“Ha!” Dowling said, and found the groups for a new message: SUGGEST YOU INQUIRE COMMANDING GENERAL THIS THEATER.
If the General Staff decided the plan was brilliant, they’d let MacArthur go ahead. So Dowling told himself, anyhow. But he also told himself somebody other than the scheme’s originator ought to look at it before it went forward.
He didn’t hear from Colonel Abell again. He also didn’t receive a detonation from Daniel MacArthur. Abell knew when to be subtle, then. MacArthur pulled no troops from Dowling’s command to go into a landing force. That didn’t leave Dowling downhearted, not at all. Sometimes what didn’t happen was as important as what did.
In spite of everything, reports from Philadelphia did get back to Richmond. They took a while, but they got here. Clarence Potter, unlike a lot of people in the Confederate government and military these days, was a patient man. Sooner or later, he expected he would find out what he needed to know.
One of the things he’d grown interested in was how reports got from Richmond to Philadelphia, to whatever opposite numbers he had there. A clerk in the U.S. War Department had sent by a roundabout route a U.S. report that . . . quoted Potter, as a matter of fact.
I believe the situation with regard to the Negroes in Mississippi is hectic, and our response to it must be dynamic. Seeing his own words come back was interesting—and exciting, too. He’d written several versions of that report. In another, he called the situation distressing and the needed response ferocious; in yet another, the keywords were alarming and merciless; and so on. He had a list of where the report with each set of keywords had been distributed. He kept that list in his wallet. No one but him could possibly get at it.
When he took out the list, he checked to see where the relevant words were hectic and dynamic. Then, whistling to himself, he went to Lieutenant General Forrest’s office. He had to cool his heels in an anteroom for half an hour before he could see the chief of the Confederate General Staff. By the glum expressions on the faces of the two major generals who emerged from Forrest’s inner office, they would have been glad to let him go before them.
“Good morning, General,” Nathan Bedford Forrest III said when Potter came in at last. “Sometimes you have to take people out to the woodshed. It’s not a hell of a lot of fun, but it’s part of the job.”
“Yes, sir. You’re right on both counts.” Potter closed the door behind him and lowered his voice: “You’re right on both counts, and you’ve got a Yankee spy somewhere in the Operations and Training Section.”
“Son of a bitch,” Forrest said. “Son of a bitch! So your cute little scheme there paid off, did it?”
“Yes, sir.” Clarence Potter nodded in somber satisfaction. “When I drafted that report on the guerrilla situation in Mississippi, I varied the words in some of the most important sentences. Each version went to a different section here in the War Department and in the State Department. If a spy sent it north and one of our people in the USA got it back to me, I’d know where it came from. I’ve had to wait longer than I wanted to, but that’s part of the game.”
“Operations and Training, eh?” A savage gleam came into Forrest’s eyes. His great-grandfather had probably worn that same expression just before he drew his saber and charged some luckless damnyankee cavalryman. “You have any idea who the snake in the grass is?”
“No, sir,” Potter answered. “I can’t even prove he’s the only spy in the War Department. But I know he’s there, and I can think of a couple of different ways to get after him.”
“I’m all ears,” Forrest said.
“One would be to do the same thing I did this time: make several versions of a report, one for each subsection of O and T. The problem with that is, getting results back from the USA is slow and uncertain,” Potter said. “The other one is the usual—seeing who has a grudge, seeing who’s spending more money than his salary accounts for, seeing who all had access to the report, and on and on. You’ll have plenty of people who can do that for you; you don’t need me to give them lessons.”
“Let’s try both approaches,” Nathan Bedford Forrest III said after only the barest pause for thought. “You fix up another report—hell, make it on the organization and training of spies. They’ll sit up and take notice of that. We’ll use it to winnow out suspects, or we’ll try to, anyway. And we’ll do the usual things, too. We don’t want to miss a trick here.”
Potter nodded. “All right, sir. I’ll take care of it. I wonder how much this bastard has given the USA without our ever noticing it.”
