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"For what?"

"Anything our boys need. These, for instance." Reaching down, he poked his left shoe, then rested his gaze on the newly painted ceiling while he mused. "The shoe industry's the second biggest in the North, only it's fallen on hard times lately. Bet there are a lot of small factories for sale in New England."

"But I know nothing about the shoe indus— "

"Learn, my boy." Snakelike, Cameron's head shot toward him. "Learn."

"Well, I suppose I could —"

"Sure." Affable again, Cameron gave Stanley's knee a second slap and stood. "Shoes are in damn short supply. It's a fine opportunity for somebody."

"I appreciate the suggestion. Thank you."

Cameron beamed. "Good night, my boy."

"Good night, sir."

After the secretary left the hotel, Stanley sat staring at his feet for more than a minute. He always had trouble with decisions, but tonight was worse because of George. He had no more say in that matter. Could he withstand Isabel's fury when she learned that the man who'd forced them out of Lehigh Station was now being invited to become Stanley's rival once again?

 6

"Wouldn't have this war if it wasn't for the niggers."

"You're wrong. It's them rebs pulling out of the Union that started it. I say fight for the flag but not the darkies."

"I'm with you there. Way I see it, the best way to solve the problem would be to shoot 'em all."

The comment generated loud agreement from several other civilians at the Willard bar. The solitary officer held the same opinion, but since he was in uniform, he made no comment. Some pro-nigger toady from the government might take notice.

The officer weighed two hundred and thirty pounds. A paunch inflated his spotless dress coat. In a dead white face that bright sunlight could broil red in half an hour, dark eyes shifted toward a corner table. One man still seated had been left by two others a moment ago. Of the pair departing, the younger man had a tantalizingly familiar face.

The officer sipped his whiskey and cudgeled his memory. He was thirty-seven, but his black hair had begun to show gray streaks six months ago. He applied dye every day to hide them and preserve a youthful appearance. Brevet Colonel Elkanah Bent only wished he could conceal his awareness of them as easily.

In that gray, he found intimations of his own mortality and a heightened sense of frustration with his career. He'd suffered career frustration during most of his adult life. But this past month it had worsened as he idled through the days in this benighted pro-Southern city. Bent hated Southerners almost as much as he hated blacks. He hated one Southerner, named Orry Main, most of all; Main and his Yankee classmate George Hazard. On top of that, Washington was the home of the only human being for whom Bent had any affection, and he was forbidden to see him.

The face of the departed stranger lingered in his mind. Bent motioned for the barkeep. "Did you see that gentleman who just left?"

"Secretary Cameron."

"No, the one with him."

"Oh, that's one of his flunkies. Stanley Hazard."

Bent's hand clenched. "From Pennsylvania?"

"I suppose. Cameron brought a lot of political pals to the War Department." A nod to the empty glass. "Need another?"

"Yes, I do. A double."

Stanley Hazard. George Hazard's brother, surely. That would explain the familiarity despite the soft, sagging face. For a moment such overwhelming emotions buffeted him that he felt sick, dizzy.

Orry Main and George Hazard had been one year behind Elkanah Bent at the Military Academy. From the start, they had despised him and conspired to turn others against him. He held them directly responsible for his failure to win promotions and commendations. That had been true at West Point and again during the war in Mexico.

In the late fifties, Bent had been posted to the Second Cavalry in Texas. There, Orry Main's cousin Charles, a brash new lieutenant in the regiment, had further besmirched his record.

In this war, the Mains naturally sided with the Southern traitors. George Hazard had left the army years ago, but his younger brother, Billy, was in the Union engineers. Bent didn't know the whereabouts of any of them, but this he did know beyond doubt: Elkanah Bent was destined for greatness. Supreme power. All of his adult life he'd believed he would emerge as the American Bonaparte, and he still believed it, even though an upstart Academy classmate, George McClellan, lately returned to the army, had somehow persuaded the gullible press to confer the title on him.

Never mind. What mattered was the power itself. It would bring recognition and reward for Bent's military genius and, just as surely, the opportunity to destroy the Mains and the Hazards.

He gulped whiskey and fixed a clear image of Stanley's present appearance in his mind. After he emptied the glass, he pulled out his watch. Past seven already. Soon it would be dark, and when it was, the steets were unsafe. Unlike the daytime police, those on duty at night were paid by the government, principally to protect public buildings, not citizens. He ought to be leaving. Though he wore his dress sword, he didn't care to invite the attention of the thugs and robbers who hunted for victims when the sun went down. Men like that terrified him.

One more drink, then he'd go. He sipped it, struggling to summon satisfying visions of throttling Stanley Hazard or stabbing his sword into Stanley's belly. The effort did him no good. The one he wanted to hurt was George. George and that damned Orry Main.

Clutching the hilt of his sword, he lurched out of Willard's. He could feel and smell dampness in the air; another pestilential fog would soon be rising from the river. He bumped into an oyster-seller giving one last toot of his horn as he wheeled his cart away. Bent cursed the blurred figure and wove on through twilight shadows from which strange, taunting voices whispered to him. Real voices? Phantoms? He wasn't sure. His walk approached a run.

Three blocks of this torment brought him to the safety of the boardinghouse. Panting, he climbed steps to the lighted veranda and huddled there until his tremors of relief subsided. Then he went into the parlor, where he found another boarder with whom he'd struck up an acquaintance. Colonel Elmsdale, a jug-eared New Hampshireman, chewed a cigar as he pointed to some papers on a table.

"Picked up my orders today. Yours, too. There they are. Not the best of news."

"Not — the best —?" Licking lips already moist, Bent snatched the orders. The handwriting, typically ornate, seemed to writhe, as if snakes were somehow imprisoned in the paper. But he understood every word. He was so frightened, he passed wind uncontrollably. Elmsdale didn't laugh or smile.

"Department of — Kentucky?"

A grim nod, "Army of the Cumberland. Do you know who's in command? Anderson. The same slave-owning bungler who hauled the flag down at Sumter. I know a lot of people called him a hero, but I'm hanged if I do."

"Where's this Camp Dick Robinson?"

"Near Danville. Camp of instruction for volunteers."

Incredulous, Bent said, "I've drawn line duty — in secesh country?"

"Yes, and I've drawn the same. I'm no happier than you are, Bent. We'll have greenhorns to command — bushwhackers behind every tree — nobody fighting by the book. I'll bet the plowboys we're supposed to train can't even read the goddamn book."

"There's been some mistake," Bent whispered, wheeling and stumbling to the stairs.

"There certainly has. The army kind." Elmsdale sighed. "Not a thing we can do about it."

Lumbering upstairs, Bent didn't hear. Down a dusty, gas-lit hall reeking of stew beef and onions — the dining-room supper he was too sick to eat — he found his room. He slammed the door. Sank to the edge of the bed in the dark. Line duty. Commanding illiterates in a wilderness where a man ran a high risk of dying from the bullet of some Southern sympathizer.