Sylvia Enos stood in the kitchen of her flat, glaring at her only son. She had to look up to glare at him. When had George, Jr., become taller than she? Some time when she wasn’t watching, surely. He looked unhappy now, twisting his cloth cap in his hands. “But, Ma,” he said, “it’s the best chance I’ll ever have!”
“Nonsense,” Sylvia told him. “The best chance you’ll ever have is to stay in school and get as much learning as you can.”
His face—achingly like his dead father’s, though he couldn’t raise a mustache and they were falling out of style anyhow—went closed and hard, suddenly a man’s face, and a stubborn man’s at that, not a boy’s. “I don’t care anything about school. I hate it. And I’m no . . . good in it anyhow.” He wouldn’t say damn, not in front of his mother. Sylvia had done her best to raise him right.
“You don’t want to go to sea at sixteen,” Sylvia said.
“Oh, yes, I do,” he said. “There’s nothing I want more.”
Till you meet a girl. Then you’ll find something you want more. But Sylvia didn’t say that. It wouldn’t have helped. What she did say was, “If you go to sea at sixteen, you’ll be doing it the rest of your life.”
“What’s wrong with that?” he asked. “What else am I going to be doing the rest of my life?”
“That’s why you go to school,” Sylvia said. “To find out what else you could be doing.”
“But I don’t want to do anything else,” George, Jr., said, exactly as his father might have. “I just want to go down to T Wharf and out to sea, the way Pop did.”
All the reasons he wanted to go to sea were all the reasons Sylvia wanted him to stay home. “Look what going to sea got your father in the end,” she said, fighting to hold back tears.
“That was the Navy, Ma.” Now George, Jr., just sounded impatient. “I’m not going into the Navy. I just want to catch fish.”
“Do you think nothing can go wrong when you’re out there in a fishing boat? If you do, you’d better think again, son. Plenty of boats go out from T Wharf and then don’t come home again. Storms, fog, who knows why? But they don’t. Even if they do come home, they don’t always bring back everybody who set out. If you’re tending a line or hauling in a net and a big wave comes by . . . Do you really want the crabs and the lobsters and the flatfish fighting over who gets a taste of you?”
Most fishermen had a horror of a watery death, and of the creatures they caught catching them. But her son only shrugged and answered, “If I’m dead, what difference does it make?” He was sixteen. He didn’t really think he could die. So many sailors had, but he wouldn’t. Just listening to him, Sylvia could tell he was sure of it.
With a sigh, she asked, “Well, what is this big chance you’re talking about, son?”
“I ran into Fred Butcher the other day, Ma,” George, Jr., said.
“He’s got fat the last few years, hasn’t he?” Sylvia said.
George Jr., grinned. “He sure has. But he’s got rich the last few years, too. He doesn’t put to sea any more, you know. He hires the men who do.”
“I know that.” Sylvia nodded. “He’s one of the lucky ones. There aren’t very many, you know.” Butcher wasn’t just lucky. He’d always driven himself like a dray horse, and he had a head for figures. Sylvia wished she could have said the same about her son. But, as he’d said himself, he didn’t like school, and he’d never been an outstanding scholar.
“I don’t care. I want to go to sea,” he said now. “And Mr. Butcher, he said he’d take me on for the Cuttlefish. She’s one of the new ones, Ma, one of the good ones. Diesel engine, electricity on board, a wireless set. A fishing run on a boat like that, it’s almost like staying ashore, it’s so comfy.”
Sylvia laughed in his face. He looked very offended. She didn’t care. “You tell me that after you’ve put to sea, and I’ll take you seriously. Till then . . .” She shook her head and laughed some more.
But she’d yielded ground, and her son took advantage of it. “Let me find out, then. I’ll tell you everything once I get back. Mr. Butcher, he says he’ll pay me like a regular sailor, not a first-timer, on account of he was friends with Pop.”
