Quarks at Appomatox by Charles L. Harness This story copyright 1983 by Charles L. Harness.Reprinted by permission of Linn Prentiss.This copy was created for Jean Hardy's personal use.All other rights are reserved. Thank you for honoring the copyright. Published by Seattle Book Company, www.seattlebook.com. * * * This is my historical period. My bemused ancestors fought on both sides during the Civil War. West Virginia (where we came from) seceded from Virginia and joined the Union, but one of my distant Harness uncles organized and outfitted a company with his own money and joined up with General Lee. The Harness house on Route 220 near Moorefield, West Virginia, still stands, with rifle ports in the basement. And George Washington actually did spend the night there on his way to fiasco at what is now Pittsburgh. *** * * * * * * "General Lee." A statement. A greeting. A question. "General" with a hard "g," and each syllable precisely enunciated. And something odd about the accent. More like "Gaynayral Lay." The two officers in gray jackets stared down from their horses at the stranger who stood by his own mount, a beautiful bay. The soft radiance of the paschal moon revealed a man in uniform, but the jacket and trousers were neither blue nor gray. The newcomer was dressed in black. From his bearing, clearly a soldier. Rank uncertain. The stranger saluted the tall officer with the white beard. "General Lee. I am Oberst Karl von Mainz, of the Army of West Germany." If General Lee was puzzled, he concealed it well. He returned the salute and nodded toward his companion. "Colonel von Mainz, my aide, Major Potter." He studied the visitor a moment. "I presume you are a military attaché from His Majesty, King William of Prussia. Welcome, sir. We haven't had an attaché since the British Colonel Freemantle rode with us to Gettysburg. You must have overcome incredible hardships to join me here at Appomattox Court House, and quite possibly to no purpose." He peered through the semi-light. "I don't remember you in Richmond. How did you get through? The roads are jammed with Union troops." "I used... a different approach, Herr General." "Ah? Well, no matter. Major, would you please extend our hospitality to the colonel?" His aide sighed. "It's parched corn and creek water, sir. No coffee. No tea. No brandy." Robert Lee thought back. A Richmond lady had entertained him in her parlor a few months ago. She had given him a cup of real tea, made from what were probably the last genuine tea leaves in the doomed city. She had drunk her own cup of "tea," which he knew to be dark water from the James River. He had never let on. She had sipped, and she had smiled. A true Southern lady. All this was passing away. He said, "By your leave, Colonel, I will now retire. There will be action tomorrow morning that decides whether the war is over or whether it continues." "Herr General, I know all about that. The Army of Northern Virginia now consists of two small infantry corps-- Gordon and Longstreet-- and a little cavalry. And you are in a tight box. On your east is General Meade, with the Second and Sixth Corps. To the west is Custer and most of the Union cavalry. To the south is Sheridan's cavalry. That's the bottom of the box, and that's where the Union lines are weakest. You propose to break out through Sheridan, move rapidly south on the Lynchburg Road, join up with General Johnson in North Carolina, and drag the war out until the North is willing to negotiate an honorable peace. But it won't work, Herr General." General Lee looked at the German for a long time. "Sir, you seem to know a great deal about the tactical situation. So tell me, why can't I break out through the south?" "Because, Herr General, history has already written the dénouement of this, your last campaign." He did not look at Major Potter. "May we discuss this in private, Herr General?" Lee shrugged. "Very well." He dismounted and gave the reins to his aide. "Oh, it's perfectly all right, Potter. We'll be in the tent." A stump of candle was already burning on the cracker box when they went inside. The Confederate officer motioned to the camp chair, then eased himself down on the cot. "I think we can push through Sheridan," he said. The other nodded. "True, in the dawn fighting you will push back Sheridan's dismounted cavalry. Your boys will cheer. But that's the end of it. General Ord's Fifth Corps arrives just in time to reinforce Sheridan. The great game is over. You send out a rider with a white flag. At eleven tomorrow morning, Palm Sunday, you will send General Grant notice that you would like to meet him to discuss surrender terms. You will accept his demand for unconditional surrender. Tomorrow afternoon, except for a little scattered action in other theatres, the war will be over." Lee was silent. Von Mainz shrugged. "You think I am insane? I am not insane, General Lee. I know many events that lie in your future." "How is this possible?" "You think of me as a loyal subject of King William of Prussia and an officer of the Prussian army, in this eighteen hundred five and sixty. Not exactly, General. I am not what you