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Last time, the war in SimEurope inched ever closer to Simsfield. In the meantime, generation five began to
depart, with the most noted passings being Lizzie and Jason Seiff, Melanie Alcott, and Marsha Bradford.
The many deaths brought James, Taddy, and Sterling closer. Meantime, the kids did their best to be kids
and the youngest of generation 7 started to become teens. Nick wrote to Alice’s father, asking him to let
her stay East, and they came to an understanding regarding their relationship.
We’ve also reached the point where the events leading up to World War II will start happening. I plan on
dealing with several aspects of the war pretty head-on, so consider this your warning for that.
Blanket warning about language, topics, adult situations, etc. James has only 1 nice point, and he likes to
swear like a sailor, and Cindy’s a Romance Sim, with some type of purple-hearted want in her panel at all
times. Oh, and just about all of generation 7 (except Nick) are 1-nice-point-newspaper-thieves.
Please enjoy Chapter 27 of The Bradford Legacy.
As they’d promised to do after the passing of the elder Seiffs, James, Sterling, and Taddy were enjoying an
evening out at the Simsfield Tavern. They talked about the goings-on of their families, what was happening
at their respective jobs, and when those topics had been exhausted, they moved on to current events.
“I still don’t like it,” Sterling said. “No good can come of letting Simmany march in and take whatever
territory they want.”
“Ausimtria wanted it, by all accounts,” Taddy pointed out as he took another swig of his drink.
“Just because the leadership of the country wanted it doesn’t mean that they whole country does,” James
interjected.
“James, I’m shocked,” Sterling said. “I didn’t think that you were interested in sticking your nose in
international business.”
“Normally, I’m not. I’m still waiting to see this damned Depression come to an end. But unlike you two, my
son is nearly of the age where he’d have to serve if Simerica decides to stop sticking its proverbial head in
the sand. Of course I’m paying attention to what’s going on.”
“I’m sure you’ve got nothing to worry about,” Taddy stated. “No one wants another world war.”
“Simmany seems to,” Sterling retorted.
“Hey, no bickering, you two. We’re on the same side, remember?” James said. The other two reluctantly
nodded. “Now, how the hell do you pronounce that Simman word everyone’s using? I can’t make heads
or tails of it.”
“You never could speak anything but Simlish to save your life,” smirked Sterling. “Anschluss. It means
‘union,’ or something like that.”
“Implying a non-hostile takeover,” Taddy pointed out again. “It was wanted.”
“Regardless of that,” replied Sterling, refusing to rise to Taddy’s bait, “the fact remains that we can’t keep
allowing Simmany to just take over other countries without so much as blinking. If someone doesn’t
physically stop them, and soon, who knows how far they’ll push their borders.”
“It’s not our problem,” Taddy insisted. “Let Simland and SimFrance take care of it; they’re the ones who
have the most to lose. As James said, we’ve got our own problems to worry about.”
 “We can’t live in our little Simerican bubble forever. Simmany’s doing their best to take over SimEurope
one country at a time. Simpan’s busy expanding their navy, so you know they have conquest on the brain
too. With the President trying to rearm the country, you know what he’s thinking.”
James sighed, an uncharacteristic reaction for him. “I don’t like any of it. Let’s hope Simland and
SimFrance are able to put Simmany in their place before too much longer, so we don’t have to send our
boys over there to clean up their mess, again. As for Simpan, they’re awful far away. I don’t think they’re
interested in us.”
“I’ll drink to that,” Taddy said.
“Here, here,” agreed Sterling. “Even if I don’t think that’s how things will play out, this is one instance
where I would be happy to be proved wrong.”
                                                     *****
Not long after their get-together, George Horace Alcott departed the world at the ripe old age of 82.
Sterling was distraught, as was understandable. Viola and James were supportive, but as they watched
Sterling grieve their thoughts were often on their own father. He was only a few years younger than
George Horace, and Jefferson was definitely showing his age. They knew it wouldn’t be too much longer
before they were mourning his loss.
                                                *****
As summer came to a close, it was time for Nick to pack up his things and head off to college. Each of the
family members wished him well in their own way.
With their first year of college in full swing, Nick and Alice did their best to make time for each other.
Between Nick’s very full course load and Alice’s working as a secretary part-time for Sterling, their dates
often consisted of study sessions in SimHarvard’s library or in one of their dorm’s common rooms.
One day, Alice noticed something was wrong with Nick. Even though he had an anatomy exam the next
day, he was still reading the newspaper, his brow furrowed in concentration.
“Honey, I don’t think the Herald’s started printing diagrams of the abdomen. You might want to open your
textbook for that.”
Nick looked up, confused. “Why would I be reading the newspaper for diagrams?”
“You were studying it just as hard as you should be studying for your exam tomorrow. I just wanted to
make sure you knew that it wasn’t your notes or your textbook.”
Nick folded up the newspaper, but the frown remained on his face. “You’re right, of course. I do need to
study. I shouldn’t let myself get wrapped up in international news that has no real affect on me at this
moment.”
Alice pursed her lips. “You don’t need to be snarky, Nick. You were the one who invited me over here to
study tonight.”
Nick’s shoulders dropped. “I was, and I should have left the newspaper in my room. I know that I get
cranky anytime I read it. I’m sorry.”
Alice smiled, and Nick knew he was forgiven. He opened up his textbook, and began to review the various
diagrams in preparation for his exam.
