He cleared left and made a gentle turn, rolling out south toward the field. Ten minutes later they were both down.
Jesse switched off and looked out. The first big drops of rain splashed on the Belle's windscreen. He looked over at Woody.
'Lieutenant Woodsill, would you mind getting out the chocks? I think I'll watch the rain for a bit.'
'Colonel Wood and Captain Richter are on the ground in Wismar.'
Mike looked up quickly at the announcement. John Simpson stood in the doorway of the office Mike had appropriated here in Magdeburg with a folded piece of paper in his hand.
'The radio room just got word from Lieutenant Wild,' Simpson continued. 'Apparently the weather was closing in and they just got down in time, but they made it safely. I thought you'd like to know.'
'You certainly thought correctly,' Mike told him, and heaved a deep sigh of heartfelt relief. The pounding rain which had swept over Magdeburg just before sunset had made him more than a little anxious about Jesse and Hans. Wismar was over a hundred miles from Gustavus' capital, so there was a lot of room for local differences in weather. But, judging from the difficulty they'd been having with radio transmission to Holland, the rain seemed to be part of a storm front crossing over a large stretch of northern Europe.
'Sounds like things are looking up in Wismar,' he said after a moment.
'Yes,' Simpson agreed, but his own expression was much less relieved than Mike's. 'At the same time, however, the situation there is scarcely what I'd call secure. Lieutenant Cantrell and Lieutenant Clements seem to have managed rather better than I'd allowed myself to hope they might where jury-rigging the speedboats is concerned. But General Aderkas is still several days from the city. And until he arrives, the prospect for Wismar's managing to stand off a serious Danish attack is hardly a favorable one.'
Mike started a quick, caustic retort about how the suggestion which had sent Eddie and Larry to Wismar had come from Simpson in the first place. But the quick comeback died unspoken before the worry in the other man's eyes. Yes, it had been Simpson's idea. But Mike had signed off on it, and he'd done that because it had also been the
'Yeah,' he agreed instead. 'We're still hanging in the wind at Wismar. But the situation's getting better, even there. And Luebeck, on the other hand, looks pretty damned secure. Which,' he acknowledged, 'is largely due to the effort you made to get reinforcements and supplies into the city.'
'Only common sense,' Simpson replied a bit gruffly. 'Like I said, I'm not going to put half of our ironclads out at the end of a supply line which might not be there when they arrive.'
'Of course,' Mike said.
'And whatever the situation in Luebeck,' Simpson resumed in a stronger voice, 'the fact remains that we still don't know what the Danes think they're-'
'Excuse me, Admiral. Mr. President.' A lieutenant (junior grade) had trotted up behind Simpson. The stocky young German came to attention as Simpson and Mike turned toward him. 'This dispatch just came in from Luebeck, sir,' the jay-gee said, extending another folded slip of paper to Simpson.
The admiral took it with a crisp nod of thanks and unfolded it quickly. His eyes flipped over the neatly printed lines, then stopped. He raised them to meet Mike's gaze, and his voice was flat.
'A fishing boat just put into Luebeck, Mr. President,' he said formally. 'According to her crew, the Danes aren't more than an hour behind her.'
Chapter 41
Jack Clements wished, not for the first time, that he was better at languages. Unfortunately, he wasn't. What he really needed right now was Eddie or Larry, or one of the other up-timers who'd acquired sufficient German to explain what he wanted done. He'd had Larry up until a few minutes before, but then the runner had arrived from the radio shack with the news that Larry was urgently needed to supervise an incoming message from Luebeck. Which was how Jack came to be struggling with the Outlaw's rocket launcher and ammunition stowage in the poor illumination provided by dockside torches. His two German assistants were eager enough to help; he just wasn't able to tell them what sort of help he needed, and gestures could only go so far.
He straightened his aching back and beckoned for one of the Germans to climb back up onto the wharf. More hand gestures, and the younger German nodded enthusiastically and began dragging another rocket from the cart parked beside the mooring bollard. In fact, he was rather more enthusiastic about it than Jack might have liked, given the size and weight-and explosiveness-of the projectile. He shook his head, trying to slow the youngster down, but the message clearly wasn't getting through, and he had to jump quickly to catch the heavy rocket before his overeager assistant dropped it straight into the Outlaw's cockpit.
He staggered as the solid weight hit his arms, but he managed to keep his footing and lower the black-powder missile in more or less controlled fashion.
