Settling Accounts_ Drive To The East - Part 40
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Part 40

A rifle shot rang out. A bullet struck sparks from the bricks just behind the head of the soldier who'd thrown the grenade. He hit the dirt. Three other Confederates pointed in three different directions, which meant n.o.body'd seen where the shot came from. The machine gun might be gone, but the Yankees hadn't given up the fight for this block. It didn't seem as if they would till they were all dead.

Down in the CSA, some people-mostly those who hadn't been through the Great War-still believed U.S. soldiers were nothing but a pack of cowards. Tom laughed as he ducked down into a sh.e.l.l hole to shed his mask and smoke a cigarette-he didn't turn blue and keel over, so it was safe enough. And much better not to let the match or the coal give the d.a.m.nyankee sniper a target. He just wished Confederate propaganda were true. Pittsburgh would have fallen long since.

A runner came skittering back to him, calling his name. "Here I am!" he shouted, not raising his head. "What's up?"

"Sir, there's a Yankee with a flag of truce right up at the front," the runner replied. "Wants to know if he can come back and d.i.c.ker a truce for the wounded."

The last time a U.S. officer proposed something like that, he'd scouted out the C.S. positions as he moved with his white flag. The d.a.m.nyankees kept the truce, but they knew just where to strike after it ended. Tom threw down the half-finished smoke. "I'll meet the son of a b.i.t.c.h at the line," he growled.

He made his own flag of truce from a stick and a pillowcase, then went up with the runner. The truce already seemed to be informally under way. Firing had stopped. Confederates were swapping packs of cigarettes for U.S. ration cans. Both sides deplored that. Neither could do anything about it. Commerce trumped orders. The Yankees had better canned goods and worse tobacco, the Confederates the opposite.

A U.S. captain in a dirty uniform waited for Tom. "I could have come to you," the man remarked.

Colleton smiled a crooked smile. "I bet you could," he said, and explained why he didn't want the Yankee back of his lines.

"I wouldn't do a thing like that," the U.S. officer said, much too innocently. "And I'm sure you wouldn't, either."

"Who, me?" Tom said with another smile like the first. The U.S. captain matched it. They'd been through the mill, all right. Tom got down to business: "Is an hour long enough, or do you want two?"

"Split the difference?" the d.a.m.nyankee suggested, and Tom nodded. The captain looked at his watch. "All right, Lieutenant-Colonel. Truce till 1315, then?"

"Agreed." Tom stuck out his hand. The U.S. captain shook it. They both turned back to their own men and shouted out the news. Corpsmen from both sides came forward. Ordinary soldiers did some more trading. Somebody had a football. C.S. and U.S. soldiers tossed it back and forth. Tom remembered the 1914 Christmas truce, when the Great War almost unraveled. He knew that wouldn't happen here. Both sides meant it now.

Corpsmen poked around through rubble. They called outside of smashed houses. Sometimes they got answers from smashed people trapped inside. Soldiers helped move wreckage so the medics could do their job. When U.S. corpsmen found wounded C.S. soldiers, they gave them back to the Confederates. Corpsmen in b.u.t.ternut returned the favor for the Yankees.

Tom and the officer in green-gray-his name was Julian Nesmith-hadn't agreed to that, but neither of them tried to stop it. "Won't change how things end up one way or the other," Nesmith remarked.

"I was thinking the same thing about smokes and grub a little while ago," Tom agreed. He'd handed Captain Nesmith a couple of packs of Raleighs, and was now the proud possessor of two cans of deviled ham, a delicacy esteemed on both sides of the front. His mouth watered. If he could scrounge up some eggs . . . Even if he couldn't, the ham would be a treat.

"We might as well be comfortable as we can while we slaughter each other," Nesmith said.

"We're enemies," Tom said simply. "You won't make me believe the United States wants to do anything but to squash my country, and I don't expect I can persuade you the Confederate States aren't full of villains."

"It wouldn't matter if you did," Nesmith answered. "As long as you've got villains at the top, all they have to do is shout loud enough to make everybody else go along."