At nine o’clock, the two gathered their books and Nick walked Alice back to her dorm. As it was a warm
night, they both put their schoolwork on the front step and settled down to watch the stars for a few
moments.
As she lay against his chest, Alice could sense that Nick was not as focused on the sky above as she was.
“What are you thinking? And don’t lie and say you’re thinking about me, because I know you’re not.”
Nick chuckled. “How do you know me so well?”
“It’s a talent.”
His arm tightened around her. “The leaders of Simland, SimFrance, Simtaly, and Simmany met, and
they’ve agreed to let Simmany take back land that was given to Czechosimvakia because it’s full of ethnic
Simmans.”
“So?”
He shifted a bit so he could face her. “Don’t you see? The Simlish Prime Minister is so scared of getting
Simland involved in another world war that he’s giving in to Simmany’s bullying.”
“Simland lost a lot during the Great War.”
“That’s not an excuse for not standing up when it’s the right thing to do.”
“I thought that the people of SimFrance and Simland were pleased with the agreement. And didn’t the
Simmans say they have no other territorial demands in SimEurope?”
“That’s what they said after they took over Ausimtria, too. The Simlish Prime Minister may be deluded into
thinking that this agreement means peace in our time, but I’m not buying it.”
“You sound like your Uncle Sterling – it’s nearly all he talks about with his colleagues. He doesn’t think that
Simmany will stop until SimFrance or Simland, or Simerica for that matter, decided to step in and stop
them by force.”
“Uncle Sterling and I have a lot in common, then. I know that no one wants war and all that it brings, but I
wonder,” he said as he sighed, “if Simmany will understand any other way.”
“I hope it doesn’t come to that.”
“Hope is not a strategy,” Nick said, kissing her forehead.
“No, it’s not. But sometimes, it’s all we have.”
                                                    *****
After her conversation with Nick that night, Alice made a point of keeping up with the news of the world.
None of what was coming out of SimEurope was good, but she was at least better able to predict Nick’s
mood swings from what she read.
She began to understand where Nick was coming from, especially when she read about the way the
Simmans were treating some of their own citizens. She just couldn’t understand how readily the Simmans
were turning on their neighbors and friends.
But it wasn’t until she read about the night of organized violence that came to be known as the Night of
Broken Glass that she fully understood why Nick and Sterling were so worried about what the Simman
régime meant for the world as a whole.
Nick was due to take her out for a date that night, but he knew that something was wrong straight away by
how pale she was.
“You saw the papers, then,” he said, sinking down on the sofa next to her.
“How could they do that? Destroying all those homes and businesses, and letting the churches burn as the
firefighters just watched.”
“Synagogues, Alice. But you’re right. It’s abominable behavior.”
“All because they have different beliefs. Nick, it’s just not right. Those poor people.”
“Now do you understand why so many of us our so worried?”
She nodded. “But shouldn’t we do something? It just seems so wrong that there’s no response at all.”
“Well, as I heard it, we’re recalling our ambassador from Simmany, but not breaking of diplomatic relations
with them.”
“Why not?”
“Who knows? Probably don’t want to cut all ties, just in case we need to talk to them for some reason.”
Alice shook her head. “Someone needs to do something.”
“I agree with you, sweetheart. But who and what? With any luck, Simland and SimFrance will pull their
heads out of their asses before long and force him to stop, but I probably shouldn’t hold my breath.”
“No,” she said with a sigh. “They suffered the worst during the Great War. They know what it means.
They won’t fight back unless there’s no other way.”
Nick put his arm around her. “I’m sorry this spoiled our afternoon, even if I’m kind of glad that you
understand why I get so riled up about the news from SimEurope now.”
“Do you honestly think we’ll get involved?”
Alice felt his shoulder rise in a shrug. “I have no idea. We should, but we probably won’t. There are too
many that think the world should be as isolated as it was during Grandpa John’s time. But they forget that
it keeps getting smaller. Everything that happens affects everyone else, even if they don’t know it yet.”
                                                    *****
Even though his freshman year of college was over and most of his classmates were enjoying their break,
Nick was still busy with his studies. He’d decided to take a few extra classes over the summer so he could
graduate sooner, start medical school sooner. Cindy fretted over his plans, but James had dissuaded her.
“Sterling did the same thing, with law school, and he wasn’t any worse for wear after it. A little exhausted,
but nothing worse than that.”
Alice was not idle either. With no classes to attend, she spent three full days each week at Sterling’s law
office, answering the phone, filing papers and occasionally doing a bit of typing. She could have gone back
to working at the general store; in fact, it would have been easier for her than arranging to get to
Portsimouth on a regular basis. But James had hired another part-time clerk when she’d left for college,
and, being perfectly honest, she liked being a secretary better. It wasn’t as physical, the customers far
easier to deal with, and Sterling didn’t mind if she let the radio play quietly in the background.
The other two lawyers in his practice were pleasant enough, though she liked working for Sterling the best.
He always greeted her when he came into the office, made sure she had a way to get home, and would
often send her to buy lunch for the staff, herself included.
The money she was earning went right into paying for college. There were moments when she wondered
if she wasn’t being a bit frivolous; after all, she was just going to get married and be a mother after Nick
graduated. But she would quickly shake those thoughts away. She really was enjoying her studies, getting
to read all those great works of literature. And what else was there for her to do? College was a good a
way as any to pass the time, and it kept her close to Nick. The coming school year would be better, as
Shirley and Rosalie would be joining her at SimRadcliffe.
