XIV

Jeremiah Stafford peered at the insurrectionists' position through a spyglass. He couldn't judge how many men they had behind that stone wall. Enough to let them think they could challenge the Atlantean army, anyhow. They couldn't possibly be right… could they?

By the way Colonel Sinapis lined up his men with fussy precision, and by the way the corners of his mouth turned down, he wasn't so sure. Instead of sending the foot soldiers forward to sweep aside the riffraff of Negroes and copperskins, Sinapis advanced his field guns till they weren't far out of musket range. "Hit the wall with everything you have," he told the artillerymen.

"What good will that do?" Stafford asked him.

Patiently, the Atlantean officer answered, "A stone wall will protect the men behind it from musketry. If they think they are safe from cannonballs… Inexperienced troops often make that mistake." He turned back to the men with the red chevrons and piping on their uniforms. "Now!" he commanded.

The field guns belched fire and smoke. They scooted backward from the recoil; a few artillerymen had to step smartly to keep the carriages from running over them. As soon as the recoil stopped, the gun crews wrestled their pieces back into position, swabbed the guns' iron and brass throats, and started reloading them.

Several roundshot smacked into the fence that protected the insurrectionists. From the way Colonel Sinapis had talked, Stafford thought the guns would smash down the wall all at once. They didn't. But through the spyglass he saw turmoil among the men on the far side. Something was going on, sure enough.

When he asked about it, Sinapis answered, "The balls break the stones they hit. You stand behind a stone wall that gets can nonaded, it is like standing up under shotgun fire. Those little bits of stone can kill you and will hurt you if they do not kill."

"Ah," Stafford said, enlightened. The cannon went on thundering. The commotion on the far side of the stone wall got worse. Here and there, roundshot bit chunks out of the wall. Even when they didn't, the copperskins and Negroes stirred like bees when their hive was kicked.

"So we shall see how they like that for a while, and then we shall see how steady they are after a cannonading," Colonel Sinapis said. "Artillery is what inexperienced troops commonly fear most. If it unsettles the-what do you call them?-the insurrectionists, yes, they will be easy enough for our infantry to handle."

"I expect they will be," Stafford said. "It's not as if they were white men, after all." He wondered how he would like to face artillery fire from behind a stone wall that offered less protection than he'd expected. Chances were he wouldn't like it much, but he didn't dwell on that.

Something gleamed in Colonel Sinapis' dark eyes. But the colonel didn't call him on it. The fieldpieces thundered again and again, hurling cannonballs up the slope. The whack!s the roundshot made when they hit the fence were shorter and sharper than the blasts that flung them forth.

Sinapis waved. The cannon fell silent. The officer turned to the bugler beside him. "Blow Forward," he said.

"Yes, sir," the man replied, and raised his battered brass bugle to his lips. Under the subtropical sun, it gleamed like gold. The imperious notes rang out.

"Hurrah!" the soldiers shouted as they started toward the enemy. They advanced with fixed bayonets. The sunshine also glittered from the sharp steel. Bayonets were another thing that made raw soldiers' knees knock. Somehow, it was easier to put up with the notion of taking a bullet than to imagine yourself screaming your life away, pierced by a foe who'd come all that way to stick you and who had within himself not a drop of the milk of human kindness.

While the main force advanced on the fence, a smaller group of soldiers moved against the barricade blocking the road. Copperskins and Negroes popped up from behind the fallen trees and fired at the oncoming men in gray. And plenty of insurrectionists in back of the fence blasted away at the Atlanteans moving toward them.

"They have nerve," Sinapis said.

"They have their nerve!" Jeremiah Stafford exclaimed, which meant something altogether different.

"I had hoped we could get in among them without needing to fire," Sinapis said. "That does not seem likely now."

Sure enough, the Atlantean infantrymen began shooting back at the foes behind the fence. Then they had to reload under fire from the enemy, which nobody in his right mind could have been enthusiastic about. Some of them got shot ramrod in hand-as ignominious a way to go out of the fight as any Stafford could think of.

