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1633 by David Weber & Eric Flint. Part seven. Chapter 50, 51, 52

Hesse-Kassel’s smile was very wide. “What are you going to call it, have you decided? The ‘United States’ province of the ‘United States of Europe’ just won’t do. Too confusing.”

“Personally,” said Mike, scratching the back of his neck thoughtfully, “I’m rather partial to Gustav’s suggestion. ‘East Virginia’ has a nice little sound to it—and it would certainly be a none-too-subtle poke in Richelieu’s eye. Seeing as how the good cardinal has chosen to rename Virginia and call it Louisiana. I can’t wait to see what he decides to call Louisiana itself, when they get around to grabbing it.”

“Cardinalia,” snorted Ludwig Guenther, the count of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt. “You watch.”

“It won’t be that,” demurred Mike. “Richelieu’s much too smooth, and he’s always careful not to make the fact that he really runs France become so obvious that it would embarrass Louis XIII. But, to get back to Wilhelm’s question, I don’t know if the people living there will much care for ‘East Virginia.’ The name will probably rub a lot of up-timers the wrong way, and it just won’t mean that much to the rest of them. However—”

He shrugged. “I’m going to stay out of it. As of tomorrow, when my resignation takes effect, Ed Piazza is the new President of the United States. I’m not about to stick my thumb in his pot of soup. He’ll handle it, just like he’ll handle anything else he has to. I have great confidence in the man. Truth is, he’ll be a lot better administrator than I ever was.”

An odd sort of silence fell over the small room. Mike was pretty sure it was what authors liked to call a “pregnant silence.”

Delayed pregnancy, apparently. Mike chuckled again. “Come on, Wilhelm, spit it out. You’re trying to figure out how soon you should launch your new party and start running in opposition to me. My advice? As fast as you can.”

Wilhelm cocked his head. “You are that confident in winning, once the emergency period is over and your post becomes elective?”

“Don’t be silly. You’ll win in a landslide. Not in—ah—East Virginia, of course, or Magdeburg. But when all the votes are counted, all over the new United States, I figure I’ll be doing well to get a third of the votes. That’s what I’ll be shooting for, anyway.”

Again, silence.

“The prospect does not seem to bother you,” commented Ludwig.

“Why should it? People need to settle down some, now. Start relaxing a bit. Get accustomed to their new set of political clothes. Start growing into them at a pace they feel comfortable with. I make too many people nervous, Ludwig. You know it, I know it—everybody here knows it. Up to a point, that’s fine. But I think we’ve probably reached that point.”

He leaned forward in his chair and gave the eight former princes a display of dignitas that would have had George Washington hollering with approval. For their part, the eight men listened with as much rapt attention as pupils listening to a world-famous sage. Eight princes-that-were, now leaders-not-sure-what-they-are. Later on, Mike knew, he would be laughing about it all.

Later, not now.

“Lesson number one, gentlemen. Not the least of the reasons a democracy is more stable than any other kind of regime is because it has a self-correcting mechanism. Right or wrong doesn’t even enter into it, really, at this level. You can only stretch a people so far, before they snap. Or you snap. And don’t think you can’t, I don’t care how powerful you are. So . . . we’ll find out, when the election happens, but I think the people of Germany within our borders would prefer Wilhelm. For a while, at least. They need a bit of a rest.”

He gave out a rueful little laugh. “For that matter, I could use one myself. Once Becky gets out of Amsterdam, I’d really like to spend some time with my family. Especially now that I seem to have acquired a boy also. A famous miniature philosopher, no less. That’s three hours a day right there, just making sure the kid doesn’t grow up squirrelly. First thing I’m doing—Becky can squawk all she wants—is teach him how to fish.”

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