Authors: Harry Turtledove
When the lights came up again, Jeff sighed. He didn’t want to face the real world. But here it was, whether he wanted it or not. “I’ll take you home,” he told Edith Blades.
“All right,” she answered. “Thank you again for asking me out.”
“You’re welcome. I’d like to do it again, if you care to,” he said. She nodded. He smiled. He felt like a kid having a pretty good time on a first date. If that wasn’t silly at his age, he didn’t know what would be. Silly or not, it was real.
He walked her up to her front door when they got back to her house. “Good night,” she said, and squeezed his hand. He wondered if he ought to try to kiss her. Something told him it wouldn’t be a good idea, so he held off. She opened the door, went inside, and softly closed it behind her.
Even without a kiss, a broad grin stretched over Jeff’s face as he drove back to Camp Dependable. In the morning, Mercer Scott would grill him about what he’d done. He was as sure of that as he was of the coming sunrise. He didn’t know if the guard chief would care for the story he spun. He didn’t much care, either. If Mercer Scott wanted to play Peeping Tom, he could watch prisoners, not his boss.
Sure as hell, the first thing Scott said the next morning was, “How’d it go?”
“Fine,” Jeff answered. “She’s a nice gal.” After that, he went back to his ham and eggs and grits and toast and coffee.
“Well?” Scott went on. “Where’d you go? What did you do?”
“Went to the Bijou. Spy picture there’s not bad.” Jeff pointed. “Pass me that strawberry jam, would you?” Fuming, Scott did. He asked a few more questions. Pinkard sidestepped most of them, which only annoyed the guard chief more. The harder the time Scott had hiding it, the more Jeff wanted to laugh out loud.
Instead of laughing, he prowled through the camp after breakfast, the way he did almost every morning. Things felt quieter than they had when bands of Negroes were led out into the swamps every so often and didn’t come back. Some of the desperation, the certainty they had nothing left to lose, was gone from the prisoners. That eased Jeff’s mind. A man with nothing left to lose would lash out against the people holding him. Why not? If he figured he’d last a while, though, he’d think twice.
Nobody made a fuss when a fleet of trucks pulled up in front of the camp. “Come on!” the guards shouted. “Get your raggedy asses lined up, niggers. Some of y’all are goin’to Texas! Be good to see the last of you, you miserable bastards. Free up space in the camp, and about time, too.”
The black men who boarded the trucks didn’t fuss at talk like that. White men had talked to them like that since they were babies. Had the guards spoken softly and politely, it would have made them suspicious. Ordinary, bantering abuse they were used to.
They didn’t give anyone any trouble as they filled one truck after another. Why should they? Texas was a big place. Camps there were bound to be big, too, with more room than this one had. Guards slammed the rear doors of the trucks. None of the Negroes flabbled at those metallic clangs, or at the thud of the bar coming down across the doors. Naturally, the white men wouldn’t want them getting away. At least they weren’t shackled into place in the cargo box. It might get a little crowded in there, but it wouldn’t be too bad . . . would it?
One after another, the loaded trucks rolled away. A couple of the guards waved good-bye. Jefferson Pinkard saw that. As soon as the trucks were gone, he summoned those guards to his office. “You
ever
do that again, I will fire your sorry asses so fast, it’ll make your heads swim,” he snarled. “Ever! You don’t like those niggers well enough to wave if they’re going to Texas. Only thing that’d make you wave is if something else is goin’on.”
“But, sir, somethin’ else is—” one of the guards began.
“Shut up,” Jeff told him. “Every time you open your mouth, your brains try and fall out. You may know somethin’. I doubt it, but you may. I may know somethin’. Matter of fact, I damn well do. But do we want the niggers here gettin’ a whiff of it?
Do
we, you stupid son of a bitch?”
The guard stood mute, which was the smartest thing he could have done. Pinkard jerked his thumb toward the door. The guards almost tripped over each other in their eagerness to escape. They left the door open. Jeff shouted after them. One came back and closed it. Jeff listened to his footsteps recede.
That afternoon, Mercer Scott said, “Don’t you reckon you came down on my boys a little hard?”
“Sorry, Mercer, but I don’t,” Jeff answered. “I want things to go smooth around here. That means I
don’t
want some damn fools tryin’ to be funny spookin’ the spooks. They get the wrong idea”—by which he meant the right idea—“and we’re right back where we were at before.” He didn’t go into detail. They were out in the open. It wasn’t likely anybody could overhear them if they talked quietly, but it wasn’t impossible, either.
