Rulers of the Darkness d-4 Read online

Page 4


  "Algarvians," Skarnu said with fine contempt. If they weren't the most self-important people on the face of the earth, he didn't know who was. He laughed, but not for long. Their pretensions would have been funnier if they hadn't dominated all the east of Derlavai.

  And then they came up the stairs to his block of flats. When he saw that, he didn't hesitate for a moment. He grabbed a cloth cap, stuffed it down as low on his head as it would go, and left his flat, closing the door behind him as quietly as he could. His wool tunic would keep him warm for a while outside.

  He hurried to the stairs and started down them. As he'd thought he would, he passed the Algarvians coming up. He didn't look at them; they didn't look at him. He'd gambled that they wouldn't. Their orders were probably something like, Arrest the man you find in flat 36. But there wouldn't be any man in flat 36 to arrest when they got there. If Skarnu hadn't seen them coming…

  Vapor puffed from his mouth and nose as he opened the front door and went out onto the street. He was already hurrying up the sidewalk in the direction from which the redheads had come- a clever touch, he thought- when he realized he didn't know for a fact that they'd been after him. He laughed, though it wasn't funny. How likely that this block of flats held two men the Algarvians wanted badly enough to send their own after him instead of entrusting the job to Valmieran constables? Not very.

  A youth waved a news sheet in his face. "Algarvians smash Unkerlanter drive south of Durrwangen!" he cried. The news sheets, of course, printed only what King Mezentio's ministers wanted Valmiera to hear. They'd stopped talking about Sulingen, for instance, as soon as the battle there was lost. They made the victories they reported these days sound like splendid triumphs instead of the desperate defensive struggles they had to be.

  Skarnu strode past the vendor without a word, without even shaking his head. He turned a corner and then another and another and another, picking right or left at random each time. If the Algarvians came bursting out of the block of flats hot on his trail, they wouldn't have an easy time following him. He chuckled. He didn't know himself where he was going, so why should the redheads?

  That didn't stay funny long, though. He had to pause and get his bearings- not easy in Ventspils, since he didn't know the town well. In Priekule, he could have looked for the Kaunian Column of Victory. That would have told him where in the city he was… till the Algarvians knocked it down. The victory it celebrated was one the Kaunian Empire had won over the barbarous Algarvic tribes- a victory that still rankled the tribesmen's barbarous descendants more than a millennium and a half later.

  Though he took longer than he should have, he finally did figure out where he was. Then he needed to figure out where to go. That had only one answer, really: the tavern called the Lion and the Mouse. But the answer wasn't so good, either. Were the Algarvians after him in particular, or were they trying to smash all the resistance in Ventspils? If the former, they might know nothing of the tavern. If the latter, they were liable to be waiting in force around or inside it.

  He muttered under his breath. A woman passing by gave him a curious look. He stared back so stonily, she hurried on her way as if she'd never looked at him at all. Maybe she thought him a madman or a derelict. As long as she didn't think him one of the handful who kept the fight against Algarve alive, he cared nothing for her opinion.

  I've got to go, he realized. The Lion and the Mouse was the only place where he could hope to meet other irregulars. They could find him somewhere else to stay or spirit him out of Ventspils altogether. Without them… Skarnu didn't want to think about that. One man alone was one man helpless.

  He approached the tavern with all the caution he'd learned as a captain in the Valmieran army- before the Algarvians used dragons and behemoths to smash that army into isolated chunks and then beat it. He couldn't see anything that looked particularly dangerous around the place. He wished Raunu, his veteran sergeant, were still with him. Having been in the army as long as Skarnu was alive, Raunu knew far more about soldiering than Skarnu had learned in something under a year. But Skarnu was a marquis and Raunu the son of a sausage seller, so Skarnu had led the company of which they'd both been part.

  After twice walking past the doorway to the Lion and the Mouse, Skarnu, the mouse, decided he had to put his head in the lion's mouth. Scowling, he walked into the tavern. The burly fellow behind the bar was a man he'd seen before- which meant nothing if the man was in bed with the Algarvians.

