- Home
- Harry Turtledove
After the downfall Page 4
After the downfall Read online
Page 4
They rode. As they went along, Velona and Aderno got into a screaming row. Every so often, one of them would point Hasso's way, so he figured they were arguing about him. Velona went on laughing, so he guessed she believed him, whether the wizard did or not. Hasso heard the words four million more than once. Maybe it would have been better if Aderno hadn't asked him. Too late to worry about that, though.
Hasso wondered what the ordinary Lenello troopers thought. He couldn't tell. Those proud faces might have been carved from stone for all they showed. SS recruiting posters with men like that on them would have pulled in twice the volunteers — or maybe none at all, since so many would have despaired of measuring up to that standard.
Still, men were men, horses were horses, pigs were pigs… and Aderno's unicorn was a goddamn unicorn, and his magic was, without a doubt, real, live magic. Hasso didn't know much about this world, but he knew it was different from his. And his was different from this one, and the people here seemed to have more trouble than he did working that out.
Drammen lay on the Drammion. Hasso judged the river more impressive than the Spree, which ran through Berlin, but less impressive than the Danube or the Rhine. Barges and sailboats came down the river to the city; sailboats fought their way up to it against the current. No motors anywhere, which didn't surprise him. He didn't miss the stink of exhaust.
And if he had, there were plenty of other stinks to savor. He'd grown intimately familiar with horse manure and unwashed humanity during the war. The wind wafted those odors from Drammen to his nose. And with them came the stench of what might have been every sour privy in the world. He'd seen at the castles that the Lenelli didn't have much of a notion of plumbing. Now, approaching a city — not a large city, by his standards, but a city even so — he got a real whiff of what that meant. No wonder Aderno hadn't wanted to imagine the filth from four million Berliners.
Catching Velona's eye, Hasso screwed up his face and held his nose. She laughed and nodded, but then shrugged and spread her hands as if to say, What can you do?
"Cities always stink," Aderno said.
Sure they do, if there's no running water and horses shit in the streets, Hasso thought. He didn't want to think about the flies in Drammen. As if to mock him, a big shiny one lit on the back of his hand. He swatted at it — and missed.
"Stink or no stink, though, have you ever seen finer works than the ones protecting Drammen?" Aderno had his share of hometown pride and then some.
Artillery could have knocked down the curtain walls around the city in hours. The castle on a hill near the center of town would have taken a little longer, but not much. Hasso thought of G Tower again. That reinforced concrete could hold up against damn near anything. It wasn't a fair comparison, though, and he knew as much.
"They're very strong," he said, and by the standards of this world that was bound to be true. The wizard looked pleased, even smug, so he hadn't sounded too sarcastic. Good.
A group of Grenye leading donkeys were ahead of them at the gate. The sad little beasts were piled high with sacks of this and that, so high that Hasso marveled that their legs didn't collapse under them. The Grenye, seeing Lenelli behind them, made haste to get out of the way. The Lenelli accepted that as their due.
The guard who swaggered out to question Aderno had top sergeant written all over him, from that rolling, big-bellied walk to the double chin and the silver hair frosting gold. Most officers treated a senior noncom with the respect his position and his years deserved. Aderno didn't. He spoke more brusquely than Hasso would have in his shoes.
Whatever the wizard said, though, had enough oomph to impress the veteran. The fellow came to attention, saluted with clenched fist over his heart, and waved Aderno's party through. When Hasso looked up as he rode through the arched gateway, he saw more Lenelli staring down at him through murder holes. In case of trouble, what would they pour on attackers? Boiling water? Boiling oil? Red — hot sand? Something anybody in his right mind would rather give than receive — he was sure of that.
The gateway had two stout, spike-toothed iron portcullises, one near the outer end, the other near the inner. Would even a panzer be enough to smash them down? Hasso wasn't sure. They didn't have to worry about panzers here, anyhow.
Inside the wall was a clear space to let troops maneuver. That would be prime real estate. If the king kept people from building there, he had real power. He also had real worries, or worries that seemed real enough to him. Otherwise, he wouldn't have bothered to keep that area open.