suppose. There are two very basic facts that you must accept. If you can accept these two facts and all that they imply, then you can understand everything you need to know about me. Fact number one, I am from your future. I was born in the year two thousand and thirty. I am thirty-five years old. I left the American Sector of Berlin this morning, April 8, in the year two thousand five and sixty, almost exactly two hundred years in your future. I am indeed a colonel, but not in the Prussian army. I am a colonel in the Neues Schutz-Staffeln-- the 'NSS'-- an underground paramilitary organization devoted to reuniting West and East Germany." He waited. "You don't believe me? Not just yet? No matter. I assure you, I can provide proof." "West Germany... East Germany?" said Lee. "I don't understand." "Never mind. It's a long story. With the general's permission, I'd like to state the second fact." "Proceed. What is your second fact?" "The second fact is that you can win the war. Not merely the impending battle. You can win the whole war." Lee looked at him sharply. "How?" "With a new weapon." The older man smiled faintly. "Which you brought with you, of course, from your twenty-first century?" "Of course. And please do not smile, General. It does not become you; nor is it fitting to the occasion." Lee stood up. "Now, you really must excuse me, Colonel. Tomorrow will be a difficult day." He walked to the tent door. "There's Potter over there, by the napoleon. He'll find a place for you to sleep." Colonel von Mainz joined him at the door and peered out into the moonlight. "A napoleon. Hah! The deadliest cannon of the war. Favored by both sides. Range, one mile. With canister at two hundred yards, wipes out an entire platoon. Like a giant sawed-off shotgun. The difficulty is, Grant has three times as many as you have, as well as plenty of powder and skilled gun crews. But you can even the odds, my General." The stranger flashed black eyes at his reluctant host. "May I demonstrate?" "Go ahead." Von Mainz smiled, then held a finger up. "On the other hand, General, it would be more convincing if you performed the experiment yourself." "Really, Colonel-- " "Would the general please pull out the weapon from my rifle boot." Lee walked over to von Mainz's horse, pushed the saddle bags aside, and tugged at what appeared to be a plain rifle stock. The thing came out with a long squeak. Lee carried it into a patch of moonlight for a better look. He frowned. "It's not a rifle...?" "Not exactly. Now then, shall I retire with your Major Potter, or do you want me to tell you about this... instrument?" "Hmm. It's a weapon, you said?" "It is, indeed." The visitor smiled and crossed his arms over his chest. "What does it fire?" asked Lee. "Something in the nature of an electric charge." "Electricity? For heaven's sake! But to what effect?" "See for yourself. First, ask the good Major Potter to move a few meters away from the napoleon." "Very well." Lee call out, "Major-- move away to your left a bit. There. That's fine." "Now," said the visitor, "take it to your shoulder and hook your finger around the trigger, just as you would a rifle. Aim it at the cannon barrel." "What's this on the barrel?" muttered Lee. "A telescopic sight? No-- what in the name of heaven! I can see everything, plain as day!" "A snooperscope," explained von Mainz. "It senses infrared radiation." "Whatever that is," said Lee. He began to perspire. "A gentle squeeze on the trigger," prompted the German. Lee felt a faint click as he closed the trigger. The cannon seemed to vanish. The great Confederate first squinted; then his eyes opened very wide. Something was still there. Dust. Metallic dust glinting in the soft moonlight. Now beginning to settle. And a clatter as the wooden wheel spokes and undercarriage collapsed. Lee hurried out to the shambles, followed by von Mainz. The general poked into the dust clumps with a boot toe. He bent over, picked up a handful, and smelled it cautiously. A faint odor-- something like the residue of a lightning strike. He tossed the dust aside. Major Potter ran over to Lee. "General! Are you all right? What happened?" Lee stared first at his aide, then at the German colonel. "Potter, everything's fine. Excuse us, please. The colonel and I have somewhat to discuss." He handed the strange weapon gingerly to von Mainz and motioned him back into the tent. The candle sputtered at the sudden draft. "There are five more such weapons in my saddle bags," said von Mainz. "They merely require assembly. So. What do you think? Do you believe me now?" "I believe," said Lee, "that I have seen a remarkable thing." He sat on the cot and motioned to the chair again. "How does it work?" "I'm not a technical man-- but I think I can give you the basic theory. You've heard of atoms, of course?" "Yes." "Atoms are made up mostly of even smaller particles called protons and neutrons. These in turn consist of sub-particles called quarks. These quarks are held together by a thing called the strong force, or color force. It is also called 'gluon,' because it functions like glue in holding the quarks together." He peered over at