Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    In the Balance & Tilting the Balance

    Page 72
    Prev Next


      Larssen rode east, to the University of Chicago campus. If he couldn’t find Barbara, the Met Lab crew was the next best bet—they might even know what had happened to her.

      Though bare of students, the university didn’t seem as badly battered as the city around it, perhaps because its buildings were more widely scattered. Jens rode up Fifty-eighth and then across the lawns in the center of campus. They had been a lot more pleasant before they were pocked with bomb and shell craters.

      Off to the right, Swift Hall was a burnt-out ruin; God hadn’t spared the university’s divinity school. But Eckhart Hall still stood, and, but for broken windows, looked pretty much intact. Worn as he was, hope made Jens all but sprint the bike toward the entrance.

      He started to leave it outside, then thought better of that and brought it in—no use giving booters temptation they didn’t need. “Where is everybody?” he called down the hallway. Only echoes answered. It’s after quitting time, he told himself, but hope flickered all the same.

      He walked to the stairway, took the steps two at a time. No matter when the secretaries and such went home, the Met Lab scientists were busy almost around the clock. But the halls upstairs were empty and silent, the offices and labs not only vacant but methodically stripped. Wherever the Metallurgical Laboratory was, it didn’t live at the University of Chicago any more.

      He trudged downstairs much more slowly than he’d gone up. Somebody was standing by his bicycle. He started to snatch his rifle off his shoulder, then recognized the man. “Andy!” he exclaimed

      The gray-haired custodian whirled in surprise. “Jesus and Mary, it’s you, Dr. Larssen,” he said, his voice still flavored with the Auld Sod though he’d been born in Chicago. “I tell you true, I never thought I’d see you again.”

      “Plenty of tines I never thought I’d get here,” Jens answered. “Where the devil has the Met Lab gone?”

      Instead of answering directly, Reilly fumbled in his shirt pocket, pulled out a creased and stained envelope. “Your wife gave me this to give to you if ever you came back. Like I said, I had my doubts you would, but I always hung on to it, just on the off chance—”

      “Andy, you’re a wonder.” Jens tore open the envelope. He let out a soft exclamation of delight as he recognized Barbara’s handwriting. The note was stained and blurry—probably from the janitor’s sweat—but the gist was still clear. Larssen shook his head in tired dismay. He’d come so far, been through so much.

      “Denver?” he said aloud. “How the devil am I supposed to get to Denver?” Like the war, his journey had a long way to go.

      This is a bundled book. You may experience changes in navigation functionality, but the content has not been affected.

      A Del Rey® Book

      Published by Ballantine Books

      Copyright © 1994 by Harry Turtledove

      All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.

      http://www.randomhouse.com

      Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 93-22133

      eISBN: 978-0-345-45613-7

      v3.0

      Praise for Harry Turtledove’s

      WORLDWAR:

      IN THE BALANCE

      “Readers will have a perfectly delightful time … Turtledove’s storytelling and historiography now march in perfect step. World War II buffs will have a particular romp … But the readership will be much wider than this, and all will be glad that Turtledove plans three more volumes in Worldwar.”

      —Chicago Suns-Times

      “Totally fascinating … With this engrossing volume, Turtledove launches a four-book alternate-history saga, possibly the most ambitious in the subgenre’s history and definitely the work of one of alternate history’s authentic modern masters.”

      —Booklist

      “I literally could not put Worldwar: In the Balance down. I carried it with me to the doctor’s office and to a dinner date the day it arrived! The novel is a tour de force in three acts.”

      —S. M. STIRLING

      “A fast-paced, suspenseful work.”

      —Chicago Tribune

      Worldwar: Tilting the Balance

      BOOKS BY HARRY TURTLEDOVE

      The Guns of the South

      THE WORLDWAR SAGA

      Worldwar: In the Balance

      Worldwar: Tilting the Balance

      Worldwar: Upsetting the Balance

      Worldwar: Striking the Balance

      COLONIZATION

      Colonization: Second Contact

      Colonization: Down to Earth

      Colonization: Aftershocks

      Homeward Bound

      THE VIDESSOS CYCLE

      The Misplaced Legion

      An Emperor for the Legion

      The Legion of Videssos

      Swords of the Legion

      THE TALE OF KRISPOS

      Krispos Rising

      Krispos of Videssos

      Krispos the Emperor

      Noninterference

      Kaleidoscope

      A World of Difference

      Earthgrip

      Departures

      How Few Remain

      THE GREAT WAR

      The Great War: American Front

      The Great War: Walk in Hell

      The Great War: Breakthroughs

      AMERICAN EMPIRE

      American Empire: Blood and Iron

      American Empire: The Center Cannot Hold

      American Empire: The Victorious Opposition

      SETTLING ACCOUNTS

      Settling Accounts: Return Engagement

      The Best Alternate History Stories of the 20th Century

      The Best Military Science Fiction of the 20th Century

      (with Martin H. Greenburg)