Artillerymen wrestled some of the cannon around half a turn, so they bore on the logs across the road. Twelve pounds of highspeed iron smacking an obstacle like that did much more visible damage than the roundshot did to the stone fence. Logs tumbled like jackstraws. Consul Stafford hoped they squashed some of the fighters behind them when they fell over.

"This is good," Sinapis said in somber satisfaction-the only kind he seemed to show. "That is very good. If the flanking party gets through there, the frontal assault matters less."

Stafford hadn't thought the flanking party would matter. He'd assumed the frontal assault would overwhelm the insurrectionists in back of the fence. They proved steadier than he'd ever imagined they could. Despite the bombardment from the field guns, they kept pouring a galling fire into the Atlantean soldiers assailing their position. Dead and wounded men in gray uniforms dotted the slope, more of them every minute. There was a limit to what flesh and blood could bear. The Negroes and copperskins firing as if their lives depended on it-and they did, they did-forced the soldiers right to the edge of that limit.

And the attack on the barricade didn't go as well as either the colonel or the Consul wanted. Some of the men behind the logs might have got squashed. The rest kept on shooting. And insurrectionists hiding in the woods banged away at the flanking party from the flank-an irony Stafford failed to appreciate.

"Make them stop that!" he shouted to Sinapis.

The colonel looked at him without expression. "If you have any practical suggestion as to how I am to accomplish that end, I should be delighted to hear it." He didn't add If you don't, shut up and quit joggling my elbow-not out loud, he didn't. Stafford heard the suggestion whether it was there or not. He knew too well he didn't have any practical suggestions along those lines. He could see what was wrong, but not how to fix it.

Leland Newton pointed to the slope and the wall. "They're getting up to it," he said, and then, diminishing that, "Some of them are, anyhow." Yes, a lot of bodies dotted the slope.

"Once they get over it and in amongst the damned insurrectionists, the fight is as good as won," Stafford said.

"You hope," the other Consul said.

"Yes. I do," Stafford agreed. "And if you do not, I should like to know why."

"Oh, no-I won't fall into that trap. Now that we are in the field, you will not be able to accuse me of failing to support our soldiers in every way," Newton said.

"I suppose you also wish to pretend you did not do everything in your power to keep them from taking the field," Stafford growled.

"My dear fellow, had I done everything in my power to prevent it, the army never would have left New Hastings," Newton replied easily. My dear fellow, here, had to mean something like You silly son of a bitch. He wasn't wrong, either. But he certainly had delayed the army's departure.

Stafford might have pointed that out. Instead, he peered toward the fight at the stone fence. Some of the Atlantean soldiers were scrambling over it. Through the spyglass, he could see soldiers and insurrectionists stabbing at one another with bayonets. The copperskins and blacks weren't giving much ground. Were they giving any ground at all? He had trouble being sure.

Over on the wing, the flanking party had reached the barricade. Not many white men had got past it, though. The gunfire from the woods alongside the road was too intense to let the flankers ignore it. They had to turn and respond, which meant they had trouble going forward.

"The insurrectionists planned this battle well," Colonel Sinapis remarked. "I do not think I could have improved on their dispositions."

Hearing that did nothing to improve Stafford's disposition. "We can beat them?" he asked anxiously.

"Yes, we can beat them," Sinapis said. "But they can also beat us, which I had not counted on before we set out."

If enough Atlanteans got over the wall, they would win. But the enemy had more men, and more determined men, back there than Stafford had dreamt possible. Colored fighters, savages, couldn't be that brave… could they?

Sinapis' spyglass also surveyed the front. Under it, his mustache-framed mouth twisted. He lowered the telescope. "I am very sorry, your Excellency. I do not think we shall succeed this day."

"Dear God in heaven!" Stafford cried. "Can that-that rabble beat our finest soldiers?"