the tired gray face. "Do you follow me, General?" "No, I'm afraid not." "Well, I'm sorry. Shall I go on?" "Please do." "Very well, then. It appears that quarks have at least five flavors: up, down, strange, charm, and bottom. But we'll skip all that. The point is, General, that in my birth year, two thousand and thirty, a means was discovered to de-sensitize the gluon associated with the so-called down quark, which exists in neutrons of the structural metals. Since neutrons are made of one up-quark and two down-quarks, the consequence was that such metals could readily be caused to disintegrate. Your napoleon is-- was-- brass, an alloy of copper and zinc. Brass is quite susceptible. But so are musket barrels, swords, all the iron and steel instruments of war. Even the harmless things yield to it: belt buckles, buttons, stirrups, mess kits, telegraph keys, telescope barrels, spectacle rims..." The general patted his jacket pocket uncertainly. Von Mainz laughed. "Your glasses are safe, General. The weapon never backfires." Lee studied his visitor in silence. Finally he said, "The demonstration was indeed a success. Quite remarkable. I accept is as proof that you are from another time and place. But that simply raises additional questions. How did you get here from the future? What is it to you whether the South wins or loses? Why did you select me for your presentation?" "Not so fast, dear General. Good questions, all valid, and there are answers. Why you? You are the commander-in-chief of all the armies of the Confederacy, and your army has a very pressing need for the weapon. You were therefore the logical choice. "Now then, how did I get here? Not quite so easy to answer, but I can try. There is a device-- really an entire cellar room-- in Berlin. It is associated with an immense power source, all very accurately calibrated. In the center of the room is a sort of plate, a machine, actually, very cleverly constructed. A person stands on that plate, together with certain things he may wish to bring along, even including a horse. Then the dials are set to a specific time and place in the past, a compatriot pulls a switch, and the plate is empty. If the warp is accurate, the person in the chair moves from Berlin twenty sixty-five to... wherever, whenever..." "I... see," murmured the general. "I think I see." He put his fingers to his forehead. "So here you are. But why? What difference does the outcome of this war make to you... to the NSS... to the Germany of the twenty-first century?" "Why? Because I-- my group-- we want to change the past, and hence the future fate of the German people. You and I together can do this." "Go on." "I'm sure you realize, General, that in the history about to be written the South loses the war. The Union is reestablished. The United States spreads across the continent 'from sea to shining sea,' as your hymn says. Very quickly America becomes rich and populous. But she is not done with war. There will be a great war in nineteen fourteen to nineteen eighteen: at the start, Germany against England, France, and Russia. We would have won this war, except that America came in against us. Germany rose from the ashes and in nineteen thirty-nine tried again, against almost the same enemies. Again, we almost made it. Our armies lay on the outskirts of Leningrad-- oh, St. Petersburg to you. We could see the church spires of Moscow. But once more America came in against us. America sent Russia immense quantities of war materials; shipload after shipload through the Persian Gulf, and in the north by Murmansk. These weapons you would find quite incredible. Self-propelled cannons with iron plating, called 'tanks.' Machines that flew through the air, capable of dropping terrible bombs. And big horseless carriages for moving troops rapidly. Our German armies had these things, too, of course, but in nowhere near the numbers the Americans were able to furnish our Russian enemies." He sighed and took a deep breath. "In nineteen hundred three and forty the Russians began a general counterattack across the entire eastern front-- some twelve hundred miles long. For us it was the beginning of the end. We gave up two years later." "But you speak of history. All that will happen whether the South wins or loses." "No, we think not. Our forecasters have made a number of studies on great machines called computers. The results agree as to several essential points. If America exists in two countries, North and South, neither would possess the industrial and manpower resources to make a difference in the war of nineteen fourteen to nineteen eighteen. Germany would have won. The German emperor-- the Kaiser-- would have stayed in power, and there would have been no need for the war of nineteen thirty-nine to forty-five. Stalingrad... Lend Lease... our Führer committing suicide in a bunker in Berlin... all moot... will never happen." "You are telling me, sir," mused the general, "if the South wins now, in eighteen sixty-five, Germany wins in nineteen eighteen." "Exactly." The visitor smiled crookedly. "And more than that. The world wins. For twenty million people are scheduled to