  But there, at a table in the far corner of the room, Skarnu spied a painter who was one of the leaders of the underground in Ventspils. Unless he proved a traitor, too, the Algarvians didn't know about this place. Skarnu bought a mug of ale- nothing wrong with Ventspils' ale- and sat down across the table from him.

  "Well, hello, Pavilosta," the painter said. "Didn't expect to see you here today." That sounded polite, but harsh suspicion lay under it.

  Skarnu's answering grimace was harsh, too. He didn't care to have even the name of the village he'd come from mentioned out loud. After a pull at the ale, he said, "A couple of redheads came into my block of flats an hour ago. If I hadn't spied 'em outside, they would've nabbed me."

  "Well, we can't expect the Algarvians to love us, not after we yanked those Sibian dragonfliers right out from under their noses," the local underground leader said. "They'd want to poke back if they saw the chance to do it."

  "I understand that." Like the painter, Skarnu kept his voice low. "But are they after underground folk in Ventspils, or me in particular?"

  "Why would they be after you in particular?" the other man asked. Then he paused and thumped his forehead with the heel of his hand. "I keep forgetting you're not just Pavilosta. You're the chap with a sister in the wrong bed."

  "That's one way to put it, aye," Skarnu said. It was, in fact, a gentler way to put it than he would have used. It also avoided mentioning his noble blood- common women could and did sleep with the redheaded occupiers, too.

  After a pull on his own mug of ale, the painter said, "She knew where you were down in Pavilosta- she did, or else the Algarvian she's laying did. But how would she know you've come to Ventspils? How would the redheads know, either?"

  "Obvious answer is, they're squeezing somebody between Pavilosta and here," Skarnu said. "I had a narrow escape getting out of there; they might have stumbled onto somebody who helped me." He named no names. What the other fellow didn't know, King Mezentio's men and their Valmieran stooges couldn't squeeze out of him. Skarnu wouldn't have been so careful about security even during his duty in the regular Valmieran army.

  "If they've got hold of a link in the chain between here and there, that could be… unpleasant," the painter said. "Every time we take in a new man, we have to wonder if he's the fellow who's going to sell the lot of us to the Algarvians- and one fine day, one of them will do it."

  Someone Skarnu had seen once or twice before strolled into the Lion and the Mouse. Instead of ordering ale or spirits, he spoke in casual tones: "Redheads and their dogs are heading toward this place. Some people might not want to hang around and wait for them." He didn't even look toward the corner where Skarnu and the painter sat.

  Skarnu's first impulse was to leap and run. Then he realized how stupid that was: it would make him stand out, which was the last thing he wanted. And even if it didn't, where would he go? Ventspils wasn't his town; aside from the men of the underground, he had no friends and hardly any acquaintances here.

  After a last quick swig, the painter set down his empty mug. "Maybe we'd better not hang around and wait for them," he said, with which conclusion Skarnu could hardly disagree.

  Skarnu didn't bother finishing his ale. He left the mug on the table and followed the other man out. "Where do we go now?" he asked.

  "There are places," the painter said, an answer that wasn't an answer. After a moment, Skarnu realized the underground leader had security concerns of his own. Sure enough, the man went on, "I don't think we'll have to blindfold you."

&nbs
p; "I'm so glad to hear it." Skarnu had intended the words to be sarcastic. They didn't come out that way. The Unkerlanters might have the Algarvians on the run in the distant west, but here in Valmiera the redheads could still make their handful of foes dance to their tune.

  ***

  Fernao was studying his Kuusaman. That was, he understood, a curious thing for a Lagoan mage to do. Though Lagoas and Kuusamo shared the large island off the southeastern coast of Derlavai, his countrymen were in the habit of looking in the direction of the mainland and not toward their eastern neighbors, whom they usually regarded as little more than amusing rustics.