That came close to hitting below the belt. Tom hadn't much cared to listen to Jake Featherston on the wireless at all hours of the day and night. But Jake Featherston had got Kentucky and Houston back into the CSA after the d.a.m.nyankees stole them at gunpoint in 1917. The Whigs hadn't come close to managing that. Featherston was doing something about the Negroes in the Confederate States, too. The Whigs hadn't known what to do. And so . . .

"Who's a villain and who isn't depends on how you look at things," Tom said.

"Sometimes," Julian Nesmith replied.

They shook hands again when the truce ended. Corpsmen disappeared. Men got back under cover. Almost ceremoniously, a U.S. soldier fired a Springfield to warn anybody who hadn't got the word. In that same spirit, a Confederate soldier answered with one round from a Tredegar.

Then another Confederate squeezed off a burst from his automatic rifle. A U.S. machine gun opened up. Tom sighed. The little peace had been nice while it lasted.

Salt Lake City wasn't h.e.l.l, but you could see it from there. Armstrong Grimes peered toward the rubble of the Mormon Temple-twice built and now twice destroyed. He peered very cautiously. All the Mormons still fighting were veterans. Some of them were veterans of two uprisings. Show any body part, and they'd put a bullet through it faster than you could say Jack Robinson.

Armstrong wondered who the h.e.l.l Jack Robinson was. He also wondered how life would change now that he was a sergeant instead of a corporal. He'd hesitated before sewing the new stripes onto his sleeve. The Mormons' snipers liked to pick off officers and noncoms.

Yossel Reisen had two stripes now. He wore them, too. Their promotions both came through while the regiment was in reserve in Thistle. Somebody must have thought they were on the ball when that woman blew herself up in Provo. All Armstrong knew was that the two of them hadn't got badly hurt when the people bomb went off, and afterward he'd done what anybody else would have. That must have been enough to impress one officer or another.

He turned to Reisen, who crouched behind a stone fence not far away. "You hear the skinny last night?" he said. "They figure Sergeant Stowe's gonna make it."

"Yeah, somebody told me." Yossel nodded. "I would've thought he was a goner for sure. He looked like h.e.l.l."

"Boy, didn't he?" Armstrong said.

"He's lucky."

"Hunh-unh." Now Armstrong shook his head. "We're lucky. We didn't catch shrapnel. We aren't in the hospital with our guts all messed up. If Stowe was lucky, he'd still be here, same as we are. Instead, he's in a bed somewhere, and they probably have to shoot morphine into him all the G.o.dd.a.m.n time. Belly wounds are supposed to hurt like anything." lucky. We didn't catch shrapnel. We aren't in the hospital with our guts all messed up. If Stowe was lucky, he'd still be here, same as we are. Instead, he's in a bed somewhere, and they probably have to shoot morphine into him all the G.o.dd.a.m.n time. Belly wounds are supposed to hurt like anything."

His vehemence surprised him. It must have surprised Yossel Reisen, too. Armstrong didn't usually argue with him. Yossel was older and more experienced, even if he didn't care about rank. Here, though, Armstrong couldn't keep quiet. And after a few seconds, Yossel nodded. "Well, you're right," he said. "He's alive, and that's good, but he still isn't lucky."

"There you go," Armstrong said. "That's how it looks to me, too."

"Sarge! Hey, Sarge!" somebody yelled.

Armstrong needed a moment to remember that meant him. "Yeah? What is it?" he said, a beat slower than he should have.

"Mormon coming up with a flag of truce."

Firing had died away. Armstrong hadn't noticed that, either. He felt as far down on sleep as he had before his regiment got R and R. Cautiously, he stuck his head up again. Sure as h.e.l.l, here came a Mormon in what the rebels used for a uniform: chambray shirt, dungarees, and boots. "Hold it right there, buddy, or you'll never know how your favorite serial comes out on the wireless!" Armstrong yelled.

The Mormon waved the white flag. "I want to talk to an officer. I mean no harm."

