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McDougald winced. "Those d.a.m.ned Mormons let the genie out of the bottle with that one," he said. "How do you stop somebody who's already decided to die?" By the evidence available so far, you couldn't couldn't stop somebody like that, not often enough. McDougald added, "They'll feel it in Vienna and Budapest, too." Serbs and Romanians and Bosnians and G.o.d only knew how many others from the Balkan patchwork quilt of peoples and competing nationalisms bushwhacked the King-Emperor's soldiers where and as they could. Russia encouraged them and sent them arms and ammunition, the way the British helped the Canucks, and the Confederates armed the Mormons. stop somebody like that, not often enough. McDougald added, "They'll feel it in Vienna and Budapest, too." Serbs and Romanians and Bosnians and G.o.d only knew how many others from the Balkan patchwork quilt of peoples and competing nationalisms bushwhacked the King-Emperor's soldiers where and as they could. Russia encouraged them and sent them arms and ammunition, the way the British helped the Canucks, and the Confederates armed the Mormons.
Of course, the USA armed Negroes in the CSA. (O'Doull didn't even think about U.S. support for the Republic of Quebec, which would still have been a Canadian province absent the Great War.) Germany played those games with Finns and Jews and Chechens and Azerbaijanis inside the Tsar's empire. And both sides helped their own sets of guerrillas inside the Ukraine, which was, in technical terms, a mess.
An orderly trotted up to O'Doull and McDougald. "We've got a man with a leg wound in OR Seven," he said.
"We should do something about that," McDougald said, and O'Doull nodded. They hurried toward the OR. Working in an actual operating room was an unaccustomed luxury for O'Doull. It beat the h.e.l.l out of doing his job under canvas. He had a real operating table, surgical lights he could aim wherever he wanted, and all the other amenities he'd almost forgotten in the field.
And he had a nasty case waiting on the table for him. A leg wound A leg wound hardly did the injury justice. "Get him under fast, Granny," O'Doull said after one glance at the shattered appendage. hardly did the injury justice. "Get him under fast, Granny," O'Doull said after one glance at the shattered appendage.
"Right," McDougald said, and not much else till the soldier was mercifully unconscious. Then he asked, "You're not going to try and keep that on, are you?"
"Good G.o.d, no," O'Doull answered. "Above the knee, too, poor b.a.s.t.a.r.d." He picked up a bone saw and got to work.
Like most amputations, it was b.l.o.o.d.y but fast. The wounded soldier was young and strong and healthy. O'Doull thought he would do well-or as well as you could do after you'd been maimed. How many men on both sides of the border were short an arm or a leg? Too many, that was for sure.
As he closed up the stump, O'Doull asked, "Ever see a real basket case, Granny?"
"No arms, no legs?" McDougald asked, and O'Doull nodded. The medic shook his head. "No, not me. You always hear about 'em, but I've never seen one. You get wounded like that, most of the time they take your pieces back to Graves Registration, not to an aid station. How about you?"
"The same," O'Doull answered. "You hear about 'em all the time. h.e.l.l, people talk about basket cases when they mean somebody who's just all messed up. But I've never seen the real McCoy, either."
"I suppose there really are some," McDougald said. "Would we have the name if we didn't have the thing?"
"Beats me," O'Doull said. "We have names for truth and justice and liberty, too. How often do you really see the things those names point at?"
"Touche, Doc." Granville McDougald gave him another sour laugh. "And then we've got 'Freedom!' too." By the way he said the word, he might have been a stalwart in white shirt and b.u.t.ternut trousers getting ready to go out there and break some heads.
"G.o.d d.a.m.n Jake Featherston up one side and down the other," O'Doull said wearily as he went to the sink and washed the now one-legged soldier's blood from his hands. How much blood did Featherston have on his his hands? But he didn't care about washing it off. He reveled in it. hands? But he didn't care about washing it off. He reveled in it.
McDougald stood beside him and scrubbed down, too. "I've been wishing that very same thing," he said, holding out his arms in front of him with the wrists up so water would flow down from his hands and carry germs away with it. "I've been wishing for it since before the war started, matter of fact, and G.o.d hasn't done thing one. Far as I can tell, He's at a football game-probably standing in line to get Himself a couple of franks and a beer."
That was blasphemous, which didn't mean it didn't hold a lot of truth. "I don't know how anybody's going to be able to believe in anything by the time this d.a.m.n war is done," O'Doull said.
"I don't know how anybody believed anything after the last one," McDougald said. "But you're right. This one's worse. The poison gas is more poisonous. We're better at dropping bombs on the Confederates' cities, and they're better at dropping them on ours. 'O brave new world, that has such people in't!' " He quoted Shakespeare with malice aforethought.
