CAUTIONARY NOTE:

 

I’m going to start snippeting THE BALTIC WAR today, and I’ll be following the usual schedule of snippeting on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.  Everyone should consider this a rough draft, however.  This first part is finished and, I believe, generally in very good shape.  But neither Dave Weber nor Toni Weisskopf have looked at the manuscript yet, and it’s possible they’ll want some changes or additions, or whatever.  I doubt if there’ll be anything major, but you never know.

 

So, no promises that the final book text will be identical to this draft.  Still, it should be as close as most manuscripts I’ve snippeted.

 

Eric

 

 

 

1634: The Baltic War

 

by

 

Eric Flint & David Weber

 

 

PART I

 

A mist that is like blown snow is sweeping over all

 

December, 1633

 

 

 

Chapter 1

 

 

Hans Richter Field

 

Near Grantville, in the State of Thuringia

 

 

            Colonel Jesse Wood turned off the computer in his office, removed the floppy disk and carefully slid it into its protective sleeve. It was a copy of the original disk he had already placed in an envelope and addressed to Mike Stearns, the Prime Minister of the United States of Europe. The copy itself was destined for Admiral John Simpson, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Chief of Naval Operations, and one of the chief architects of the new nation’s growing industrial capability in Magdeburg.

 

            And how he manages all three, I have no idea, Jesse thought. Lord knows I always feel about two weeks behind in my sleep. At least this report should cheer him up.

 

            The thought wasn’t as sour as it would have been some months earlier. In fact, it was rather respectful. Whatever Jesse thought of the way John Simpson had conducted himself in the two years following the Ring of Fire, the man’s actions after Mike Stearns had put him in charge of the new little Navy—especially during and after the Battle of Wismar—had pretty much washed all that old antagonism away. As it had, Jesse knew, for Stearns himself. Simpson might have been a disaster as a political leader, but there was no denying that as a pure and simple military commander he had a lot going for him. Even if his insistence on the punctilio of military protocol still rubbed Jesse the wrong way, now and then.

 

            The colonel squinted out the window at the unseasonably bright, late afternoon sunlight, catching a glimpse of Master Sergeant Friedrich Krueger giving the welcoming briefing to a bunch of newly arrived recruits. The sergeant was not being gentle about it. A recruit was on the ground, rubbing his head, no doubt after having been instructed in some fine detail of service courtesy. The tall German NCO had well earned his nickname of Freddy Krueger, although Jesse doubted he understood the background of it.

 

            He watched as the sergeant pointed to the white stripes on the sleeve of the dark brown jumpsuit that was his uniform. Perhaps he does, though, Jesse reflected. God knows they made enough of those crappy movies. One’s sure to be in town somewhere.

 

            Jesse made a mental note to ask Major Horton to have another word with the NCO about his temper. He had to admit that Krueger’s techniques were highly effective, if rather crude. Still, there was no sense in beating men who had just arrived, since they probably didn’t yet have enough sense to absorb the lesson. Looking at the assembled recruits, Jesse felt he knew the source of Krueger’s irritation. They were a very mixed bag, as all of the latest had been. Recalling the roster on his desk, Jesse thought he could spot their origins, for the most part. Among the fifteen men, he saw several Dutch, a couple of Bavarians, other Germans of all regions and dialect, two Spanish deserters, and a Swede. One man, by his dress, appeared to be either a nobleman or the son of a rich merchant.

 

            I wonder what he’s running from? Jesse mused. Well, it doesn’t matter, he’s in Freddy’s gentle care, now. I’ll wager not one of them knows a word of English. I wonder how many of them brought families with them?

 

            They were refugees for the most part, from all over Europe. The same sort of people who filled the ranks of most of the armies of the era. Mercenaries, at bottom, regardless of the official label of “citizen soldiers” they had in the New United States.

 

            Unfortunately from Jesse’s point of view, although it saved him a lot of grief in other ways, the Air Force didn’t get too many volunteers from the Committees of Correspondence. He’d been surprised by that, at first, since Hans Richter had been an airman and Hans was the poster boy for the CoCs. But after a little experience, the reason had become obvious enough. Lots of enthusiastic CoC members volunteered to become pilots like Hans Richter, sure enough. But in an Air Force that still only had a literal handful of planes, how many pilots did you need? What the Air Force mainly needed were people for the ground crews—and for all but a tiny number of CoC firebrands, serving behind the lines doing what they saw as mostly menial chores just didn’t appeal to them. One of the many American terms that had already made its way into the hybrid mostly-German dialect of the new nation emerging in central Europe was REMFs.

 

            Instead, they volunteered for the new regiments in the new army Gustav Adolf was creating, which were sure to see action come next spring. So, for the most part, Jesse had to make do with men—and some women, here and there—who “volunteered” out of necessity rather than political fervor. Granted, that saved Jesse from having to deal with the rambunctious politics that saturated the new army regiments and had most down-time officers tearing out their hair. Most up-time officers, for that matter, who were often just as aghast as their down-time counterparts at the radical conclusions their volunteers sometimes drew about the logic of democracy as applied to military discipline.

 

            So, true enough, Jesse was generally spared that problem. What he faced instead were the traditional ones of maintaining efficiency and discipline in a mercenary force—a problem that officers in the new army regiments rarely had to deal with. If a recruit in one of those regiments slacked off, he’d get “disciplined” by his CoC mates before any officer even knew a problem existed—and the discipline could be a lot more savage than anything even a sergeant like Krueger would hand out.