Settling Accounts_ Drive To The East - Part 10
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Part 10

"You'd better believe I have," Summer said. "If we weren't all on the ball, for instance, we'd have Confederate spies raising all kinds of trouble."

"How do you know we don't?" Moss asked.

"There are ways." The senior U.S. officer spoke with a.s.surance. "There are ways, but they don't work unless everybody's on the ball. Have you got that?"

"Yes, sir," Moss said.

"All right, then." Monty Summers' nod seemed amiable enough. "I won't say anything more about it, then. A word to the wise, you know." He seemed to like other people's distilled wisdom.

Moss went on much as he had before-but not quite. He'd never been a back-slapping gladhander. He never would be, either. But he did try to stop making his fellow captives actively dislike him. They seemed willing enough to meet him halfway. He started hearing more camp gossip, which gave him something to chew on, if nothing else.

Nick Cantarella sidled up to him one warm spring morning. "How you doing, Major?" he asked.

"Not too bad," Moss answered. "How's yourself?"

"I've been worse. Of course, I've been better, too. This isn't exactly my favorite place," Cantarella said.

"I wouldn't come here on vacation, either," Moss said, and Cantarella laughed. Moss added, "The only people who like it here are the guards. They're too dumb not to-and they get to carry guns, but n.o.body's going to shoot back at them." He was thinking of the officer he'd routed. Cantarella laughed again, even more appreciatively this time. Moss started to laugh, too, but swallowed the noise in a hurry. Captain Cantarella was somehow involved in escape plans-if there were any escape plans to be involved in. As casually as Moss could, he asked, "What is your favorite place?"

"New York City," Cantarella replied at once.

With his accent, that didn't surprise Moss at all. Still casually, the fighter pilot asked, "How soon do you expect to see it again?"

Cantarella didn't answer right away. He scratched his cheek. Whiskers rasped against his fingernails; he was a man who got five o'clock shadow at half past one. Then he said, "Well, sir, I hope I don't have to sit out the whole G.o.dd.a.m.n war here."

"Who doesn't?" Moss agreed. "Let me know if you have any other thoughts along those lines."

"I'll do that, Major," Cantarella said. "You can count on it." Off he went. He gave the impression of still being very much in the war even though he was hundreds of miles behind the lines and on the wrong side of the barbed wire and machine-gun towers. Moss looked after him. How long did he intend to stay on the wrong side of the barbed wire? Will he take me with him when he goes? Will he take me with him when he goes? That was the question that mattered most to Moss. That was the question that mattered most to Moss.

"h.e.l.lo, General," Brigadier General Irving Morrell said, walking up toward the frame house that held Brigadier General Abner Dowling's headquarters.

"h.e.l.lo, General," Dowling replied. "Good to see you again, and it's high time you had stars on your shoulders, if anybody wants to know what I think."

"Thanks. Thanks very much," Morrell said. "They do make me think I haven't wasted the past thirty years, anyway."

"I know what you mean," Dowling said, and no doubt he did: he'd been in the Army even longer than Morrell had before trading his eagles for stars. He went on, "How are you feeling?"

"Sir, I'll do," Morrell answered. His shoulder chose that moment to twinge. He did his best not to show how much it hurt. It would sting him if he tried to move it too far-to move it as if he weren't wounded, in other words-or sometimes for no reason at all: certainly none he could find. With a wry chuckle, he continued, "One of the so-called advantages of my new exalted status is that they don't expect me to push back the Confederates singlehanded."

Dowling snorted-a rude noise to come from a general. "You can't fool me. I've known you too long. First chance you get, you're going to climb back into a barrel. Five minutes later, you'll stick your head out of the cupola, because you can't see a d.a.m.n thing through the periscopes."

"Who, me?" Morrell said, as innocently as he could. Both men laughed. Dowling had him pegged, all right. Morrell added, "I don't know that I like being so predictable."

He'd thought Dowling would go on laughing, but the fat officer sobered instead. "You probably shouldn't be that predictable, as a matter of fact. If you are, the Confederates are liable to take another shot at you."

Morrell grunted. The other general might well be right. Morrell said, "It's an honor I could do without. I never minded getting shot at because I was a U.S. soldier. I minded getting shot, that time in Sonora-it hurt like blazes, and it left me flat on my back for a h.e.l.l of a long time. But it was one of those things that happen, you know what I mean? But if they're shooting at me because because I'm me . . . That's a.s.sa.s.sination. It isn't war." I'm me . . . That's a.s.sa.s.sination. It isn't war."

"They're doing it," Dowling said.

"I know they are," Morrell answered. "We've lost some good people because they're doing it, too-lost them for good, I mean, not just had them wounded the way I was."

"Unofficially-and you haven't heard this from me-we're doing it, too," Dowling said.