"You forgot one," O'Doull said. McDougald raised a questioning eyebrow. The doctor explained: "We didn't slaughter people just because of who they were the last time around."
"Oh, yeah? Tell it to the Armenians. And the Turks were on our side," McDougald said. O'Doull winced. He'd forgotten about the Armenian ma.s.sacres. He was sure most people in the USA had. McDougald went on, "But you're right-we didn't, not on this continent. And Jake Featherston probably noticed nothing much ever happened to the Turks, and he must have figured nothing much would happen to him if we went after his spooks. And you know what else? Looks like he's right." didn't, not on this continent. And Jake Featherston probably noticed nothing much ever happened to the Turks, and he must have figured nothing much would happen to him if we went after his spooks. And you know what else? Looks like he's right."
"It does, doesn't it?" O'Doull said unhappily.
"I don't think a whole lot of people in the USA like smokes a whole h.e.l.l of a lot," McDougald said. "I'd be lying if I said I liked 'em a whole h.e.l.l of a lot myself. Don't know very many. Don't know any very well-aren't that many here to to know, and that suits me fine. What I do know . . . Well, you can keep 'em, far as I'm concerned. But there's a lot of difference between saying that and wanting to see 'em dead." know, and that suits me fine. What I do know . . . Well, you can keep 'em, far as I'm concerned. But there's a lot of difference between saying that and wanting to see 'em dead."
"I'm with you," O'Doull said. "I don't think I saw a Negro all the time I was up in Riviere-du-Loup, and I didn't much miss 'em, either. Lots and lots of 'em in the CSA, so the Confederates can't pretend they aren't there, the way we can. But making so they really aren't aren't there-that's filthy." there-that's filthy."
"Yeah, we're on the same page again, Doc," Granville McDougald said. "And you know what else?" O'Doull raised an interrogative eyebrow. The medic went on, "It won't do those poor sons of b.i.t.c.hes one d.a.m.n bit of good." Leonard O'Doull sadly nodded, because that was much too likely to be true.
Coming back to the Lower East Side of New York City always felt strange to Flora Blackford. It was only a couple of hours by fast train from Philadelphia, but it was a different world. As she made a campaign visit just before the 1942 Presidential elections, she found it different in some new ways.
Confederate bombers hadn't hit her hometown nearly so hard as they'd hit Philadelphia. Those extra 90 miles-180 round trip-meant more fuel and fewer bombs aboard. They also meant U.S. fighters had all that extra time to try to shoot the Confederates down. And most of the bombs that had fallen in New York City had fallen on Wall Street and the publishing district, and on and around the factories in the Bronx and Brooklyn. The neighborhood where she'd grown up was-oh, not untouched by war, but not badly damaged, either.
She spoke in a theater where she'd debated her Democratic opponent during the Great War. This time, the Democrats were running a lawyer named Sheldon Vogelman. He stood well to the right of Robert Taft, and only a little to the left of Attila the Hun. He was the sort of man who, if he weren't Jewish, probably would have been a raving anti-Semite. Instead, he raved about plowing up the Confederates' cities and sowing them with salt so nothing ever grew there again. He also wanted to plow up anybody in the USA who presumed to disagree with him.
"My opponent," Flora said, "would ship salt from the Great Salt Flats in Utah especially for the purpose. Digging up the salt and bringing it east for his purposes would create jobs. I'm afraid that's his entire definition of a full-employment policy."
She got a laugh and a hand. The Democrats could nominate a right-wing lunatic in this district because they weren't going to win no matter whom they nominated. Vogelman blew off steam for their party. He was loud and obnoxious and, for all practical purposes, harmless.
"We made mistakes," Flora said. "I'm not going to try to tell you anything else. We should have been tougher on Jake Featherston as soon as he made it plain he was building up a new war machine. But Herbert Hoover was President of the United States from 1933 to 1937, and he and the Democrats didn't do anything about Jake Featherston then, either."
"That's right!" somebody in the audience shouted. A few hecklers booed. But there weren't many. Sheldon Vogelman was not only a reactionary nut, he was an ineffective reactionary nut. Best kind, Best kind, Flora thought. The best-or worst-example of the other kind was Featherston. Flora thought. The best-or worst-example of the other kind was Featherston.
She and Vogelman agreed on one thing: the war had to be fought to a finish. They had different reasons, but they agreed. She didn't know of any Socialists, Democrats, or even Republicans running on a peace-at-any-price platform. Jake Featherston had been effective at uniting the United States against him, too.
