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Gunpowder Empire

Page 24

by Harry Turtledove


  “This town took a beating, didn’t it?” Dad said, as Jeremy closed the door behind them. “It’s in worse shape than I thought it would be.”

  “Like I told you, the Lietuvans broke in once,” Jeremy answered. “The garrison managed to drive them out again.” He still didn’t say anything about stabbing the Lietuvan soldier. He knew he wouldn’t forget it, but wished he could.

  Mom and Dad walked out into the courtyard. Dad clicked his tongue between his teeth when he saw the places where the kitchen roof had been repaired. The new tiles were a brighter red than those that had stood out in the sun for a while. “You were lucky,” he said. Jeremy nodded.

  Amanda went into the kitchen. She came out carrying a tray. “I knew you were coming, so I baked a cake,” she said. It was, of course, a honey cake—honey did duty for sugar here most of the time. Along with it, the tray held a jar of wine and four cups.

  Everyone poured out a small libation. The cake was sweet. The wine was sweeter. Having the family together again was sweetest of all. “How long till we can go home?” Jeremy asked. Like Amanda and his parents, he was still speaking neoLatin. Voices carried. No point in rousing suspicion.

  “Our replacements left Carnuto a couple of days after us,” Mom answered, which told him what he needed to know and didn’t tell the neighbors anything they didn’t need to know.

  “The accounts are in good shape,” Jeremy said. “We had to collect in silver, not grain, for a while. You know about that.”

  Dad and Mom both nodded. Dad said, “You did what you had to do. No one will hold that against you. Sooner or later, we’ll turn the silver back into grain.”

  Amanda stirred. “I used some of the silver to buy Maria’s freedom. I liked her before, but we got to be really good friends during the siege. The people we all work for will probably bill us on account of it.”

  Jeremy thought the same thing. He hadn’t said anything to Amanda about it, because he understood why she’d done what she’d done. Even so, he doubted Crosstime Traffic’s accounting computers would.

  But Dad just shrugged. Mom smiled. Neither one seemed the least bit upset. Dad said, “Don’t worry about it, sweetheart. You’re not the first person to do something like that, and you won’t be the last.”

  “Really?” Amanda sounded amazed. “When we train to go out into the alternates, they tell us and tell us not to have anything to do with freeing slaves. They say we’re not supposed to mess with slavery at all.”

  “They tell you that to keep you from getting into trouble,” Dad answered. “But you didn’t get into trouble here. You did everything by the book.”

  Mom added, “Besides, a lot of the people who teach those training courses have never been out in the alternates themselves. Saying, ‘Never do this,’ is a lot easier when you’ve never had to worry about doing it yourself.”

  “Once you’ve gone out and seen some of the things people do in the alternates, a lot of the time you do want to change it. You can’t help yourself. It’s ugly,” Dad said.

  “What exactly are you saying?” Jeremy asked. “Are you saying we shouldn’t pay any attention to what they tell us in the training sessions? Why do we have them, in that case?” He liked authority no better than anyone else his age. If the stuff they fed him was pointless, he didn’t want to have to go through it.

  “No, I’m not saying that. You do have to pay attention,” Dad answered. “But what you run into in the real world—in the real alternates—isn’t just the same as what they tell you about in training. When you get out on your own, you have to use your own judgment. Amanda did that. We’re not mad at her. We’re proud of her.”

  Amanda looked so smug, Jeremy wanted to hit her. He didn’t like her getting praised when he didn’t. She probably didn’t like him getting praised when she didn’t. That wasn’t his worry, though. That was hers.

  Then Mom said, “We’re proud of both of you, as a matter of fact. It sounds like you did a great job here. You’re not supposed to be on your own yet. You’re especially not supposed to be on your own in the middle of a war.”

  Dad’s chuckle had kind of a nasty edge. “The locals probably figured you bashed out our brains and buried us in the cellar.”

  “That’s not funny!” Amanda stopped acting smug. Her voice went shrill. “They did.”

  “They sure did,” Jeremy agreed. “If they’d been any more suspicious, they would have tried digging down there. That wouldn’t have been so good. They would have found all the grain we were storing, and they might have found the concrete over the subbasement.” He spoke quietly, so only the people in the courtyard could hear.

  “They couldn’t get through it,” Amanda said.

  “No, but they sure would have wondered why it was there,” Jeremy said. “Locals aren’t supposed to wonder about us at all.” He’d learned that in a training session, too. He’d never thought to doubt it, either. It seemed too obvious to need doubting.