Shortly before the fall term was set to start, Alice was busy pulling files Sterling would need for court the
next day. She didn’t look up from the drawer as she heard the door open, as she recognized the tread of
Sterling and one of his colleagues.
“I’m telling you it means trouble,” Sterling was saying. “Without the Simviets to worry about, Simmany will
start to march West across SimEurope.”
“Simland and SimFrance will stop them before it gets to that,” the other man said.
“They haven’t shown much of a backbone thus far. If they didn’t stand up for Ausimtria or Czechosimvakia,
I don’t know what it will take for them to draw a line in the sand.”
The other man shrugged. “No telling. We’ll find out soon enough; no sense in worrying about it until then.”
He turned to Alice. “Do you have…”
She opened a drawer and pulled out an envelope. “In chronological order, just like you asked.”
“Thank you. Okay, I’m off to get this mess sorted out. Have a good afternoon.”
Sterling nodded before opening the door that led to his office. Alice stared at it for a moment after it closed,
wondering what had happened to get her boss so upset. After that moment passed, she went back to
pulling the files Sterling had asked for.
It was nearly five when Alice had collected everything Sterling had asked for. She knocked on the office
door and entered when bid to do so.
“Everything you need is here,” she said, handing him the paperwork.
“Thank you, Alice. You’ve been invaluable, you know. Sure I can’t convince you to stay on for a while after
you get married? I can train you to be a real legal secretary.”
She smiled. “Thank you, but no. Once Nick starts his residency, I imagine my free time will be rather
occupied with household matters.”
Sterling chuckled. “Well, if you ever find yourself in a pinch, I’ll gladly take you on short term again.”
“Thank you.”
Alice bit her lip. “Mr. Alcott? May I ask you something?”
“Alice, you can call me Sterling. I’ve told you so a dozen times at least; we’re practically family.”
“It just doesn’t seem right, not yet anyway.”
“I’ll have to speak to my nephew about that,” he said with a smirk.
Alice smiled. “What were you and Mr. Small talking about when you came in?”
Sterling’s expression became serious. “The Simmans and the Simviets came to a non-aggression
agreement.”
“What does that mean?”
“In the simplest of terms, it means they aren’t going to fight each other. They’re also going to share
resources, with isn’t a good thing either.”
“And you believe that it means Simmany will start focusing their attention elsewhere?”
“For certain. They’re itching to fight someone, more than likely the Simlish or the SimFrench. It’s just a
matter of time before we find out who. Of course, the Simmans and the Simviets don’t see eye to eye on a
lot of issues, so maybe the pact won’t last and they’ll just end up fighting each other.”
Alice nodded somberly. “Things just keep going from bad to worse, don’t they?”
Sterling nodded, not feeling the need to say anything in response. “Do you need a ride back to Simsfield?”
“No, not today, thank you. Nick had his last summer class today, and he’s taking me out on the town to
celebrate a bit before fall term starts next week.”
“Get going, then,” he said. “Go on, have fun with your boyfriend.”
Alice smiled at him. “Thank you, Mr.…Sterling.”
Sterling watched Alice, a slight spring in her step, as she left his office.
Once he heard the outer door close, he wiped his face with his hands. He crossed to a cabinet, pulling
from it the decanter that he kept there for moments like this. He filled a glass with several fingers of its
contents, and raised it.
“Have fun while you can, kids. No telling how long it will last.”
                                                      *****
Nick was packed and ready to head back to SimHarvard to start his sophomore year of college. In addition
to Nick being ready to return, Walter, Shirley, and Rosalie were also prepared to join him in college. The
night before he left, Cindy and James invited the Alcotts and the Seiffs over for dinner to give their children
a proper send-off.
Despite the relative festiveness of the occasion, conversation was anything but light. Two days ago, they’d
learned that Simmany had invaded SimPoland, in defiance of the Treaty of Simsailles that ended the Great
War. That morning, word came that Simland and SimFrance had declared war on Simmany. After dinner,
everyone gathered in the parlor of the old farmhouse, waiting to hear what the President had to say when
he addressed the country over the radio. They listened to the voice through the crackle of the static,
wanting to know what the events occurring in far away SimEurope meant for them.
“I don’t think that he means to get us involved,” Taddy said to James and Sterling.
“Taddy, hush,” Calla said gently. “I can’t hear.”
“It is right that I should recall to your minds the consistent and at time successful efforts of your
Government in these crises to throw the full weight of the United States into the cause of peace.”
“See, I told you!” Taddy boomed.
“I doubt it will end up being that simple, Taddy,” Sterling replied. “Simmany seems hell-bent on dominating
SimEurope, and if it comes to that you know that Simerica won’t leave Simland in the lurch.”
“Will you two hush up?” Viola asked. “Save the commentary until after the speech is over.”
“Let no man or woman thoughtlessly or falsely talk of Simerica sending its armies to SimEuropean fields.
At this moment there is being prepared a proclamation of Simerican neutrality.”
James snorted. “Hard to remain neutral when so many of us can trace our roots back to one of the
countries involved.”
Taddy opened his mouth to reply, but a hard glance from Calla stopped him.