"When this war is over-when we have won this war-" Flora began, and had to stop for a flood of fierce applause. "When we have won, I say, Featherston and his fellow criminals will face the bar of justice for their aggression against the United States"-more ferocious cheers-"and for their cold-blooded murder of tens of thousands of their own people."
She got cheers for that, too, but not so many, even if she didn't call a spade a spade. The painful truth was that not even her mostly Jewish audience could get excited about the fate of Negroes in the CSA. Flora had been banging her head against that truth ever since she started speaking out about Jake Featherston's persecutions.
"Don't you see?" she said. "Pogroms are wrong. wrong. How many of your ancestors-how many of How many of your ancestors-how many of you, you, ladies and gentlemen-came to the United States because of the Tsar's pogroms? Come on-I know it's more than that." ladies and gentlemen-came to the United States because of the Tsar's pogroms? Come on-I know it's more than that."
All over the hall, hands went up. People raised them reluctantly and lowered them as soon as they could. If they'd had their druthers, they wouldn't have raised them at all. They didn't want to think about why they'd come to America. They especially didn't want to compare their past to the Confederate Negroes' present.
Flora wanted to make sure they remembered. She wanted that even if it cost her votes. Against a candidate like Sheldon Vogelman, losing a few didn't much matter. If the Democrats had run someone stronger, she hoped she would have done the same thing.
"If you turn your back on other people when they're in trouble, who'll look out for you when you are?" she asked. "Don't you see? If we don't look out for the Negroes in the CSA, in an important way we don't look out for ourselves, either."
"We don't want those people here!" somebody shouted. Several people clapped their hands. They weren't all hecklers. She knew where the hecklers were sitting. Listening to them hurt more because they weren't.
"The Democrats are the party for people who only care about themselves," Flora said. "If your fellow man matters to you, you'll vote Socialist next week. I hope he does. I hope you do. Thank you!"
She got a good hand as she stepped away from the lectern. She could have been caught pulling hundred-dollar bills out of a contractor's pocket with her teeth, and she still would have won here this time around.
For lunch the next day, she faced a more critical audience. David Hamburger had come out of the Great War with one leg and with politics not far from Vogelman's. He and Flora still got on well when they stayed away from political matters. When they didn't-and they couldn't all the time-sparks flew.
They met at Kaplan's, a delicatessen that had been around at least as long as Flora had. David was waiting for her when she came in. That was probably just as well; she didn't have to watch the rolling gait required by an artificial leg that started above the knee.
"h.e.l.lo, there," he said as she joined him. "So how does it feel to be slumming in your old stomping grounds?"
"Kaplan's isn't slumming," Flora said. "Don't be silly. Not a place in Philadelphia comes close to it." The waiter was bald and had a gray mustache. Flora ordered corned beef on rye. Her brother chose pastrami. They both ordered beer. The waiter nodded and hurried away. "How have you been?" Flora asked.
"Not too bad-middle-cla.s.s, or somewhere close." David shrugged. "My son's too little to conscript in this war, so that's good."
"Yes," Flora said tonelessly. Her own son was heading toward eighteen, and Joshua wouldn't hear of her doing anything to keep him out of the conscription pool. Having a nephew in harm's way was bad enough. Having a son on the front lines would be ten thousand times worse.
The food and the beers came quickly. Flora took a long pull at hers. David drank more slowly. He pulled a dill pickle from the jar on the table and nibbled it with his sandwich and his beer. After a bit, he said, "Looks like you'll be away for another couple of years."
"Well, I hope so," Flora said.
"You've done a good job, and Vogelman's meshuggeh, meshuggeh," David said. "Between the two, that ought to do the job. If it doesn't, this district is even more verkakte verkakte than I give it credit for-and I didn't think it could be." than I give it credit for-and I didn't think it could be."
Hearing the Yiddish made Flora smile. Like her brothers and sisters, she'd grown up speaking it more often than English at home. Now, though, she never heard it, never spoke it, unless she came back to the district. No one she knew in Philadelphia used it. Her husband, a gentile from Dakota, had learned a few phrases from her, but that was all. Joshua knew a few phrases, too. He couldn't begin to speak it. Flora wasn't so sure she could speak it herself anymore.
She thought, and then did bring out a Yiddish sentence: "What's going to happen to this language in a couple of generations?"
"I don't know," David answered, also in Yiddish. He dropped back into English to go on, "And I won't lose much sleep over it, either. We brought Yiddish from the old country. Now we're Americans. They speak English here. So, fine-I'll speak English."
"I suppose so," Flora said. "Joshua doesn't seem much interested in learning it, anyhow. But I can't help wondering whether my grandchildren or great-grandchildren won't think they missed out on something special because they didn't get the chance to learn it."