"It would seem so, yes," the colonel answered impassively.

"They must not!" Stafford said. "Do you hear me? They must not!"

"It is war," Sinapis said. "There are no musts in war. There are only ares."

Consul Stafford almost hit him. One thing alone made the Consul hesitate: the likelihood that he would lie dead on the ground a moment after he did such an unwise thing. He groaned instead, watching everything he held dear crumbling before his eyes.


Eight shots in one weapon were wonderful. Reloading the pistol after firing eight shots at the Atlantean infantry was a son of a bitch bastard, as Frederick Radcliff discovered to his sorrow. Put a bullet in each chamber. Measure a charge of black powder and stuff each charge into a chamber without spilling it. Fix a percussion cap for each chamber. Do all that while your hands trembled because you'd just come as near as dammit to getting killed.

Doing it seemed to take about a year. But Frederick methodically went on. He couldn't afford to stay unarmed. Seven more bullets for the white men-some of them would probably hit, anyhow. One more bullet for himself, just in case.

They'd got over the wall. He hadn't dreamt they could do that. He'd also assumed that, if the white soldiers did get over the wall, the battle was as good as lost. But it turned out not to be. The Negroes and copperskins he led didn't flinch, even from the soldiers' most savage bayonet work. They rushed toward the white men in gray, not away from them. They might be less skilled with the bayonet themselves, but they were every bit as plucky.

And they turned the wall to an advantage. They pinned the soldiers who'd got over against it and started killing them there. It was madness. It was mayhem. Neither side asked for quarter, and neither side offered it. For longer than Frederick thought possible, neither side gave ground, either.

A white man's voice, furious and astonished, rose above the din of shrieks and gunfire: "You nigger assholes can't do this!"

"Hell we can't!" Frederick shouted back. He had no idea whether the soldier heard him. He'd finally got that damned eight-shooter reloaded. As he raised it, he breathed a small prayer that it wouldn't explode in his hand. If you didn't do a good enough job cleaning off excess powder, more than one chamber would fire when you pulled the trigger. Only one bullet could get out, of course. The rest… the rest would probably blow off the hand that held the revolver.

More whites scrambled up over the wall to try to help their comrades. Frederick fired at one of them. The man clutched his ribs and tumbled back on the far side of the stone fence. Only after that did Frederick realize the gun had hurt the enemy, not him.

Then-and the thought within him warred between all at once and at last!-more Atlantean soldiers were climbing over the fence to get away than to come to their friends' rescue. "We licked 'em!" Lorenzo cried exultantly. He asked, "Shall we go after 'em?"

"If we do, their cannon will murder us." Frederick unbent enough to follow that with a question of his own: "Or do you think I'm wrong?"

"Nooo." The way Lorenzo stretched the word showed his reluctance. But he didn't try to talk Frederick out of the decision. He might not like it, but he saw it was right. A moment later, he brightened: "When word of what we done here gets around, every copper man and black man in these parts is going to come running to join our army."

"Expect you're right." Frederick hoped he sounded more enthusiastic than he felt. That would bring his army more men-men he mostly didn't have weapons for, and men he would have trouble feeding.

Lorenzo went on, "Planters around here'll have to light out for the tall timber, too, unless they want to get their big houses burned down while they're layin' in bed asleep."

"That's a fact." Now Frederick could sound happy without reservation. "The Free Republic of Atlantis just got bigger."

"Damned right it did," Lorenzo agreed. "Those white sons of bitches'll run back to New Marseille with their tails between their legs. Everything outside the city limits, I reckon that's ours from now on."

Half an hour later, a Negro who'd been a butler before the uprising and served as the rebels' quartermaster these days came up to him. "You know where we can get more percussion caps, boss?" he asked. "We're mighty low on 'em, mighty low. We're short on powder and bullets, too, but we can come up with some of those, anyways. Percussion caps, though… You know how to make 'em?"

