That was a potent argument with any Negro, but not necessarily potent enough with Cincinnatus. “Jake Featherston never lured me down here so he could throw me in jail,” he snarled. “This here asshole did.”
Bliss didn’t deny it. How could he, when it was true? He said, “Featherston’s killing spades by the tens of thousands—hell, maybe by the hundreds of thousands now. You gonna piss and moan about a jail cell next to that?”
He had an odd way of arguing, which didn’t mean it wasn’t effective. He didn’t care what Cincinnatus thought of him. He just worried about what the black man did. Cincinnatus didn’t look at him or speak to him. Instead, he turned to Lucullus. “Where’s this truck at? Where do I got to drive it to?”
“It’s by the train station,” Lucullus answered. “You got to bring it over to the river.”
“The Ohio?” Cincinnatus asked. You could almost spit from the station to the Ohio.
Lucullus shook his head. The soft flesh under his chin wobbled. That made Cincinnatus think of the barbecue chef’s father. Apicius Wood’s flesh had been the only soft thing about him. Lucullus said, “No, not the Ohio. The Licking, here in the colored part o’ town.”
That made sense. Cincinnatus wasn’t sure a colored truck driver could get near the Ohio without challenge. The tributary was bound to be a different story. “What’s the truck got in it?” Cincinnatus asked.
“Something I arranged,” Luther Bliss said. “You don’t need to know what.”
Cincinnatus started to get to his feet. “Obliged for the ribs,” he told Lucullus. “Reckon you don’t need me for no driver.”
“Git down off your high horse. You are the proudest damn nigger,” Lucullus said querulously. Cincinnatus didn’t deny it. He didn’t leave, either. He waited. If he got an answer, that was one thing. If he didn’t . . . He could always leave then. Lucullus muttered under his breath. Then he stopped muttering and spoke in that same low, breathy voice: “Got us some mines to dump in the river.”
“Do Jesus!” Cincinnatus said. Luther Bliss doubtless had connections with the U.S. War Department. Even so, smuggling infernal devices like that across the border couldn’t have been easy. Since Bliss had managed to do it, or somebody had managed to do it for him . . . “When you want me there?” Cincinnatus asked.
Two days later, wearing a pair of overalls and a cloth cap furnished by Lucullus, he made his way toward the truck. A gray-uniformed cop checked his passbook and let him go on without asking exactly where he was going and why. The Confederates thought everything in Covington was under control. Cincinnatus’ carnivorous smile said otherwise.
He found the truck right where Lucullus said it would be. One of the keys in his pocket opened the door. Another fit the ignition. The motor roared to life when he turned that key and stamped the starter.
Releasing the hand brake and putting the truck in gear felt good. He’d been driving for more than thirty years. He’d taken his surname because of what he did. Driving was a big part of his life, and he hadn’t been able to do it since coming down to Covington. Now he could.
He shook his head and clucked sadly as he went through the colored quarter. A lot of houses stood empty; their owners had been sensible enough to get across the Ohio to the USA when the CSA won the plebiscite. Cincinnatus sighed. He’d been sensible himself. Fat lot of good it had done him.
The derelict garage where Lucullus had told him to pull in was hard by the river. The building faced away from the Licking, but had a back door that opened on it. Even before Cincinnatus killed the engine, half a dozen black men stepped out from the gloom and darkness inside the garage.
“You brung ’em?” one of them asked.
“Yeah,” Cincinnatus answered. The men took half a dozen crates out of the back of the truck. They pried up the tops and carefully removed the mines, one after another. Two men on each mine, they carried them down to the river. Cincinnatus didn’t see how they placed them: whether they dropped them in, had a rowboat waiting, or what. As soon as the last mine was gone, he fired up the truck again and drove off. Lucullus’ crew of men with strong backs also broke up in a hurry.
The truck went back where he’d found it. He returned the keys to Lucullus. The barbecue chef gave him a conspiratorial wink. He returned it, then limped out of the barbecue shack and headed home.
