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Krigel looked at the retreating derriere of Dawn. "No s.h.i.t!" he said.
Work halted briefly outside the tent as laughter erupted from inside.
"What's going on there?" a dark-haired, small young woman asked Dawn.
"d.a.m.ned if I know. Dawn Bellever." She stuck out her hand.
"Rosita O'Brien." The women shook hands. "I'm with Colonel Ramos's detachment. Sounds like the bra.s.s is having a stag party in there."
"That ... very well may be true. Boys being what they are." She had a pretty good idea what the men were laughing about.
"I heard that. What's going on, Dawn? Why all the commotion?"
Dawn opened her mouth, then closed it. She shook her head. "Beats me."
Rosita laughed. "Okay, I get it. Well, I'll get the word in time."
"Come on," Dawn took the woman's arm. "Walk with me to the mess tent."
"Thanks, but I've already eaten."
"No, I've got to get some coffee for the bra.s.s."
Rosita stopped dead in her tracks. "I'm no G.o.dd.a.m.n delivery person." The fire in her eyes was a smoldering emerald green. "And neither are you; you're a soldier, remember?"
"Sure. I also remember something else, as well."
"Oh?" the little Irish-Spanish lady stood with hands on hips. "What's that?"
"Ben said he wanted some coffee."
"Ben? Oh ... I see. I think." Her face brightened. "Some people get all the luck. Come on, let's get that coffee. I have a million questions I'd like to ask you."
"If they're about General Raines, forget it."
"Aw, come on, Dawn! We're on the same team, aren't we?"
"Sure," Dawn's reply was dry, then she joined in Rosita's laughter.
Hartline ignored the girl's pleadings and shifted her into another position. "That's my little fox, now," he laughed. "Isn't this way all better?"
She sobbed her reply.
"Oh? Well ... let's do it this way, then." He grinned as he took her, his grin broadening as Nancy Olivier's cries filled the bedroom. She jerked under his a.s.sault and tried to pull away. His hands held her, clamped tightly on her shoulders and he bulled his way inside her. "You just hang on, now, baby-it'll start gettin' good in a minute or so. Ol' Sam Hartline guarantees it."
The girl groaned as his manhood filled her.
"Yes, indeed," Hartline laughed. "Won't momma be surprised?"
"Okay," Jake Devine spoke to the roomful of young people. "This is what I want you folks to do: Now you've all seen the treatment your friends are receiving; you've seen that the talk of mistreatment and torture is nothing but a pack of lies. So I want you all to spread the word in the towns I've given you. Tell the folks no harm will come to any of them. All they have to do is lay down their arms and go back to work. My people will come through and gather up the guns and they won't see us again. That's a promise. Now I've given you cases of food and clothing for the people-you young folks distribute them as evenly as possible; be sure the old folk get enough to eat and warm clothing and medicine. That's all, kids-take off."
Lisa was still in his quarters, sleeping. Jake watched the young people file out to the cars and trucks waiting for them. They were well-fed, wore new clothing, and had sidearms belted around their waists.
"I gotta hand it to you, Jake," a lieutenant said, walking up to him. "This way is a h.e.l.l of a lot better than shooting it out with the citizens. Do you think it'll work?"
"Slicker than an ol' redbone hound. Kindness always works better than force."
"Fine-lookin' little gal you picked out for yourself, too."
"You like her? h.e.l.l, John. Soon as we move from this area into Illinois, I'll give her to you, then you can pa.s.s her around when you get tired of the same old s.n.a.t.c.h."
"How about the ones we're holding now-that bunch from Huntington?"
"How are they responding to the talks?"
"Very well. We have the few diehards separated from those who just want to go back home and forget all about fighting the government."
"Okay. Send those back home."
"What about those we couldn't brainwash?"
Jake looked at him. "Shoot them."
Ben looked at the message just handed him. He gritted his teeth and swore, loud and long. When he had exhausted his profane vocabulary, he looked at Conger.
"Move your people out of here this afternoon. Block all the bridges leading from Indiana into Kentucky, starting at Madison. Pull some extra personnel from General Krigel's troops. We've got to write off Indiana. We've lost it. I don't want the same s.h.i.t to happen in Kentucky." He glanced at Cecil. "Radio Captain Gray. Tell him to start a guerrilla movement, working east. I want a terror campaign against all federal police, effective immediately. General Krigel, your people will have the states of Mississippi, Arkansas, and Louisiana. General Hazen, take Alabama, Georgia, and Florida. Hector, North and South Carolina. My bunch will move in behind Major Conger and secure Kentucky, then move into Virginia."
Ben looked at his commanders. "Hit hard, hit fast, and make it brutal. If they work for the government of the United States ... they have two choices, either quit, or die. Any questions?"
"Kick-a.s.s time," Hector said, getting to his feet.
The men filed from the tent. In exactly nineteen hours the second civil war in one hundred and thirty-eight years would rock the nation, eleven years after the world had exploded in nuclear and germ warfare. It was a testimony to the desire of men and women who wished to live free: free of government constraints, free of government bureaucracy, free of crime, free to live their own lives free of fear of the central government.
Free.
PART TWO.
If blood be the price of admiralty Lord G.o.d we ha' paid in full.
- Kipling
One.
Ben had been wrong in thinking the guts had been torn from Americans; that they would not fight; that they did not know the tactics of defense.