"Not me." Frederick shook his head. "They got mercury in 'em-I know that. Mercury fulmisomethin'."

"Know where we can get our hands on some this mercury whatever-the-devil-you-called-it?" the quartermaster persisted. "Can you dig it out of the ground?"

"Don't think so. I think you've got to make it some way, like they make sugar out of sugar cane," Frederick answered.

"But you don't know how." It wasn't a question. But, by the way the other Negro said it, Frederick should have known how. The quartermaster set his hands on his hips. "How are we supposed to keep fighting if we can't get no more percussion caps?"

"I never said we couldn't do that," Frederick replied. "I just said we couldn't make 'em ourselves. But we can steal 'em from the Atlantean soldiers. We're getting more from the men we killed at the wall, right?"

"Some more," the quartermaster said grudgingly. "Not hardly enough to fight another battle with, though."

"Well, we'll get lots." Frederick soothed him as best he could. "Some of the white folks in these parts'll have percussion muskets, too. We'll grab us more caps once we kill them or run them off."

"A few more," the quartermaster said. "But if the white soldiers just keep on picking fights with us, we're licked, on account of before long we won't have nothin' to shoot back with. What do you propose to do about that, Mr. Frederick Radcliff?"

Frederick wondered whether his grandfather had ever had the family name flung in his face like that. Probably-the Radcliffs and Radcliffes had been prominent in Atlantis for so long, the surname made a handy curse.

And, even if the quartermaster was a snotty nigger (yes, Frederick knew that was how Master Barford would have thought of the fellow, but it fit too well to let him pretend it didn't), the question needed answering. "They just got whipped, remember," he said. "They won't be hot to jump on us again right away. And I figure we'll get our hands on more percussion caps by the time they do."

"How you gonna do that?" the other man challenged.

"I'll manage." Frederick actually had an idea. He was damned if he'd tell it to anybody who talked like that.


Stafford wanted to try to hit the insurrectionists again. To Leland Newton's surprise, Colonel Sinapis was thinking about it, too. "Are you both out of your minds?" Newton said. "We'll just bang our heads on the stone wall again." He pointed to the fence where the Negroes and copperskins had taken such a toll of Atlantean soldiers two days earlier.

"They can't do that twice," the other Consul declared.

"You didn't think they could do it once," Newton reminded him.

"This is the only reason I pause now," Colonel Sinapis said. "I was surprised once. If I must take these people more seriously, then I must, that is all. If we were in touch with New Hastings by telegraph, I could ask for reinforcements. Without them, I fear we could not defend a perimeter after another misfortune."

"Plenty of New Marseille militiamen to draw on," Stafford said. "They're a lot closer than any regulars except the garrison in New Marseille city. And they'd be up for fighting slaves who've risen up-Lord knows that's so."

"How well they would do it is, I fear, a different question," Colonel Sinapis told him. "They have no experience in the field, they have little experience in drill, they are unaccustomed to following orders-as what Atlantean is not?-and they would be armed with flintlock muskets no better than the ones their great- grandfathers used against the English."

"But they want to fight," Stafford said. "That counts, too."

"No doubt," the colonel replied: one of the more devastating agreements Newton had ever heard. Sinapis went on, "In any case, we are lower on ammunition than I would like. After the next supply column comes in, we will be in a better position to try the enemy again."

"That makes sense," said Newton, who didn't want to fight again any time soon.

"That does make sense," Stafford agreed. "When we fight again-and we'd better do it pretty quick-we ought to make damned sure we win." Differing motives led the two Consuls to the same conclusion now.

But that conclusion turned out not to be worth a cent, or even an atlantean. The next supply column didn't bring more bullets and powder and percussion caps and hardtack and salt pork and coffee to the Atlantean army. The next supply column never arrived. A handful of harried soldiers did. The tale they told wasn't pretty.