Scott understood what he was saying—and what he wasn’t. The guard chief didn’t want Camp Dependable simmering at the edge of revolt the way it had been when Negroes were marched off into the swamps any more than Jeff did. “I don’t reckon they’ll make that mistake again,” he said.
“They’d better not, or they’re gone,” Jeff said. “That’s how come I came down on ’em like I did. They’ve got to know I won’t put up with that shit. And if you want to talk to your friends in Richmond about it, you go right ahead. I don’t aim to back down on this one.”
He watched Scott weighing his chances. By the downward curve of the guard chief’s mouth, he didn’t think they were good. Jeff didn’t, either. He was sure right lay on his side. And he was in favor in Richmond because of the transport trucks that did more than transport. Put right and favor together and you were pretty hard to beat.
F
rom the way the papers and the wireless news in Covington, Kentucky, were crowing, Cincinnatus Driver feared that the U.S. offensive in Virginia had come to grief. He didn’t completely trust the papers or the wireless; he’d seen they told more lies than a husband coming home with lipstick on his collar and whiskey on his breath. But Lucullus Wood was gloomy, and he had more ways of knowing than what the papers and the wireless said.
Cincinnatus made a habit of visiting Lucullus’ barbecue joint every so often. If the police ever asked him what he was doing there, he could truthfully say he was a regular and have witnesses to back him up. How much good that would do him he didn’t know, but it couldn’t hurt.
Lucullus often came out from the back of the place and sat with him when he did show up. Cincinnatus got the feeling the cook who was more than a cook was looking for somebody to talk to, somebody who he could be sure wouldn’t go to the police with whatever he said.
“Yeah, the USA screwed up,” Lucullus said mournfully. “Got over the Rappahannock, but they ain’t over the Rapidan yet, an’ I dunno if they ever git that far. All depends on how much bleedin’ they wanna do.”
“Great War was like that,” Cincinnatus said after swallowing a bite from his barbecued-pork sandwich. “This here one wasn’t supposed to be. Goddamn Confederates done it right.”
“Yeah, well . . .” Lucullus’ broad shoulders went up and down in a shrug. “Where they went, they caught the Yankees by surprise. Daniel MacArthur sure didn’t surprise them none.” He took a swig of coffee, as if to wipe a bad taste from his mouth.
“Too bad,” Cincinnatus said: a two-word epitaph for the Lord only knew how many men and how many hopes.
“Uh-huh. You said it. Too bad is right.” By the way Lucullus agreed, his hopes were among those that lay bleeding between the two Virginia rivers.
Trying to change the subject, Cincinnatus asked, “You ever run across Luther Bliss?”
Lucullus had been raising the coffee cup again. It jerked in his hand—only a little, but Cincinnatus saw. “Funny you should ask me that,” the barbecue cook said. “He come in here the other day.”
“Is that a fact?” Cincinnatus said. Lucullus nodded. Cincinnatus wagged a finger at him. “And you called me a liar when I said he was back in town.”
Lucullus shifted uncomfortably. “Yeah, well, looks like I was wrong.”
“Looks like,” Cincinnatus agreed. “What did he want?”
The other man hesitated. Cincinnatus understood that: the less Lucullus said, the less anybody could tear from
him.
At last, the barbecue cook answered, “He’s interested in makin’ trouble for folks he don’t like an’ we don’t like.”
For the Confederates,
Cincinnatus thought. “Do Jesus!” he said, as if astonished such an idea could have crossed Luther Bliss’ mind.
Hearing the sarcasm, Lucullus made a sour face. “He want you to know more, I reckon he tell you more his ownself.”
That put Cincinnatus in his place, all right. The last thing he wanted was Luther Bliss telling him anything at all. He’d hoped he would never see the secret policeman again. Like so many of his hopes, that one had been disappointed. He changed the subject once more: “You ever find out anything more about them trucks?”
“They usin’ ’em in the camps,” Lucullus replied. “They usin’ ’em to ship niggers between the camps. Now you knows as much as I does.” He didn’t sound happy confessing his ignorance.
“Well, that explains it, then,” Cincinnatus said. It did for him, anyhow. “They use ’em in the camps, they reckon that’s important—maybe even important enough to take ’em away from the Army.”
“Maybe.” But Lucullus sounded deeply dubious. “But what they use ’em
for
?”
“You done said it yourself: to ship niggers from one place to the next.”