      DRAMATIS PERSONAE

      (Characters with names in CAPS are historical, others fictional)

      HUMANS

      ANIELEWICZ, MORDECHAI Leader of Jewish fighters in Poland

      Auerbach, Rance Captain, U.S. Army Cavalry

      Bagnall, George Flight engineer, RAF

      Barisha Tavern keeper in Split, Independent State of Croatia

      Berkowicz, Stefan Landlord in Lodz

      BLAIR, ERIC BBC talks producer, Indian Section, London

      Borcke, Martin Wehrmachtcaptain and interpreter in Pskov

      CHILL, KURT Wehrmacht lieutenant general, 122nd Infantry, in Pskov

      CHURCHILL, WINSTON Prime Minister, Great Britain

      COMPTON, ARTHUR Nuclear physicist with the Metallurgical Laboratory

      Cooley, Mary Waitress in Idaho Springs, Colorado

      Daniels, Pete (“Mutt”) Sergeant, U.S. Army, in Illinois; former minorleague manager

      DIEBNER, KURT Nuclear physicist, Hechingen, Germany

      Donlan, Kevin U.S. Army private in Illinois

      Embry, Ken Pilot, RAF

      FERMI, ENRICO Nuclear physicist with the Metallurgical Laboratory

      FERMI, LAURA Enrico Fermi’s wife

      Fiore, Bobby Lizard experimental subject; former baseball player

      FLEROV, GEORGI Soviet nuclear physicist

      Fritzie Cowboy in Chugwater, Wyoming

      Fukuoka, Yoshi Japanese soldier in China

      GERMAN, ALEKSANDR Commander of Second Partisan Brigade in Pskov

      Goldfarb, David Radarman, RAF

      Gorbunova, Ludmila Pilot, Red Air Force

      GROVES, LESLIE Engineer; U.S. Army colonel

      Harvey Civilian guard in Idaho Springs, Colorado

      HEISENBERG, WERNER Nuclear physicist in Hechingen, Germany

      Henry Wounded U.S. soldier in Chicago

      Hexham U.S. Army colonel in Denver

      Hicks, Chester U.S. Army lieutenant in Chicago

      Higuchi Japanese scientist

      Hipple, Fred RAF group captain in Bruntingthorpe

      Ho-T’ING, NIEH Chinese Communist guerrilla officer

      Horton, Leo RAF radarman in Bruntin
    gthorpe

      HULL, CORDELL U.S. Secretary of State

      Isaac Jew in Leczna, Poland

      Jacobi, Nathan BBC broadcaster in London

      Jäger, Heinrich Wehrmacht panzer colonel

      Jones, Jerome RAF radarman

      Karpov, Feofan Red Air Force colonel

      Kennan, Maurice RAF flight lieutenant in Bruntingthorpe

      Klein, Sid U.S. Army captain in Chicago

      Klopotowski, Roman Townsman in Leczna, Poland

      Klopotowski, Zofia Daughter of Roman Klopotowski

      KONIEV, IVAN Red Army general

      KURCHATOV, IGOR Soviet nuclear physicist

      Laplace, Freddie U.S. Army private in Illinois

      Larssen, Barbara see Yeager, Barbara

      Larssen, Jens Nuclear physicist with the Metallurgical Laboratory

      Leon Jewish fighter in Lodz

      Lidov, Boris NKVD lieutenant-colonel in Moscow

      Liu Han Chinese peasant woman; Lizard experimental subject

      Lo Communist Chinese partisan

      Maczek U.S. Army captain in Illinois

      Meinecke, Klaus Sergeant; gunner on Heinrich Jäger’s panzer

      MOLOTOV, VYACHESLAV Foreign Commissar, USSR

      Morozkin, Sergei Red Army interpreter in Pskov

      MURROW, EDWARD R. Radio news broadcaster

      Nakayama Japanese scientist

      NISHINA, YOSHIO Japanese nuclear physicist

      Okamoto Japanese Army major; interpreter and translator

      Olson, Louise Inhabitant of New Salem, North Dakota

      Olson, Thorkil Inhabitant of New Salem, North Dakota

      Oscar U.S. Army bodyguard in Denver

      Peary, Julian RAF wing commander in Bruntingthorpe

      Petrovic, Marko Captain, Independent State of Croatia

      Potter, Lucille Nurse in Illinois