Jake Featherston scowled as he read the report from Kentucky. A Confederate gunboat on the Licking River had blown sky-high when it hit a mine. Two dozen men dead, another eight or ten badly hurt, an expensive piece of machinery gone to hell . . . He cursed under his breath, and then out loud.
After he’d thought for a few seconds, his curses got nastier. The Licking ran into the Ohio. You couldn’t drop a mine into the Ohio and expect it to go up the Licking. Sure as hell, the damnyankees had sneaked people and at least one mine from the USA into the CSA. Either that or they’d sneaked in the explosives and then used white traitors or niggers to do their dirty work for them.
After a few more seconds, Jake swore even louder. That at least one mine stuck in his head. How much time and money and manpower would the authorities in Covington have to spend before they made sure there weren’t any others—or before they got rid of the ones they found? Too much, too much, and too much, respectively.
Back before Kentucky and the abortion called Houston came home to the CSA, pro-Confederate demonstrators had been as nasty and as noisy as they could. Yankee backers in the redeemed states were quieter. If they showed what they thought, the police and Freedom Party stalwarts and guards would land on them with both feet. The Yankees had been soft-headed and let their enemies shelter under the protection of the Constitution. In the CSA, the Whigs had made the same mistake—and they’d paid for it, too.
Unfortunately, the damnyankees had wised up. They’d figured out how to play nasty, and they’d turned out to be pretty good at it. Featherston swore once more, this time at himself. He’d misread Al Smith. The man—and the country Smith led—turned out to have more backbone than he’d expected. He’d been so sure the Yankees would go for his peace offer after the CSA’s smashing victories in Ohio. He’d been sure, and he’d been wrong.
“Well, if the bastards won’t lay down on their own, we’ll just have to knock ’em flat, that’s all,” he muttered. “And we goddamn well will.” The telephone rang. He picked it up. “Yeah? What is it, Lulu?”
“General Potter is here to see you, sir,” his secretary answered.
“Send him in,” Jake said, and hung up. When Clarence Potter walked into the President’s office, Featherston fixed him with a glare. “You know about the goddamn mess in Covington?”
“Yes, sir, I do,” Potter answered. Jake’s glare, which reduced a lot of men to quivering jelly, had disappointingly little effect on the Intelligence officer. Potter went on, “That’s one of the things I was coming to talk to you about. We’ve got reports Luther Bliss has been seen in Covington. Does that name mean anything to you?”
“I hope to shit it does!” Featherston burst out. “That cold-blooded bastard was nothing but trouble for us while the USA held on to Kentucky.”
Potter’s face never showed a whole lot. Even so, the slight twitch of an eyebrow gave Jake some idea of what was going through his devious mind. If it wasn’t something like, Takes one to know one, the President of the CSA would have been mightily surprised.
“I can’t prove he had anything to do with the mines in the Licking,” Potter said. “I can’t prove it—but that’s the way to bet.”
“You’d better believe it,” Jake said. “I want that son of a bitch taken out. He can cause us more trouble than a regiment of regular Yankee soldiers.”
“We’re working on it,” Potter said. “Trouble is, he’s a professional, too. I’d guess he’s been in place there a good long while, getting set up and so on, but I first got word of him just a few days ago. He’s not going to be there by himself. He’ll have friends lending a hand.”
“Niggers lendin
g a hand,” Featherston said savagely. “You see why we’re on our way to taking care of them.”
“Oh, yes, Mr. President. I’ve never had any trouble with that,” Potter said.
Jake eyed him. He hadn’t quite come out and said he did have trouble with other things the Freedom Party had done, but he might as well have. “How the hell did I get me a goddamn stiff-necked Whig running my spies?” Jake asked Potter—or possibly God.
God, as usual, kept quiet. Potter, as usual, didn’t. Giving Jake a crooked smile, he answered, “Well, sir, looks to me like it’s because you aren’t a wasteful man.”
Among his other annoying traits was being right most of the time. He’d sure put a hole right in the middle of this bull’s-eye. Featherston remained sure Potter had come up to Richmond in 1936 to put a hole right in the middle of his bull’s-eye. He’d accidentally become a hero instead, and made the most of things since.