That was generous. Sylvia couldn’t deny it. She wished she could have, for she would. Tears came to her eyes again. She was losing her little boy, and saw no way to escape it. There before her stood someone who wanted to be a man, and who was ever so close to getting what he wanted. She sighed. “All right, George. If that’s what you care to do, I don’t suppose I can stop you.”
His jaw dropped. Enough boy lingered in him to make him take his mother’s word very seriously. “Thank you! Oh, thank you!” he exclaimed, and gave Sylvia a hug that made her feel tiny and short. “I’ll work as hard as Pop did, I promise, and save my money, and . . . everything.” He ran out of promises and imagination at the same time.
“I hope it works out, George. I pray it works out.” When a tear slid down Sylvia’s face, her son looked alarmed. She waved him away. “You’re not going to get me not to worry, so don’t even try. I worried about your father every day he was at sea, and I’ll worry about you, too.”
“Everything will be fine, Ma.” George, Jr., spoke with the certainty inherent in sixteen. Sylvia remembered how she’d been when she was that age. And it was worse with boys. They thought they were stallions, and had to paw the ground with their hooves and neigh and rear and show the world how tough they were.
The world didn’t care. Most of them needed years to figure that out. Some never did figure it out. The world rolled over them either way: it ground them down and made them fit into their slots. If they wouldn’t grind down and wouldn’t fit, it broke them. Sylvia didn’t think it intended to. But what it intended and what happened were two different beasts.
It had rammed her into a slot, all right. Here she was, coming up on middle age, living from day to day, wondering how she’d get by, worrying because her only son was quitting school and taking up a dangerous trade. If there weren’t ten thousand others just like her in Boston, she’d have been astonished.
But then savage anger and pride shot through her. I killed the son of a bitch who sank the Ericsson. I shot him dead, and I’m walking around free. How many others can say the like? Not a one.
She’d take that to the grave with her. Most of the time, it wouldn’t do her one damn bit of good, not when it came to things like catching a streetcar or dealing with the Coal Board or going to the dentist. But it was hers. Nobody could rob her of it. For one brief moment in her life, she’d stepped out of the ordinary.
George, Jr., brought her back into it, saying, “I’ll go right on giving you one dollar out of every three I make, too, Ma. I promise. It’ll be the same with this as it’s always been with the odd jobs I’ve been doing. I’ll pay my way, honest.”
“All right, George,” she said. He was a good boy. (She didn’t think of him as a man. She wondered if she ever would, down deep where it counted. She had her doubts.)
He asked, “What do you think Pop would say about what I’m doing?”
That was a good question. After some thought, Sylvia answered, “Well, he always did like going to sea.” God only knew, that was the truth. Whenever the Ripple went out, she’d felt as if she were giving him up to the arms of another woman—the Atlantic had that kind of hold on him. She went on, “I think he’d have wanted you to stay in school, too. But if you got this kind of chance, I don’t think he’d have stood in your way.”
His face lit up. “Thanks!” Almost as fast as it had appeared, that light faded. “I wish I would have known him better. I wish I could have known him longer.”
“I know, sweetheart. I wish you could have, too. And I wish I could have.” On the whole, Sylvia meant that. She’d never quite forgiven her husband for having been about to go to a Tennessee brothel with a colored whore, even if he hadn’t slept with the woman and even if being about to had saved his life. If he hadn’t been on his way to the whorehouse, if he’d gone back aboard his river monitor instead, he would have been on it when Confederate artillery blew it out of the water. But if he’d come home from the war, if he’d been around every day—or half the time, as fishermen usually were—and if he’d kept his nose clean, she supposed she would have.
George, Jr., started for the door. “I’d better go find Mr. Butcher and tell him. I don’t know how long he’ll hold the job for me.”
“Go on, then, dear,” Sylvia said, half of her hoping Fred Butcher wouldn’t hold the job. The door opened. It closed. Her son’s footsteps receded in the hallway. Then they were gone.