  That was true even though a lot of Lagoans had some Kuusaman blood. Fernao's height and his red hair proved him of mainly Algarvic stock, but his narrow, slanted eyes showed it wasn't pure. Lagoans also did their best not to notice that Kuusamo outweighed their kingdom about three to one.

  Outside, a storm that had blown up from the south did its best to turn this stretch of Kuusamo into the land of the Ice People. The wind howled. Snow drifted around the hostel the soldiers of the Seven Princes had run up here in the middle of nowhere. The district of Naantali lay so far south, the sun rose above the horizon for only a little while each day.

  Down on the austral continent, of course, it wouldn't have risen at all for a while on either side of the winter solstice. Having seen the land of the Ice People in midwinter, Fernao knew that all too well. Here, he had a coal-burning stove, not the brazier he'd fed lumps of dried camel dung.

  "I shall shovel snow," he murmured: a particularly apt paradigm. "You will shovel snow. He, she, it will shovel snow. We shall shovel snow. You-plural will shovel snow. They-"

  Someone knocked on the door. "One moment!" Fernao called, not in Kuusaman but in classical Kaunian, the language he really did share with his Kuusaman colleagues. Just getting to the door took rather more than a moment. He had to lever himself up from his stool with the help of a cane, grab the crutch that leaned by the chair, and use both of them to cross the room and reach the doorway.

  And all of that, he thought as he opened the door, was progress. He'd almost died when an Algarvian egg burst too close to him down in the land of the Ice People. His leg had been shattered. Only in the past few days had the Kuusaman healers released what was left of it from its immobilizing plaster prison.

  Pekka stood in the hall outside. "Hello," she said, also in classical Kaunian, the widespread language of scholarship. "I hope I did not interrupt any important calculations. I hate it when people do that to me."

  "No." Fernao smiled down at her. Like most of her countrymen- the exceptions being those who had some Lagoan blood- she was short and slim and dark, with a wide face, high cheekbones, and eyes slanted like his own. He switched to her language to show what he had been doing: "We shall shovel snow. You-plural will shovel snow. They will shovel snow."

  She laughed. Against her golden skin, her teeth seemed even whiter than they were. A moment later, she sobered and nodded. "Your accent is quite good," she said, first in Kaunian, then in her own tongue.

  "Thanks," Fernao said in Kuusaman. Then he returned to the classical tongue: "I have always had a knack for learning languages, but yours is different from any other I have tried to pick up." Awkwardly, he stepped aside. "Please come in. Sit down. Make yourself at home."

  "I wish I were at home," Pekka said. "I wish my husband were at home, too. I miss my family." Her husband, Fernao knew, was no less a sorcerer than she, but one of a more practical bent. As Pekka walked past, she asked, "Were you using the stool or the bed? I do not want to disturb you."

  "The stool," Fernao answered. Pekka had already sat down on the bed by the time he closed the door, hobbled back across the chamber, and carefully lowered himself onto the stool. He propped the crutch where he could easily reach it before saying, "And what can I do for you this morning?"

  He knew what he wouldn't have minded doing, not for her but with her. He'd always reckoned Kuusaman women too small and skinny to be very interesting, but was changing his mind about Pekka. That was probably because, working alongside her, he'd come to think of her as colleague and friend, to admire her wits as well as her body. Whatever the reason, his interest was real.

  He kept quiet about it. By the way she spoke about Leino, her husband, and Uto, her son, she wasn't interested in him or in anyone but them. Making advances would have been worse than rude- it would have been futile. Though a good theoretical sorcerer, Fernao was a practical man in other ways. Stretching out his legs in front of him, he waited to hear what Pekka had to say.

  She hesitated, something she seldom did. At last, she answered, "Have you done any more work on Ilmarinen's contention?"

  "Which contention do you mean?" he said, as innocently as he could. "He has so many of them."

  That got him another smile from Pekka. Like the first, it didn't last long. "You know which one," she said. "No matter how many strange ideas Ilmarinen comes up with, only one really matters to us now."