  By then, Dad’s grin had fallen from his face. He poured himself another cup of wine. “I thought I was joking,” he said.

  “Nope.” Jeremy shook his head. “They do wonder about us. We sell things nobody else has. We sell for grain, not silver. They think that’s weird, too. I don’t know what we can do about it. Move out of Polisso, maybe, and start up again somewhere a long ways off. That would buy some time.”

  “Less than you think,” Dad said. “News doesn’t move fast here, but they keep records. They keep records like you wouldn’t believe, in fact. There’s bound to be a file on us back in Rome. Nobody’s ever come out here to ask question, so they can’t think we’re real important. But if we showed up in Spain or Britain instead of Polisso, news of that would get back to Rome, too. And a clerk who’d seen the one file would also see the other one. He’d wonder why we disappeared here and set up shop there. And somebody would start asking questions then. Or am I wrong?”

  Jeremy thought it over. He didn’t have to think very long. He’d already had his own run-ins with the bureaucracy of Agrippan Rome. “No, you’re right. I hope we don’t have to pull out of here and start over on some other alternate that looks a lot like this one.”

  “That would be a nuisance,” Dad agreed. “I wouldn’t want to have to say we’ve lost our grip on Agrippan Rome.” Jeremy and Amanda both made horrible faces. Dad grinned at them. He had no shame—he was proud when he did something like that. Still grinning, he went on, “We’re not the ones who make choices like that, anyway.”

  “One good thing,” Amanda said: “Even if the locals here found out we’re from crosstime, they couldn’t do anything about it. As long as we could jump into a transposition chamber, we’d be safe.”

  “True enough here,” Mom said. “But there are alternates where they have the technology to go crosstime themselves if they ever get the idea. Some of those aren’t nice worlds at all. Crosstime Traffic has to be real careful in places like that.”

  “It might be better if we didn’t go to those places ourselves,” Jeremy said. “Then we couldn’t give ourselves away.”

  “It might, but it might not, too,” Dad said. “If they found out how to build transposition chambers on their own and we didn’t know till we bumped into them on some alternate where we were both working…well, that wouldn’t be so good, either. So we stay and we watch and we try to be careful and we worry. Sometimes—a lot of the time—there are no clear answers, only hard choices.”

  Jeremy thought about that, too. It reminded him—reminded him uncomfortably—of his own worries after he and Amanda got stuck here. He said, “Things don’t seem as black-and-white to you as they do to me, do they?”

  Dad and Mom looked at each other. They both started laughing at the same time. Jeremy started to get mad. Dad saw that, too. He held up a hand. “No offense,” he said. “Honest, none. It makes us feel good that you’re growing up. It really does. It’s just that—”

  “You don’t know how right you are,” Mom broke in.

  �
��You sure don’t,” Dad said. “That’s what you’ll do between now and when you’re as old as we are. One of the things you’ll do, anyway. You’ll find out how right you are.”

  “The older you get, the more complicated things look,” Mom said. “That’s not because you’ll get smarter. You’ll just get more experience.”

  “You won’t get more RAM,” Dad added. “But you’ll have a lot more programs and a lot more files on your hard disk that you can use and read.”

  Not all of Dad’s comparisons made sense to Jeremy. That one did. He said, “What do we do if somebody from a nasty alternate figures out how to go crosstime?”

  Mom and Dad looked at each other again. They didn’t laugh this time. Slowly, Dad said, “I don’t know. I don’t think anybody else knows, either. What do you think we ought to do?”

  “A lot depends on when we find out they’re doing it,” Amanda said while Jeremy was still chewing on it. “We can do things if we catch them quick that we can’t if they have a chance to spread out.”

  She was right. Jeremy could see as much. He said, “I just hope it doesn’t happen, that’s all.”

  “Well, so do I,” Dad said. “But it probably will. It’s almost bound to, sooner or later.” He raised his winecup in a toast. “Here’s hoping it’s later.”

  They all drank to that.

  Two days later, the Robinson family came into Polisso. As Jeremy and his kin had before them, they walked in through the western gate. As far as anyone here was concerned, they came from Carnuto. They were all small and dark. For looks and size, they fit in better than the Solters family did. They too had a boy and a girl. The boy, Michael, was thirteen or fourteen. The girl’s name was Stephanie. She was Jeremy’s age, and pretty enough almost to make him sorry he was leaving. That was all the more true because she seemed very impressed about what he and Amanda had gone through during the siege.