      RIBBENTROP, JOACHIM VON German foreign minister

      ROOSEVELT, FRANKLIN D. President of the United States

      Roundbush, Basil RAF flight officer in Bruntingthorpe

      RUMKOWSKI, MORDECHAI CHAIM Eldest of the Jews in the Lodz ghetto

      Russie, Moishe Former medical student; leader among Polish Jews; fugitive

      Russie, Reuven Son of Moishe and Rivka Russie

      Russie, Rivka Moishe Russie’s wife

      Sawatski, Emilia Wife of Wladyslaw Sawatski

      Sawatski, Ewa Daughter of Wladyslaw and Emilia Sawatski

      Sawatski, Jozef Son of Wladyslaw and Emilia Sawatski

      Sawatski, Maria Daughter of Wladyslaw and Emilia Sawatski

      Sawatski, Wladyslaw Polish farmer

      Schultz, Georg Former Wehrmacht panzer gunner; Red Air Force mechanic

      Sharp, Hiram Physician in Ogden, Utah

      Shmuel Jewish fighter in Lodz

      Sholudenko, Nikifor NKVD man in the Ukraine

      Shura Whore in Shanghai

      SKORZENY, OTTO SS colonel

      Sobieski, Tadeusz Grocer in Leczna, Poland

      STALIN, IOSEF General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union

      Sumner, Joshua (“Hoot”) Justice of the peace in Chugwater, Wyoming

      Szabo, Bela (“Dracula”) U.S. Army private in Illinois

      SZILARD, LEO Nuclear physicist with the Metallurgical Laboratory

      Tatiana Sniper and companion of Jerome Jones in Pskov

      TOGO, SHIGENORI Japanese foreign minister

      Tolya Groundcrew man, Red Air Force

      Tsuye Japanese scientist

      Ussishkin, Judah Doctor in Leczna, Poland

      Ussishkin, Sarah Wife of Judah Ussishkin; midwife in Leczna, Poland

      van Alen, Jacob U.S. Coast Guard lieutenant in Oswego, New York

      VASILIEV, NIKOLAI Commander, First Partisan Brigade in Pskov

      Vernon, Hank Ship’s engineer in the Duluth Queen

      Victor Wounded U.S. soldier in Chicago

      Whyte, Alf RAF navigator

      Wittman, Rolf Driver in Heinrich Jäger’s panzer

      Yeager, Barbara Former graduate student in medieval literature; Sam Yeager’s wife

      Yeager, Sam U.S. Army corporal; liaison with Lizard POWs; former baseball player

      ZHUKOV, GEORGI Marshal of the Soviet Union

      THE RACE

      Atvar Fleetlord, conquest fleet of the Race

      Bunim Official in Lodz

      Drefsab Intelligence agent and ginger addict

      Forssis Landcruiser gunner in Besançon, France

      Hessef Landcruiser driver in Besançon, France

      Ianxx Officer in Shanghai

      Kassnass Landcruiser unit commander in Besançon, France

      Kirel Shiplord of the 127th Emperor Hetto

      Nejas Landcruiser commander in Besançon, France

      Nossat Psychologist

      Ristin Lizard POW with the Metallurgical Laboratory

      Sherran The first male to circumnavigate Home

      Skoob Landcruiser gunner in Besançon, France

      Ssamraff Investigator in China

      Starraf Researcher in China

      Straha Shiplord of the 206th Emperor Yower

      Teerts POW in Japan

      Tessrek Psychologist

      Ttomalss Researcher in China

      Tvenkel Landcruiser gunner in Besançon, France

      Ullhass Lizard POW with the Metallurgical Laboratory

      Ussmak Landcruiser driver in Besançon, France

      I

      For nostalgia’s sake, Fleetlord Atvar called up the hologram of the Tosevite warrior he had often studied before the invasion fleet actually reached the world of Tosev 3. Nostalgia was an emotion that came easily to the Race: with a unified history of a hundred thousand years, with an empire that stretched over three solar systems and now reached out to a fourth, the past seemed a safe, comfortable place, not least because it was so much like the present.