die in the war of nineteen thirty-nine to forty-five. They would live. And that's not all. America develops a bomb capable of destroying all humanity all over the globe. If the South wins in eighteen sixty-five, that bomb would not be available in nineteen forty-five." "Interesting. And very curious. I can see that science is due to make immense strides in the decades ahead. But tell me-- this present weapon-- this strange rifle-- what do you call it?" "Dis. Short for disintegrator." "Was it-- perhaps I should say will it-- be used in one of your future wars?" "No, General. Happily-- or unhappily-- the radiation is readily nullified by insulating the metal with a certain coating." "Suppose the North discovers this defensive coating?" "They won't. It requires an alloy that won't be available for a hundred and fifty years." He looked at the general expectantly. "Well, sir?" Lee seemed lost in thought. Finally he said, "No, I can't accept the weapon." Von Mainz was astonished. "But why?" "Colonel, I can say a thing to you, a total stranger, that I cannot say to Mr. Davis, or to any of my own officers, or even to my wife." "Sir?" Lee's voice dropped. He said quietly, "I believe that the Almighty wills that the South shall lose." The man from the future stared at him. Lee said, almost sadly, "I am convinced at last that God has been trying to give me a message these past four years. I could have won at Sharpsburg in '62, except that one of my officers used my battle plan as a cigar wrapper, and it fell into McClellan's hands. And I would have won at Gettysburg if Stonewall Jackson had been there. But he had been shot at Chancellorsville by his own picket-- another freak accident. And last year, in the battle of The Wilderness, victory was within our grasp. Longstreet was reaching out to take it-- when he was shot by his own men. Another ghastly and impossible mistake. And that's not the end of it. Last year in his march to Richmond, Grant split his army to cross the North Anna River-- Warren on the right, Hancock on the left. I moved in between them, and I could have smashed first one and then the other, except that I fell ill. If we had won on any of these occasions-- Sharpsburg or Gettysburg or The Wilderness or on the North Anna-- Britain and France would have recognized the South as a new nation. The North would have had to lift the blockade. Money, arms, food, everything would have poured in. We could have negotiated an easy peace with Washington, and we would have remained in permanent fact the Confederate States of America. But Providence intervened. Always at the critical place, the critical hour. I believe it to be the will of the Almighty." "The will of the Almighty?" Von Mainz's jaw dropped. "Is childish superstition to decide this great struggle? Gott in Himmel! Is the strain finally too much?" He peered in hard suspicion at the man on the cot. "Let us face the realities, Herr General. Look at the facts! Lincoln has already carved your beloved state in two. The western section he calls West Virginia. The federals hold your plantation at Arlington. Your wife is an invalid in Richmond, and the city is burning. Are these calamities the will of God? Your son Fitzhugh rots in a federal prison. The war has already killed his wife and two children. And your own daughter Annie. Do you see in this a divine plan, General? Your army is starving. No rations in two days. You are finished. When this is over, General, the best that life can offer you is presidency of a tiny southern college with an enrollment of forty-five students." "All that you say is true, and it is tragic," said Lee. "But some day the country will be great once again. Lincoln will see to that. He will not permit the South to be ground down like a conquered province." Von Mainz laughed softly. "Lincoln dies one week from today. He will be assassinate while attending a play at Ford's Theatre in Washington." The candle flame shuddered as Lee's head jerked up. "No!" "Yes. History, dear General. And to your beloved South, terrible things are done by Lincoln's successors." Lee groaned. "But the common people... we are of one blood... we are brothers." Von Mainz shrugged. Lee leaned over, stuffed a loose trouser leg back into a Wellington boot top, then tried to get up. His mouth twisted with pain. His visitor leaned forward, concerned, but the older man waved him back. "Rheumatism, Colonel. I'm an old man. My joints..." He was up. "I cannot take your weapons, Colonel. I will take my chances on breaking out tomorrow. I think it pointless for you to remain any longer. How will you return to your time?" "No problem, General. I step out into the darkness. There's a sort of gate, near where my horse is tethered. I go through with my weapons, and you never see me again. I'll leave the bay behind. He's yours, if you want him. Remind General Grant that in your army, the horses belong to the men personally, not to the Confederate government." "If it should come to that." "It will." The colonel looked overhead at the full moon. "Perhaps it's all for the best. You've heard of Jules Verne?" "The French science writer? I've heard