“… I cannot ask that every Simerican remain neutral in thought as well. Even a neutral has a right to take
account of facts. Even a neutral cannot be asked to close his mind or close his conscience.
I have said not once but many times that I have seen war and that I hate war. I say that again and again.
I hope the United States will keep out of this war. I believe that it will. And I give you assurance and
reassurance that every effort of your Government will be directed toward that end.”
After the broadcast ended, the adults in the room, Nick now included in that group, looked at each other.
“I hope we can stay out of it,” Viola sighed, her eyes drifting towards Howie. Calla nodded in agreement,
as her eyes sought Gilbert’s fair head as he sat by the fireplace.
Cindy’s eyes strayed to Nick. He had a serious expression on his face, but that was nothing out of the
ordinary. She wondered what he was thinking.
Nick looked at James. “I’d have to go, if we get involved, wouldn’t I?”
James’ mouth suddenly went dry, and he could only nod in response to his son’s question.
“It’s nothing you need to worry about now, Nicky,” Cindy cooed, slipping and calling him by his childhood
nickname. “It will probably get settled before it comes to that.”
“I hope so, Mama. But as Uncle Sterling said, Simmany wants what’s not theirs. Someone has to stop
them. I want to help stop them. I’d volunteer to go fight them if it comes to that. What they’re doing isn’t
right.”
“No, it’s not. And you’re not the only one who’d volunteer to give the Simmans a good licking,” Howie
piped up, causing Viola to draw in a sharp breath.
Gilbert didn’t say anything, but nodded, a resolved look on his face. Calla went pale, and she groped
blindly for Taddy’s hand.
Cindy managed to keep her voice steady as she replied. “That’s very honorable of you. But let’s not put
the cart before the horse and worry about things that might not even come to pass.”
Nick nodded and said no more. He knew enough had already been said. Not long after, the guests
excused themselves to go home, each of them worried about how much closer the problems of the world
seemed to their doorsteps that September night.
                                                 *****
With the news of the war weighing heavily on their minds, Walter, Shirley and Rosalie headed off to join
Nick and Alice at college.
Shirley and Rosalie were in the same dorm as Alice, though that was a blessing and a curse. Alice was
delighted to have her friends so close by, but Rosalie was trying on a good day, and Shirley and Rosalie
were very much like oil and water. Fortunately, their class schedules were radically different so there was
always an excuse when one needed a break from the rest of the group.
Walter settled into Landgraab Hall with Nick, though the elder lad was in the middle of the process to
become a member of the fraternity his grandfather Elias had founded. Nick was hoping to move into the
fraternity house before the end of the school year, and had promised Walter he’d pull whatever string
necessary to get his friend a membership as well.
As they had in their teenage years, the five of them often gathered to pass an afternoon, though they were
no longer as idle as they had been in their teenage years. Textbooks and notebooks were their near-
constant companions as they lounged on the grassy quad in the summerlike afternoons of late fall.
It was on such an afternoon about a month after school started that they were discussing the state of things
in between reading and reviewing class notes.
“They were right to refuse the so-called peace offer,” Nick said, mostly to Walter and Alice, as Shirley had
her nose in a book and Rosalie was furrowing her brow over a notebook.”
Alice nodded, but Walter didn’t react.
“Don’t you agree?”
Walter shrugged. “You think Simerica should intervene somehow, Nick. I don’t, unless our hand gets
forced somehow. The Great War didn’t have any winners, certainly not us. Why commit resources to a
foreign war, when the last time we did it just resulted in the loss of lives?”
Shirley looked up from her book at that moment. “I didn’t realize you were an Isolationist, Walter.”
“So what if I am? The majority of the country is. I was under the impression that you were, too, Shirley,
since you never talk about it.”
She raised an eyebrow. “With my father? I’d get shot if I started spouting Isolationist ideology. I’m not
sure that things are quite as dire as he thinks they are, but I also don’t think we should wait until the last
minute before we act. No sense in getting caught with our proverbial pants down.”
“Really, Shirley, must you use such expressions?”
“Oh, stuff it, Miss Prissy Pants. What’s that that you’ve got your undivided attention? I know it’s not
homework, since you were strutting around bragging about how you didn’t have homework because of your
good marks on your last test.”
Shirley reached over and snatched the notebook away from Rosalie before she knew what happened. As
Shirley began to read it, she laughed.
“You’re making a list of the eligible bachelors?”
“The suitable ones, yes. How else will I narrow my choices down?”
Shirley howled with laughter as she flipped to the next page.
“Why is there a list of girls on the next page?”
“For my brother. He hasn’t shown any interest in any of the ladies of his acquaintance, so I thought I’d help
him out a bit.”
“Better not to meddle, Rosalie,” Alice advised. “I’m sure he’s getting pressure from your parents in that
regard.”
“That’s the thing – he’s not. Father and Mother are taking the attitude that he’ll figure out who to marry
when he’s ready.”
“He’s still young, Rosalie. My parents didn’t meet until Papa was almost done with college. Give him
time.”
“Under different circumstances, I might. However, when you combine the threat of a war with his recent
behavior, I feel I must intervene. Someone has to carry on the Seiff name, and it can’t be me.”
“If you’re referring to his friendship with Clarence, I don’t see what the issue is. Sure, he’s a bit of a
troublemaker, but he never gets himself into anything too serious,” Shirley pointed out.
Rosalie sighed, knowing that her friends wouldn’t ever understand her. “Still, I can bring some more
respectable people around the house when I’m home, and hope for the best.”
