The idea that he might be able to work magic made Hasso want to laugh. The extra gold jingling in his belt pouch was a good reason to take the notion seriously, though. “Go, Nebun,” he said. “Go back to your chiefs. Tell them how strong we are. Tell them we are very strong. Tell them you see all this with your own eyes. Go now.”
“I go.” Nebun booted his pony up into a walk, and then into a trot. He wasn’t such a smooth rider as most of the Lenelli, but he got the job done.
“That should confuse them,” Hasso said. “If they think they know things that are not so, they get confused. They make mistakes.”
“If they think they know…” Aderno raised a wry eyebrow. “I get confused, too.”
“Finding out what is really so is important,” Hasso said. “The one who knows that better usually wins.”
Inevitably, the German invasion of Russia came to mind again. The
“One thing that is really so I already told you – we can work magic and the Grenye can’t,” Aderno said. “Now you see it with your own eyes.”
“I see that you can work magic and that that Grenye can’t,” Hasso half-agreed. He said nothing about his own magical abilities, if any. “But if this is so wonderful, why don’t Lenelli take Falticeni a long time ago?”
The wizard gave him a dirty look but no answer. Not even Velona had an answer for that, or so it seemed.
“Do the Grenye in Bucovin worship the goddess?” Hasso asked Velona at breakfast the next morning. “Or do they have their own gods, the ones they have before you Lenelli come here?”
She sipped from a mug of beer. Hasso still missed coffee and tobacco. This was this world’s New World, wasn’t it? Why didn’t it have tobacco in it? Whatever the reason, it didn’t. After swallowing, Velona said, “Some worship the goddess. They’ve seen she has true power. Their old gods are just statues of stone or wood. Some of them look pretty, but what do they do?”
She might have been a Hebrew prophet mocking the local Baals. No sooner had that thought crossed Hasso’s mind than he laughed at himself. If the prophets had any descendants, the
But the goddess here wasn’t sleepy like the long-ignored Baals of Palestine. She didn’t ignore her worshipers, the way the Jews’ God forgot about them. She was as real as a river. No wonder the Grenye started bowing down before her. The wonder was that any of them stayed stubborn enough to keep on following whatever gods they’d had before.
That brought up another question. “What goed – no,
Before answering, Velona smiled at him. “Your Lenello is getting better all the time.”
“Baptism by total immersion,” Hasso said in German. It wouldn’t have meant anything to Velona even in her language. But when he needed to use Lenello to talk at all, he had the biggest incentive in the world for getting fluent as fast as he could. He could have used Aderno to translate … if he and the wizard didn’t rub each other the wrong way all the time. He’d learned the language faster because he was doing it on his own. With an effort, he brought his mind back to the business at hand. “Bucovin.”
“Yes, Bucovin.” Velona stopped smiling. “I don’t know what went wrong. I told you that before, I think. Things … stopped working, that was all. The whole country might have been trying to see through me, and finally it did.”
“How do you stop it?” Hasso asked.
“If I knew, I would tell you,” she answered. “Once we settle our knights on the land, once we have our wizards in the towns, things should take care of themselves. I hope so, anyhow.”
Hasso didn’t know what to say to that. The Germans had been sure that, once they seized Moscow, things would take care of themselves. Then, after Moscow didn’t fall, they’d been just as sure that grabbing Stalingrad would set everything right. Then, after Stalingrad didn’t fall … Hasso forced his mind out of that unhappy groove.