  Amanda noticed Jeremy noticing Stephanie. She got him aside and asked, “Well, are you going to tell her all about what a hero you were?”

  “No!” He shook his head violently. That hadn’t even crossed his mind. He said, “I never even want to think about that again, let alone brag about it.”

  His sister eyed him. After a few seconds, she nodded. He felt oddly relieved. He might have just passed a test, and an important one. Amanda said, “All right.” She started to turn away, then seemed to decide that wasn’t enough. “Better than all right, in fact. I wouldn’t like it if you got all blood-thirsty on me.”

  “You don’t need to worry about that,” Jeremy promised. “I saw that guy get shot when I was up on the wall at the start of the siege. It wasn’t movie blood or video-game blood. It was real. I could smell it.” He shuddered. “And it could have been me as easy as him. Nothing but dumb luck, one way or the other. Anybody who goes on about how glorious war is, should have been there, you know what I mean?”

  “Oh, yes.” Amanda nodded again. “I know just what you mean. I was there when that cannonball came down by the fountain. That could have been me, too. And you could see the blood in the cracks between the cobblestones for days afterwards. Maybe you still can, if you get down on your hands and knees and look close.”

  Mr. and Mrs. Robinson were hashing things out with Mom and Dad. They were talking about business, and about exactly how big a snoop the city prefect was. It all mattered if you were going to do business in Polisso. Somehow, though, to Jeremy it seemed to be missing the real point.

  And what is the real point, if you’re so smart? he asked himself. After a little while, he came up with an answer: I suppose the real point is that life is cheap here, and you’ll get in trouble if you forget it. He wondered if he should have gone to the beast shows and the gladiator games at the amphitheater. They would have made him sick, but they would have taught him the lesson he needed to know.

  He also wondered if he ought to tell Michael and Stephanie Robinson to go. He shook his head. They wouldn’t go on his say-so. The locals’ blood sports would gross them out, just as they did with him. One way or another, the Robinsons would have to find out for themselves. And, seeing what Polisso was like, they probably would.

  In neoLatin, Stephanie was saying, “It smells so bad now that we’re in a town again.” She was careful about protecting the secret. Michael made gagging noises to show how he thought Polisso smelled. Jeremy hardly noticed the stink any more.

  But he noticed the fresher air when he and his sister and his parents left Polisso the next morning. The breeze was out of the west, so it blew away the city stench as soon as he and his family got outside the wall. He looked back in amazement. Somebody might have sent the air through a washer and dryer. He noticed Amanda and Mom and Dad smiling, too.

  They walked out toward the transposition chamber in the cave outside of town. A long line of cranes flew past overhead, bound for a warmer, friendlier country. Jeremy waved to the big, long-legged birds. He felt the same way.

  No one in sight in either direction. The road west from Polisso wasn’t a busy one. The Solters family didn’t have to wait before they went up the hillside to the trap door. Even inside the cave, Jeremy had trouble making himself believe the chamber would really show up.

  But then it appeared, on time to the second. The door opened. “In you go,” the operator said. To him, it was all routine. It wasn’t routine to Jeremy. It never would be again. So what, though? This time, everything would work fine.

  And it did.

  Tor Books by Harry Turtledove

  The Two Georges (by Richard Dreyfuss and Harry Turtledove)

  Household Gods (by Judith Tarr and Harry Turtledove)

  Between the Rivers

  Into the Darkness

  Darkness Descending

  Through the Darkness

  Rulers of the Darkness

  Jaws of Darkness

  Gunpowder Empire

  (writing as H. N. Turteltaub)

  Justinian

  Over the Wine-Dark Sea

  The Gryphon’s Skull

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.

  GUNPOWDER EMPIRE: CROSSTIME TRAFFIC—BOOK ONE

  Copyright © 2003 by Harry Turtledove

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.

  Edited by Patrick Nielsen Hayden

  A Tor Book

  Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

  175 Fifth Avenue

  New York, NY 10010

  www.tor-forge.com

  Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Turtledove, Harry.

  Gunpowder empire / Harry Turtledove.—1st ed.

  p. cm.

  “A Tom Doherty Associates book.”

  ISBN: 978-1-4299-1505-2

  1. Time travel—Fiction. 2. Teenage boys—Fiction. 3. California, Southern—

  Fiction. 4. Rome—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3570.U76G85 2003

  813'.54—dc21

  2003054334

 

 

 


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