Shirley rolled her eyes. “Worry about getting yourself a husband first, Rose. Then you can play
matchmaker for the poor souls who haven’t been as lucky as you.”
“Okay, I’m going to put a stop to this now, before you descend into full-on bickering,” Nick said. “Shirley,
don’t pick on Rosalie. Rosalie, don’t meddle in business that’s not yours. Walter, you and I will just have
to agree to disagree on matters of foreign policy. Alice, how about you and I take a walk, and forget that
we’ve got studying to worry about for an hour or so?”
“That sounds lovely,” she said, getting up. “We’ll see you all later.”
The couple paused briefly at Alice’s dorm to drop off their school things before continuing along towards
the edge of campus where the river was. It was one of their favorite spots.
“Why is Rosalie the way she is? Your Uncle Taddy and Aunt Calla are so relaxed.”
Nick shrugged. “Sometimes, I think she’s so prim and proper because they aren’t. My parents and them,
and Uncle Sterling and Aunt Vi to a lesser extent, got up to a lot of high jinks when they were our age.
Prohibition was law, of course, and they spent an awful lot of time at a speakeasy. My dad actually
managed one for a time.”
Alice feigned shock. “But that still doesn’t explain why she’s matchmaking for Gilbert. He’s barely a
teenager; doesn’t he get a little leeway on settling down?”
Nick kicked a rock in his path. “I think that’s more about her wanting to keep him out from Clarence Alcott’s
influence than anything else. Shirley won’t point it out, because they’re cousins and she’s clannish, but
he’s developing a reputation as a bit of a cad. He’s been caught by the police down at the beach more
than once, with all different kinds of company.”
“The part of the beach where teenage couples go to escape the prying eyes of their parents?” she asked,
bumping his hip with hers.
“How do you know about that, Miss Kalson?” he asked, a cheeky grin on his face.
“Oh, I might have been there once or twice when I was his age, in the company of a handsome young
man.”
Nick chuckled, and pulled Alice close for a kiss or two.
“Why don’t you try talking to Gilbert? He looks up to you like a brother, and you might be able to convince
him to limit his time with Clarence better than Rosalie can.”
Nick nodded. “Probably a good idea. I’ll see if I can get home this weekend if for no other reason than
that. See if you can get Shirley to put a bug in Howie’s ear about spending more time with Gilbert, too.”
“I will. Maybe Shirley in all her brashness will decide to read Clarence the riot act while she’s at it. I know
he’s an only child so I’m certain his parents indulge him.”
“Now that we’ve got that sorted out, let’s pretend that we’re the only two people in the world for a few
minutes.”
“I think that’s an excellent idea.”
                                                    *****
Rosalie was sitting in the parlor of her dorm, sipping at her afternoon tea. She was very, very pleased with
herself. After much careful planning and execution, she had landed a date with the man she wanted for her
husband.
It hadn’t been easy. Bruce Thorne was a year older than her, in Nick’s class, and she’d had to spend far
too much time biting her tongue around her cousin so that she could make the right connections to meet
her target. From there, it was a matter of joining the right clubs and societies so she was in front of him
more often than not. Of course, she also had to deflect the attention of the other ladies around him as well.
Bruce was a handsome man, not lacking for female attention. As she took one last sip of her tea, she
certainly hoped it would be worth it in the long run.
There was a dance that night, hosted by Bruce’s fraternity, and she was his date. She took special care
with her hair and makeup, wanting to look perfect.
She wasn’t the only one from the dorm going to that dance, as Nick and Alice were attending as well. She
watched the other woman come down the stairs as she sat on a sofa in the foyer waiting. Alice fairly
glowed, and for a moment, Rosalie was jealous of how the redhead looked. But then she remembered that
she could wear red, unlike Alice, and she would stand out that evening because of her vibrant dress.
Nick and Bruce arrived at nearly the same time, each bringing flowers for their dates. Both couples walked
out the door together.
The next day, Rosalie was in the best of moods. The evening had gone perfectly. Despite all the requests
from the other girls in the room, Bruce had remained attentive to her and her alone. Her feet were sore
and blistered from dancing in her high heels, but she hadn’t complained once. The night had been worth
every ounce of pain.
After getting ready for the day (and carefully wrapping up her poor feet), she went down to breakfast, where
Shirley was asking Alice about the night.
“He still hasn’t asked you yet? What’s the boy waiting for?”
“Shirley, I know he’s going to. It’s up to him to decide when the moment’s right.”
“What are you two talking about?” Rosalie inquired as she set her plate down next to the other two.
“Nick still hasn’t asked Alice to marry him yet. I don’t know what’s taking him so long.”
“And I told Shirley that we have an understanding, and he’ll ask when he’s ready. Which I’m sure won’t be
until he’s nearly done with his schooling. I’m not worried, so don’t you go doing it on my behalf.”
Shirley let out a breath in a harrumph, and earned herself a reproachful look from Alice and Rosalie.
“Speaking of marriage proposals, Shirley, when is Walter planning on asking you?” Rosalie asked.
Alice barely suppressed a smirk as Shirley stuttered and sputtered. “That’s none of your business, Miss
Prissy Pants,” she finally managed to choke out.
“If you can’t stand the heat, stay out of the kitchen, then,” was Rosalie’s simple reply.