The German on the dock obviously realized, after the fact, what Jack had been trying to get across. His expression was hard to make out in the poor lighting, but what Jack could see of it was-as his wife would have put it-'covered with chagrin.' The up-timer chuckled and waved one hand in a reassuring gesture, but he also beckoned for his enthusiastic assistant to give him a moment to catch his breath.
The pain hit like a sledgehammer. It seemed to explode through his chest like a bomb, and his grunt of anguish was that of a man who'd just been kicked in the belly by a mule. His eyes popped open, and he saw both of his German assistants turning toward him in sudden alarm even as the sledgehammer smashed him again and he felt himself sliding helplessly out of his seat.
'God
'How bad does it sound, James?' he asked in a more nearly normal voice. He listened again, lips firmly compressed. Then he closed his eyes, and his square shoulders sagged. 'Okay,' he said. 'Okay. I understand. Just… let me know if you hear anything else, all right?' He listened a moment longer, then nodded as if the other man could see him. 'Thanks. I'll talk to you later.'
He hung up the phone very, very carefully, and turned to his wife.
'What is it?' Diane Jackson asked. She'd been heating water to brew tea when the telephone rang. Now she studied her husband's expression with the same eyes which had seen the fall of one homeland, the loss of a second, and the painful birth of yet a third.
'Jack,' Frank told her flatly, and his nostrils flared as he inhaled deeply. 'Stubborn old bastard. Why the hell didn't he
'Don't be foolish,' she scolded, and snorted when he looked at her in surprise. 'Men! All of you just alike!' She shook her head. 'Would you have told you if you'd asked you to go to Wismar?' she demanded.
Despite himself, Frank found himself smiling as she glowered at him. Diane's English sometimes got just a bit… convoluted, even after all these years. Not that his was always any great prize, he reminded himself, and shook his head at her.
'Point taken,' he conceded. 'I'm just as stubborn and pigheaded as he is, I suppose. But, Jesus, Diane! He could've at least warned me there might be a problem instead of leaving it all up to Doc Adams!'
'And if he had, you wouldn't have sent him,' Diane pointed out inexorably. 'But you needed him. So he didn't tell you.' She shrugged.
'Guess you're right,' he sighed.
'So,' she said. 'How bad?'
'James couldn't really say,' Frank said sadly. 'Sharon was right there on the spot, thank God. But good as she is, she's not as good as her dad. And she doesn't begin to have what she really needs in the way of supplies and equipment.' He sighed again and shook his head. 'Sounds to me like James was trying to tell me he doesn't expect Jack to make it.'
'I must go to Alice's,' Diane said.
'I'll come along,' Frank said. 'After all, my fault he went.'
'You will not come along,' Diane informed him. 'First, Alice does not need for you to come and beat yourself in front of her. Second, you must tell Mike and Admiral Simpson. They should know.'
'Yeah.' Frank nodded. 'Yeah, you're right. Not that much we can do about it, of course, but I guess somebody should tell them that the only real pilot we had for Watson's Folly isn't available anymore.'
'Can you think of anything at all we can do about it?' Mike asked.
'No.' Simpson's face was drawn, and he shook his head. 'There's not anything. We're here; they're there. And even if that weren't true, I doubt there's anyone else here in Magdeburg or in Grantville who's really qualified to handle that boat properly. We'll just have to hope Lieutenant Wild did pick up enough from Mr. Clements while he was available.'
'I don't like it,' Mike muttered, and Simpson snorted.
'I don't like it either,' he admitted. 'Unfortunately, what we like has very little to do with the situation. It never does. Especially when it's time for the shooting to start.'
Mike leaned back in his chair and cocked his head at the older man. He gazed at him for several seconds.
'You don't have to answer this if you don't want to… John,' he said, deliberately putting his question on a non-official basis with the use of the other's first name. 'But I can't help wondering. It's obvious to me from some of the things you've said-and the way you talked to Eddie, before we sent him off-that you'd seen combat before we ever wound up here. A lot, I'd guess. Probably at least as much as Frank Jackson. But you never mentioned it until we needed you to build our navy. And to be honest, I've got the distinct impression you'd never mentioned it to Tom at all.'
Simpson looked at him steadily, and Mike gave a tiny shrug. 'John, I really don't think the fact that your son hasn't answered the radio message I sent to him just before I left means anything. That storm front has scrambled all our communications with Becky-and God knows what it's done to the relay between Amsterdam and London.'
Simpson nodded once, jerkily, but his face was still tight.