That made Morrell grunt again. "Well, I can't even tell you I'm very surprised," he said at last. "It's the only thing we can do, pretty much. If they hit us like that, we have to hit back the same way, or else they get an edge. But I'll be d.a.m.ned if I like it. It makes this business even filthier than it has to be."

"Personally, I agree with you. You'll find those who don't, though." Dowling paused, ruminating on that. After a bit, he went on, "When you were in Ohio, you met Captain Litvinoff, didn't you?"

"The skinny fellow with the little mustache that looked like it was penciled on? The poison-gas specialist? Oh, yes. I met him. He gave me the cold chills." Now it was Morrell's turn to pause. He let out a long, sorrowful sigh. "All right, General. You made your point."

"Over in Richmond or wherever they keep them, the Confederates have men just like dear Captain Litvinoff," Dowling said. Morrell realized the other general liked the poison-gas expert even less than he did. He hadn't imagined such a thing was possible. Dowling went on, "Now we're finding a.s.sa.s.sins under flat rocks. And things are liable to get worse before they get better."

"How could they?" Morrell asked in honest perplexity.

"Well, I don't exactly know. But I can tell you something I heard from somebody I believe," Dowling said.

"I'm all ears." Morrell liked gossip no less than anyone else.

"You ever hear of that German scientist named Einstein? You know-the Jew with the hair that looks like steel wool in a hurricane?"

Morrell nodded. "Sure. Who hasn't heard of him? He's the one they always make absentminded professor jokes about. What's he got to do with the price of beer, though?"

"He's a h.e.l.l of a sharp man, no matter how absentminded he is."

"I never said he wasn't. You don't get to be famous like that if you haven't got a lot on the ball. But what about him?"

"He's disappeared," Dowling said portentously. "Not disappeared as in his apartment building got hit by a bomb while he was in the bathtub. Disappeared as in fallen off the map. Quite a few of the other high-forehead fellows in Germany and Austria-Hungary have quietly dropped out of sight, too."

"They're working on something." Morrell didn't phrase it as a question. He'd been in the Army a long time. He recognized the signs. When a lot of people who did the same kind of work quietly dropped out of sight, something-probably something big-was going on behind the scenes. He pointed a finger at Dowling. "Do you know what it is?"

"Not me," Dowling said. "When I need to count past ten, I take off my shoes."

He was sandbagging; he was n.o.body's fool. Morrell paused one more time. Then he asked, "Whatever the Kaiser's boys are working on, are we working on it, too?"

Dowling had started to light a smoke-a Confederate brand, no doubt captured or confiscated here in Virginia. He froze with the cigarette in his mouth and the match, still unstruck, in his hand. "You know, General, I asked my . . . friend the very same question."

"And? What did he tell you?"

"He told me to mind my own G.o.dd.a.m.n business and get the h.e.l.l out of his office." Dowling did light the cigarette then. He took a long, deep drag, as if he wanted to escape the memory of his friend's reply. "So you can take that any way you want to. Either we aren't or we are and we don't want to talk about it-really don't want to. You pays your money and you takes your choice." don't want to. You pays your money and you takes your choice."

"You sound like that colored band that got away from the Confederates," Morrell said. "They put them on the wireless enough, don't they?"

"Oh, you might say so." Dowling's voice was dry. "Yes, you just might. But propaganda is where you find it."

"And isn't that the sad and sorry truth?" Morrell looked west from Culpeper, the town where Dowling presently made his headquarters. The Blue Ridge Mountains sawtoothed the horizon. The mountains didn't worry Morrell so much. What the Confederates might have lurking in them did. "Is Patton going to try to hit us from the flank again?"

"He's welcome to, by G.o.d. He'll have even less fun than he did the last time," Abner Dowling growled. "But things seem pretty quiet off to the west. If what the spies say is true, the enemy's pulled some forces away from there."

"Where have they gone, then?" Morrell asked the immediately obvious question-not only was it obvious, it was important.

"Best guess is, to attack our salient on the other side of the Rapidan."

"The Wilderness." Morrell made a discontented-almost a disgusted-noise. "I've been down there. I've looked it over. You couldn't come up with worse country for barrels if you tried for a year. What on earth possessed General MacArthur to get a foothold there there?"

Dowling considered before answering, "Well, General, you'll have to understand that he and I are not on the most intimate terms." By the pained expression he bore, that was an understatement. "My guess is only a guess, then. I suppose that's where we have the foothold because it's the only place we could get one."

"I see," Morrell said-two words that covered a lot of Deeply Regrets telegrams from the War Department. After a meditative pause of his own, he added, "Do you suppose that salient does us more good than it does the Confederates?"

"I hope hope so," Dowling answered, which wasn't quite what Morrell had asked. "If we can ever get out of that nasty second growth, the terrain gets better. But the Confederates know that as well as we do, and they don't want to turn us loose." so," Dowling answered, which wasn't quite what Morrell had asked. "If we can ever get out of that nasty second growth, the terrain gets better. But the Confederates know that as well as we do, and they don't want to turn us loose."