"Bushwhacked!" one of them said, his eyes wide and staring. "We were going through the woods, and all of a sudden, like, there were these trees across the road, and wild men shooting at us from both sides. Wagons couldn't turn around. Hell, we couldn't do anything. I'm a good Christian man, and it's God's own miracle I'm here to give you the word. You'll see me in church a-praying every Sunday from here on out."

Another survivor nodded sorrowfully. "They came on us screamin' and yellin' and leapin' and carryin' on," he said. "Some of 'em had bayonets, and some of 'em had hatchets, and… Dear Lord, I don't want to remember some of the things I seen when they jumped us."

How soon did these fellows quit fighting and run away? Newton wondered. Were they the ones who'd fled first and fastest? Or had they played dead till the insurrectionists weren't interested in them any more? Either way, they hadn't covered themselves with glory.

Balthasar Sinapis had more immediate worries. "What became of the wagon train?" he demanded. "Where are our munitions and victuals?"

"Damned niggers grabbed all that shit," answered the soldier who'd promised to go to church every Sunday from now on. "Reckon they'll send us more from New Marseille sooner or later."

"If we get it later but the insurrectionists have it now…" By the way Jeremiah Stafford looked around, he expected fighters in slave clothes to start popping out of the ground like skinks. (So Newton thought, anyway; a man from Europe or Terranova would have been more likely to compare them to moles.)

"This is not good," Colonel Sinapis said, and Newton would have had a hard time quarreling with him. "This is not even slightly good. The loss of the munitions… The bullets and powder are bad enough, but the percussion caps are worse. The rebels had not a prayer of making their own percussion caps."

"Can we recapture them?" Newton asked.

"The wagons, perhaps," Sinapis said. "What they held? I would doubt that. Can you not see the Negroes and copperskins in your mind's eye, each with a crate in his arms or on his back?"

Unhappily, Newton nodded. He could picture that only too well, the men singing the same songs they would have used at harvest time as they carried away their precious booty. Consul Stafford would know from experience what songs those were. Newton didn't, but his imagination seemed to serve well enough.

"Maybe we should attack now," Stafford said, "before they bring the loot up to their position."

"Your colleague has the command today," the colonel reminded him.

"Tomorrow is bound to be too late," Stafford said.

You'll get the blame if we sit here, he meant. "Well, we can try," Newton said. He did not mind if papers south of the Stour screamed at him. If newspapers in his own section did the same, that wouldn't be good. He could be only so dilatory before they started. If he wanted another term as Consul, which he did… "Yes, we can try."

It was almost noon by then. The soldiers didn't expect to attack the rebels' position that day. Getting orders to the junior officers and forming the men up for the assault took longer than Leland Newton thought it should. The soldiers went forward willingly enough, but with no great enthusiasm.

And it soon became plain that Sinapis had waited too long to give the order (Newton didn't think about his own role in the troops' late start.) Either the insurrectionists had had enough percussion caps and ammunition all along or the copperskins and Negroes lugging those stolen crates had got to their position before the Atlantean attack went in. A rippling wave of fire from behind the stone wall greeted the white men in gray who advanced on it.

The soldiers didn't press the assault the way they had before. None of them reached the wall, let alone got over it. They returned the insurrectionists' fire for a while, then fell back toward their encampment once more, bringing their dead and wounded with them. Newton had a hard time getting angry at them for their performance. They could see they had no chance to break the position before them. What sensible professional would let himself get killed with so little chance to realize a return on the investment of his life?

But their failure left another question hanging in the muggy air. Newton asked it: "Well, gentlemen, what do we do now?"


Setting out from New Hastings, Jeremiah Stafford had thought everything was obvious. They would close with the insurrectionists. They would smash their gimcrack army and hang or shoot or burn Frederick Radcliff and as many other leaders as they could catch. They would return the copperskins and Negroes to the servitude for which they were fit by nature. And then they would go back to the capital in triumph.