"Well, if they do, there's always night school," David said, and Flora nodded. How many immigrants had learned all sorts of different things in night school? Hundreds of thousands, surely. Some were accountants, some were lawyers, because of the courses they'd taken in hours s.n.a.t.c.hed from sleep and rest. Still . . .
"It won't be the same," she said. "What you learn in school isn't like what you pick up around the house."
"I can't do anything about it." David pulled another pickle spear out of the jar and aimed it at her like a bayonet. "I can't-but you you can. You can pa.s.s the Preservation of Yiddish Act and make it a crime for all the can. You can pa.s.s the Preservation of Yiddish Act and make it a crime for all the alter kackers alter kackers"-he tacked the English plural onto the Yiddish word-"who can still yatter away in the old language to use English instead. And you can make it another crime for anybody Jewish not to listen to them and talk back in Yiddish."
Flora laughed so hard, she almost choked on her sandwich. "You," she said severely, "are ridiculous."
"Thank you," her brother answered, which only made her laugh harder. "And while you're at it, you can have them make the Lower East Side a national park. Buffalo have Yellowstone. Why shouldn't people who speak Yiddish have their own game preserve, too? And if we get too crowded, you could issue hunting licenses to anti-Semites, and they'd come in here and thin us out. Only difference between us and the buffalo is, we might shoot back."
"You-" Flora stopped. She had to reach into her purse for a handkerchief to wipe her streaming eyes. She tried again: "You ought to sell that routine to the Engels Brothers. If they wouldn't pay you for it, I'm a Chinaman."
"You could do the same thing for Chinamen, here and in San Francisco," David said, warming to his theme. "And think of the chances Jake Featherston's missing. If he charged fees to get into the hunting preserves for shvartzers, shvartzers, he could probably cut taxes in half." he could probably cut taxes in half."
That killed Flora's laughter. "It isn't hunting down there," she said. "It's slaughter, nothing else but."
"They might as well be Mormons, eh?" David insisted on being difficult.
"It's worse," Flora insisted. "We're fighting the Mormons, but we aren't murdering the ones in the land we've taken. The Confederates are emptying out one town after another, taking the Negroes off to camps and killing them once they get there. It's . . . about as bad as it can be down there."
"And it's just pretty bad up here," David said. "Well, nice to know we've still got room for improvement."
That wasn't funny, either-or, if it was, only in the blackest way. When Flora laughed this time, it was only to keep from sobbing.
XVI.
Some lovely rubble lay between Sergeant Michael Pound's barrel and the advancing Confederate armor. Once upon a time, the rubble had been homes and shops and people's hopes. All things considered, Pound liked it better as rubble. If you knocked a wall down in a neighborhood that hadn't been trampled, the enemy would notice right away. If you rearranged what was already wreckage, though, so what?
Not many Pittsburgh neighborhoods had gone untrampled. The United States were making a stand here, defying the Confederates to drive them out. Jake Featherston seemed willing, even eager, to try. He keep feeding men and barrels and artillery and airplanes into the fight. No matter who held Pittsburgh by the time the battle here was done, one thing was clear: it wouldn't be worth holding.
Pound tapped Lieutenant Don Griffiths on the leg. "Sir, do you think we could crawl inside that ruined-garage, I guess it used to be-over there? We've got a nice field of fire where the window was, and the shadows inside'll keep the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds in b.u.t.ternut from spotting us."
The barrel commander stuck his head out of the cupola for a good look. He had nerve; n.o.body could say he didn't. And he seemed to own more in the way of sense than the late Lieutenant Poffenberger, anyway. When he ducked back down again, he said, "Good idea, Sergeant," and spoke to the driver by intercom. Jouncing over shattered brickwork, the barrel took its new position.
Another reason Pound liked the ruined garage was that he'd seen U.S. infantrymen huddled in the ruins not far away. Your own foot soldiers were the best insurance policy you had in a barrel. They kept the other side's foot soldiers away. No sneaky b.a.s.t.a.r.d could plant a magnetic mine on your side, chuck a grenade through an open hatch, or throw a Featherston Fizz at your engine compartment so the flaming gasoline dripped down through the louvers and set you on fire, not if you had pals around.
He spotted motion up ahead through the gunsight. Not the dinosaurian shape of a Confederate barrel rumbling into position, but . . . "Sir, they're moving infantry up."
"Yes, I saw them, too," Griffiths answered. "Hold fire for now. Let our own infantry deal with them if they can. We've got this good position. I don't want to give it away for something as small as a few soldiers on foot."
"Yes, sir." Pound surprised himself by smiling at the lieutenant. What Griffiths said made perfectly good sense. Pound wouldn't have thought the junior officer had it in him.