  And that was also true. Fernao sighed. He didn't like admitting, even to himself, how true it was. Here, though, he had no choice. Pointing out the window- the double-glazed window that helped hold winter at bay- in the direction of the latest release of sorcerous energy the Kuusaman experimental team had touched off, he said, "That was fresh grass, summer grass, he pulled up from the middle of the crater."

  "I know," Pekka said softly. "Fresh grass in the middle of- this." She pointed out the window, too, at the snow swirling past in the grip of the whistling wind. More softly still, she added, "It can mean just one thing."

  Fernao sighed again. "The calculations suggested it all along. So did the other experimental results. No wonder Ilmarinen got angry at us when we didn't want to face what that meant."

  Pekka's laugh was more rueful than anything else. "If Ilmarinen had not got angry over that, he would have got angry over something else," she said. "Getting angry, and getting other people angry, is what he enjoys more than anything else these days. But…" She stopped; she didn't want to say what followed logically from Ilmarinen's grass, either. In the end, she did: "We really do seem to be drawing our energy in these experiments by twisting time itself."

  There. It was out. Fernao didn't want to hear it, any more than he'd wanted to say it. But now that Pekka had said it, he could only nod. "Aye. That is what the numbers say, sure enough." For once, he was glad to be speaking classical Kaunian. It let him sound more detached, more objective- and a lot less frightened- than he really was.

  "I think the numbers also say we can only draw energy from it when we send one set of animals racing forward and the other racing back," Pekka said. "We cannot do any more meddling than that… can we?" She sounded frightened, too, as if she were pleading for reassurance.

  Fernao gave her what reassurance he could: "I read the calculations the same way. So does Siuntio. And so does Ilmarinen, for all his bluff and bluster."

  "I know," Pekka said. "I have had long talks with both of them- talks much more worried than this one." Maybe she found Kaunian distancing, too. But she added, "What if the Algarvians are also calculating- calculating and coming up with different answers?"

  For effect, Fernao tried a few words of Kuusaman: "Then we're all in trouble." Pekka let out a startled laugh, then nodded. Fernao wished he could have gone on in her language, but had to drop back into classical Kaunian: "But most of their mages are busy with their murderous magic, and the rest really should get the same results we have."

  "Powers above, I hope so!" Pekka exclaimed. "The energy release is dreadful enough as is, but the world could not stand having its past revised and edited."

  Before Fernao could answer, someone else knocked on the door. Pekka sprang up and opened it before Fernao could start what was for him the long, slow, involved process of rising. "Oh, hello, my dear," Master Siuntio said in Kuusaman before courteously switching to classical Kaunian so Fernao could follow: "I came to ask if our distinguished Lagoan colleague would care
to join me for dinner. Now I ask you the same question as well."

  "I would be delighted, sir," Fernao said, and did struggle to his feet.

  "And I," Pekka agreed. "Things may look brighter once we have some food and drink inside us."

  A buffet waited in the dining room. Fernao piled Kuusaman smoked salmon- as good as any in the world- on a chewy roll, and added slices of onion and of hard-cooked egg and pickled cucumber. Along with a mug of ale, that made a dinner to keep him going till suppertime. "Would you like me to carry those for you?" Pekka asked.

  "If you would be so kind- the plate, anyhow," Fernao answered. "I can manage the mug. Now I have two hands, but I would need three." Till not too long before, he'd had an arm in a cast as well as a leg. Then he'd needed four hands and possessed only one.

  Pekka had built a sandwich almost as formidable as his own. She did some substantial damage to it before asking Siuntio, "Master, do you think you will find any loopholes in the spells we are crafting?"

  Siuntio gently shook his head. He looked more like a kindly grandfather than the leading theoretical sorcerer of his generation. "No," he said. "We have been over this ground before, you know. I see extravagant energy releases, aye, far more extravagant than we could get from any other source. But I see no way to achieve anything but that. We cannot sneak back through the holes we tear in time- and a good thing we can't, too."