Sylvia sighed. She muttered something she never would have let anyone else hear. That helped, but not enough. She pulled a whiskey bottle out of a kitchen cabinet. A fair number of states had made alcohol illegal, but Massachusetts wasn’t one of them. She poured some whiskey into a glass, then added water and took a drink. Whiskey had always tasted like medicine to her. She didn’t care, not now. She was using it for medicine.
She’d medicated herself quite thoroughly when the front door to the flat opened. She hoped it would be George, Jr., coming back all crestfallen to tell her Fred Butcher had given someone else the berth. But it wasn’t her son; it was Mary Jane, back from helping her teacher grade younger students’ papers. Sylvia’s daughter even got paid a little for doing it. She made a better scholar than her brother. That would have been funny if it hadn’t been sad. A boy could do so many more things with an education than a girl could, but Mary Jane seemed to want to learn, while George, Jr., couldn’t have cared less.
“Hello, Ma,” Mary Jane said now, and then, as she got a better look at Sylvia’s face, “Ma, what’s wrong?”
“Your brother’s going to sea, that’s what.” Without the whiskey in her, Sylvia might not have been so blunt, but that was the long and short of it.
Mary Jane’s eyes got wide. “But that’s good news, not bad. It’s what he’s always wanted to do.”
“If he’d always wanted to jump off a cliff, would it be good news that he’d finally gone and done it?” Sylvia asked.
“But it’s not like that, Ma,” Mary Jane protested. She didn’t understand, any more than George, Jr., did. “He needs a job, and that’s a good one.”
“A good job is a shore job, a job where you don’t have to worry about getting drowned,” Sylvia said. “If he’d gotten one of those, I’d stand up and cheer. This—” She shook her head. The kitchen spun slightly when she did. Yes, she was medicated, all right.
“He’ll be fine.” Mary Jane was fourteen. She also thought she was immortal, and everybody else, too. She hardly remembered her own father, and certainly didn’t care to remember he’d died at sea. She went on, “Things are a lot safer than they used to be. The boats are better, the engines are better, and they just about all have wireless nowadays in case they run into trouble.”
Every word of that was true. None of it did anything to reassure Sylvia, who’d seen too many misfortunes down by T Wharf. She said, “I want him to have a job where he doesn’t need to worry about running into trouble.”
“Where’s he going to find one?” Mary Jane asked. “If he goes into building, somebody could drop a brick on his head. If he drives a truck, somebody could run into him. You want him to be a clerk in an insurance office, or something like that. But he’d be lousy at clerking, and he’d hate it, too.”
Every word of that was true, too. Sylvia wished it weren’t. Mary Jane was right. She did want George, Jr., in a white-collar job. But Mary Jane was also right that he wouldn’t be good at one, and wouldn’t like it. That didn’t stop Sylvia from wishing he had one. She knew the sea too well ever to trust it.
When Jefferson Pinkard went down to the Empire of Mexico, he never dreamt he’d stay so long. He never dreamt the civil war would drag on so long. That, he realized now that he understood things here a little better, had been naive on his part. The Mexican civil war had started up not long after the Great War ended. The USA fed the rebels money and guns. The CSA sent money and guns and—unofficially, of course—combat veterans to prop up the imperialists.
Off in the distance, artillery rumbled. Jeff took a sip of strong, black coffee. The coffee had been improved—corrected, they said hereabouts—with a shot of strong rum. Alabama was officially dry. The Mexicans laughed at the very idea of prohibition. Some ways, they were pretty damn smart.
He finished the coffee as the artillery barrage went on. The front line ran quite a ways west of San Luis Potosí these days. Mexican-built barrels had driven back the rebels, and the damnyankees didn’t seem to be helping their pet Mexicans build armored vehicles. Maybe they would one of these days, or maybe they’d just import some from the USA. If they did, a lot more greasers would end up dead, the front line would stabilize or start going back, and the civil war might last forever.
A Mexican soldier in the yellowish shade of butternut they wore down here politely knocked on Pinkard’s open door. “Yeah?” Pinkard said, and then, “Sí, Mateo?”
