But he’d done plenty. The way Rautat sprang up and kissed him on both cheeks proved that. So did the way the Lenelli ran. From now on, they’d piss themselves whenever they saw a cord running to some freshly turned earth. Professionally, Hasso was happy. Personally … He’d worry about that later. When he had time. If he ever did.
XXII
Things in western Bucovin were going to be different for a while – maybe for quite a while. Hasso could already see that. The natives had their peckers up. And the Lenelli … The Lenelli had to be wondering what the devil had hit them. They sure would start to sweat whenever they saw string running to what looked like holes in the ground. And they would have to be ten times more worried about bushwhackers than they ever had before.
Then he shook his head. To make nitro safe to handle, you had to turn it into dynamite, and he knew he didn’t know how to do that. Turning out gunpowder was dangerous. You had to be careful as hell. Turning out nitroglycerine? No, he didn’t even want to try. And he
Rautat nudged him. “Let’s get out of here.”
Plain good sense ended his woolgathering in a hurry. “Right,” he said. Getting away wasn’t hard. King Bottero’s men had either fled back to the west or were hotly engaged with Lord Zgomot’s soldiers. They didn’t have time to worry about a couple of men heading the other way.
Not getting scragged by the Bucovinans was more interesting. Hasso was glad he had Rautat along. The underofficer was able to convince his countrymen that the big blond beside him wasn’t a Lenello and was a friend. Hasso might not have had an easy time doing that on his own.
He felt better when he and Rautat caught up with the wagon that held the rest of the gunpowder jars. Dumnez and Peretsh and Gunoiul and the other Bucovinans on his crew were beside themselves with excitement. “It worked!” they shouted, and, “We heard it blow up!” and other things besides. Once they’d said those first two, though, they’d said everything that mattered.
“What now?” Hasso asked
“Now we go back to Falticeni and find out what new orders Lord Zgomot has for us,” Rautat answered.
“We ought to leave the wagon somewhere closer to the front, so even without us it can go into action fast if it has to,” Hasso said.
“Not too close,” Rautat said. “Can’t let it get captured no matter what.”
He would have been right about that in medieval Europe. He was righter here. Hasso still worried about magic. The longer till Aderno and the other Lenello wizards figured out what gunpowder was and how it worked, the better. How much of a spell would you need to ignite it from a distance? “Where do you want to leave it, then?” the
“How about Muresh?” Rautat said. “Even if the big blond bastards do come that far, it can always go back over the Oltet.”
Hasso found himself nodding. “Muresh should do.” He liked the idea of putting such a potent weapon in a town the enemy had ravaged only the autumn before.
In fact, he needed a moment to remember that he’d been part of the army that ravaged Muresh. It seemed a long time ago – and that despite his trying to rejoin that army only a few days before. King Bottero didn’t want him back? Well, long live Lord Zgomot, then!
He really had turned his coat. He shook his head. No, he’d had it turned for him. If the Lenelli wanted him dead – and they damn well did – how could he think he owed them anything but a good kick in the nuts the first chance he got?
It all made good logical sense. Which proved … what, exactly? If Jews had a country of their own, would Germans feel easy about fighting for it? He had a hard time seeing how. Why would Jews want Germans on their side, anyway?
But that one had an answer. Whatever else you said about Germans, they were better at war than damn near anybody else. They’d shown twice now that they weren’t as good as everybody else put together, but that wasn’t the same thing.
“Why are you laughing?” Rautat asked.
“Am I?” Hasso said. “Maybe because I am starting to pay the Lenelli back for trying to kill me.”