"Yeah, now tell me another one," Armstrong said. "How do I know you're not a G.o.dd.a.m.n people bomb waiting to go off?"

"Because I say I am not," the rebel answered. "I am a major in the Army of the State of Deseret." Armstrong could hear the capital letters thud into place.

Capital letters didn't impress him. "And I'm the Queen of the May," he said. "You want to come forward?" He waited for the Mormon to nod, then made a peremptory gesture. "Strip. Show me you're not loaded with f.u.c.king TNT."

If looks could kill . . . But they couldn't, and TNT might. Fuming, the Mormon major shed his boots, his jeans, and his shirt. He even took off his Stetson. That left him in a peculiar-looking undershirt and longish drawers. It was getting toward long-underwear time-nights were downright chilly-but it hadn't got there yet. The strange getup didn't particularly bother Armstrong; he'd seen it on other Mormons. Some sort of religious rule said they had to wear it.

That didn't mean he had to trust it. "Lift up the shirt," he called. "The drawers are snug enough-don't bother with those." The Mormon did, showing a hard belly covered with hair a shade darker than the blond hair on his head. Armstrong waved to him. "Now turn around." After the rebel did, Armstrong reluctantly nodded. "All right. Looks like you're clean. Put your stuff back on and come ahead."

As the Mormon major dressed, he said, "I ought to complain to your officers."

"Go ahead, buddy," Armstrong said. "You think they'll come down on me? I I think they'll pat me on the back. They don't trust you people any further than I do, and I don't trust you at all." think they'll pat me on the back. They don't trust you people any further than I do, and I don't trust you at all."

"Believe me, we feel the same way about you," the Mormon said, bending to tie his bootlaces. "If you would only leave us alone-"

"If you hadn't risen up, I'd be back east somewhere with Confederates trying to shoot me," Armstrong said. "And you'd be here in Utah, happy as a G.o.dd.a.m.n clam. They didn't even conscript you people."

"We want to be free. We want to be independent," the Mormon said as he picked up his white flag. "What's so wicked about that?" He came toward the U.S. lines.

Armstrong laughed a dirty laugh. "You want to have lots of wives. Are they all in the same bed when you screw 'em? Does one lick your b.a.l.l.s while another one gets on top?"

The Mormon's jaw set. "It's a good thing I don't know your name, Sergeant." He walked past Armstrong as if he didn't exist. Armstrong called for a couple of privates to take him back toward the rear.

"He's going to put you on a list even if he doesn't know your name," Yossel said. "You'll be the sergeant in so-and-so sector, and those b.a.s.t.a.r.ds will be gunning for you."

"Big f.u.c.king deal." Armstrong laughed again. "Easy enough to get shot around here even when the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds aren't gunning for you. Won't make a whole h.e.l.l of a lot of difference one way or the other."

"You better hope it won't." Yossel seemed willing to look on the gloomy side of life.

"Screw it. n.o.body's even shooting right now." Armstrong lived for, and in, the moment. The less you thought about all the horrible things that had happened, the horrible things that would happen, and the horrible things that might happen, the better off you were.

After a bit, Captain Lloyd Deevers came over and got down in the hole with him. Armstrong liked Deevers a lot better than Lieutenant Streczyk, who ran the platoon. Deevers actually had a pretty good idea of what he was doing. He nodded to Armstrong now and said, "I don't think that Mormon likes you."

"Now ask me if I care, sir," Armstrong answered. "I don't like him, either."

Deevers chuckled. "All right. I'm not going to flabble about it-except if you want to transfer to some other outfit on the line, I won't say no."

"No, thanks, sir. I already told Reisen I can stop one as easy somewhere else as I can here," Armstrong said. Captain Deevers grinned and slapped him on the back. Armstrong asked, "Did that Mormon say why he wanted the truce?"

"Not to me," Deevers answered. "He wanted to talk to the high mucky-mucks. I pa.s.sed him back to Division HQ, and we'll see what they do with him. If I had to guess, I'd say he wants to d.i.c.ker a surrender that isn't really a surrender, if you know what I mean. But that's only a guess."

