caracoles in
He paused, waiting. Not to his surprise, none of the officers indicated any discomfort at his words. Turenne had handpicked them carefully.
'Good,' he said, nodding. 'Robert, would you be so kind as to remain behind?'
It was a clear dismissal. The officers moved over to the sidetable, each taking up one of the manuscripts, and quickly left the room. When they were gone, only Robert du Barry's stack remained.
Turenne gave the stack a glance. 'You should read them also, of course. But I have something more important for you immediately.' He led the way toward the little table in a corner where rested a larger manuscript.
'This is more technical in nature, Robert. I put it together as best I could from the material I had available.' Quickly, Turenne sketched out the assignment he had in mind. When he was finished, du Barry's already florid face was almost brick red with suppressed anger.
'I have given you no reason-neither you nor the crown nor the cardinal-to doubt my loyalty. Furthermore-'
'Oh, do be quiet!' snapped Turenne. 'Robert, I have never once inquired as to your religious beliefs. Neither has the cardinal. The fact that you-like me-come from a long line of Huguenots is irrelevant.'
' 'Irrelevant,' I say-except in one respect. Which does not reflect badly upon you in the least.' Turenne placed a hand on the manuscripts. 'It's all here, Robert,' he said softly. 'Everything we need-most of it, anyway, I'm convinced-to meet the Swedish king and his American wizards on level ground. Not immediately, no; hopefully, though, soon enough. But the books give us precious few specifics. In almost every case, they tell us only what the weapons could do, not how they actually did it. Perhaps that's because their readers already knew those things, while we do not. But the mere fact that we know what can be done will guide us in determining how to do it, of that I am confident. Yet it will take a large number of the best mechanics and gunsmiths in the world to carry this out-and they won't be able to do it unless they are properly organized and led. By a man who understands them and has the skill to manage them.'
Du Barry's face was still flushed, but the color was beginning to fade a bit. 'Can't do it without Protestants,' he gruffed. 'Does the cardinal understand that?'
Turenne smiled, a bit savagely. 'I think he does more than simply 'understand' it, Robert. He is
Turenne's thumb rifled idly through the first few pages of manuscript. 'To Germany, some, to be sure. Looking for work from the Swede. But our spies tell us the Dutch are already resentful of the growing American reputation for being the world's best craftsmen. So…'
A slow smile spread across du Barry's face. 'So the cardinal will offer them exile, will he?'
'Exile-
'Ha!' By now, du Barry's flush was back to normal. He only made one last token protest.
'I should not like anyone to think I am flinching from the field of battle.'
'Please, Robert! With
'And, besides,' added Turenne smoothly, 'I will explain to everyone that I was able to prevail upon you to undertake the assignment solely by dint of much pleading and begging.'
He and du Barry shared a little laugh. Given the warmth of the moment, Turenne saw no reason to add what he could have added. And, if I'd had to, I would have used the secret information the cardinal gave me to blackmail you into it. There's no doubt about your loyalty, true enough. But your brother could be sent to the executioner tomorrow.
But he left the words unsaid. Turenne would have found saying them distasteful in the extreme, for one thing. For another, like Cardinal Richelieu himself, Turenne did not really care much about a man's private conscience-so long as he was faithful, in his public activities, to his duty to crown and country.
'Ha!' repeated du Barry. Turenne had chosen him for the assignment because Robert, unlike most officers, was familiar with the world of manufacture. As Turenne had suspected-and planned-he was finding the challenge an interesting one.
Du Barry picked up a sheaf of pages and began leafing through them. 'Any suggestions for where to start?'
Turenne, as it happened-and much to his own surprise-had become quite fascinated with the challenge himself. 'I can tell you where
Robert nodded.
'Well, don't let the old man convince you to devote much effort to'-again, Turenne stumbled over the pronunciation-'these 'breechloaders' he's become a fanatic about. Oh, to be sure, he's a master gunsmith-so let him fiddle around with a few. Who knows? We might even find he can make enough to be of use. But keep his nose to the wheel, Robert.
Du Barry nodded, but Turenne could see that he was already becoming engrossed in what he was reading.
'Percussion caps, Robert. I can't tell, from the materials I had, exactly how they were made. But from the hints, we should be able to find out. And rifled muskets-not much different from today's hunting pieces. But with a clever American adaptation which enables quick loading on the battlefield. Again, I don't know exactly how it works. Richelieu's books weren't detailed enough. So find out-try different things. But it
Du Barry's eyes widened. Turenne grinned.