  "I agree," Fernao said, gulping down a large mouthful of salmon to make sure his words came clear. "On both counts, I agree."

  "I don't believe even Ilmarinen will disagree on this," Siuntio said.

  "Disagree on what?" Ilmarinen asked, striding into the dining hall as if naming him could conjure him up. With a wispy white chin beard, wild hair, and gleaming eyes, he might have been Siuntio's raffish brother. But he, too, was a formidable mage. "Disagree on what?" he repeated.

 

    King of the North Read onlineKing of the NorthWe Install Read onlineWe InstallThe Grapple Read onlineThe GrappleIn the Balance & Tilting the Balance Read onlineIn the Balance & Tilting the BalanceCurious Notions ct-2 Read onlineCurious Notions ct-2A World of Difference Read onlineA World of DifferenceAftershocks c-3 Read onlineAftershocks c-3Krispos Rising Read onlineKrispos RisingRunning of the Bulls Read onlineRunning of the BullsThe Thousand Cities ttot-3 Read onlineThe Thousand Cities ttot-3In the Balance w-1 Read onlineIn the Balance w-1Sentry Peak Read onlineSentry PeakTypecasting Read onlineTypecastingHomeward Bound (colonization) Read onlineHomeward Bound (colonization)Krispos the Emperor k-3 Read onlineKrispos the Emperor k-3An Emperor for the Legion (Videssos Cycle) Read onlineAn Emperor for the Legion (Videssos Cycle)Colonization: Aftershocks Read onlineColonization: AftershocksColonization: Down to Earth Read onlineColonization: Down to EarthBeyond the Gap Read onlineBeyond the GapBlood and Iron Read onlineBlood and IronAmerican Front gw-1 Read onlineAmerican Front gw-1Tale of the Fox gtf-2 Read onlineTale of the Fox gtf-2Krispos the Emperor Read onlineKrispos the EmperorManuscript Tradition Read onlineManuscript TraditionReturn Engagement Read onlineReturn EngagementThrough Darkest Europe Read onlineThrough Darkest EuropeThe Eighth-Grade History Class Visits the Hebrew Home for the Aging Read onlineThe Eighth-Grade History Class Visits the Hebrew Home for the AgingHow Few Remain (great war) Read onlineHow Few Remain (great war)Hammer And Anvil tot-2 Read onlineHammer And Anvil tot-2The Victorious opposition ae-3 Read onlineThe Victorious opposition ae-3The Road Not Taken Read onlineThe Road Not TakenAlpha and Omega Read onlineAlpha and OmegaUpsetting the Balance Read onlineUpsetting the BalanceThe Big Switch twtce-3 Read onlineThe Big Switch twtce-3The Valley-Westside War ct-6 Read onlineThe Valley-Westside War ct-6Walk in Hell gw-2 Read onlineWalk in Hell gw-2The Great War: Breakthroughs Read onlineThe Great War: BreakthroughsArmistice Read onlineArmisticeCounting Up, Counting Down Read onlineCounting Up, Counting DownBreath of God g-2 Read onlineBreath of God g-2Opening Atlantis a-1 Read onlineOpening Atlantis a-1Or Even Eagle Flew Read onlineOr Even Eagle FlewThe Sacred Land sam-3 Read onlineThe Sacred Land sam-3Jaws of Darkness Read onlineJaws of DarknessOut of the Darkness Read onlineOut of the DarknessEvery Inch a King Read onlineEvery Inch a KingDown in The Bottomlands Read onlineDown in The BottomlandsThe Bastard King Read onlineThe Bastard KingBreakthroughs gw-3 Read onlineBreakthroughs gw-3Last Orders Read onlineLast OrdersOut of the Darkness d-6 Read onlineOut of the Darkness d-6The War That Came Early: West and East Read onlineThe War That Came Early: West and EastThe Best Military Science Fiction