The really crazy part was that, if he’d just stayed down in Charleston as an ordinary loud-mouthed Whig, he would have got arrested and gone into a camp for politicals, the way so many others had. Or maybe, since he was tougher than most, he would have been shot while resisting arrest. He would have been out of the picture, though, for sure.
But here he was—not only alive but useful. He’d done better for himself as a would-be assassin than he ever could have as an ordinary loud-mouthed Whig.
“That was part of what you wanted to tell me,” Featherston said. “What else have you got?”
Clarence Potter smiled again. This time, a leopard wouldn’t have been ashamed to show its teeth like that. “We’ve found one of the spies in the War Department, anyhow—sniffed him out with another round of multiversion reports.”
“There you go!” Jake slammed a fist down on the desk. Papers and even the gooseneck lamp jumped. “Who was it?”
“A mousy little file clerk in Operations and Training named Samuel Beauchamp Smith,” Potter answered. “He’s been shuffling and filing papers since 1912, God help us, and he’s probably been passing things along all that time, too.”
“Peel him,” Featherston said. “Peel him like an onion, and make him hurt every time you strip off a new layer. He’s been hurting us all that time—he should hurt for a long time himself. Just be sure you keep him alive so he can go on answering questions, that’s all.”
“It’s being taken care of, sir.” Clarence Potter didn’t bat an eye. He didn’t lose any sleep over playing a dirty game. He understood you sometimes had to get answers any way you could. If that was hard on the bastard who didn’t want to give them . . . well, too bad for him.
“All right,” Featherston said. “And a good job on that sniper who shot Morrell.”
“Not good enough.” Potter said. “He’s on the shelf, but I wanted him dead.”
Potter was a perfectionist. Unless things went exactly the way he wanted them to, he wasn’t happy. That was not the least of the things that made him so useful to the CSA in spite of his godawful politics. Featherston said, “By your report, the Yankees scooped him up and got him out of harm’s way pretty damn quick.”
“First shot should have finished him off.” Yes, Potter was discontented. “One of our snipers would have. But this was so far in back of their lines, I had to rely on local talent—and the local talent wasn’t talented enough.”
“You’ll have other chances at other officers,” Featherston said. “If we can knock the brains out of the U.S. Army, it’ll be that much easier to lick.”
“Yes, sir. But the Yankees have figured out that that was an assassination try,” Potter said. “I’d suggest you beef up security for our own best men.”
“I’ve already done it,” Featherston said. “And, to tell you the truth, there’s a few generals I wouldn’t mind seeing ’em knock off. I won’t name names, but I reckon you can figure some of ’em out for yourself.”
“Could be.” Potter’s voice and chuckle were dry. But he quickly grew serious again. “The other thing is, you ought to beef up your security, too. The war effort goes down the drain if we lose you.”
“Don’t you worry about my security. That’s not your department, and it’s tight as an old maid’s. . . .” Featherston didn’t finish, but he came close enough to make Potter chuckle again. And the truth was, he didn’t worry all that much about his security, at least not in the way Potter meant. If it was good enough to keep blacks and disgruntled Freedom Party men from knocking him off, it was bound to be good enough to hold the damnyankees at bay, too.
And if it wasn’t . . . If it wasn’t, Don Partridge became President of the CSA. Jake didn’t think Partridge could run things, even if he did have the title. Who would? Ferd Koenig, from behind the scenes? Nathan Bedford Forrest III, from even further behind them?
Featherston only shrugged. If he wasn’t there to see the unlucky day, what difference did it make to him? “Anything else?” he asked.
“Only the thought that, since the damnyankees didn’t quit after we got up to Lake Erie, we might do better finding a peace both sides can live with than butting heads for God knows how long,” Potter answered. “That kind of fight favors them, not us.”
“I want your opinion on how to run my business, you can bet I’ll ask for it,” Featherston growled. “Till I do, you can damn well keep your mouth shut about it. So long, General Potter.”
“So long, Mr. President.” Potter wasn’t the least bit put out as he left the office. He’d probably said what he’d said for no better reason than to rattle Jake’s cage.