Confederate a.s.skickers screamed down out of the sky to bomb and machine-gun U.S. positions. What seemed like every antiaircraft gun in the world opened up on them. So many guns blazed away, Pound wondered if some of them hadn't kept quiet before to lure the Confederate dive bombers into a trap. Three or four Mules didn't pull up from their dives, but went straight into the ground. The explosions made the ground shake under his barrel. He saw one funeral pyre through the hole that had held the garage window.
"Good riddance," he muttered.
"Amen," Cecil Bergman said. The loader added, "See anything out there that needs killing, Sarge?"
"Quiet right now," Pound answered.
"Good," Bergman said-not a bloodthirsty att.i.tude, but a sensible one. n.o.body in his right mind was eager for combat. You had a job to do, you did it, and you tried not to think about it. When you had to think about it, you thought about targets and barrels. You didn't think about men. Because those sons of b.i.t.c.hes on the other side had a job to do, too, and theirs was turning you into a target. If that also meant turning you into raw hamburger or burnt hamburger, they would try not to think about it.
"Somebody coming over to us," Griffiths said, and then, "He's in our uniform."
"Right," Pound said, and pulled the .45 on his belt out of its holster. Confederates in U.S. uniform, Confederates who talked like U.S. soldiers, had caused a lot of grief in Pennsylvania. "Make sure he's got the right countersign before you let him get close."
"I intend to, Sergeant." Griffiths sounded like a small boy reproving his mother. The barrel commander popped out of the cupola. "Foxx!" he said.
"Greenberg," the soldier answered. Michael Pound relaxed-mostly. That was the right countersign. The Confederates had their own football heroes. They were unlikely to know the names of a couple of U.S. running backs. Of course, they might have captured a prisoner and torn the countersign out of him. Pound didn't relax all the way.
He was glad to see Lieutenant Griffiths didn't, either. "That's close enough, soldier. I don't know you," Griffiths said. Pound grinned, down there where n.o.body but Cecil Bergman could see him. Maybe the lieutenant wasn't such such a little boy after all. a little boy after all.
"Yes, sir," the man in green-gray said. "Just wanted to let you know Featherston's f.u.c.kers have armor coming forward. One of our artillery-spotting airplanes saw the barrels."
"All right-thanks," Griffiths said. The soldier sketched a salute and left. Griffiths ducked down into the turret. "What do you think, Sergeant?"
Pound had enormous respect for artillery spotters. They flew low and slow, and often got shot down. But that had only so much to do with the lieutenant's question. "Well, sir, if he's legit we'll find out pretty soon," Pound said.
"Yes," Griffiths said. "But that kind of message can't hurt us, so he must be the real thing, right?"
"Well, no, sir, not quite," Pound answered patiently. "He could have had a harmless message just waiting in case we were on our toes. If he did, he's out there looking for somebody else to screw."
"Oh," Griffiths said in a hangdog voice. "I didn't think of that." A moment later, softly and to himself, he added, "Dammit!"
"Don't worry about it, sir," Pound said. "You did what you were supposed to do. n.o.body could ask for anything more."
"I'm supposed to see more than you do, though." The barrel commander sounded fretful. "If I don't, then you ought to be the officer."
"I don't want to be an officer, sir," Pound said for what had to be the hundredth time in his career. Senior enlisted men were supposed to curb junior officers' enthusiasms. That was at least as important a part of their job as anything else. Most junior officers didn't know it. Pound didn't know how to say it without offending the lieutenant. If he didn't say anything, Griffiths couldn't get his a.s.s in a sling. He kept quiet.
A few minutes later, the Confederates laid on an artillery barrage. Griffiths kept the hatch up on the cupola as long as he could. When gas rounds started gurgling in, though, he clanged it shut. "b.u.t.ton up!" he yelled over the intercom to the driver and bow gunner. Then he put on his gas mask. Resignedly, Pound did the same. With autumn here, wearing it wasn't so awful as it had been during the summer. Even so, it cut down his vision, and it was awkward to use with a gunsight. Lieutenant Griffiths had an even harder time seeing out the cupola periscopes through his mask's portholes.
Shrapnel clanged off the barrel's cha.s.sis. A barrage like this wasn't dangerous to armor except in case of an unlucky direct hit. Pound traversed the turret so the big gun-the pretty big gun, anyway-bore on the approach route he would use if he were a Confederate barrel commander. Griffiths set a hand on his shoulder to say he understood and approved.
Not much later, the barrel commander sang out: "Front!"
"Identified," Pound answered-he saw the ugly beast, too. "Range 350."