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1633 by David Weber & Eric Flint. Part four. Chapter 29, 30, 31, 32

“What about your schedule?” Jesse asked. “Last I heard, you were still predicting that you couldn’t have them completed until next spring.”

“We can do somewhat better than that,” Simpson told him. “But not without some prioritizing. My existing estimates were based on completing all four of them, but I can get two of them—Constitution and United States—launched within six to eight weeks. This is September; call it mid-November, and I can have them in the water. I can only do that if I pull the crews off of the other two, though, and I’ll need not just Nat Davis but Ollie Reardon and Greg Ferrara up here, as well. It’s going to take an all-out effort to get them launched that quickly, and I’ll need the best mechanics and machinists we’ve got to deal with any unforeseen problems.”

“What sort of problems?” Mike asked.

“If I could tell you that, they’d hardly be ‘unforeseen,’ now would they?” Simpson replied, with an acidity Mike found oddly comforting, under the circumstances. Then the admiral relented—slightly, at least.

“We’ve done our best to test the machinery as we went along, but there’s no way to really know what problems we may or may not have until we actually get the ships into the water. And although Mr. Ferrara and I have checked our estimates as rigorously as we can, we can’t absolutely predict how they’re going to handle or what their actual top speeds are going to be. It may turn out that we have to make some last-minute modifications to the steering arrangements, for example. If we do, I’ll need the best technical people we’ve got to deal with them promptly. And I’ll need them here, not in Grantville.”

“All right, I can see that,” Mike acknowledged. “But even if you get them launched that quickly, and even if there are no technical problems at all, you’ve still got to get them down the river to the North Sea. Are you certain you can do it?”

“I’ll get them down the river,” Simpson said flatly.

“What about these wehrluecken? We still don’t have agreements for all of them.”

“Fuck agreements.” The harsh-voiced obscenity startled Mike, and Simpson laughed without humor at his expression. “I said I’ll get them down the river,” he said. “I didn’t say it would be pretty. But there’s a time for diplomacy and negotiation, Mr. President, and there’s a time to be direct. I’m willing to go on working for voluntary agreements right up to the last minute. But if we don’t get them, then I’ll by God blast my way right through any fucking wehrlueck in my way!”

Mike blinked, then darted a glance at Eddie. The young man’s expression surprised Mike more than a little. He looked just as determined as Simpson. Even more surprisingly—and importantly—his entire manner radiated agreement. And confidence. Whether Simpson really could pull it off or not, Eddie thought he could. Out of the corner of his eye, Mike saw Jesse smiling coldly. Apparently, he did too.

Mike felt a moment’s amusement, then. He suspected that his top military officers sometimes found his diplomatic and political subtleties a bit frustrating. Whatever differences there might be between John Simpson and Jesse Wood, after all—or Frank Jackson—they had all at one time been officers or soldiers in the world’s most powerful military. The prospect of—for once, dammit—just blasting through the crap must have a certain appeal to them.

For that matter, once he thought about it, Mike found the prospect had an undeniable charm. He knew all about Freiherr von Bleckede and his obstructions over his precious little wehrlueck. Bleckede was a fine sample of the German petty aristocracy at its worst. Mike allowed himself a moment’s pleasant reverie, imagining the expression on the good baron’s face after Simpson’s ironclads . . .

He shook it off.

“That still leaves Hamburg,” he observed. “They’ve been hesitant to sign on with us from the beginning because of how close to Denmark they are. They don’t have any particular love for Christian IV. In fact, they’ve been all but at war with him themselves for the past two or three years. But everybody in the region knows that sooner or later Christian and Gustavus are going to have it out to decide who’s top dog in the Baltic, and they haven’t wanted to get caught in the crossfire. Now that France and England and Spain are obviously signing up with Denmark and the Dutch are completely out of the equation, Hamburg’s authorities are going to be even more unwilling to openly support Sweden in any way. Especially with Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar’s army perched in Alsace, French troops even closer, and the Spanish—from what Becky can tell—rolling into the eastern Netherlands.”

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