The houses closest to the wall put Hasso in mind of the sorry Grenye huts he'd seen on the way to Drammen. And, as he and his escorts rode through the narrow, stinking streets, he discovered that almost all of the people living in those huts were Grenye. When he saw one obvious Lenello sitting on a front stoop with a jug of wine beside him, he was so surprised that he pointed to the big blond drunken man.
Two troopers' eyes traveled to the sodden Lenello. As soon as they saw him and recognized him for what he was, they looked away, pretending that they didn't. After a moment, Hasso realized it went deeper than that. The men on horseback weren't pretending. They were denying. Were he able to ask them if they saw their compatriot, they would have said no. And they would have meant it, all the way down to the depths of their souls.
Hasso started to ask Aderno why that should be so. Something in the set of the troopers' jaws, something in the ever so slight narrowing of their eyes, told him that might not be a good idea, especially when he noticed that same existential disapproval clotting the wizard's features. Aderno must have noted the derelict Lenello, too.
How did the British in India react to one of their own who went native? How had Americans responded to a trader who stayed with the redskins and preferred a squaw to a white woman? A lot like this, unless Hasso missed his guess.
A dumpy Grenye woman came out of the hut and took the jug from the Lenello. She wasn't trying to keep him sober; she wanted a drink for herself. The blond man gave her a slack — jawed grin and patted her on the ass.
Comparing her to Velona and the other Lenello women Hasso had seen was almost like comparing a gorilla to human beings. That fellow could have had one of those, but he'd ended up with — that? No wonder he drinks, Hasso thought.
Shabby shops and taverns and eateries lay within the first ring of huts. Again, all the proprietors and most of the customers were Grenye. When they bargained, they gesticulated and shouted and jumped up and down and did everything but poke each other in the eye. They reminded Hasso of the Jews in the villages in the east that the Wehrmacht had overrun.
When the shouting got especially raucous, Aderno stuffed his fingers in his ears. The racket had to drive him nuts. Maybe it also damaged his sorcerous sensitivity. Hasso just found it annoying. Velona caught his eye. She pointed to the Schmeisser he wore slung across his back. Then she pointed to eight or ten Grenye, one after another, and made guttural noises in her throat to suggest many rounds going off. And then she laughed and brought a forefinger up to her red lips in a gesture he couldn't misunderstand. Mischief glinted in her eyes. Without a word, she was saying shooting Grenye was the only way to make them shut up.
A man with an unkempt beard and a mop of curly, dark brown hair came over to the Lenelli riding past. He held up a little jar — what was in it? salve? perfume? fish paste? — and went into a passionate, practiced sales pitch.
"No," one of the troopers with Hasso said. The Grenye followed, still yakking a blue streak. "No!" the Lenello said again, louder this time. The Grenye had to be used to rejection, because he went right on with his spiel, coming ever closer as he did.
"No!" the Lenello shouted. He lashed out with his right foot. With a kick a World Cup footballer might have envied, he booted the jar out of the Grenye's hand and sent it flying into a dungheap six or eight meters away.
The Grenye yelped in surprise and pain. All of Hasso's escorts, even Aderno, laughed at him. Plainly, he was used to that. But his ow
n people laughed at him, too, maybe for pushing too hard, maybe for not getting out of the way fast enough. His head hung as he trudged over to retrieve the jar from its noisome new home. He brightened when he discovered it wasn't broken, and wiped it off on his tunic so he could try to sell it to some friendlier customer.
Inside the ring of shops, closer to the castle, dwelt the Lenelli. Had Hasso not already known, one glance at their homes would have told him who was on top here and who was on the bottom. Wide, well — kept lawns separated one Lenello home from another; the overlords weren't packed cheek by jowl the way their subjects were. Each Lenello home was at least six or eight times as big as a Grenye hut. The buildings were solidly made of stone or brick. They weren't built from wattle and daub and whatever scraps a Grenye could beg, borrow, or scrounge. They had roofs of red tile or gray or green slate, not tired thatch and bits of planking. The Grenye would have fallen in love with corrugated sheet iron if only they'd heard of it. Most of the Lenello homes could have doubled as fortresses. Even their stables and other outbuildings were far finer, far sturdier, than anything the Grenye lived in.
Velona saw Hasso eyeing the Lenelli's houses. "Aren't they good?" she said.
He understood that, and nodded. "Yes. Good," he said. There was a word you soon learned whenever you picked up a new language.