Right now, getting back to New Hastings in one piece would have looked like triumph to Stafford. More things had gone wrong than he would have imagined possible before the army set out. And the uprising had proved much worse than he'd dreamt it could in his worst nightmares.

"What are we going to do?" he demanded of Colonel Sinapis. "If we don't put down the insurrectionists-" He held his head in both hands, as if the enormity of the idea made it want to explode. And that wasn't so far from true, either.

"We need more munitions. We need more soldiers," Sinapis said. "I do not believe any troops will be forthcoming from the national government for some time-if ever. The state militiamen you have mentioned are less desirable, but…" He shrugged.

"A drowning man doesn't care a cent what kind of spar he grabs," Stafford said. "Send out the call, Colonel, by all means. If we have twice as many men under arms here, we can do… more than we can now, anyway. Will you tell me I'm mistaken?" You'd better not, his voice warned.

And Sinapis didn't. "Yes, I think the time to do that is here, if we are serious about quelling the insurrection."

"What else would we be?" Stafford yelped.

Colonel Sinapis shrugged again. "I am not a political man, your Excellency. I am a soldier. You and your colleague decide the policies here. Once you have done that, I shall carry out to the best of my ability any part of them involving soldiers."

Stafford muttered darkly. Agreeing on anything with Consul Newton seemed to require a special miracle every time it happened. But Newton didn't try to dissuade Sinapis from summoning the New Marseille militia, though he did say, "I worry that they may prove oversavage when they encounter armed Negroes and copperskins."

"The enemy is not gentle himself," Stafford pointed out.

"No doubt he has his reasons for harshness," Newton said.

"No doubt the militiamen do, too," Stafford snapped. "Some of them were forced to flee their homes. Some had their wives ravished, or their sisters, or their daughters."

"Ravished, perhaps, by mulattos or halfbreed copperskins," Newton said.

"What is that supposed to mean?" Stafford asked coldly.

"What it says," the other Consul answered. "You are not a naive man, your Excellency. You know slaveholders have been going in unto their bondswomen for as long as Negroes and copperskins have been in Atlantis."

"That's different," Stafford said.

"I believe you believe it is," Newton said. "Whether the slaves believe the same thing may be open to doubt."

"Be damned to the slaves!"

"Are they not saying, 'Be damned to the masters!'? In their place, would you not say the same thing?"

"I am not in their place. They want to place me there, though," Stafford said. "If they win, we shall have colored masters whipping white slaves and forcing white women to go on ministering to their filthy lusts. Is that what you have in mind?"

"Of course not. And, if you listen to the insurrectionists, it is not what they have in mind," Newton replied. "They claim the Free Republic of Atlantis is to have equality for every man of every color."

"Likely tell!" Jeremiah Stafford rolled his eyes. "They will claim anything to keep on fighting. You believe them, do you? And I suppose you will also believe that mothers find babies under cabbage leaves."

He had the satisfaction of watching Newton turn red. "I know where babies come from," the other Consul said tightly. "I am merely trying to point out to you that the rebels have more reasons for rising than Satanic wickedness. In fact, that is how they judge the system that brought their ancestors here and turned them into property."

"As if I care how they judge it!" Stafford fleered. "Their cousins in squalid so-called freedom live worse, more benighted lives than they do. They have learned our language here. They have learned of our God here, the one true God. They are part of a… a great country."

Newton was very quick. He heard the small hesitation and knew it for what it was. "You started to say 'a free country,' didn't you? What does it profit a slave to be part of a free country? It profits only his master."

"Maybe one day the mudfaces and niggers may be advanced enough to deserve freedom," Stafford said. "But that day is not here."

"And you are doing your best to make sure it never comes," Newton said. "If you do not give a boiler a safety valve, it will explode when you keep the fire too hot for too long. We are watching one of those explosions now." He walked away before Stafford could answer.