“When we catch him, we’ll squeeze him like an orange,” the chief of the General Staff promised. “Oh, yes. I have plenty of people who can take care of that for me, too.”
“No doubt, sir.” Now Potter did his best to hide his distaste. Intelligence work wasn’t always about friendly persuasion. Potter didn’t shrink from straightforward brutality, but he didn’t relish it, either. Some people did. They usually made better Freedom Party stalwarts and other sorts of strongarm men than they did spies—usually, but not always.
“You did a terrific job here, Potter,” Forrest said. “Your country won’t forget.”
“This is just a start. When we catch this son of a bitch, then I’ve done something,” Potter said.
“Well, at least we’re looking in the right place now—or one of the right places.” Forrest looked harried. “Jesus Christ! We’re liable to be ass-deep in these stinking Yankees.”
“Every one we ferret out is one we don’t have to worry about later.” Potter didn’t say that one captured spy would lead to others. It was possible, but not likely. If the Yankees had the brains God gave a blue crab, they’d have each spy sending what he found to someone he never saw, didn’t know, and would have a hard time betraying. Jack Smith wouldn’t know that Joe Doakes three desks over was also selling out his country. They could eat lunch together every day for twenty years without finding out about each other. He’d organized things in Philadelphia and Washington that way. His counterparts in green-gray would do the same thing.
“You fix up some fresh bait.” Nathan Bedford Forrest III might have been on a fishing trip. And so he was—but he hoped to fry up a nastier catch than crappie or bluegill. “We’ll take it from there.”
Potter recognized dismissal when he heard it. He got to his feet and saluted. “Yes, sir.” Out he went, coldly pleased with himself. He wished he could have talked with Anne Colleton about what he’d done. She would have appreciated it. She might have thought of it herself—she’d been nobody’s fool. If she hadn’t gone down to Charleston the day the Yankee carrier raided . . .
He shrugged. Bad luck came to everybody. You had to look at it that way, or else the voices that came to you in the wee small hours of bad nights started showing up at all hours every day. You weren’t good for anything then, to yourself or to anybody else. Bury your dead, drink a toast to them now and again, and move on. As long as you kept moving, you made a hard target.
They’d get you anyway, of course. Odds were, though, they’d take longer.
He sat down at his desk. It wasn’t as if he had nothing to do. He’d pile those bait reports on top of everything else. No rest for the weary, he thought. Or was it for the wicked? He never could remember. And what difference did it make? It fit either way.
He swore when the telephone rang. There went a perfectly good train of thought. He wondered if he’d be able to find it again. The telephone went on ringing. He picked it up. “Clarence Potter here.” Anybody who didn’t know he was in Intelligence had no business calling on this line.
“Hello, Potter, you sly son of a bitch. General Forrest tells me you really are as smart as you think you are.”
“Thank you, Mr. President—I suppose.” Potter wasn’t inclined to let anyone praise more faintly than he did.
Neither was Jake Featherston. Laughing, he said, “You’re welcome—I reckon.” His good humor never lasted long. He went on, “That was a good piece of work. We’ve got to make sure the
damnyankees aren’t looking over our shoulder and reading our cards before we ever set ’em down.”
“Yes, sir.” Potter hoped his resignation didn’t show. In spite of everything the Confederate States could do, the United States were going to find out some of what they were up to. The countries were too similar and shared too long a border to keep that from happening. He went on, “As long as we find out more about what they’re up to, we’re ahead of the game.”
“I don’t just aim to be ahead of the game. I aim to win it and then kick over the goddamn table.” Featherston sounded perfectly serious. He also sounded as angry as usual—not at me, Potter judged, but at the USA.
Really whipping the United States, whipping them to a point where they couldn’t hope to fight back, had always been the Confederate dream. Featherston still believed it. Maybe that made him crazy. Potter had long thought so. He wasn’t so sure any more.
“Gotta knock ’em flat,” Featherston went on. “Gotta knock ’em flat and never let ’em build up again. They tried it with us at the end of the Great War, but they couldn’t make it stick. When we do it, we’ll fuckin’ do it right.”