“Todo está listo,” Mateo said, and then, in English as rudimentary as Pinkard’s Spanish, “Everyt’ing ready, Sergeant Jeff.”
“All right, then.” Pinkard heaved himself to his feet. He towered over Mateo, as he towered over almost everybody down here. Lieutenant Guitierrez—no, he was Captain Guitierrez these days—was an exception, but Jeff could have broken him over his knee like a stick.
He left the little wooden shack that served him as an office and strode out into sunlight bright and fierce enough to make what he’d got in Birmingham seem as nothing by comparison. Summer down here was really a son of a bitch. It was bad enough to make him understand just how the spirit of mañana had been born.
Standing out there in the broiling sun were several hundred rebel prisoners, drawn up in neat rows and columns. They all stiffened to attention when Pinkard came into sight. He nodded, and they relaxed—a little. Some of them wore uniforms of a darker shade than those of Maximilian III’s soldiers. More, though, looked like peasants who’d chanced to end up in a place where they didn’t want to be—which was exactly what they were.
Pinkard inspected them as if they were men he would have to send into battle, not enemies of whom he was in charge. While they stood out in the open, he strode through their barracks, making sure everything was shipshape and nobody was trying to tunnel out of the camp.
He wished he had a proper fence, not just barbed wire strung on poles, but he made the best of what there was. Guards on rickety towers at each corner of the square manned machine guns. Jeff waved to each of them in turn. “Everything good?” he asked, and then, in what passed for Spanish, “Todo bueno?”
He got answering grins and waves and nods. As far as the guards were concerned, everything was fine. They had easy duty, duty unlikely to get them shot, and they got paid for it—as often as anybody except Confederate mercenaries got paid. The Mexicans didn’t stiff the men from the CSA the way they did their own people.
For a while, Jeff had wondered why the devil any Mexican would fight for Maximilian III. Then, from interrogating prisoners, he’d found out the rebels cheated their soldiers every bit as badly as the imperialists cheated theirs. Nobody down here had clean hands. Nobody even came close.
He went back up in front of the prisoners. “Dismissed!” he shouted. Mateo told them the same thing in Spanish. They all saluted. He thought they meant it, too. As long as they did what he told them to, he treated them fairly. Nobody’d ever treated a lot of them fairly before, and they responded to it even from the fellow in charge of a prison camp. If they got out of line, they were liable to earn a kick in the nuts. As far as Pinkard was concerned, that was fair, too.
As the prisoners went back to the barracks to get out of the ferocious sun, Mateo asked, “Sergeant Jeff, how you know so much about—this?” His—orderly, Pinkard supposed the word was—waved around at the camp. “In Confederate States, you policía—policeman?”
Jeff laughed like hell. “Me? A cop? Jesus God, no. I was a steelworker, a damn good steelworker, before I came down here.”
Getting across what a steelworker was took a little while. When Mateo finally did figure it out, he gave Pinkard a peculiar look. “You do work like that, mucho dinero, eh? Why you leave?”
“On account of I couldn’t stand it any more,” Jeff answered. That plainly made no sense to the Mexican. Pinkard tried again: “On account of woman troubles.” That wasn’t the whole story, but it sure was a big part. If Emily hadn’t decided she wasn’t going to wait for him to come back from the war . . . Well, he didn’t know how things would have been, but he sure knew they would have been different.
“Ah.” Mateo got that one right away. What man wouldn’t have? “Sí. Mujeres.” He rattled off something in Spanish, then made a stab at translating it: “No can live with, no can live without, neither.”
“By God, buddy, you got that one right!” Pinkard burst out. Even now, when he thought about Emily . . . He did his best not to think about Emily, but sometimes his best wasn’t good enough.
“You no policía, how you know what to do with—?” Mateo waved again as he came back to what he really wanted to know.