What had happened in America was typical of any nation of people who had been so heavily ruled and governed from one central point; who had had the right to defend what was theirs taken from them; who had been stripped of nearly every const.i.tutional right supposedly "guaranteed" them by their forefathers; and who had been told time after time that to do this, that, or the other thing was either illegal, immoral, or bad for your health.
Even the most intelligent of persons will, after a reasonable length of time, begin to believe it if that person is told fifty times a day that they are stupid.
John Adams was not farting the National Anthem when he wrote that fear is the foundation of most governments, or when he wrote that law is as deaf as an adder to the clamors of the populace.
For far too long the government, from the mouths of federal judges, had overruled the wishes of the majority of the population of the United States in so many areas that to list them would be a book in itself.
That was not what our forefathers had in mind.
But that is what happens when the central government a.s.sumes too much power ... power that rightfully belongs in the hands of its citizens.
It takes Americans awhile to get going. Always has. But once they get going ... look out, for any combat veteran will attest that there is no more savage fighting man than the American soldier.
Jake Devine's tactics had worked to some extent, for a few people, in a few states. Hartline's brutality had and was working for him in a few states. But the American people have a great will to survive; a great thirst for as much freedom as possible; a need for fair and equitable treatment.
What they needed was a catalyst, but not one that itself would not be affected. One was on his way: Ben Raines.
In a small city in Oklahoma, Mr. Kent Naylor lay wide-awake in his bed, beside his sleeping wife. His four children, ages 13 to 20, were asleep in other parts of the two-story home.
Naylor was the head of a small cell of Rebel sympathizers, fifty strong. He had received word the day before that the federal police, under the direction of Al Cody's men, were coming to get him, to take him in for questioning.
Naylor knew what that meant: he would never return. He had seen only one man ever return from those camps where Rebel sympathizers were taken, and that man had been turned into a babbling idiot from hours of physical and mental torture.
No, Naylor thought, I'm not going to be taken by the federal police.
Headlights slashed their way through the thin curtains covering the open bedroom window. Stopped.
Motors running. Silence. Naylor rose from the bed, quickly slipped into trousers and shoes and shirt. He reached into a closet and took out a twelve-gauge shotgun. It was fully loaded with double-ought buckshot, pushed by magnum powder loads. He clicked the SEND b.u.t.ton on a small handy/talkie by his bed and heard the receiver send an answering click.
Everybody was ready. All the members of his cell were ready to make their move toward restoring freedom to their lives.
A hard hammering on the front door. A demanding knocking.
Naylor knew who it was.
"Naylor! Open the door. Police."
"f.u.c.k you," Naylor muttered.
"What is it?" his wife sat up in bed, a frightened look in her eyes.
"Stay in this room, Beth," he told his wife. "Everything is going to be all right. I promise you. Finally it will be all right."
He pumped a round into the chamber of the shotgun and stepped out of his bedroom, looking down into his den.
The front door was kicked open, wood splintering and cracking.
"...drag the son of a b.i.t.c.h out," a fragment of a sentence reached the man.
"Drag all of them out," a voice filled with hard authority said. "His kids are part of it, too. We'll see how Naylor likes watching his kids take it up the a.s.s."
His face a hard mask, Naylor lifted the shotgun and emptied it into the three men standing by the ruined front door.
One man's head flew apart, splattering the wall with blood and fluid and brains. The second man's feet jerked out from under him as the slugs impacted with his chest, slamming him to the carpet. The third man took the slug in the throat, almost tearing his head from his torso.
All lay dead or dying.
Lights in the houses on both sides of the street clicked on as half a dozen police cars squalled to a halt in front of the Naylor home. Citizens with guns in their hands appeared on the front lawns, men and women and teenagers. A half a hundred of them.
The federal police officers stopped dead still in the Naylor yard.
One officer summed up their predicament as well as anyone could under such conditions. "Oh, s.h.i.t!"
"Get that c.r.a.p out of my house," Naylor jerked his thumb toward the dead men. "And clean up the mess."
"Yes, sir," a federal police officer said. "Right away."
The bodies carried out of the house, the mess cleaned up as best as possible, the gun-carrying citizens went back into their houses, leaving the street empty. But the federalized police knew they were being watched, and the choice of living or dying was solely in their hands.
"I was a cop nine years before the government federalized us," a man said, his voice low. "I knew it was a mistake. I said when Lowry and Cody started this gun-sweep it was wrong; the people wouldn't stand still for it."
Another man removed his badge and dropped it with a clink on the sidewalk. "We're through!" he yelled to the dark emptiness. "I'm goin' back to sellin' furniture. Y'all hear me? I'm no longer a cop."
Other badges followed the first one. They lay twinkling on the sidewalk and the lawn.
As Hartline had said, speaking for the other side, "It's just so f.u.c.king easy."
When one has the wherewithal to make it stick.
In West Virginia, a lanky coal miner stood in front of a judge. Sitting beside the local DA were two young men who used to be federal police officers. Their faces were bruised; lips swollen; several teeth missing. There were four federal police officers originally. The other two were dead.
The courtroom was filled to capacity with Levied, booted, work-shirted, hard-eyed men. They sat politely and quietly. They were all armed.
"Your Honor," the DA rose to his feet. "I protest the presence of armed men in this courtroom. I..." He caught the eye of the man standing in front of the judge. "I ... think I'll sit down."
He sat down.