Page 46 of 1634 The Baltic War


  The pistols weren't doing much good. Not with the clouds coming and going. It was mainly swords. Quiet, for a fight. The road was dusty; there was grass growing on the edges. Old leaves. His guards were more than holding their own.

  A horse peeled back from the front of the column. Oh, please God, not. Karl Johann Franz. Too old, too big, to be doubled up with another rider. On his own horse, with his sword out, plunging into the thick of the fight. Not quite sixteen, and nowhere nearly as skilled as he thought he was.

  "Karl!" his father shouted. "Get back! Get out of there. Go back where I left you; back where you belong."

  Too late. The boy was down, his mount running.

  Duke Albrecht spurred his horse, trying to reach where his son had fallen.

  Toward the front of the column, a shriek of fury. Mechthilde. She had turned; she had seen Karl fall. No, no, no. He watched helplessly.

  Mechthilde, spurring her horse at the Bavarians, riding into the melee. Unarmed in any conventional sense, using her horse itself as a weapon. She had always been a fierce rider in the hunt. She rammed her mount into the side of the one ridden by the soldier who had unseated Karl; knocked them hard enough that the Bavarian's horse slipped on the dewy grass and fell. Rearing up, she brought her own horse's front hoofs down on the man.

  Several of the Bavarians turned toward her. One of Albrecht's men tried to grab the reins of her plunging horse. She pulled away. Albrecht desperately tried to reach her.

  A moment of moonlight. The oncoming rider was clearly visible. The armor. Maximilian himself? Oh, surely not, but so recognizable, so very different from the standard issue of the regular troops. Mechthilde, screaming, screaming, driving her horse toward him.

  Reflexively, Duke Maximilian brought up the lance mounted at the side of his horse. She impaled herself on it and fell.

  * * * *

  Johannes Vervaux had passed this way before on one of his trips to the collegium in Amberg. He recognized it, even in the imperfect light. He could not predict the outcome of the fight; his responsibility was to his pupils and to the future for which they were destined. Gathering up the reins of the horses carrying himself and Doña Mencia, he turned off the path that the group had been following. Not northeast, but west. He pulled them away to safety as two of the guards anxiously hurried the other women and children along the determined path, as fast as they dared.

  * * * *

  "What do you want to do about it?" one of the Grenzjaeger stationed along the side road that led toward Regen asked anxiously. "This wasn't covered in our orders."

  "Stop them and take them back to the rest? Duke Ernst doesn't want to keep Duke Albrecht's party."

  "Right into the middle of that cut, hack, and slash? A priest, an old lady, and two kids?"

  "Priest?"

  "He's got priest clothes on. I could tell that, even by just the moon."

  "No point in sending lambs back to the slaughter. Let 'em go. What difference can it make?"

  "Second thought."

  "Yeah?"

  "We're not doing anything else here. Let's make sure they get away."

  "Hey, Franz."

  "Yeah."

  "It's starting to rain."

  "I noticed."

  * * * *

  After Mechthilde fell, the Bavarians pulled back, briefly. Maybe it was the sudden dark again; maybe the rain starting up. Albrecht decided to take advantage of it. "Turn and ride. Keep up a rear guard fight if we have to, but our main concern is getting across as fast as we can."

  The guards followed him. They were almost a half mile behind the lead party, which eventually came to a white sign that read, "Turn here to follow the Kleine Regen." A guard pulled that and laid it face down as well. Yet another sign directed them to the pass. The signs were telling the truth. The next town they reach was Suzicz.

  * * * *

  Duke Maximilian halted his horse and looked down at Mechthilde. She was dead. He had seen enough dead people to know.

  "Your Grace." A very young rider.

  "During the fight, Your Grace. A priest took the young dukes and an old lady away from the rest. Sir, when you sent us to the landgrave's estate the first time, you said that the young dukes were the most important. Sir."

  The duke looked at him. "You are to be commended for good thinking." He gestured. "Lieutenant. Take five men and go after them. They can't have gotten far."