“Yeah, I done said it. But it don’t add up, or it don’t add up all the way. They already had trucks for that kind o’ work. Ordinary Army trucks with shackles on the floor . . . You put a nigger in one o’ them, he ain’t goin’nowhere till you let him loose. How come they change, then?” Lucullus was as suspicious of change as the most reactionary Freedom Party man.
Cincinnatus could only shrug. “They don’t always do stuff on account of it makes sense. Sometimes they just do it for the sake of doin’ it, you hear what I’m sayin’?”
“I hears you. I just don’t think you is right,” the barbecue cook answered. “What the Freedom Party does don’t always make sense to us. But it always make sense to
them.
They gots reasons fo’ what they does.”
That made sense to Cincinnatus. He wished it didn’t, but it did. He said, “But you don’t know what those reasons are?”
“No. I don’t know. I ain’t been able to find out.” By the way Lucullus said it, he took not knowing as a personal affront.
Cincinnatus said something he didn’t want to say: “You reckon Luther Bliss knows?”
Lucullus started to answer, then checked himself. He eyed Cincinnatus with pursed lips and a slow nod. “Your mama didn’t raise no fools, did she?”
“My mama—” Cincinnatus broke off. What his mother had been bore no resemblance to the husk she was these days.
“I’m sorry ’bout your mama now. That’s a tough row to hoe. I didn’t mean it like that,” Lucullus said. Cincinnatus made himself nod, made himself not show most of what he was thinking. Lucullus went on, “I ain’t talked to Bliss about none o’ this business. Didn’t cross my mind to. Didn’t, but it damn well should have. Reckon I will next time I sees him.”
“All right. Meanwhile—” Cincinnatus got to his feet. He was smoother at it than he had been even a few weeks earlier, and it didn’t hurt so much. Little by little, he
was
mending, but he didn’t expect to try out for a football team anytime soon. “Meanwhile, I’ll be on my way.”
“You take care o’ yourself, you hear?” Lucullus said.
“Do my best,” Cincinnatus said, which promised exactly nothing. “You be careful, too, all right?”
The barbecue cook waved that aside. “Ain’t the time for nobody to be careful. Time to do what a man gotta do. If you ain’t a man at a time like this, I don’t reckon you is a man at all.”
That gave Cincinnatus something to chew on all the way home. It was tougher and less digestible than the sandwich he’d eaten, but it too stuck to the ribs. Three airplanes buzzed high overhead: C.S. fighters on guard against U.S. bombers sneaking over the border by daylight. Bombers mostly came by night, when the danger facing them was smaller. Back East, where defenses were concentrated, day bombing was suicidal. Here, though, the country was wider and airplanes and antiaircraft guns fewer and farther between. Raiders from both sides could sometimes cross the border, drop their bombs, and scoot before the enemy hunted them down.
Cincinnatus always looked both ways before crossing the street. The cane in his right hand and the pain that never went away were reminders of what happened when he didn’t. So was the brute fact that he and his father and mother remained stuck in Covington instead of being safe in Des Moines, far away from the war and from the Freedom Party.
“Hello, son,” Seneca Driver said when Cincinnatus came in. The older man looked as gloomy as Cincinnatus felt.
“Hello. How’s Ma?” Cincinnatus asked.
“Well, she sleepin’ right now.” His father sounded relieved. Cincinnatus understood that. When his mother was asleep, she wasn’t getting into mischief or wandering off. She didn’t do anything out of malice, or even realize what she was doing, but that was exactly the problem. Seneca went on, “How is things down to Lucullus’?”
“They’re all right.” Cincinnatus stopped and did a double take. “How you know I was there?”
“I ain’t no hoodoo man. I ain’t no Sherlock Holmes, neither,” his father said. “You got barbecue sauce on your chin.”
“Oh.” Cincinnatus felt foolish. He pulled a rumpled handkerchief out of his pocket and dabbed at himself. Sure enough, the hankie came away orange.
His father said, “Lucullus, he’s a pretty smart nigger, same as his old man was. He got one trouble, though—he reckon he so smart, nobody can touch him. Ain’t nobody that smart. He gonna pay the price one day. Anybody too close to him gonna pay the price, too.”
That sounded much more likely than Cincinnatus wished it did. He said, “I’m bein’ as careful as I can.”
“Good. That’s good.” To his relief, his father didn’t push it. He just sighed and said, “If Livia hadn’t chose that one day to wander off . . .”