Pinkard answered him with a shrug. “Just another job, God damn it. Somebody had to do it. Remember when we took all those prisoners after the barrels came up from Tampico?” He’d lost his orderly, and backtracked in clumsy, halting Spanish to let the other man catch up. When Mateo nodded, Jeff went on, “Like I say, somebody had to do it. Otherwise they probably all would’ve died. So I took charge of the poor sorry bastards—and I’ve been in charge of prisoners ever since.”
He wasn’t altogether sorry—far from it. The distant mutter of artillery reminded him why he wasn’t sorry. If he weren’t doing this, he’d have been up there at the front, and then some of those shells might have landed on him. He’d seen enough combat in the Great War to be glad he was part of an army, but not part in any immediate danger.
Mateo said, “You do good. Nobody never hear of nothing like how you do with prisoners. Everybody now try do like you. Even rebels now, they try do like you.”
There was praise, if you liked. When the enemy imitated you, you had to be doing something right.
A couple of days later, Pinkard decided to do something right for himself. He grabbed a ride on a supply truck and went north to the village of Ahualulco, where Maximilian III’s army had a supply dump that kept the prisoners eating. Ahualulco wasn’t anything much. It wouldn’t have been anything at all if two roads—well, two dirt tracks—hadn’t crossed there.
Red-white-and-green flags fluttered everywhere. Both sides in the civil war flew those colors, which got as confusing as the Stars and Bars and the Stars and Stripes had during the Great War. For Maximilian’s side, they were also the colors of Austria-Hungary, from which his ancestors had come. Pinkard was damned if he knew why the rebels also flew those colors, but he’d never been curious enough to find out.
The fighting was the biggest thing that had happened to Ahualulco since . . . maybe since forever. A couple of new cantinas had opened, and a whorehouse, and a field hospital. Jeff went into one of the cantinas—which had a picture of the Mexican emperor, cut from some magazine, tacked to the front door—and ordered a beer. Mexican beer was surprisingly good, even if they didn’t believe in keeping it cold. He lit a cigarette, found a table, and settled down to enjoy himself.
He’d just started his second beer when the door flew open. In came a couple of big men talking English. One of them looked his way, waved, and called, “Freedom!”
“Freedom!” Jeff echoed. “Who the hell are you boys? Where y’all from?”
One of them, a blond, was named Pete Frazee. The other, who sported a fiery red mustache, called himself Charlie MacCaffrey. They sat down by him. Frazee got a beer. MacCaffrey ordered tequila. “How do you drink that stuff?” Pinkard asked him. “Tastes like cigar butts, you ask me.”
“Yeah, but it’ll get me drunk faster’n that horse piss you and Pete got,” MacCaffrey answered. He knocked it back and waved for more.
He was from Jackson, Mississippi; Frazee from the country not far outside of Louisville. The Kentuckian said, “They told me I could’ve gone back after the war, but I was damned if I wanted to live in the United States. I spent three years tryin’ to kill those damnyankees. Screw me if I wanted to be one myself.”
“Oh, hell, yes,” Pinkard said. “How’d you find out about the Party?”
“Heard one of their people talkin’ on a street corner in Chattanooga, where I was at,” Frazee answered with a reminiscent smile. “Soon as I did, I decided that was for me. Haven’t looked back since.” He nudged the fellow who’d come in with him. “How about you, Charlie?”
“I like bustin’ heads,” MacCaffrey said frankly. “Plenty of heads need bustin’ in Mississippi, too. We got as many niggers as white folks, and some o’ them bastards even got the vote after they went into the Army. I don’t cotton to that—no way, nohow. Whigs and Rad Libs let ’em do it. Soon as I found me a party that didn’t like it, I reckoned that was for me.”
“How’d you come down here?” Jeff asked.
MacCaffrey made a face. “Ever since that stupid bastard plugged Wade Hampton V, we pulled in our horns like a goddamn snail. Wasn’t hardly any fun any more. I still got more ass-kickin’ in me than that. How about you?”