I don’t care why he said it. He can goddamn well shut up about it, Featherston thought. Defiantly, he looked north. He’d taken Confederate arms where they’d never gone before, where none of his predecessors had ever dreamt they could go. He still intended to lick the United States, to lick them so they stayed licked. It might take longer than he’d thought when he set out, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t do it.
“I can, and I will,” he said, as if someone had denied it. All he had to do to make something real was to want it, to keep going after it, and not to quit no matter what. Sooner or later, it would fall into his hands. I’m sitting here in the Gray House, aren’t I?
He nodded. Even if the Whigs didn’t like it, he was here. He belonged here. And he intended to take the Confederate States with him where he wanted to go. By the time they were someone else’s worry, they would look the way he’d wanted them to all along. No one else would be able to change them back to the way they were now.
As for the United States . . . Featherston’s swivel chair squeaked as he swung it around toward the north, too. All right, they hadn’t given up the way he’d thought they would. That didn’t mean they couldn’t be beaten down. He intended to do just that. By the time he got finished, the Confederate States would be the number-one power on this continent.
They’d stay number one, too. He intended to fix things so even a dunderhead like Partridge couldn’t mess them up. And everyone would always remember the name of the man who’d put them on top. His name. Him. Jake Featherston.
XX
The Sandwich Islands. Home of perfect weather, sugar cane, pineapple, and women of several races wearing no more than the perfect weather required. Home of the ukulele, the instrument the Devil had invented when he was trying for the guitar. Home of romance. That was what the tourist brochures said, anyhow.
George Enos, Jr., didn’t have the chance to pay attention to the tourist brochures. He didn’t have time to pay attention to the pineapple or the sugar cane or even the women and what they were or weren’t wearing. He’d been away from Connie for quite a while. His interest might have been more than theoretical. He didn’t get the chance to find out.
As soon as the Townsend pulled into Pearl Harbor, she refueled and steamed northwest toward Midway. Even though the island was lost to the Japanese, the USA seemed determined to defend Oahu as far forward as possible. That would have been farther forward still if the Remembrance hadn’t lain at the
bottom of the Pacific. As things were, the Americans didn’t poke much beyond the distance air cover from the main islands could reach.
Out beyond that distance lay . . . the Japs. They had carriers in the neighborhood, and they’d proved airplanes could do more to ships than other ships could. The Townsend did have Y-ranging gear, which struck George as something not far from black magic. Black magic or not, though, how much would it help? Airplanes were so much faster than ships—you couldn’t run away even if you saw the other guy long before he saw you.
Hydrophone gear listened for Japanese submersibles. Old-timers—the Townsend had a handful—said the gear was greatly improved over what the Navy had used in the last war. It could hear a sub while the destroyer’s engines were going. If they hadn’t been able to do that in the Great War, George wondered how any surface ships had survived. His mouth tightened. Too many hadn’t, including the one with his father aboard.
When he wasn’t chipping paint or swabbing the deck or doing one of the nine million other jobs the Navy had to keep all hands from knowing any idle moments, he stuck close to the 40mm mount. If anything came within range of the destroyer, he wanted the best chance to blast it he could get. When the klaxons sounded general quarters, he ran like a man possessed. So did his crewmates. In these waters, it was too likely no drill.
“We’re trying to find their subs, and they’re trying to find us,” Fremont Blaine Dalby said one morning. The gun chief peered out over the blue, blue water, as if expecting to see periscopes lined up like city workers waiting for the trolley. He might not have been so far wrong, either. He went on, “Whoever plays the game better gets to play it again. Whoever screws up . . .” A shrug. “It’s a hell of a long way down in this part of the Pacific.”
“Happy day,” George said.
“Ain’t it?” That was Fritz Gustafson. The loader seldom had a whole lot to say, but he never left any doubt where he stood. He jerked a thumb at Dalby. “Just our luck to have a damn Jonah bossing this gun.”
Settling Accounts Return Engagement: Book One of the Settling Accounts Trilogy Page 70