"Lenelli are good," Velona said."Grenye…"Hasso had already seen she was a good mimic. Now he discovered she could do an uncanny impersonation of a grunting hog. It startled a laugh out of him. She pointed ahead. "And the king lives — there," she said.
The gesture was nicely timed. They'd just come round a corner. An avenue — or as close to an avenue as Drammen boasted — led straight to the royal palace. If the avenue was muddy and rutted and odorous… well, what streets in this world weren't? The palace was an impressive piece of architecture, no two ways about it.
A moat surrounded the gray stone outer walls. Soldiers on the walkway atop the outwalls surveyed the city between chest — high crenellations. Hasso had seen the towers of the keep even from outside the city walls. A red flag floated from the tallest of them. His lips quirked in a mirthless smile. He couldn't hold that banner against the Lenelli, even if he'd been fighting one very much like it for almost four years. Yeah, artillery could have breached the walls and knocked down the towers in jig time. But he wouldn't have wanted to try taking the place without it.
They rode down the avenue. It wasn't the same as parading under the Brandenburg Gate after France fell. It really wasn't the same as parading under the Brandenburg Gate would have been after Russia fell. Hasso feared only the Red Army was parading through Berlin these days. Was anything left of the Brandenburg Gate?
He shrugged. He'd never know. And a glance at his comrades said they all thought approaching the royal palace was a pretty big deal. Even Aderno looked like a second lieutenant about to get the Knight's Cross straight from the Fuhrer himself.
What would happen to Hitler with Berlin falling? Hasso tried to imagine him in Russian captivity. The picture didn't want to form. The Fuhrer would do anything, anything at all, before he let himself turn into Stalin's plaything. Why couldn't England and the USA see that, if Germany went down, the last dam against the spread of Bolshevism fell? It was as if they thought the Reich even worse, which struck him as insane.
He shrugged again. He would never know the answer there. As soon as his backside touched the Omphalos, he'd put his own world behind him forever. He didn't have many answers here, either, but he could hope he would one of these days.
Velona caught his eye and winked. She blew him a kiss. "You will see the king. He will like you." She made it sound simple and inevitable. She didn't seem so overawed as the wizard and the troopers.
If you can keep your head when all those about you are losing theirs… chances are you don't understand the situation. Hasso knew too well that he didn't.
He found out how much he didn't understand in short order. Another man — another wizard? — rode a unicorn up to the guards at the outer end of the drawbridge just ahead of the group of which the Wehrmacht officer was a part. The guards talked with him for a moment, then stood aside and let him through.
Then Hasso's group approached. When the guards saw them, they stiffened to attention and saluted. Then they bowed themselves almost double, and then, straightening, they saluted again. They bawled out some sort of honorific or another — Hasso didn't understand it, but he heard the fervor with which they shouted it. SS troopers yelled, "Heil Hitler!" the same way.
The fuss wasn't for Hasso. Nobody at the castle knew him from the man in the moon. It wasn't for Aderno. Hasso had figured out the wizard's place in the scheme of things: he was hired help. He was high — class hired help, entitled to some respect, like a first-rate dentist back in the Reich. But nobody jumped through hoops for a dentist there, and nobody was likely to jump through hoops for Aderno here. The mounted soldiers? They were exactly what they looked like — muscle, nothing else.
No. The guards were having conniptions because Velona was back. She said something to them, then pointed toward Hasso. As soon as she did that, they saluted him, too.
Uneasily, he returned the salute. "Hello. Good day," he said, a couple of phrases in Lenello that couldn't land him in too much trouble.
"Good day," they chorused, and then something he didn't understand.
"What does that mean?" he asked Aderno. He wanted to learn Lenello on his own. If he had the wizard magically translating for him, he wouldn't. And he didn't like Aderno all that much, and he didn't think Aderno fancied him, either. Put all that together and he didn't want much to do with the wizard. Once in a while, though, he needed a shortcut.
"They said, 'Good day, savior of the priestess!'" Aderno told him.
"Priestess?" Hasso hadn't known she was one. He chuckled. No nun he'd ever heard of would have said thank — you the way she did.
"Priestess, yes." But Aderno didn't seem quite happy with the German equivalent Hasso offered for what he said. "You might also think of her as the goddess on earth."