“Did you have a good time last night, Rosalie?” Alice asked, eager to shift the topic of conversation.
“I had such a lovely time. Bruce and I got along famously, and I can’t help but thing that he might be the
One, if you know what I mean.”
“You’ve known him for all of about an hour, and you already know that you’re going to marry him? Have
you told him yet?”
“Of course not! That’s the kind of decisions a man has to come to on his own. Though that doesn’t mean
we can’t help push them in the right direction.”
“So, you’ll at least let us know when the wedding is?” Shirley deadpanned, with a wink in Alice’s direction.
“Of course I shall! And if you two are still single, you’ll be bridesmaids, of course.”
“Great,” Shirley said with enthusiasm that only Alice knew was false.
“If you two will excuse me,” Alice said as she got up, “I have to get ready for class.”
Alice hurried away from the table where Rosalie was now animatedly discussing her wedding to a man
she’d only had one date with. As she pulled her books together, she thought about what an odd person
Rosalie was, but that she was rather grateful to her that day for deflecting Shirley’s unwanted questions
about why Nick had not yet given her an engagement ring. Because Alice had been wondering that herself
for a while.
                                                 *****
The rest of the school year passed in a blur, and before long, exams were looming on the horizon for the
college students.
Though all of them were concerned with getting good marks, some of them found it harder to study than
others. The news from SimEurope was not good, and it made for some heated discussions around the
study tables.
“Simmark never stood a chance,” sighed Nick to no one in particular. “They had no army to speak of.”
Alice and Shirley nodded, but Walter and Rosalie remained unmoved.
Nick spoke again. “If the Allies hadn’t botched their response in Norsimway, they might have been in better
position to do something. But now…”
“Is Norsimway lost too?” asked Alice.
Nick nodded. “Probably. The King and the government members will able to escape, so that’s one good
thing.”
“What does Simmany want with them anyway? They’ve don’t have a lot of resources,” Shirley noted.
“With Norsimway in Simman hands, they control the North Sea shipping lanes, and it gives them a better
position to attack Simland,” Nick replied.
A silence fell back over the table. After a few moments, Walter spoke.
“We should probably do something to help Simland and SimFrance. After all, Simmany’s always been
steamed at them after the outcome of the Great War. I imagine they’ll need all the help we can get.”
Nick suppressed a smirk. “Don’t think the President’s cash and carry policy is enough anymore?”
“Not really. But I’m not sure what else we can do, without committing manpower which isn’t going to
happen.”
Nick nodded. “Glad to see you’ve smartened up a bit.”
Less than a month later, the exams barely finished, the five of them were gathered for a last hurrah before
returning home for another break. The occasion, however, was less than festive.
“So Simberlain’s out, and Simchill’s in. Well, after the debacles with Czechosimvakia and Norsimway, it
was only a matter of time, I suppose,” Nick sighed. “The Simlish seem pleased about it; he’s an old
warhorse and he won’t let Simland just give up without a good fight. SimFrance on the other hand, I’m
more worried about.”
At that moment, the paperboy dropped the afternoon edition of the Herald on the front step. Walter got up
and grabbed it, and then brought it back in as he read the headlines.
“Sounds like you’ve good cause to be worried, Nick. Simmany’s launched invasions of SimBelgium,
Holsimland, and SimFrance.”
Everyone gasped at the news, and Nick snatched the paper away from Walter.
“Damn,” he said under his breath as he scanned the paper. “This isn’t good.”
Alice and Shirley exchanged worried looks, and even Rosalie looked mildly concerned.
“Now what?” Walter asked.
“We’ll just have to wait to see if they’re able to stop the Simmans, or if we’ll have another batch of
surrenders on our hands.”
“Simchill’ll be reaching out to the President for support, that’s for sure. Hopefully, he has a plan in mind.”
“And what if he doesn’t?” Alice asked. “What do we do then?”
“We pray,” Nick said, taking her hand. “It’s about the only thing we can do at this point.”
                                                    *****
Dotty flung the newspaper across the room, and sank back onto the sofa, disgusted. Her dreams of
sipping a Café au lait somewhere on the Champs Simlysées while gazing at the Arc de Trisimphe were
even more unrealistic now than they had been a few years ago.
Hopefully, there’ll still be a SimParis to see when all this is over, she thought with a sigh.
Danny poked his head into the room.
“By the look on your face, I’m guessing you saw that the Simmans are marching through the streets of your
beloved SimParis as we speak.”
She turned and glared at him. “You don’t need to rub in that you were right about it not being a good time
for SimEuropean travel.”
“Hey,” he said, “There’s no need for that. Be thankful that you are here in Simerica; goodness knows that
Simmany’s going to stick it to the SimFrench for their role in ‘humiliating’ them after the Great War.”
Dotty sighed aloud. “How can you be so calm and practical at a time like this when the rest of the world is
ready to burst into flames?”
“I don’t know,” he admitted. “I guess I’m just taking stock of the situation to see how to best react to it. For
example, Simtaly just now declared war on Simland and SimFrance, and is invading the latter from the
south. So despite being ‘friends’ with Simmany, they’ve not really done anything to support their mass
expansion, which makes me wonder how good of ‘friends’ they really are.”
“Which means?”
Danny shrugged. “Not sure. But knowing your enemy is the first key to victory.”
“You’re certainly more calm about all this than Nick is. He’s always looking a little green around the gills
when someone mentions the war.”