      The hologram sprang into being before the fleetlord: a stalwart savage, his pinkish face sprouting yellowish hairs, clad in soft iron mail and woven animal and plant fibers, armed with spear and rust-flecked sword, and mounted on a Tosevite quadruped that looked distinctly too scrawny for the job of carrying him.

      Sighing, Atvar turned to the shiplord Kirel, who commanded the 127th Emperor Hetto, bannership of the invasion fleet. He stabbed a fingerclaw at the image. “If only it had been so easy,” he said with a sigh.

      “Yes, Exalted Fleetlord.” Kirel sighed, too. He turned both eye turrets toward the hologram. “It was what the probe led us to expect.”

      “Yes,” Atvar said sourly. Preparing in its methodical way for another conquest, the Race had sent a probe across the interstellar void sixteen hundred years before (years of the Race, of course; Tosev 3 orbited its primary only about half as fast). The probe dutifully sampled the planet, sent its images and data back Home. The Race prepared the invasion fleet and sent it out, certain of easy victory: how much could a world change in a mere sixteen hundred years?

      Atvar touched a control in the base of the holographic projector. The Tosevite warrior disappeared. New images took the Big Ugly’s place: a Russki landcruiser, red star painted on its turret, lightly armed and protected by the Race’s standards but well-designed, with sloped armor and wide treads for getting over the worst ground; an American heavy machine gun, with a belt full of big slugs that tore through body armor as if it were fiberboard; a Deutsch killercraft, turbojets slung under swept wings, nose bristling with cannon.

      Kirel pointed toward the killercraft. “That one concerns me more than either of the others, Exalted Fleetlord. By the Emperor”—both he and Atvar briefly cast down their eyes at the mention of the sovereign—“the Deutsche did not have that aircraft less than two years ago, when our campaign began.”

      “I know,” Atvar said. “All their aircraft—all Tosevite aircraft then—were those slow, awkward things propelled by rapidly rotating airfoils. But now the British are flying jets, too.”

      He summoned an image of the new British killercraft. It didn’t look as menacing as the machine the Deutsche made: its wings lacked
    sweep and its lines were more graceful, less predatory. From the reports Atvar had read, it didn’t perform quite as well as the Deutsch killercraft, either. But it was a quantum leap better than anything the British had put into the air before.

      Fleetlord and shiplord stared glumly at the hologram. The trouble with the natives of Tosev 3 was that they were, by the Race’s standards, insanely inventive. The social scientists attached to the fleet were still trying to figure out how the Big Uglies had gone from barbarism to a full-grown industrial civilization in the blink of an historical eye. Their solutions—or rather, conjectures—had yet to satisfy Atvar.

      Part of the answer, he suspected, lay in the squabbling multiplicity of empires that divided up Tosev 3’s meager land surface. Some of them weren’t even empires in the strict sense of the word; the regime of the SSSR, for instance, openly boasted of liquidating its former ruling dynasty. The idea of impericide was enough to make Atvar queasy.

      Empires and not-empires had competed fiercely among themselves. They’d been fighting a planetwide war when the Race arrived. Doctrine from earlier conquests said the Race ought to have been able to take advantage of their factionalism, play off one side against another. The tactic had worked now and again, but not as well and not as often as doctrine suggested it would.

      Atvar sighed and told Kirel, “Before I came to Tosev 3, I was like any sensible male: I was sure doctrine held all the answers. Follow it and you’d obtain the results it predicted. The males who designed our doctrines should have seen this world first; it would have broadened their horizons.”

      “This is truth, Exalted Fleetlord,” the shiplord said. “One thing Tosev 3 has taught us is the difference between precept and experience.”

      “Yes. Well put,” Atvar said. The last world conquest the Race had undertaken lay thousands of years in the past. The fleetlord had pored over the manuals of what had worked then, and in the Race’s previous victory, even more thousands of years before that. But no one living had any practice using what was in the manuals.

      The Tosevites, by contrast, conquered one another and dickered with one another all the time. They made deception and deceit into an art, and were perfectly willing to educate the Race as to their use. Atvar had learned the hard way how much—or rather, how little—Big Ugly promises were worth.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026