Hasso glanced over at Velona. She smiled and fluttered her fingers at him. Priestess? Goddess on earth? What the hell have I got into? he wondered. But he liked what he'd got into just fine. Along with Velona and the escort, he rode across the drawbridge and into Castle Drammen.
III
After laying a goddess on earth, getting presented to a mere king was a piece of cake. King Bottero was a great big man, as so many Lenelli seemed to be. Hasso didn't feel much shorter after he went to his knees in front of the massive, blocky throne than he did before. The king's guards murmured when Bottero rose and set a hand on Hasso's shoulder; maybe he didn't do that for every Hans, Franz, and Dietrich who got an audience.
Bottero gestured. Hasso got to his feet. Even standing, the top of his head came up to about the bottom of the king's nose. In Germany, he'd got used to looking at the tops of other people's heads. Most of the Lenelli could do it to him. He didn't like that, especially since his sandy hair was beginning to thin up there.
When the king said something, Hasso had to shrug. "I'm sorry, your Majesty. Don't speak much Lenello yet," he said. Velona had taught him your Majesty just before he went into the throne room. What was he supposed to call her? Your Divinity? She was divine, all right, but not in the theological sense of the word.
Bottero looked annoyed — not at Hasso, but at himself. He said something else. Then he called Aderno's name. The wizard came up and went to his knees. Bottero spoke to him, impatiently. Get up! Get up! It had to mean something like that. As Aderno rose, he said, "His Majesty says you look like one of us, so he forgot you weren't."
If I'm a Lenello, I look like a damn runt, Hasso thought. They couldn't shoot you for thinking, not if you kept your big mouth shut. Not even the Gestapo or the NKVD did that. "Tell his Majesty I'm glad to be here." I'm glad to be anywhere. I wasn't a good bet to still be breathing now.
As usual, Hasso heard the Lenello w
ords without understanding them when the wizard spoke to the king. He couldn't follow Bottero's reply, either. But when Aderno spoke to him, he heard Lenello in his ears and what might as well have been German in his mind. "His Majesty says he is glad to have you — all the Lenelli are glad to have you — since you saved the goddess on earth from the Grenye savages."
"I was glad to do it," Hasso said. He'd been glad to do it even before Velona offered him what maidens — not that she was — used to call their all. After that…
After that, he would have followed her to Siam, or maybe to the moon.
What would he have done if she were small and dark and plain — Jewish-looking went through his mind — and the men chasing her were perfect Aryans? Would he have opened up on them anyway? Or would he have waited to find out what the hell was going on? He had no idea.
King Bottero spoke again. "Not half so glad as we were to have it done," Aderno translated.
"Where do we go from here?" Hasso asked. He'd seen the Fuhrer a couple of times, but never spoken to him. He would have been awed if he had. Talking to a king didn't awe him a bit. Talking to this king didn't, anyhow. If a Kaiser still ruled Germany, or even if he'd met George VI of England, that might have been different. But Bottero seemed no more than an ungodly tall man in odd fancy dress who wore a gold circlet with ball-topped knobs sticking up from it.
He did have an impressive bass rumble. Aderno's lighter voice turned his words into ones that made sense to Hasso: "You did us a service. I hope you will take service with us. I have heard you know fighting tricks we would all do well to learn, and I have also heard the power dwells in you."
Hasso started to say he didn't know anything about the power. At the last second, he clamped down on that. The less he gave away, the better off he was likely to stay. And so all that came out was, "I'll be happy to join you, your Majesty."
After the wizard turned that into Lenello, King Bottero's ice-blue eyes suddenly twinkled. A grin pulled up the outer corners of his mouth. He set a massive hand on Hasso's shoulder and said something in what could only be a man- to- man tone. Hasso figured out the likely translation even before Aderno gave it: "I'll bet you will. She's quite a woman, isn't she?"