"How many casualties are we taking down there?" Morrell asked. "They can hit us from three sides at once."

"It's . . . bothersome," Dowling admitted, which meant it was probably a lot worse than that. "What we need to do is get barrels over onto the other side of the Rapidan in country where we can really use them. I'm glad you're here-if anyone can arrange that, you're the man."

"Thanks," Morrell said. "I'm just glad I'm anywhere right now." As if to underscore that, his shoulder twinged again. "I've been thinking about that particular problem myself, and I've got a few ideas."

"You'll want to talk with a map in front of you," Dowling said, proving he'd done a good deal of planning in his time, too. He waved back toward the frame house. "Shall we?"

"In a minute," Morrell said. "Let me scrounge another one of those nice cigarettes off you, if you don't mind."

"Not a bit." Dowling stuck another one in his mouth, too. "Really taste like tobacco, don't they? Not like . . ." He paused, searching for a simile.

Morrell supplied one: "Horses.h.i.t."

Dowling laughed. "Well, now that you mention it, yes." He lit it; his cheeks hollowed as he inhaled. "d.a.m.n things are supposed to be h.e.l.l on the wind. You couldn't prove it by me-I never had any wind to begin with." He patted his belly as if it were an old friend-and so, no doubt, it was.

"I don't think they've hurt mine much," Morrell said. Unlike Dowling, he was usually in good, hard shape, though his stay in the hospital had set him back. He took another drag.

Planes buzzed by overhead. Morrell automatically looked around for the closest trench, and spotted one less than ten feet away. He could jump into it in a hurry if they dove on him. But they kept going: they were U.S. fighters heading south to strafe the Confederates and shoot up C.S. dive bombers and whatever else they could find.

"Good luck, boys," he called to the pilots once he was sure they wouldn't come after him.

"Amen," Abner Dowling agreed, adding, "We could use the Lord on our side. Considering what Featherston's people are up to, He'd better be."

"Well, yes," Morrell said, "but you know what they say about the Lord helping people who help themselves. We'd better do some of that, too, or we're in real trouble." He almost wished Dowling would have told him he was wrong, but Dowling didn't.

V.

Second Lieutenant Thayer Monroe wasn't even a bulge in his pappy's pants when the Great War ended. He was just out of West Point, and so new an officer, he squeaked. He really did did squeak; he had a thin tenor voice that often didn't seem to have finished breaking. He went tomato-red whenever something he was saying came out especially shrill. squeak; he had a thin tenor voice that often didn't seem to have finished breaking. He went tomato-red whenever something he was saying came out especially shrill.

First Sergeant Chester Martin hadn't expected anything different, so he wasn't disappointed. The recruiters back in California had as much as told him this was what he'd be doing. Veteran noncoms held pipsqueak officers' hands till the pipsqueaks either figured out what they were doing or got wounded or killed. In the first case, the blooded officers commonly won promotion. In the second, they left the platoon for less pleasant reasons. Either way, the platoon got a new, green CO, and the first sergeant's job started all over again.

At the moment, Lieutenant Monroe's platoon sprawled on the ground under some oaks not far outside of Falmouth, Virginia. On the other side of the Rappahannock, the Confederates held Fredericksburg. Scuttleb.u.t.t said General MacArthur's next try at dislodging the enemy from his defenses in front of Richmond would go through the C.S. forces here.

"What do you think, Sarge?" asked Charlie Baumgartner, a corporal who led one of the squads in the platoon. "They gonna send us over the river?"

"Beats me," Martin answered. "I hope to G.o.d they don't. I don't like getting shot at any better than the next guy."

"Yeah, well, that's on account of you've got your head screwed on tight," Baumgartner said. He was more than twenty years younger than Chester, but he'd been in the Army for a while. "Some people . . ." He didn't go on.

He didn't need to, either. Lieutenant Monroe was telling anybody who'd listen what a howling waste they were going to make out of Fredericksburg and its Confederate defenders. Since he outranked everyone close by, people had to listen. Whether they believed him was liable to be a different story.

"Our bombardment will stun them. It will paralyze them," Monroe burbled. "They'll never know what hit them. We'll get over the river without the least little bit of trouble."

Baumgartner's grunt was redolent of skepticism. So was Chester Martin's. He'd seen lots of bombardments, which Thayer Monroe plainly hadn't. Not even the fiercest one knocked an enemy out altogether. As soon as the bombing and the sh.e.l.ling let up, the survivors ran for their machine guns and popped up out of their holes with rifles in their hands.