"Good f.u.c.king luck, uh, sir," Armstrong said. Lloyd Deevers laughed.

"He would have had a better chance before they started blowing themselves up," Yossel said. "If we let 'em off the hook now, it's like they screwed it out of us. And if they want something else, they'll think all they have to do is use a few more people bombs to make us give in."

"That's how it looks to me, too, especially since we've almost got 'em licked," Armstrong said.

"Well, boys, I won't argue with either one of you, 'cause I think you're dead right," Deevers said. "But it isn't up to me, any more than it's up to you. We'll see what the fellows with the stars on their shoulders have to say-and maybe the fellows in the cutaway coats, too."

"They'll screw it up," Armstrong predicted. "They always do." He waved a hand at the devastation all around. The wreckage and the smell of corpses might not prove his point, but they didn't come out and call him a liar, either.

Captain Deevers just shrugged. "Like I told you, I can't do anything about it, either. I suppose what they decide to do here depends a lot on how things look in Pennsylvania and up in Canada."

That made sense. Armstrong might have been happier if it didn't. Soldiers in Utah didn't hear much news from Pennsylvania. Not hearing news was a bad sign all by itself. When things went right, n.o.body on the wireless would shut up about it. That same ominous quiet came out of Canada. For all Armstrong knew, hordes of p.i.s.sed-off Canucks were swarming over the border toward Minneapolis and Seattle.

"We're off in the back of beyond," Yossel said. "n.o.body tells us anything."

"Wonder how much news about us gets out," Captain Deevers said musingly.

"You ought to ask your aunt," Armstrong told Yossel. He kept an eye on the company CO as he spoke. Deevers didn't blink. He was fairly new to the unit, but he knew it had a VIP's nephew.

Yossel said, "She doesn't tell me a whole lot-nothing I'm not supposed to know. She's got to worry about security like anybody else."

"Too bad," Armstrong said. "What's the point of being related to a big shot if you don't get anything out of it?"

"People always say that," Yossel Reisen answered. "But if somebody important gives you a hand all the time, how do you know what you're good for by yourself?"

He had a point. Armstrong could see it. His family, though, had no fancy connections. He thought not having to worry about money or a good job or the right college would be awfully nice. No doors had opened for him because he was so-and-so's nephew. His family had plenty of so-and-sos in it, but not that kind.

Somebody called a question across the line to the Mormons: "How long is this truce supposed to last?"

"Till the major comes back," a rebel answered. "Then we give you thieving wretches more of what you deserve."

Thieving wretches. Armstrong smiled in spite of himself. The Mormons seldom came right out and cussed. Some of the insults they used instead sounded pretty funny. Armstrong smiled in spite of himself. The Mormons seldom came right out and cussed. Some of the insults they used instead sounded pretty funny.

Men on both sides walked around and stretched, showing their faces without fear of taking a bullet if they did. The Mormons were scrupulous about honoring truces. U.S. soldiers smoked. Some of them probably had something better than water in their canteens. The Mormons weren't supposed to use tobacco or alcohol, and most of them didn't. Armstrong figured that meant s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g was the only way they could have a good time. They sure did that. They'd raised up a big new generation of rebels after getting one killed off in their uprising during the Great War.

In midafternoon U.S. soldiers pa.s.sed the Mormon officer back through the lines to his own side. His face was a thunderstorm of fury. He hardly even had an extra glare for Armstrong as he went by. The Mormons fired a warning shot into the air. A U.S. soldier answered it. A couple of minutes later, a screaming meemie came down on Armstrong's company, and then another one. All things considered, maybe he would rather have stayed anonymous.

Leonard O'Doull had worked in a hospital before. He'd met his wife working in one outside of Riviere-du-Loup during the last war. If the authorities hadn't decided Lucien Galtier was an unreliable nuisance and confiscated his land for the building, Nicole never would have come to work there. O'Doull knew he wouldn't have settled in the Republic of Quebec if he hadn't made family ties. Sometimes very strange things could twist a man's fate.