The Consul from Cosquer was much happier when militiamen started coming into camp. He could have been happier yet, for they seemed less like soldiers and more like braggarts and blowhards and ruffians. Little by little, he realized the Atlantean regulars had spoiled him. They were hard-bitten men, too, but they had discipline. Anyone among them who got out of line promptly suffered for it.

By contrast, the militiamen did as they pleased… till regular sergeants and corporals started knocking sense into them. One underofficer died in the process. So did six or eight militiamen, most of them quite suddenly. That did not count the fellow who'd knifed the regular corporal. His company commander didn't want to turn him over for punishment, and his friends seemed ready to defend him.

They soon changed their minds. Staring into the muzzles of a dozen fieldpieces double-shotted with canister would have changed Jeremiah Stafford's mind, too. Stafford judged it would have changed anybody's mind. The militiaman got a drumhead court-martial. Then he was hanged from a stout bough sticking out from a pine. The drop wasn't enough to break his neck and kill him quickly. He writhed his life away over the next several minutes.

After he finally stilled forever, Colonel Sinapis looked out at the wide-eyed amateur soldiers who'd watched the execution. "Follow orders from your officers and from our officers and un derofficers, and nothing like this will happen to you," he said. "We all face the same enemies, after all. If you work with us, we can beat them together. And if you work against us, I promise you will discover we are more frightful than any Negro or copperskin ever born." He paused, then added one word more: "Dismissed."

The militiamen couldn't have disappeared any faster if he'd called down thunder and lightning on their heads. A couple of dozen of them disappeared for good during the night. Sinapis took that in stride. "We shall be better off without them than we would have been with them," he said.

"Technically, they're deserters. If you catch them, you can hang them, too," Consul Newton said.

"No, the colonel's right," Stafford said-words that didn't come out of his mouth every day. "If they can't stand the heat, they shouldn't go near the fire. Let them run. Not everyone is a hero, even if he can fool himself into thinking he is for a little while."

"Well, maybe." Newton was even less eager to agree with Stafford than Stafford was to agree with Sinapis.

With the army reinforced, the colonel was able to send a good-sized force down to New Marseille to protect the next wagon train. The wagons reached the army without much trouble. The insurrectionists must have known they were well protected, because they did no more than snipe at them from the woods.

Hardtack and salt pork weren't inspiring-Stafford had already discovered how inspiring army rations weren't. But having enough of them was better than not. And having enough munitions was literally a matter of life and death. Unfortunately, that also held true for the insurrectionists. What they'd hijacked would keep them fighting for some time to come.

And what they'd hijacked would also let them-did also let them-expand the insurrection. More white refugees began streaming out of the north, most of them with nothing but the clothes on their backs and perhaps a musket or an eight-shooter clenched in one fist. The stories they told made Stafford's blood boil.

"How can you stand to listen to these people without your heart's going out to them?" he demanded of Leland Newton.

"I'm not saying it doesn't," his colleague answered. "But my heart also goes out to the Negroes and copperskins these same people have been mistreating for generations, while yours is hard as a stone toward them."

Stafford only stared. "How anyone could care about those savages… How anyone could say they are mistreated when they gain the benefits of Atlantean civilization…"

"The lash, the shackles, the ball and chain, the auction block, the unwelcome summons to the master's bedchamber," Newton said dryly.

"You have entirely the wrong attitude," Stafford said.

"If I do, then so does most of Atlantis north of the Stour," the other Consul replied. "And so does almost all of Europe. The font of what you call Atlantean civilization thinks little of what has sprung from it."

"I care nothing for what Europe thinks. We needed to get free of Europe, by God. Or would you rather we still flew the Union Jack and bowed down to Queen Victoria?" Stafford said.

"You must know I would not," Newton said, which was true enough. "But I would also rather that we did not bow down to injustice here."

"Nor do we," Stafford declared.

His colleague sighed. "More and more people-of all colors-think we do."

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