
only that he was a bit taller and heftier than the most of them; but
appearances can be deceiving, for Bass Foster was not a seventeenth-century
English nobleman or gentleman, as were they all. He was not even of their
universe, much less of their world or time.
Years before that day on the drill field, a device spawned of a future
technology had propelled Bass and certain others of his world and time into
this one, and their arrival had set in motion currents that had wreaked
significant changes in this world and would certainly continue to do so for
untold centuries yet to come. Mostly a misfit and seldom truly happy in the
world of his origin, Bass had, despite himself, fitted into this one like hand
into gauntlet or sword into sheath; depths almost unplumbed in his other-world
life had been sounded and he was become a consummate leader of fighting men, a
very gifted cavalry tactician, and, more recently, a naval figure of some
note, as well. His private fleet of warships, with the unofficial aid of a few
royal ships and Lord Admiral Sir Paul Bigod, had raided a certain northern
Spanish port and there burned, sunk, or otherwise destroyed the bulk of a
fleet being there assembled to bear an invasion force of Crusaders against
England. The sack of the place had been thorough and far more rewarding than
any had expected, and so even after all shares had been allotted, Bass Foster
found himself to have become an exceedingly wealthy man by any standards. "And
it's just not right, none of it," thought His Grace of Norfolk, while he
watched the squadron wheel and turn, draw pistols, present and fire, then
gallop off to repeat the exercise. "For most of my life before I ... we came
here, I seemed to utterly lack luck; anything and everything I wanted or
needed or loved was snatched away from me. It seemed, nonetheless, I tried to
hold up my head and play the poor hand that life continued to deal me as best
I could.
"Here, on the other hand, I do nothing from the very start except try to keep
myself and the others alive and I draw ace after ace after ace. Hell, the way
it is here, if I tripped and fell facedown in a fucking dungheap, I'd probably
come up with a fucking diamond, while the others. ...'.'
"Professor Collier, now. for instance. For all that he's always denigrated by
Hal and Wolfie and the King, these days, his many contributions helped Arthur
and England far more than did mine, back in the beginning. What did the Fickle
Lady deal out to him? Capture and torture by a clan of savage border ruffians
and, after belated rescue, a bare monastery cell in which to howl out his
insanity for the rest of his life.
"Then there's Pete Fairley, whose talents set up the Royal Armory at York. His
multishot hackbuts won or all but won at least two full-scale battles tor
English arms, and his large-bore breechloading rifled cannon are on the way to
revolutionizing naval warfare, not to even mention the advances in other, less
warlike, directions that his endless experiments are turning out. like that
light but sturdy and comfortable springed carriage there, that Buddy Webster
came down here in.
"And how about Bud Webster, too? His stockbreeding and general agricultural
projects will no doubt feed folks far better in years to come than any of us
can now imagine, and he got damned nearly as raw a deal as Bill Collier did.
Yes, he's still got his sanity, but he'll limp stiff-legged for the rest of
his life and never be able to sit a horse in comfort or real security again.
And that means a great deal in this primitive, preindustrial world where about
the only common means of getting about in peace or war are on horseback or
shank's mare. That fine carriage that Pete has fabricated for Bud is handy and
comfortable, true, but much use on the rutted, muddy, hole-pocked abominations
that pass for roads in this version of England will soon wreck it, no matter
how well and cunningly made, just as they wreck sutler waggons and even