of him. Never read any of his books, though I understand Five Weeks in a Balloon was quite popular with our young people." "Yes. And this year, From Earth to the Moon." "Wild fantasy, Colonel." "Is it? Your great United States of America will launch a manned ship from Cape Canaveral and it will land on the Moon, following which it will safely return to Earth. It will do that in just about one hundred years from now. And I have seen the return of the first interstellar ship. The ion engine was designed in Washington and Lee University." "'Ion' engine? All after my time. And I don't believe I know the institution. Any connection with the Lees of Virginia?" "Very close, General." His guest smiled wryly. "The starship, incidentally, was named the Robert E. Lee. Auf Wiedersehen, Herr General." He saluted, and disappeared through the tent flap. The old soldier stared after him. Over a quarter million Southern lads dead in this war. It had lain within his power to make good their sacrifice, and he had thrust it aside. What would Stonewall Jackson think? And Jeb Stuart, and A.P. Hill? Were they all whirling in their graves? Was he a secret Unionist at heart? Did he see this bountiful land stretching in a single golden band from Atlantic to Pacific, and from New Orleans to the Canadian border? Did he secretly think all men should be free? He had never owned a slave, except briefly, when he inherited a few from his mother-in-law. He had promptly emancipated them. How much humiliation lay ahead for him, and for the army? *** It was morning, and he was looking toward the south with fieldglasses. "We got through Sheridan," he muttered. "But that's the end of it." He handed the glasses to his aide. "That's Ord coming up, isn't it?" "Ord? Can't make out the regimentals, sir. Yes, I'm afraid so. A corps, at least." "Row on row of blue," murmured Lee. "Sir?" "Never mind. The war's over, Potter. Signal General Gordon. He knows what to do." "But-- " "Get on with it, Potter." * * * Wilmer McLean had a horrid sinking feeling in his gut. He knew now that the Almighty had had his eye on him in this war, from start to finish. On July 21, 1861, General Beauregard had requisitioned McLean's fine farmhouse near Manassas, and had just sat down to dinner, when a cannonball crashed into the dining room fireplace, thereby announcing that the federals were on their way to Richmond. So Wilmer McLean had sold out and moved south and west, to the village of Appomattox Court House, and here had built an even finer house, where by all logic he should have been able to farm in peace and quiet, out of the path of armies. But Fate had decreed otherwise. For just now his carriage circle and his front yard and his porch and is parlor swarmed with more generals and lesser officers-- of both sides-- than there were bees in his blossoming apple trees. They all stopped talking a moment and made a path for an unkempt, slouched-over officer in a mud-spattered blue uniform. "Is General Lee up?" he asked. Somebody said yes, and he walked up on the porch and into Wilmer McLean's house. *** "The rest is easy, General Lee," said General Gordon. "Our troops just march off down that road there, stack arms in the field at the right, and then they go home." "There's a line of Yankees along the roadside," said Major Potter uneasily. "Don't worry, Potter," said Lee. "That's Chamberlain's brigade. Just to keep order. Decent chap, Chamberlain. Used to be a college professor." "There go my boys," said Gordon. "I'd better get out there with them." "Yes, of course," said Lee. "Go on." The officer cantered away. From somewhere ahead a bugle shrilled. It echoed and re-echoed down the road. Then General Lee and his aide heard a hoarse shout, repeated up and down the blue line along the road, then the slapping of thousands of rifles on hardened palms. Major Potter stood up in his stirrups. "My God, sir! What-- !" "It's all right, Major," said Lee quietly. "General Chamberlain has just given his Yanks the order for 'carry arms.' It's the 'marching salute'-- the highest honor fighting men can give other fighting men." His eyes began to glow. "And look at Gordon. He's standing his horse up. His sword is out, and he's ordering... our boys to return... the salute." He coughed softly. "Dusty hereabouts, Potter." "Yes, sir." The United States, thought Lee. Both sides are going to try. We've got the future. It's all ahead of us. There for the taking. Science, that's what we need. Math. Chemistry. Physics. That's the road for our young people. And we need a vision. This fellow Verne has a vision. Get his books. Potter was trying to ask him something. "What now, sir?" Back to earth. "Where do you live, Major?" "Florida, sir. My folks have a little farm on the Atlantic side." "I was there in '61, trying to strengthen the forts. Where is your farm, Potter?" "You probably never heard of it, sir, a place called Cape Canaveral." "Oh, but I have, Potter." "Really, sir?" The ex-officer looked at the man in gray with pleasure and astonishment, but no explanation was given him. "Let's go home, Potter." Lee wheeled his horse and cantered off toward Richmond.