Jeff shrugged. “Didn’t like what I was doin’. Didn’t have nothin’ holdin’ me in Birmingham. I thought, Why the hell not?—and here I am.”
“You’re the fellow with the prisoners of war, ain’t you?” Pete Frazee said suddenly. Pinkard nodded. So did Frazee, in a thoughtful way. He went on, “Heard about you. From what everybody says, you’re doing a hell of a job.”
“Thank you. Thank you kindly,” Pinkard answered. He paused till the barmaid got him another beer, then chuckled and said, “Wasn’t what I came down here to do, but it hasn’t worked out too bad.”
He spent most of the afternoon drinking with the other Party men and enjoying the chance to speak his own language. Then, despite a certain stagger, he made his way to the brothel and laid down enough silver for a quiet room and the company of a girl named Maria (not that half the women down here weren’t named Maria), far and away the prettiest one in the place.
He’d drunk enough to have some trouble rising to the occasion. He’d paid enough to have her slide down the bed and start to help him with her mouth. He enjoyed it for perhaps half a minute. Then he remembered Emily’s mouth on him after he’d found her with Bedford Cunningham, who had been his best friend. “No, goddammit,” he growled, and pulled away.
“What?” Maria had no idea what the trouble was.
“No, I said.” He scrambled onto her. She’d got him hard enough so he could manage. He did, and then got back into his clothes and left in a hurry.
Maria shook her head. “Loco,” she muttered, and tapped a finger against her temple.
Clarence Potter said, “My trouble is, I want to see the Freedom Party dead and buried, not just weak.” He sipped at his whiskey in the Charleston saloon. “That makes me as much a fanatic as Jake Featherston, I suppose.”
The Freedom Party was weak nowadays, and weaker in South Carolina than it had been before the previous year’s Congressional election. Even so, in most saloons a comment like that would have been good for starting a fight. Not in the Crow’s Nest, though, not on a Tuesday night. The Whig Party faithful met at the Odd Fellows’ hall across the street, and then a lot of them were in the habit of coming over and hashing things out with the help of the lubricants the saloon provided.
Braxton Donovan was a prominent Charleston lawyer. He was also, at the moment, slightly—but only slightly—drunk. He said, “Only thing that’d put those know-nothing peckerheads into power is a calahamity—a calahamity, I tell you.”
“A calamity, you mean?” Potter asked.
“That’s what I said, isn’t it?” Several of the chins beneath Donovan’s neat gray goatee wobbled.
“As a matter of fact, no,” Potter answered. Relentless precision had brought him into Confederate Army Intelligence, and later into investigative work.
“Well, it’s what I meant—a calahamity is.” The lawyer held up his glass. The colored bartender hastened to refill it. Braxton Donovan nodded regally. “Thank you kindly, Ptolemy.”
“You’re welcome, suh,” Ptolemy said, professionally polite, professionally subservient.
“Tell me, Ptolemy,” Donovan asked in his rolling baritone, “what is your view of the Freedom Party?” He might have been encouraging a friendly witness on the stand.
“Don’t like ’em for hell, suh,” Ptolemy said at once. “Somebody should ought to do somethin’ about ’em, you wants to know what I thinks.” He polished the top of the bar with a spotless white towel.
“This country is in a bad way when some not so small fraction of the electorate can’t see what’s obvious to a nigger bartender,” Braxton Donovan said. He took a pull at his freshened drink. “Still and all, better a not so small fraction than a large fraction, as was so a few years back.”
“Yes,” Potter agreed. “And I believe Ptolemy here really does have no use for the Freedom Party—it’s in his interest not to, after all, when you think about what Featherston has to say about blacks. But even so . . . Jeb Stuart III had a colored servant whose name, if I remember right, was also Ptolemy. Jake Featherston suspected the fellow was a Red—he was serving under Stuart in the First Richmond Howitzers. He told me about this servant not so long before the uprisings began.”
“And so?” Donovan asked. “Your point is?”