“That’s easy to understand. If we declared war on Simmany tomorrow, Nick would have to go. He
wouldn’t necessarily have any time to plan anything, he’d just have to go. Me, on the other hand, I have
time to figure out what path I want to go down, since I’ve got a few years before I’m old enough to be
drafted.”
“I didn’t think you’d be so willing to serve.”
“It’s not necessarily about willingness; it’s about accepting what’s to come and making the best of it.”
“And what does that mean for Danny Bradford?”
“Well, if I’m going to have to join the military, I’m not doing it as a nobody. I’ll get myself a commission
somehow, and be an officer.”
“You, an army lieutenant?”
“Or a navy ensign. Either one would be acceptable.”
“The navy? Really, Danny? You don’t even like to swim.”
“As long as your ship stays afloat, you shouldn’t have to,” he grinned. “But that’s a few years away yet.
There’s time for both of us to make plans. You can’t sit around and sulk about not getting to see the great
cities of the world forever, after all.”
“Ha ha. Very funny, Danny.”
“I’m serious, Dotty. What do you want to do with yourself?”
“I’m not sure,” she admitted. “I’ll go to college at least, or risk breaking Mama and Papa’s hearts if I don’t.
After that…well, as you said, there’s still time to make plans.”
                                                    *****
It hadn’t been an easy few months, news-wise. Between the SimFrench surrendering, the Simviets
snatching up territory in eastern SimEurope, and the Simtalians stretching their reach into Simfrica, it
seemed that no news was good news.
“And those damnable U-however-you-pronounce-it underwater boats the Simmans have!” cursed Viola.
“Sinking ships left and right. How are we supposed to get supplies to the Simlish with them patrolling the
Simlantic?”
“I thought it was the responsibility of the Simlish to transport those supplies,” Cindy pointed out. “The real
issue is that they don’t seem to distinguish between ships carrying war supplies and those that aren’t. And
since they’re underwater, it’s very hard to find them.”
“Oh, someone will figure out how to eventually. It’s just a matter of how much damage they’ll inflict before
then,” Viola sighed, as she got up to refill everyone’s cups.
After Viola sat back down, everyone sipped at their tea and nibbled on the baked goods she’d made.
“Why are we always talking about a war that’s taking place thousands of miles from here? It’s not like
we’re directly involved,” Calla said.
“Yet,” Viola said, a bit harsher than she intended. “All these Isolationists are doing is delaying the
inevitable. We need to be doing more to get ourselves prepared. You agree with me, right Cindy?”
Cindy hesitated. “Well, I do think that we’re going to get involved at some point, whether we like it or not,
so it makes sense to be prepared. But the mother in me wants to leave them be and let them sort it out
themselves, so my family stays here where it’s safer.”
Viola felt a bit reproached by Cindy’s remark. “Of course we all feel that way. But wouldn’t you feel better
about Nick or Danny fighting if you knew there was a orchestrated plan and the best possible resources
behind them?”
“I don’t know if I could ever feel ‘better’ about sending my boys off to fight, Viola.”
“Fair enough,” she relented. Her eyes drifted towards the big headlines on the newspaper that was sitting
at the other end of the table..
“Why do you even bother to read that anymore?” Calla asked. “There’s never anything good in there
anymore.”
“No, but I at least like to know what atrocities are occurring overseas. The Simmans bombed Simdon, so
the Simlish returned the favor and bombed Berlsim.”
Cindy shook her head. “Those aren’t even military targets. Those poor civilians.”
“I know,” Viola said. “It doesn’t seem right, somehow, to get the general populace involved. Though I don’t
blame Simland for retaliating. Probably just trying to show that they’re not going to give up without a good
fight.”
“I don’t mind them attacking Simmany in that way, somehow,” Cindy mused. “It seems like the whole
country is brainwashed, and maybe a few tons of explosives will knock some sense back into them.”
“We can only hope.”
“Calla, why so quiet?” Cindy asked.
“Oh,” she said with a shrug. “Taddy gets upset when he hears about the war; he’s of the mind that we
should just stay out of it, you know.”
“Sterling may have mentioned that once or twice,” Viola said wryly.
“So I’ve just started tuning all the war talk out. With any luck, it will be over soon and everything will go
back to normal.”
Viola opened her mouth, but a sharp look from Cindy stopped her.
“That’s what we all want, Calla, but I’m not sure it’s realistic. You’re better off keeping one eye on things,”
Cindy said.
Calla looked indifferent, but that was nothing new. Her head always seemed to be in the clouds.
“Cindy’s right. Watch what’s going on, and pray for it to change. That’s about all we can do now.”
                                                    *****
With another school year upon them, the college kids packed up their trunks and headed back to the city.
Rosalie had spent most of her summer securing her place as the future Mrs. Bruce Thorne, and the rest of
the circle had accepted him into their little group. With him around, Rosalie was always on her best
behavior, and so there was less bickering between the girls, which made Nick and Walter happy.
Nick couldn’t quite get a read on Bruce and where he stood in regards to the war in SimEurope. When he
brought it up to Walter one day, Walter had snorted back a laugh.
“Really, Nick? Can’t you see that he’s just like Rosalie in that respect? He can’t see past the end of his
own nose, let across an ocean.”
And Nick had no choice but to agree. Bruce was rather self-centered, but that was probably the main
reason he and Rosalie were so well suited.
