Return Engagement

Return Engagement by Harry Turtledove Page A

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Authors: Harry Turtledove
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these days, nearer seventy than sixty. But if he didn’t work, he wouldn’t eat. That made his choices simple. He would work till he dropped.
    Bathsheba, his wife, had already left their small, cramped apartment to clean white folks’ houses. Scipio kissed his daughter and son and went out the door. They’d had a better flat before the white riots of 1934 burned down half the Terry. Not much had been rebuilt since. The way things were, they were lucky to have a place at all.
    A couple of blocks from the apartment building, a long line of Negroes, almost all men, stood waiting for a bus. It pulled up just as Scipio walked by. Some of the blacks stared at him. Somebody said something to his friend that had
penguin suit
in it. Scipio kept walking. He shook his head. Real wit was hard to come by, whether from whites or blacks.
    The placard on the bus that pulled up said war plant work. Scipio shook his head again. Negroes weren’t good enough to be Confederate citizens, weren’t good enough to be anything but the CSA’s whipping boys. But when the guns started going off . . .
    When the guns started going off, the whites went to shoot them. But the soldiers went right on needing more guns and ammunition and airplanes and barrels. If the CSA took whites out of the line to make them, it wouldn’t have enough men in uniform left to face the USA’s greater numbers. That meant getting labor out of black men and white women.
    Scipio wouldn’t have wanted to make the tools of war for a government that also used those tools to hold Negroes down. But none of the blacks getting on that war plant work bus seemed unhappy. They had jobs. They were making money. And if they were doing something Jake Featherston needed, Freedom Party stalwarts or guards were less likely to grab them and throw them in a camp. Those camps had a reputation that got more evil with each passing day.
    Scipio didn’t believe all the rumors he’d heard about the camps. Some of them had to be scare stories, of the sort that had frightened him when he was a pickaninny. Nobody in his right mind could do some of the things rumor claimed. Confederate whites wanted to keep blacks down, yes. But killing them off made no sense. Who would do what whites called nigger work if there were no blacks to take care of it?
    He imagined white women cleaning house for their rich sisters. And he imagined white men out in the cotton fields, picking cotton dawn to dusk under the hot, hot sun. It was pretty funny.
    And then, all of a sudden, it wasn’t. One of the things the Freedom Party had done was put far more machinery in the fields than had ever been there before. A few men on those combines could do the work of dozens, maybe hundreds, with hand tools.
It’s almost as if they were working out ahead of time how they would get along without us.
That precisely formed sentence made Scipio nervous for two reasons. First, it had the unpleasant feel of truth, of seeing below the surface to the underlying reality. And second, it reminded him of the education Anne Colleton had forced on him when he was her butler at the Marshlands plantation. Again, she hadn’t given it to him for his benefit, but for her own. But that didn’t mean it hadn’t benefited him.
    And now Anne Colleton was dead. He’d read that in the
Augusta Constitutionalist
with astonished disbelief. He hadn’t thought anything could kill her, could stop her, could turn her aside from a path she’d chosen. She’d always seemed as much a force of nature as a mere human being.
    But even a force of nature, evidently, could get caught in a damnyankee air raid. For years, Scipio had lived in dread of her showing up at the Huntsman’s Lodge. And then one day she had, and sure as hell she’d recognized him. She wanted him dead. He knew that. But he’d managed to slither out from under her wrath, and now he didn’t have to worry about it any more.
    Without looking at the people around him, he could tell the minute

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