“Jeb Stuart III pulled wires with his father to make sure that Ptolemy didn’t have any trouble.” Clarence Potter finished his whiskey at a gulp. “And he was a Red, dammit, as became abundantly clear when the pot boiled over. Young Stuart died in combat—let himself be killed, they say, so he wouldn’t have to face the music. His father’s revenge was to make sure Featherston never rose above the rank of sergeant. Petty, I suppose, but understandable.”
“Why are you telling me this?” the lawyer asked.
“A couple of reasons,” Potter answered. “For one, we can trace the rise of the Freedom Party to such small things. And, for another, a white man’s a fool if he takes a Negro’s word at face value. Look what happened to Jeb Stuart III.” He swung around on the stool so that he faced the bartender. “Ptolemy!”
“Yes, suh? ‘Nother drink, suh?” the black man asked.
“In a minute,” Potter said. “First, tell me something—what were you doing when the rebellion came in 1915?”
“Me, suh?” For all they showed, Ptolemy’s eyes might have been cut from stone. “Nothin’, suh. Stayin’ home mindin’ my business.”
“Uh-huh.” Potter knew what that meant. It meant the bartender was lying through his teeth. Every Negro in the CSA claimed to have stayed at home minding his own business during the Red rebellion. If all the blacks who said they had actually had stayed at home, there would have been no rebellion in the first place.
Ptolemy said, “Suh, it was a long time ago nowadays, an’ it’s all over an’ done with. Ain’t no way to change what happened. Onliest thing we can do is pick up the pieces an’ go on.”
“He’s right,” Braxton Donovan said. Potter found himself nodding. The Confederate States, and everybody in them, did have to do that. Saying it, though, was easier than doing it. Donovan took a half dollar out of his pocket and slid it across the bar to Ptolemy. “Here you are. Buy yourself a drink.” A few hundred years before, kings had tossed out largess to peasants with that same sort of offhanded generosity.
“Thank you, suh.” Ptolemy made the coin disappear. He did fix a drink for himself. By its pale amber color, it held a lot more water than whiskey. And the bartender nursed it, raising it to his lips every now and then but not doing much in the way of real drinking. Potter had known very few men who worked behind a bar and did much in the way of pouring down what they served. Too easy, he supposed, for a man who worked around whiskey all the time to come to like it too well.
Having been generous to one beneath him—or so he plainly felt—Braxton Donovan swung his attention back to Potter. “I have a question for you, sir,” he said, “speaking of the Freedom Party.”
“Ask it, then,” Potter answered.
“I’ve heard you knew Roger Kimball while he was still alive,” the lawyer said.
Clarence Potter nodded. “And so I did. That’s the best time to get to know a man—while he’s still alive, I mean.”
“Indeed. And in fact.” Donovan nodded grandly. “Now, sir, the question: while he was still alive, did Kimball ever hint to you that he’d torpedoed the USS Ericsson after we’d yielded to the damnyankees?”
“Never once, never in the slightest way,” Potter replied at once. “We were acquaintances, you understand, not friends—he liked Jake Featherston as much as I loathe the man. But I would say he didn’t tell his friends, either. He was, in my opinion, a first-class son of a bitch, but he knew how to keep a secret—by keeping it, at all times and everywhere. If his exec hadn’t spilled the beans, I don’t think anyone would ever have known.”
“Poetic justice, what he got,” Donovan said.
“Yes, I think so, too,” Potter agreed. “If he hadn’t come to a sudden demise, he would have been a sore spot between us and the USA, and we can’t afford to give them excuses to kick us around. They’re too liable to do it even without excuses, though Sinclair has taken a milder line than Teddy Roosevelt did.”
“I quite agree,” Donovan said. “I despise the Socialists and all they stand for—they set a bad example for our people, at the very least—but their foreign policy is . . . well, as you said, gentler than Roosevelt’s.”
“Now I have a question for you,” Potter said. Braxton Donovan looked cautious, but could hardly do anything but nod. Potter asked, “Why are you so interested in the late, unlamented Roger Kimball?”