Potter remembered U.S. inspectors in Charleston harbor making sure the Confederate States adhered to the armistice they’d signed. But Jake Featherston was right; the USA hadn’t kept that up for long. The United States had wanted to forget about the war, to enjoy what they’d won. They were able to afford it—they had won. For the Confederates, everything since then had been about getting even. With Featherston, everything still was.
If he made the damnyankees say uncle, he wouldn’t forget about holding them down. He wanted nothing more than to stand on them with a boot on their neck. For as long as he lived, the United States would go through hell on earth. And if anything could make Jake Featherston a happy man—which was by no means obvious—that would be it.
What would happen after Jake finally went? Potter wondered if the President of the CSA had ever wondered about that. The Intelligence officer doubted it. Everything was personal with Jake Featherston. If it didn’t have him in it, he didn’t give a damn. Whatever happened after he was gone would just have to take care of itself.
“How would you like to run the operation that makes sure the damnyankees keep on being good little boys and girls?” Featherston asked.
Not only was everything personal with him, he knew who had an axe to grind, and which axe it was. He assumed everybody took things as personally as he did. He knows just what to offer me, by God, Potter thought. He said, “If we get there, I’ll do that job for you, Mr. President.”
“Oh, we’ll get there. Don’t you worry about that. Don’t worry about it even for a minute.” As usual, Jake sounded messianically certain. By being so sure himself, he made other people sure, too. And when they were sure, they could do things they never would have imagined possible before.
The Confederate States had done some things Clarence Potter wouldn’t have imagined possible. Could they do more? Could they flatten the United States? A smaller country flatten a bigger one and hold it down? Before this war started, Potter never would have believed it. Now—and especially after he listened to Jake Featherston for a while—he really thought he did.
Hipolito Rodriguez hadn’t needed long to decide that Assault Troop Leader Billy Joe Hamilton put him in mind of his Great War drill sergeant. “I want y’all to listen up. Listen up real good, you hear?” he’d say several times a day, sticking out his chin to seem even meaner than he did already. “y’all better listen up good, on account of I ain’t got the time to say this shit over and over.”
He gave his warning over and over. He didn’t seem to realize that. Rodriguez didn’t challenge him on it. Neither did any of the other men in his training group. Challenge an instructor and you lost even if you won.
“Anybody here ever hear people talk about a population reduction?” Hamilton asked one day.
A few men from the Confederate Veterans’ Brigade raised their hands. The ones Rodriguez knew came from big cities—Richmond, Atlanta, New Orleans.
“Means, ‘I’ll fix you,’ somethin’ like that, right?” Hamilton said. “Folks say,, ‘I’ll reduce your population, you son of a bitch,’ right? Doesn’t make a whole hell of a lot of sense, but who said the way people talk’s gotta make sense, right? Right?”
“Right!” the men chorused. If loud agreement was what the Freedom Party guard wanted, they’d give it to him.
“That’s a bunch of bullshit,” he said now. “When we talk about reducing population, we goddamn well mean it. Too many niggers in this country, right? Gotta do somethin’ about that, right? Right?”
“Right!” The chorus sounded odd this time. Some of the men bayed out the word in voices full of savage enthusiasm, while others sounded oddly doubtful. Rodriguez’s tones were somewhere in the middle. He had no use for mallates, but he’d never been filled with blood lust, either.
The Party guard studied his students. “Some of you sorry sons of bitches are gonna puke like you wouldn’t believe when we get rolling on this here job. Some of y’all won’t be able to cut it. We’ll have to ship your asses home—either that or put you in an easier line of work.”
“How come?” somebody in back of Rodriguez called.
“How come?” Billy Joe Hamilton echoed. “You’ll find out how come. Bet your balls you will. I got one other thing to tell you, too—no matter how tough y’all reckon you got it, you don’t know squat about what tough is. Fellas who were doin’ this before we got the system down, they’re the ones who can talk about tough. What they saw is tougher’n any battlefield.”