of the 20th Century Read onlineThe Best Military Science Fiction of the 20th CenturyIn High Places Read onlineIn High PlacesStriking the Balance w-4 Read onlineStriking the Balance w-4The Golden Shrine g-3 Read onlineThe Golden Shrine g-3Thessalonica Read onlineThessalonicaThirty Days Later: Steaming Forward: 30 Adventures in Time Read onlineThirty Days Later: Steaming Forward: 30 Adventures in TimeDrive to the East Read onlineDrive to the EastVidessos Cycle, Volume 1 Read onlineVidessos Cycle, Volume 1Colonization: Second Contact Read onlineColonization: Second ContactSomething Going Around Read onlineSomething Going AroundWalk in Hell Read onlineWalk in HellLee at the Alamo Read onlineLee at the AlamoThe Chernagor Pirates Read onlineThe Chernagor PiratesThe Gryphon's Skull Read onlineThe Gryphon's SkullSecond Contact Read onlineSecond ContactThe Grapple sa-2 Read onlineThe Grapple sa-2Down to Earth Read onlineDown to EarthOver the Wine-Dark Sea Read onlineOver the Wine-Dark SeaJoe Steele Read onlineJoe SteeleDown to Earth c-2 Read onlineDown to Earth c-2Days of Infamy doi-1 Read onlineDays of Infamy doi-1A Different Flesh Read onlineA Different FleshThings Fall Apart Read onlineThings Fall ApartThe Best Alternate History Stories of the 20th Century Read onlineThe Best Alternate History Stories of the 20th CenturyThe Gladiator ct-4 Read onlineThe Gladiator ct-4The Gladiator Read onlineThe GladiatorCayos in the Stream Read onlineCayos in the StreamFallout Read onlineFalloutAmerican Front Read onlineAmerican FrontSwords of the Legion (Videssos) Read onlineSwords of the Legion (Videssos)Breakthroughs Read onlineBreakthroughsSentry Peak wotp-1 Read onlineSentry Peak wotp-1The Valley-Westside War Read onlineThe Valley-Westside WarFox and Empire Read onlineFox and EmpireBlood and iron ae-1 Read onlineBlood and iron ae-1Herbig-Haro Read onlineHerbig-HaroCoup D'Etat Read onlineCoup D'EtatRuled Britannia Read onlineRuled BritanniaIn at the Death Read onlineIn at the DeathLast Orders: The War That Came Early Read onlineLast Orders: The War That Came EarlyGunpowder Empire Read onlineGunpowder EmpireSupervolcano: All Fall Down s-2 Read onlineSupervolcano: All Fall Down s-2The Disunited States of America Read onlineThe Disunited States of AmericaWest and East twtce-2 Read onlineWest and East twtce-2Upsetting the Balance w-3 Read onlineUpsetting the Balance w-3Tilting the Balance w-2 Read onlineTilting the Balance w-2An Emperor for the Legion Read onlineAn Emperor for the LegionStriking the Balance Read onlineStriking the BalanceWe Haven't Got There Yet Read onlineWe Haven't Got There YetThe Golden Shrine Read onlineThe Golden ShrineThe Disunited States Read onlineThe Disunited StatesThe Center Cannot Hold ae-2 Read onlineThe Center Cannot Hold ae-2The Stolen Throne tot-1 Read onlineThe Stolen Throne tot-1Atlantis and Other Places Read onlineAtlantis and Other Places3xT Read online3xTSupervolcano: Things Fall Apart s-3 Read onlineSupervolcano: Things Fall Apart s-3The Scepter's Return Read onlineThe Scepter's ReturnReturn engagement sa-1 Read onlineReturn engagement sa-1Owls to Athens sam-4 Read onlineOwls to Athens sam-4The Man with the Iron Heart Read onlineThe Man with the Iron HeartAdvance and Retreat wotp-3 Read onlineAdvance and Retreat wotp-3Reincarnations Read onlineReincarnationsRulers of the Darkness d-4 Read