“Idle curiosity,” Donovan answered.
“Shit,” Potter said crisply. All of a sudden, his metal-framed spectacles didn’t make him seem mild and ineffectual any more. When he went on, “I deserve a straight answer,” the implication was that he’d do something unpleasant if he didn’t get one.
Braxton Donovan could have bought and sold him. Donovan owned enough property that the disastrous postwar inflation hadn’t wiped him out. They both knew it. Most of the time, in the class-conscious Confederate States, it would have mattered a great deal. Now, somehow, it didn’t. The lawyer flinched, muttered something under his breath, and gulped his drink. “Fill it up,” he told the bartender.
“Yes, suh.” Ptolemy did. Ice clinked as he built Donovan a fresh one.
The lawyer sipped from the new whiskey. Clarence Potter waited, patient and implacable as a father waiting up for a son out too late. At last, Donovan said, “You know Anne Colleton?”
“Personally? No,” Potter said. “But I know of her. Who doesn’t, in this state? What’s she got to do with anything?”
“She and Kimball were . . . friends during the war, and for a while afterwards,” Braxton Donovan answered, suggesting by the pause that they’d been more than friends. “Any dirt I can get on him will stick to her.”
“Wait a minute.” Potter held up a hand. “Wait just a minute. Didn’t she help get the Yankee woman who punched Kimball’s ticker for him out of jail and back to the USA?”
“Oh, yes.” Donovan’s silver pompadour was so securely in place, it didn’t stir a hair as he nodded. “They broke up unpleasantly. I think it was over politics—he stayed in the Freedom Party, and she was one of the rats who left the sinking ship.” His lip curled.
“Why tar her, then?” Potter asked. “If she’s back to being a Whig, don’t you want her to keep on being one? If you drive her into Featherston’s arms again, aren’t you just asking for trouble? She’s a high-powered woman, no two ways about it.”
“That’s the point,” Donovan said. “She’s talking like a Whig again, yes, but she’s trying to pull us to the right till you can’t tell us from the yahoos in white shirts and butternut pants who run around yelling, ‘Freedom!’ She wants to have another go at the United States—wants it so bad, she can taste it.”
Potter pondered that. “We’d have to be damn lucky to win it. They beat us and they hurt us. And even if we do lick them, that just sets up another war ten, twenty, thirty years further down the line. I wish I could say something else—I fought those bastards from the very first day to the very last, and I’d’ve kept on fighting if we hadn’t folded up. But come on, Donovan. A good big man won’t always lick a good little one, but sure as hell that’s the way to bet. And I don’t think we can afford to lose again.”
“I don’t want to fight them again, either,” Donovan said. “I fought plenty in the last war, too, and I am plumb satisfied. And I don’t want her voice in the Whig Party.”
“There may be something to that,” Potter allowed. “On the other hand, there may not. You want to think twice about going after her. Maybe you want to think three times.”
“I know what I’m doing.” Braxton Donovan certainly sounded confident. Potter wondered if that was the whiskey talking. He also wondered how Donovan not only didn’t fall over but kept on sounding coherent. The man had to have a sponge in place of a liver. Donovan went on, “She’s not quite the force she used to be, anyhow, on account of she’s ten years older than she used to be, same as the rest of us. But it hurts women more.” He finished the latest drink. “One more of the same, Ptolemy.”
“Comin’ right up, suh,” the Negro said. As he made the next whiskey, Potter studied him and, covertly, Donovan. He wondered if the lawyer really knew as much as he thought he did. Not too many people came away happy after they bumped up against Anne Colleton.
Which meant . . . Potter finished his own drink. He didn’t ask for a fresh one, not right away. Instead, he did some quiet thinking. He came closer to agreeing with Donovan than with Anne Colleton. Nothing was stupider, though, than backing a loser, which he judged Donovan likely to be. How much of a deal can I cut? he wondered. And should I?