The noncoms in the platoon all plainly knew as much. But rank had its privileges: no one told Monroe to shut up. Chester thought about it. He would have been more diplomatic than that if he'd decided to do it. In the end, he kept quiet with the rest. The young lieutenant was heartening new men who hadn't been through the mill yet. That counted for something.

But when Thayer Monroe said, "We ought to be in Richmond a week after we break through at Fredericksburg," Chester cleared his throat. For a wonder, the lieutenant noticed. "You said something, Sergeant?"

"Well, no, sir. Not exactly, sir." Chester knew he had to be polite to the snotnose with the gold bar on each shoulder strap. He wasn't convinced Monroe deserved such courtesy, but the military insisted on it. "Only, sir, it might be better if you don't make promises we can't keep."

Monroe stared at him. Failure had plainly never crossed the shavetail's mind. He said, "Sergeant, once we cross the river, we will will go forward." He might have been propounding a law of nature. go forward." He might have been propounding a law of nature.

He might have been, but he wasn't. Chester knew it too well. "Yes, sir," he said, meaning, No, sir. No, sir.

Maybe Monroe wasn't altogether an idiot. He heard what Martin wasn't saying. Stiffly, he said, "When the order comes, Sergeant, we will will go forward." go forward."

"Oh, yes, sir," Martin agreed-he couldn't quarrel with that, not without ending up in big trouble himself. But he did want to persuade the lieutenant not to take on faith everything his superiors told him. "Sir, when you were at West Point, did you study the battles on the Roanoke front?"

"Sure." Monroe chuckled. "All twelve or fourteen of them, or however many there were."

To him, those fights were just things he'd studied in school. He could laugh about them. Chester couldn't. His memories were too dark. "Sir, I was there for the first six or eight-till I got wounded. I was lucky. It was just a hometowner. But before every attack, they told us this would be the one that did the trick. Do you wonder that after a while we had trouble jumping up and down when they told us to go over the top?"

"I hope we've got better at what we're doing since then." By the way Thayer Monroe said it, it was a forgone conclusion that the Army had.

"So do I." By the way Chester Martin said it, it was anything but.

The bombardment started on schedule, regardless of Martin's opinion. It didn't go on for days, the way it would have during the Great War. The men in charge of the guns had had learned something. Long bombardments did more to tell the enemy where the attack was going in than they did to smash him flat. Make him keep his head down, then strike hard-that was the prevailing wisdom these days. learned something. Long bombardments did more to tell the enemy where the attack was going in than they did to smash him flat. Make him keep his head down, then strike hard-that was the prevailing wisdom these days.

Martin would have liked it better if they hadn't had to throw bridges across the Rappahannock before they could cross. He and the rest of the platoon-the rest of the regiment-waited by the river for the engineers to do their job. Martin liked and admired military engineers. They were good at their specialized trade, and when they had to they made pretty fair combat soldiers, too.

They did their d.a.m.nedest on the Rappahannock, but they never had a chance. Even though U.S. artillery kept pounding Fredericksburg, Confederate machine guns and mortars started pounding the engineers right back. Guns up in the hills behind the town, guns that had stayed quiet so the U.S. cannon wouldn't spot them and knock them out ahead of time, added their weight of metal to the countersh.e.l.ling.

And they added more than metal. The U.S. engineers had to try to do strenuous work in gas masks. U.S. guns had thrown poison gas at Fredericksburg along with everything else, and the C.S. artillery replied in kind. Martin was wearing his mask well before the order went out to put them on. He'd seen mustard gas the last time around. He hadn't seen what they called nerve agents-those were new. But he didn't want to make their acquaintance the hard way.

Confederate Mules-U.S. soldiers more often called them a.s.skickers-swooped down on the bridges. These days, the gull-winged dive bombers weren't the symbol of terror they had been when the war was new. They were slow and ungainly; U.S. fighters hacked them out of the sky with ease when they ventured into airs.p.a.ce where the CSA didn't have superiority. But they still had a role to play. They screamed down, put bombs on three bridges, and zoomed away at just above treetop level.

"I hate those b.a.s.t.a.r.ds, but they've got b.a.l.l.s." Because of Corporal Baumgartner's mask, his voice sounded distant and otherworldly.

"You want to know what I think, I think we have to be nuts to try to cross here at all," Martin said. Baumgartner didn't argue with him. He wished the other noncom would have.

U.S. raiders in rubber boats tried crossing the Rappahannock to quiet the mortar crews and machine gunners and riflemen on the other side. Despite smoke screens and heavy U.S. fire, a lot of the boats got sunk before they made it to the south bank of the river. The raiders who managed to cross no doubt did their best, but Chester couldn't see that Confederate fire diminished even a little.

About every half hour, Lieutenant Monroe would say, "We'll get the order to cross any minute now, men," or, "It won't be long!" or, "Be ready!" Knowing how stubborn the high bra.s.s could be, Chester feared the platoon leader was right, but kept hoping he was wrong.