onlineRulers of the Darkness d-4Worldwar: Upsetting the Balance Read onlineWorldwar: Upsetting the BalanceTwo Fronts twtce-5 Read onlineTwo Fronts twtce-5United States of Atlantis a-2 Read onlineUnited States of Atlantis a-2Agent of Byzantium Read onlineAgent of ByzantiumThe Breath of God Read onlineThe Breath of GodThe War That Came Early: Coup d'Etat Read onlineThe War That Came Early: Coup d'EtatRulers of the Darkness Read onlineRulers of the DarknessHomeward Bound Read onlineHomeward BoundThrough the Darkness Read onlineThrough the DarknessThe House of Daniel Read onlineThe House of DanielThe United States of Atlantis Read onlineThe United States of AtlantisSettling Accounts Return Engagement: Book One of the Settling Accounts Trilogy Read onlineSettling Accounts Return Engagement: Book One of the Settling Accounts TrilogyGive Me Back My Legions! Read onlineGive Me Back My Legions!In the Balance Read onlineIn the BalanceOwls to Athens Read onlineOwls to AthensSupervolcano :Eruption Read onlineSupervolcano :EruptionDarkness Descending Read onlineDarkness DescendingThe Case of the Toxic Spell Dump Read onlineThe Case of the Toxic Spell DumpConan of Venarium Read onlineConan of VenariumSecond Contact c-1 Read onlineSecond Contact c-1End of the Beginning Read onlineEnd of the BeginningThe First Heroes Read onlineThe First HeroesKrispos of Videssos Read onlineKrispos of VidessosAftershocks Read onlineAftershocks3 x T Read online3 x TShort Stories Read onlineShort StoriesIn At the Death sa-4 Read onlineIn At the Death sa-4Through the Darkness d-3 Read onlineThrough the Darkness d-3The Tale of Krispos Read onlineThe Tale of KrisposIn The Presence of mine Enemies Read onlineIn The Presence of mine EnemiesThe Seventh Chapter Read onlineThe Seventh ChapterWisdom of the Fox gtf-1 Read onlineWisdom of the Fox gtf-1Jaws of Darkness d-5 Read onlineJaws of Darkness d-5On the Train Read onlineOn the TrainFort Pillow Read onlineFort PillowGreek Missology #1: Andromeda and Persueus Read onlineGreek Missology #1: Andromeda and PersueusThe Disunited States of America ct-4 Read onlineThe Disunited States of America ct-4Legion of Videssos Read onlineLegion of VidessosHitler's War Read onlineHitler's WarMarching Through Peachtree wotp-2 Read onlineMarching Through Peachtree wotp-2The War That Came Early: The Big Switch Read onlineThe War That Came Early: The Big SwitchVilcabamba Read onlineVilcabambaAfter the downfall Read onlineAfter the downfallOpening Atlantis Read onlineOpening AtlantisLiberating Atlantis Read onlineLiberating AtlantisDepartures Read onlineDeparturesDown in The Bottomlands (and Other Places) Read onlineDown in The Bottomlands (and Other Places)Gunpowder Empire ct-1 Read onlineGunpowder Empire ct-1American Empire : The Center Cannot Hold Read onlineAmerican Empire : The Center Cannot HoldHow Few Remain Read onlineHow Few RemainShtetl Days Read onlineShtetl DaysBeyong the Gap g-1 Read onlineBeyong the Gap g-1Drive to the East sa-2 Read onlineDrive to the East sa-2Worldwar: Striking the Balance Read onlineWorldwar: Striking the BalanceJustinian Read onlineJustinianDays of Infamy Read onlineDays of InfamyBombs Away Read onlineBombs AwayThe Guns of the South Read onlineThe Guns of the SouthThe Victorious Opposition Read onlineThe Victorious OppositionVidessos Besieged ttot-4 Read onlineVidessos Besieged ttot-4