King of the North
We Install
The Grapple
In the Balance & Tilting the Balance
Curious Notions ct-2
A World of Difference
Aftershocks c-3
Krispos Rising
Running of the Bulls
The Thousand Cities ttot-3
In the Balance w-1
Sentry Peak
Typecasting
Homeward Bound (colonization)
Krispos the Emperor k-3
An Emperor for the Legion (Videssos Cycle)
Colonization: Aftershocks
Colonization: Down to Earth
Beyond the Gap
Blood and Iron
American Front gw-1
Tale of the Fox gtf-2
Krispos the Emperor
Manuscript Tradition
Return Engagement
Through Darkest Europe
The Eighth-Grade History Class Visits the Hebrew Home for the Aging
How Few Remain (great war)
Hammer And Anvil tot-2
The Victorious opposition ae-3
The Road Not Taken
Alpha and Omega
Upsetting the Balance
The Big Switch twtce-3
The Valley-Westside War ct-6
Walk in Hell gw-2
The Great War: Breakthroughs
Armistice
Counting Up, Counting Down
Breath of God g-2
Opening Atlantis a-1
Or Even Eagle Flew
The Sacred Land sam-3
Jaws of Darkness
Out of the Darkness
Every Inch a King
Down in The Bottomlands
The Bastard King
Breakthroughs gw-3
Last Orders
Out of the Darkness d-6
The War That Came Early: West and East
The Best Military Science Fiction of the 20th Century
In High Places
Striking the Balance w-4
The Golden Shrine g-3
Thessalonica
Thirty Days Later: Steaming Forward: 30 Adventures in Time
Drive to the East
Videssos Cycle, Volume 1
Colonization: Second Contact
Something Going Around
Walk in Hell
Lee at the Alamo
The Chernagor Pirates
The Gryphon's Skull
Second Contact
The Grapple sa-2
Down to Earth
Over the Wine-Dark Sea
Joe Steele
Down to Earth c-2
Days of Infamy doi-1
A Different Flesh
Things Fall Apart
The Best Alternate History Stories of the 20th Century
The Gladiator ct-4
The Gladiator
Cayos in the Stream
Fallout
American Front
Swords of the Legion (Videssos)
Breakthroughs
Sentry Peak wotp-1
The Valley-Westside War
Fox and Empire
Blood and iron ae-1
Herbig-Haro
Coup D'Etat
Ruled Britannia
In at the Death
Last Orders: The War That Came Early
Gunpowder Empire
Supervolcano: All Fall Down s-2
The Disunited States of America
West and East twtce-2
Upsetting the Balance w-3
Tilting the Balance w-2
An Emperor for the Legion
Striking the Balance
We Haven't Got There Yet
The Golden Shrine
The Disunited States
The Center Cannot Hold ae-2
The Stolen Throne tot-1
Atlantis and Other Places
3xT
Supervolcano: Things Fall Apart s-3
The Scepter's Return
Return engagement sa-1
Owls to Athens sam-4
The Man with the Iron Heart
Advance and Retreat wotp-3
Reincarnations
Rulers of the Darkness d-4
Worldwar: Upsetting the Balance
Two Fronts twtce-5
United States of Atlantis a-2
Agent of Byzantium
The Breath of God
The War That Came Early: Coup d'Etat
Rulers of the Darkness
Homeward Bound
Through the Darkness
The House of Daniel
The United States of Atlantis
Settling Accounts Return Engagement: Book One of the Settling Accounts Trilogy
Give Me Back My Legions!
In the Balance
Owls to Athens
Supervolcano :Eruption
Darkness Descending
The Case of the Toxic Spell Dump
Conan of Venarium
Second Contact c-1
End of the Beginning
The First Heroes
Krispos of Videssos
Aftershocks
3 x T
Short Stories
In At the Death sa-4
Through the Darkness d-3
The Tale of Krispos
In The Presence of mine Enemies
The Seventh Chapter
Wisdom of the Fox gtf-1
Jaws of Darkness d-5
On the Train
Fort Pillow
Greek Missology #1: Andromeda and Persueus
The Disunited States of America ct-4
Legion of Videssos
Hitler's War
Marching Through Peachtree wotp-2
The War That Came Early: The Big Switch
Vilcabamba
After the downfall
Opening Atlantis
Liberating Atlantis
Departures
Down in The Bottomlands (and Other Places)
Gunpowder Empire ct-1
American Empire : The Center Cannot Hold
How Few Remain
Shtetl Days
Beyong the Gap g-1
Drive to the East sa-2
Worldwar: Striking the Balance
Justinian
Days of Infamy
Bombs Away
The Guns of the South
The Victorious Opposition
Videssos Besieged ttot-4