  Maximilian looked down again. Two of the young dukes. Karl, like his mother, was dead.

  "Wait here," he directed the rest of his men. "The most important thing is to ensure that I have control of Bavaria's heirs."

  * * * *

  A half hour later, the lieutenant was back. With three men and two lamed horses.

  "There are wires across the path in the dark, Your Grace. And traps on the road. I don't see any way that the priest could have set them. They were, ah, professional. If I do say so myself."

  "Do you have an explanation of why the priest and the young dukes did not encounter these supposed wires and traps?"

  "Ah, Your Grace, I suppose that they must have been put up after they passed by."

  Maximilian glanced up. It was still raining, but the clouds were patchy. The moon was coming out, a cloud sliding away from it. In the sudden light, there was a flight of arrows out of the trees on either side of the road. Aimed at the horses. Several neighed and reared; none down, but some would be lame.

  Then, from behind them, a volley of shots, also aimed at the horses. These brought some of them down.

  The moon disappeared again; the rain gathered force.

  "Those of you with horses, head back to the boats in good order. Those without, follow us as best you can."

  He turned his own horse; his two regular bodyguards appeared at his side.

  Duke Albrecht's guards who had been coming up the path on foot evaporated into the woods; the Grenzjaeger let them. Once the Bavarians were out of hearing, the guards returned to the path and started to follow Duke Albrecht. The Grenzjaeger permitted that, as well. Duke Ernst did not want to keep Duke Albrecht's party. The lieutenant of the Grenzjaeger was very pleased that the guards had not seen any of his own men.

  * * * *

  Half of the boats were gone. Not as bad as it could have been, since nearly half of the horses were gone, as well. Maximilian's men loaded them and pushed out into the river.

  Duke Ernst's boatmen looked after them wistfully. Maybe it had been against orders. They had been told not to destroy the duke's boats, but nobody said, well, not directly, that they shouldn't just hide them.

  "Wish the main fight up there had lasted a little longer. We could have disappeared them all and had some fun here while they milled around."

  The scout from the Grenzjaeger slid in among them again.

  "Don't go into mourning too soon, Matzi. There's a batch more coming on foot."

  The boatmen settled down to wait. To finish the business. Leaving half of Matzi's men behind to clean up, the scout led the rest northeast to find the others.

  * * * *

  At dawn, the Grenzjaeger came out of the woods, onto the scene of the skirmish. You couldn't call it more than that.

  "What do we do?"

  "With the soldiers? Just collect their weapons and armor, clothes, shoes, knives, anything useful. Then start digging. A couple of you see if any of the horses are worth saving. If not, put them down. I'll send Heinz the knacker and his boys to collect them. I hope he appreciates the bonus."

  "Good. I don't want to think about digging graves that size."

  "What about them?" The first man gestured toward the woman and young boy.

  "Hell, I don't know."

  "Sarge?"

  "Yes, Matzi."

  "I've seen her before. She wasn't so old, then. But it's the landgravine. From Leuchtenberg, up by Pfreimd. I'm sure of it."

  "What in hell was she doing with a bunch of Bavarians?"

  "Married one of them. You know, how they marry of
f princesses. The family picks somebody important and she doesn't have a bit of say about it."

  "Damn. Wish it was that simple with my daughter Anna. Mule-headed, determined that she's going to have Endres the fisherman or nobody."

  "Nothing really wrong with Endres. Better let her have her way, or she'll make your life miserable. So what do we do with them?"

  "If they really do belong up at Pfreimd, we'll send them there. Fancy family, they'll have a tomb or a crypt or something to put them in. Go to that town up to the west and call a teamster to bring a couple of coffins out."

  "Tell him to bill it to Duke Ernst."

  * * * *

  Vervaux had been moving slowly, saying a rosary of thanks that, apparently, no one had seen them leave the fight. Now it was getting light. There was a town ahead. Doña Mencia and the boys were too exhausted, from the flight and the fight, to ride through to Amberg. They needed to eat, to stop and rest. He had enough money for an inn, though innkeepers were more used to having people show up at dusk rather than dawn.