He was in a fancier hospital now. The University of Pittsburgh had had one of the best medical schools in the USA, and a large hospital where staff members trained residents, interns, medical students, and nurses. Now the hospital was full of wounded and ga.s.sed soldiers. Along with the people in training-those who hadn't put on the uniform-the staff were getting trained themselves, by experts like Leonard O'Doull and Granville McDougald.

"Speed," McDougald told a surgeon with an old-fashioned, upturned Kaiser Bill mustache. "The faster we can get to 'em, the better they do. If we're operating less than an hour after they get hit, they'll probably make it. Every minute after that hurts their chances."

The white-mustached healer nodded. "I've also seen this in motorcar accidents," he said.

"It's even more critical with gunshot and shrapnel wounds, because the trauma's usually worse," McDougald said. The surgeon nodded again, thoughtfully, and walked down the corridor. McDougald looked over at Leonard O'Doull and grinned. "Look at me, Doc, going on just like I know what I'm talking about."

"Don't sandbag, Granny," O'Doull answered. "When it comes to wounds, who's seen more than you?"

"n.o.body this side of the guy who cuts up steers in a Chicago slaughterhouse," McDougald said. "But he always sees the same ones. Not like that in our line of work, is it?"

"Always something new," O'Doull agreed. "People keep coming up with new ways to maim their fellow man. I don't know why I don't despair of the human race."

"Somebody once said people were the missing link between apes and human beings," McDougald said wistfully. "d.a.m.ned if he didn't hit that one on the b.u.t.ton."

"Didn't he just?" O'Doull listened to the artillery outside. "If the Confederates get over the Allegheny, we're going to be even busier than we are already."

"So will they," McDougald said. "They'll be busier than a one-armed paper hanger with the hives. They may take this place away from us, but Christ!-they're paying through the nose."

Leonard O'Doull nodded. It looked that way to him, too. The dashing C.S. barrels weren't dashing, not in Pittsburgh. They had to fight their way forward house by house, and a lot of them ended up as burnt-out hulks. Confederate infantry had trouble advancing without the barrels, too. Local U.S. counterattacks meant the hospital held a good many wounded Confederates along with U.S. soldiers. That might have been for the best-the more of their own men in this place, the less inclined the Confederates would be to hit it "by accident."

"Wouldn't put it past 'em," McDougald said when O'Doull remarked on that. "They fought as clean as we did the last time around. Here? Now?" He made a sour face. "I think they cheat when they use the Red Cross, and I think they think we cheat, too. Makes them more likely to hit our aid stations and hospitals and ambulances. Featherston's f.u.c.kers, sure as h.e.l.l."

"I hope that isn't true." O'Doull let it go there. The bad news seemed more likely to be true with each unfolding day. There were even rumors Featherston himself traveled in an ambulance to keep U.S. fighters from shooting him up.

"Well, Doc, if you want some consolation, the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds in b.u.t.ternut aren't as bad as they could be," Granville McDougald said. "It sounds like the Action Francaise Action Francaise boys really abuse the Red Cross." boys really abuse the Red Cross."

"Yeah. I've heard that, too," O'Doull said. "There's another war as big as this one going on over there-"

"Bigger," the medic said.

"Bigger, all right." O'Doull accepted the correction. "But it's like noises in another room to us. Oh, we're working with the German High Seas Fleet where we can, but mostly we've got our troubles, and Germany and Austria-Hungary have theirs."

"Austria-Hungary's got more troubles than you can shake a stick at," McDougald observed. "All the uprisings in the Balkans make what's going on in Utah and Canada look like pretty small potatoes." He grinned crookedly at O'Doull. "Might as well be Ireland, matter of fact."

"Heh," O'Doull said sourly-something that sounded like a laugh but really wasn't. With U.S. help, Ireland had thrown off the English yoke after the Great War. The first thing Winston Churchill's government did when the new round of fighting flared was send in barrels and bombers and battleships. The Union Jack flew again in Belfast and Dublin and Cork-and the island heaved with rebellion. "I wonder how long it'll be before Irish people bombs start going off in London."