'The best of it all, however… They called it a 'Miniй ball.' Which-
Du Barry's eyed widened. Turenne barked another laugh.
'Oh, yes! Welcome to the new world, Robert-and who is to say it can't be a French one?'
Chapter 22
'The streets are in chaos,' Rebecca said, as soon as she came through the front door of the U.S. delegation's house in The Hague. 'I never even made it to my interview with the prince.'
Heinrich Schmidt came in after her, and closed the door. 'It probably doesn't matter, anyway. According to most rumors, Frederik Henrik left The Hague yesterday. On his way north, according to some, trying to find out what happened. Others claim he went south-or east-in order to bolster the Dutch forces guarding the line of fortresses.'
Rebecca sighed and rubbed her face. 'Rumors, rumors-everywhere. Every corner is filled with knots of people arguing and exchanging rumors. Who knows what's really happening?'
Gretchen scowled. Jeff, sitting next to her on a couch, took a deep breath. 'Well… if Frederik Henrik's really gone… there went our best chance to get a hearing from anybody who'd listen.'
Rebecca went over to a nearby chair. 'Yes, true enough.' As she sat down, her hands slapped the arm rests in a gesture of exasperation. 'Damn the Dutch and their obsessive sectarianism! Ever since we got here, the burghers and the regents have had us pigeon-holed as 'Arminians.' As if we care in the least about their stupid doctrinal disputes!'
Heinrich leaned back against the door and grinned coldly. 'Calvinists, what do you expect? If you support freedom of conscience-as we do-you are no better than a spawn of Satan, Rebecca. Arminians-the devil's wolves already-dressed in sheep's clothing.'
Wearily, Rebecca nodded her head. 'Arminianism,' in the parlance of the day, was what hardcore Calvinists called the moderate tendencies within Calvinism itself. The term was a vague one, measured by any objective intellectual standards, since it swept under one label such very different men and schools of thought as the Dutchman Grotius-now in exile-or the forces gathered around Bishop Laud in England.
But that very vagueness was an advantage to the hardcore Calvinists in the United Provinces. Under the official theology lurked hard-headed immediate material interests; and the real issues at stake were at least as much political and economic as they were religious. The bastions of hardcore Calvinism in Holland-the Counter- Remonstrants, as they were called-were in such towns as Haarlem and Leiden and Utrecht: manufacturing towns, basically, whose prosperity depended largely on the textile trade. A state of hostility with Spain worked to their advantage, since the Dutch blockade of the Flemish coast and their control over the outlets of the Rhine served to protect them against their Flemish and Brabantine competitors in the Spanish Netherlands. And thus they were hostile to any tendency within the United Provinces which, along theological lines, suggested the possibility of a compromise with Spain.
For its part, Arminianism in Holland had an equally material underpinning. The strongholds of the Arminians were the major port cities-Rotterdam and Amsterdam, along with the smaller towns of Dordrecht and Alkmaar and Delft. These cities depended for their prosperity on the carrying trade and fishing, and for them the continued state of hostilities since the end of the Twelve Years Truce in 1621 had been a major burden. Fine for the manufacturers of textiles-or the Zeeland merchants who depended on the inland trade-to wax hot and eloquent about the Anti-Christ and the devious ways of Popery. It wasn't
Complicating the mix was the long-standing political tug-of-war between the various levels of Dutch government, which was a complex entity: Holland versus the other six provinces; between the town councils and the States of Holland and the States General; the ongoing conflict between the merchant oligarchs who dominated the town councils of Holland and the nobility who were still the dominant class in the more agricultural areas.
Overriding everything else, perhaps, was the role of the House of Orange, the premier noble family of the United Provinces. In the summer of the year 1618, Mauritz of Nassau-the stadtholder of Holland and Zeeland provinces as well as the prince of Orange-had carried through, with the support of the hardcore Calvinists, what amounted to a coup d'йtat. The existing Arminian regime led by Oldenbarnevelt and Grotius had been overthrown. Oldenbarnevelt had been executed, and Grotius cast into prison.
For the next seven years, until his death in 1625, Mauritz had wielded greater personal authority in the United Provinces than any man since his father William the