  They lost their way. Always a good, reliable, excuse. How to travel? The boys weren't wearing anything fancy, just hunting clothes, thank goodness, but still they were obviously from a very wealthy family. The old ploy of a man traveling with his elderly mother and two young sons clearly would not do, if only because he himself didn't have any secular clothing.

  Simple, Johannes, simple. Two young men on their way to the collegium in Amberg, accompanied by their grandmother and their tutor.

  * * * *

  Which was, in fact, where they went.

  Jakob Balde notified Duke Ernst of their arrival. And of their identity.

  Ernst Haakansson Hand howled with laughter. "Remember what you said. 'I certainly don't want to end up with them here. Let Wallenstein deal with the political headaches. I have too much else to do.' So much for plans that are all too clever."

  "How did they get here?" Böcler asked. He scribbled a note to himself: interview all involved. His Historia Ernesti Ducis, he thought, was coming along very well. If only people kept on doing such interesting things for a while longer, eternal fame would be within his grasp. Plus, since Duke Ernst was only thirty years old, there should be a second volume. At least.

  "A little self-help and initiative. On the part of Vervaux," Hand answered. "And a certain tendency to interpret their orders freely by some of our Grenzjaeger, I'm afraid. Who didn't have the slightest idea who they were, of course, so I decided not to discipline them too hard."

  "Have you heard anything about Duke Albrecht?" Duke Ernst asked mournfully.

  "Yes, he did make it into Bohemia with the rest of his party. But he didn't realize that his sons were missing until dawn, and he still doesn't know where they are."

  "So all we have to worry about are the boys."

  "Well, not exactly." Hand grinned and handed over a piece of paper.

  "Cardinal Bedmar, in the Netherlands, would appreciate it very much if we would reunite him with his sister. This wish is endorsed by the Cardinal-Infante. Or the prince formerly known as the Cardinal-Infante. Don Fernando, in any case. Accompanied by a personal communication from my illustrious cousin asking us to do just that."

  "Bedmar's sister?"

  "The old lady Vervaux brought in with the boys."

  Duke Ernst rested his chin on the tips of his fingers. "Archduchess Maria Anna's chief personal attendant?"

  "Got it."

  "She had rheumatic knees, I've heard."

  "I have it on the best authority that Grantville is sending a diesel truck."

  Böcler took notes steadily.

  Part VII

  August, 1634

  And I Again Am Strong

  Chapter 49

  Triumphata Conscientia

  Landshut, Bavaria

  Duke Maximilian called his privy council and his close advisers, both civilian and military, to Landshut. He ordered the rest of the court establishment to remain in Munich, since he intended to return there shortly. Upon their arrival, he announced that young Duke Karl and his mother, die Leuchtenbergerin, had been killed during the pursuit.

  The duke did not describe the circumstances of the deaths. Enough of the troops who had accompanied him into the Upper Palatinate had seen the events, though, that rumors were flying wild.

  He formally announced that Duke Albrecht and the other two young dukes had escaped, but said no more than that. It was left to rumor, again, to circulate the information that while Duke Albrecht had achieved his goal of Bohemia, the two boys had been taken in another direction.

  The most widespread rumor was that the removal of the two young dukes was the result of a conspiracy between, ah, someone, and Duke Ernst, with the intention of handing them into the power of the Swede. There was no other explanation of the undoubted fact, to which any number of the troops who had accompanied Duke Maximilian were willing to testify, that the regent in the Upper Palatinate had men in place with the intent of preventing Bavarian pursuit.

  This being so, and since they had been taken from their father by their tutor, the Jesuit Vervaux, who had been sent to Bavaria by the duke of Lorraine . . . speculation went wild. It was a conspiracy that involved the French, possibly Richelieu, but more likely Monsieur Gaston, who was married to the duke of Lorraine's sister. The Jesuits, for unknown motives, were conspiring with the French against Bavaria.