“Bullshit.” This time, it was a man off to Rodriguez’s left. Rodriguez was thinking the same thing himself. Nothing was worse than a battlefield. Nothing could be. He was convinced of that. The Devil hadn’t known how to run hell before he took a long look at a Great War battlefield.
“I heard that,” Hamilton said. “You go ahead. You think that way. y’all’ll find out what it’s like now. But that ain’t a patch on what camp guards were doin’. No, sir, not even a patch.”
Rodriguez remained dubious. Everybody who was an old-timer at this, that, or the other thing always went on and on about how tough things had been before all these new fellows came in. Talk was cheap. Talk was also commonly nonsense.
Camp guards learned by doing. They ran their own camp, out there past Decatur, Texas. They were Great War veterans, every man jack of them. They knew all they needed to know about barbed wire and machine guns. Most of them had taken prisoners, too. Some of them had been prisoners, which also taught a lot about what they needed to know.
Submachine guns were new to Rodriguez, but easy to learn. For guard duty, they were better than the bolt-action Tredegar he’d carried during the last war. No one bullet had the stopping power of a Tredegar round, but you could do a lot of shooting mighty fast with a submachine gun. If you got in trouble in the camp, that mattered more.
“Never trust the niggers here. Never believe the niggers here,” Assault Troop Leader Hamilton told his pupils. “You do, you’ll end up with your throat cut. They didn’t get in here on account of they was nice people. They got here on account of they was trouble.”
That Rodriguez believed. The blacks in the camp looked like men who would raise hell if they ever got the chance. They looked like captured enemy soldiers, as a matter of fact. In essence, they were. Rodriguez figured he would have been safer guarding Yankee prisoners. They would have been less desperate than the Negroes here.
A truck with an iron box of a cargo compartment pulled up to the camp. At the morning roll call, the experienced guards picked twenty Negroes from the lineup. “You men are going to be transferred to another camp,” one of them told the blacks.
There were the usual grumbles. “I jus’ got here two weeks ago,” a prisoner complained. “How come you shippin’ me somewheres else?”
“To confuse you. Working pretty good, isn’t it?” the guard answered. The
prisoner scratched his head. He didn’t know how to take that, and so he warily accepted it.
Rodriguez was one of the guards outside the barbed-wire perimeter who made sure the Negroes didn’t try to run off on their way to the truck. The black men gave no trouble. Most of them seemed glad to get away from where they were. One of the experienced guards closed the doors behind the prisoners and dogged them shut. The bar that did the trick seemed exceptionally sturdy.
“We’ll need a driver,” Hamilton said. Rodriguez didn’t volunteer; he couldn’t drive.
They packed him and the other trainee prison guards into a couple of ordinary trucks with butternut canvas canopies over their beds. Those trucks followed the one with the Negro prisoners. Rodriguez wondered where they were going. He didn’t know of any other camps close by. Of course, Texas had more empty space than it knew what to do with. Maybe there were others, somewhere not too far over the horizon.
His truck ride lasted about an hour. Looking out at where he’d been—he couldn’t see where he was going—he found he’d passed through a gate in a perimeter marked off by barbed wire. Maybe it’s another camp after all, he thought.
The truck stopped. “Everybody out!” Billy Joe Hamilton yelled. “y’all got work to do!”
Out Rodriguez came. Like a lot of the other middle-aged men who’d ridden with him, he grunted and stretched. His back ached. The truck had been anything but comfortable.
The other truck, the one with the Negroes in it, had stopped, too, at the edge of a long, deep trench a bulldozer had scraped in the ground. Rodriguez looked around. All he saw was prairie. They were a long way from anything that mattered. He nodded to himself. He remembered this kind of landscape from when he’d fought in the Great War, though he’d been farther west then.
“You!” Hamilton pointed to him. “Open the rear doors on that there truck.”
“Yes, Assault Troop Leader!” Rodriguez answered. His pure English would never be great, but he followed what other people said to him, and he could speak enough to get by. Nobody’d complained about the way he talked.
Settling Accounts Return Engagement: Book One of the Settling Accounts Trilogy Page 66