vehicles, Armstrong could see the coveralls were the wrong color, too. The stranger had a pistol on his hip, but he didn’t try to use it. Instead, he raised his hands above his head. “Reckon y’all got me,” he drawled, sounding cheerful enough. “Isn’t much point for a flyin’ man to go on with the fight once his airplane goes down, now is there?”
Just hearing that Southern accent made Armstrong wish he had a gun handy. The bastard thought he could murder U.S. soldiers and then bail out of the war as easily as he’d bailed out of the bomber? Growling like an angry dog, Armstrong took a couple of steps toward him.
A rock sailed out of the darkness and caught the Confederate airman above the ear. In the firelight, he looked absurdly surprised. As he started to crumple, he tried to get the pistol out of the holster. He couldn’t. His hands didn’t seem to remember what they were supposed to do.
And it probably wouldn’t have made any difference anyway. Armstrong and eight or ten others rushed him. He wouldn’t have been able to hold on to the gun for more than a heartbeat. He might have shot one of the U.S. soldiers, or two, but after that. . . . After that, he would have been a dead man. Which he was anyway.
By the time the soldiers finished pounding and kicking and stomping, he didn’t look anything like a man any more. He resembled nothing so much as a large broken doll lying there on the grass, all of its limbs bent in directions impossible in nature. His neck had an unnatural twist in it, too.
A corporal came up right after the recruits realized the flier had no more sport left in him. “Jesus Christ, you bastards, what the hell did you go and do?”
“Gave this asshole what he deserved,” Armstrong answered. Morning twilight was beginning to paint the eastern sky with gray.
“Well, yeah.” The noncom stared at the crumpled corpse. “But do you know how much of a stink there’ll be if the Confederates find out what the hell you did? They’re liable to start doing the same thing to our guys, too.”
Armstrong hadn’t thought of that. It was the only reason he could imagine for regretting what he’d just helped do. He would have rid the world of ten or a hundred Confederates as cheerfully, if only he’d got his hands on them.
One of the other men who’d mobbed the flier said, “Hell with it, Corporal. We’ll throw the motherfucker in the trench where the bomb hit, toss his clothes on the fire, and bury the pistol somewhere. After that, who’s gonna know?”
After a little thought, the soldier with two stripes on his sleeve nodded. “All right. That’s about the best we can do now, I guess. Get the identity disk off from around his neck, too, and bury it with the piece. That way, people will think he was one of ours when they deal with the bodies.” He came closer and took a long look at the dead Confederate. “Fuck! Nobody’ll recognize him, that’s for sure.”
“It’s a war, Corporal,” Armstrong said. “You wanted us to give him a big kiss when he came in here with that shit-eating grin on his face? We kissed him, all right. We kissed him good-bye.” The noncom waved for him and the others to take care of the body. They did. The corporal didn’t do any of the work himself. That was what having those stripes on his sleeve meant.
B rigadier General Clarence Potter had spent three years up near the front in the Great War. He hadn’t had to do a lot of actual fighting; he’d been in Intelligence with the Army of Northern Virginia. He was in Intelligence still—or rather, after close to twenty years out of the Confederate Army, in Intelligence again—but wished he could get up to the front once more instead of being stuck in Richmond.
A tall, well-made man in his mid-fifties, Potter had close-cropped hair now closer to white than to its original dark brown. His cold gray eyes surveyed the world from behind steel-rimmed spectacles. The spectacles,