'Make sure the Croats understand. The main blow is to fall
Gallas studied the place indicated on the map. It was a very good, very detailed map of the town-small city, now-called Grantville. Dozens of spy reports had gone into its making, over the past few weeks.
Gallas' face was creased with a slight frown. 'Not the town itself?'
Wallenstein shook his head. 'No. Oh, certainly-make sure a sizeable force of cavalry ravages the town, as best they can.' He chuckled harshly. 'If they can butcher a few Jews, so much the better. But the main blow must come
He leaned back and, once again, stood erect. 'Cardinal Richelieu can prate about money and bankers and Jewish financial wizards all he wants.
Again, he stooped; and, again, pointed with a devil's finger.
'There. Raze it to the ground. Kill everyone. Even the dogs, if they find any.'
His own laugh, when it came, was as coarse as that of any of his officers. 'Who knows? Might be a Jew in disguise.'
Chapter 50
'I don't like this,' growled Gustav Adolf softly. He gave the letter in his hand a little flick of the fingers. 'Not in the least.'
He raised his eyes and peered at Torstensson. 'Lennart, can you think of any good reason Bernard would be engaging in such maneuvers? That far to the south?'
The young artillery general started to make some sarcastic remark-
'Axel has no suggestions?'
Gustav shook his head. 'No. But he's worried, I can tell.'
Standing on the walls of the redoubt which the Swedes had built where the river Rednitz entered Nьrnberg, Torstensson turned and stared to the northwest. The king copied the movement. Both men were groping in their minds, trying to visualize the terrain in the Rhineland.
Their eyes passed over, but ignored, the huge complex of fortifications which surrounded the city. Most of those fortifications were crude earthworks, and most of them were new. Like the redoubt itself, they had been erected hastily over the past month.
As soon as he entered the city on July 3, Gustav had used the labor of Nьrnberg's inhabitants to build those fieldworks. The citizens had not complained-not in the least. Nьrnberg had allied itself to the king of Sweden, and they were well-nigh ecstatic to see him make good on his promise:
Gustav Adolf had arrived not a moment too soon. The huge army which Wallenstein had assembled in Bohemia was marching on the city. Sixty thousand strong, that army was-the largest force ever put into the field in the course of the long and brutal war. Tilly's Bavarian troops, now under the direct command of the Elector Maximillian, were marching to join him-perhaps another twenty thousand men. And Pappenheim, whose Black Cuirassiers had spent the spring and early summer in Westphalia, was reported to be coming as well. Pappenheim's route was unclear, but the Swedes assumed he would take advantage of Gustav's withdrawal to Nьrnberg to march through Franconia. If so, Nьrnberg was threatened from three sides: Wallenstein from the northeast, Maximillian from the south, Pappenheim from the west. An army of one hundred thousand men was about to threaten Nьrnberg with the fate suffered by Magdeburg.
While the inhabitants of the city frantically erected their fortifications, under the direction of the Swedish engineer Hans Olaf, Gustav had led his army back into the field. For days, the Swedes had maneuvered against the oncoming enemy forces, slowing their advance and buying time for Nьrnberg. But on July 10, at Neumarkt, the Bavarian and imperial armies had finally merged.
Although he was outnumbered four to one, Gustav had continued to challenge Wallenstein to meet him in the open field. Wallenstein had declined. The Bohemian military contractor preferred the surer, if slower, methods of siege warfare. Steadily, surely, inexorably, his enormous army had moved into positions threatening the city. But, by then, the feverish program of fortifications had erected a new wall around Nьrnberg, replacing the inner walls of the city. Gustav's line of defense, hastily erected but well designed, was too large for even Wallenstein to surround.
So, the Bohemian had been forced to 'besiege' Nьrnberg by erecting what amounted to a 'counter-city.' Through the rest of July, Wallenstein's men had been set to work erecting a gigantic armed camp a few miles to the southwest of the city. Using the Bibert River as a central water supply, Wallenstein had erected fieldworks with a circumference of a dozen miles. The strong point in those fieldworks, directly facing the Swedes, was a wooded hill on the north. That hill was called the Burgstall. It rose some two hundred and fifty feet above the Rednitz river, flowing past its eastern slope. In effect, the Rednitz served as a moat, and the wooded hill was capped by an ancient ruined castle named the Alte Veste. Wallenstein had turned the Alte Veste and the entire Burgstall into a fortress. Palisades and ditches sprouted like mushrooms on the hill, with clear lines of fire for the heavy guns positioned on its slopes.
Then-nothing. Time after time, Gustav had sallied from Nьrnberg, challenging Wallenstein to open battle. Wallenstein declined. 'There has been enough fighting,' he told his generals. 'I will show them another method.'
Cold-blooded like no man of his time, Wallenstein's method was simple. Hunger and disease, soon enough, would strike both armies. Men would die in the thousands, and then the tens of thousands-and he had a lot more men than the king of Sweden.
'Treason,' whispered Gustav. 'It can only be treason.'