  At least, some of the Jesuits. Father Forer made it very plain that he did not in any way endorse the action of the renegade Vervaux. He stated that he had appealed to Father General Vitelleschi to do something about it. Demand that Vervaux, wherever he was at the moment, be arrested and handed over. If not to Duke Maximilian, then at the very least to the bishop of Augsburg, or to a trustworthy emissary of the father general, or to... someone, at any rate. As soon as they definitely found out where he was. And if, he added mentally, there was anyone trustworthy left in the world.

  The formal announcement did not include any information in regard to Doña Mencia. Neither did the rumors, since none of the common soldiers had recognized her in the darkness of the night. In any case, Maximilian himself did not know that she had been the old woman drawn away from the escape party by Vervaux or even that an old woman had gone with the boys.

  Richel sat next to the duke, taking notes. Personally, he expected Doña Mencia to surface in Bohemia any day now and be returned to Austria in a flamboyant gesture of magnanimity by Wallenstein. At which time they would have evidence, when Ferdinand II received her honorably, that he had been part of a conspiracy to humiliate Duke Maximilian from the moment he agreed to the marriage project. What the Bavarians really needed to determine, now, was why the Austrians had done it.

  And do something about finding die Habsburgerin. Wherever she might be. Having her in custody would give Duke Maximilian a considerably greater amount of leverage against Austria.

  This was not included in Duke Maximilian's statement to the privy council. Which did not mean that it failed to have a prominent place in Richel's instructions to the duke's intelligence staff, along with the disappearance of the Grantville women. The question of where the English Ladies might be led back, of course, to the question of the renegade Jesuit, Vervaux, who had confessed the archduchess. Even if not formally, Mary Ward's sisters were de facto Jesuitesses. They had maintained close contacts with the collegium in Munich, which led naturally to a suspicion that more of the Jesuits there had been involved in the conspiracy that had now deprived Bavaria of its heirs.

  The next item of business, was the siege of Ingolstadt. Again, the news from Ingolstadt was not good. The Swedes showed no sign of giving up now that their plot with Farensbach had been discovered. They were not making much progress, but they were not giving up.

  After the formal announcements, the duke dismissed the majority of the privy councillors, sending them back to Munich.

  * * * *

  Munich

  Father Forer was finding life very difficult. Heinrich von
Knoeringen, the bishop of Augsburg and his own former penitent, the man who had once investigated the fitness of Gepeckh to become prince-bishop of Freising, formally demanded an investigation into the orthodoxy of the Munich Jesuits. Father General Vitelleschi—probably as a delaying tactic, Forer thought—had responded by requesting that Ferdinand II permit Father Lamormaini to conduct a visitation of the Munich house. The Holy Roman Emperor had the impudence to issue him the necessary passports to travel to Munich.

  Duke Maximilian, of course, had refused. One did not invite a conspirator to investigate his own fellows. Maximilian's objections were vociferous. He appealed to the pope; then from the pope badly informed to the pope better informed.

  Forer himself desired, certainly, that the Catholic church be utterly uncompromising toward heretics. He also suspected, more strongly with every passing day, that at least some of his fellow Jesuits were somehow mixed right into the thick of the departure of the English Ladies. Duke Maximilian's net was widening. The inquisition's investigation of heresy associated with the house on Paradise Street spread farther ever day. Reluctantly, Forer warned his fellow-Jesuits at the Munich collegium and the Wilhelmsgymnasium. Father Drexel left Munich, taking the elderly Father Rader with him. Forer did not want to know where they were going.

  Several other Jesuits whom the inquisition might possibly consider to be tainted also left. Father Forer did not want to know that, either, but he suspected that they were going to Tyrol.

  He was beginning to think, at least to suspect, that the Father General had supported Urban VIII in the appointment of the Grantville priest as cardinal-protector of the USE. If that was true, what was his own obligation of conscience? Had he sworn a vow of obedience to a heretical pope? Did he stand under the command of a heretical father general? Had he allowed the formal obligation of oaths he had taken to them to lead him from the path of strict orthodoxy? Had he, in warning the other Munich Jesuits, permitted heretics to evade correction?