By the end of September, the school year was back in full swing, and the six of them had resumed their old
habit of group study sessions. And as they had in years past, the talk inevitably turned to what was
happening overseas.
“Some success the Simerica First Committee’s had so far,” said Walter sarcastically. Not a month after
they get organized and the President manages to get a conscription bill through Congress.”
Bruce looked up from his book. “Well, a draft doesn’t mean war, necessarily.”
“It means that we’re thinking about it more seriously than we have,” Nick replied in a tone that caused Alice
to look up.
“What’s that group all about, again?” Shirley asked. “I know you were going on about it the other day, but I
wasn’t really paying attention.”
Walter gave her a bit of a pointed look as he answered. “It’s a group that’s trying to pressure Simerica into
staying out of the war. It got started by a bunch of college kids, but since its founder is from SimYale, you
know it’s no good.”
“Har, har, har,” Shirley deadpanned, not impressed by Walter’s jab at SimHarvard’s rival school. “So, what
do they plan on doing?”
“Give speeches, it sounds like,” Nick answered. “I don’t know how much they’ll actually do beyond that.
Since the fall of SimFrance, opinions about entering the war have shifted. There’s a lot of people who don’t
want to leave Simland to stand alone against Simmany.”
“I can’t say I blame them. The Simlish are standing strong against Simmany’s Blitz, but that constant
bombing, and at night at that, must be wearing on them,” Alice sighed.
Nick nodded, a grim expression on his face. “I can’t even imagine what it’s like to be bombarded on a
nightly basis.”
“And it’s sentiment like that that allowed the draft bill through,” Walter stated. “Not that it affects us much
right now.”
“It will when you turn twenty-one,” Shirley pointed out.
Nick nodded solemnly. “You sometimes forget that I’m a year older than all of you. I’ll have to register on
my birthday, but I’ll probably get deferred as I’m in college.”
“I certainly hope so,” Alice said softly.
“I thought you were all gung-ho when it came to fighting,” Walter commented.
“Well, I’ll do what’s necessary,” Nick replied. “If I’m called upon to serve, I’ll do so willingly.”
“Me, too,” Walter nodded, looking at Bruce as he did so.
“I shall do what is required of me, of course,” he said.
Nick and Walter exchanged a look as everyone went back to their books.
                                                       *****
“Anything good in the mail?” Jefferson asked as James placed a few envelopes on the desk.
“No bills, if that’s what you mean,” James said with a bit of a cheeky grin. “I think it’s all just plain, boring
letters. If you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to run. I was on my way to the store when the mailman came, and I
wanted to bring it in.”
“Go,” Jefferson said, waving his hand. “If there’s something that needs to be dealt with, we’ll do so when
you get home.”
After James left, Jefferson flipped through the mail absently. When he came across one addressed to him
in a vaguely familiar hand, he opened it.
It was after dark when James returned home from the store, and when Cindy heard the door open she
rushed to meet him.
“Thank goodness you’re back,” she said as she gave him a quick peck on the lips.
“Why? What’s wrong?”
“Your father wouldn’t join us for dinner; he just sat in his study, staring at a piece of paper.”
James immediately felt guilty for dropping the mail and running; something in the post must have upset
him.
“I’ll go see if I can figure out what’s going on.”
James didn’t knock as he usually did when he entered the study. He found his father sitting at the desk,
just as Cindy had described, his eyes fixed on a single page of paper.
“Papa?”
“I’m the last one,” he said softly.
James waited, knowing that his silence would prompt the older man to speak.
“There was a letter from Jane Hutchins in the mail; Victor’s passed on. And so I am the only one of my
school friends left.”
James stayed silent, this time because he didn’t know what to say.
“It’s horrible thing, watching your childhood friends die. I wish I knew why I’m the one to outlast them all.”
“If I knew, I’d tell you,” James said honestly.
“I know you would, son,” Jefferson replied as he got up very slowly. “I’m heading to bed. It’s been a tiring
afternoon.”
“Are you sure you don’t want something to eat first? Cindy’s heating up a plate for me and I’m sure it
would be no trouble for her to do one for you, too.”
“No, I’m not very hungry this evening. You enjoy your dinner.”
James went reluctantly into the dining room, where his dinner was waiting for him. When he didn’t
immediately dig in as was his habit, Cindy sat down and waited for him to talk.
“I don’t think my father’s going to be around much longer.”
“What makes you say that?”
“I’ve never seen him so…defeated. It’s like he’s just waiting to die.”
“That’s horrible,” Cindy said. “How old is he now?”
“84, the same as Uncle Victor was. He seemed to finally be getting his spirit back a little, but the news
today just crushed him.”
“It can’t have been easy for him these past few years.”
“No, especially not since Mama passed. If she were still here, I think he could bear it, but without her…”
Cindy pressed a kiss to his temple. “Eat your dinner, and then come to bed. Tomorrow, take the day and
do something with your father, just the two of you. If he’s not long for this world, enjoy what time you can
with him.”
James nodded. “You’re right. You usually are.”
“Of course I am,” she replied. “And don’t leave your dirty plate on the table for me to find in the morning,
mister. Put it in the sink at least.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
She raised an eyebrow. “Unless you want to sleep on the sofa, I suggest you never call me ‘ma’am’
again.”
                                                    *****
James raised his glass. “To the Simlish, for blowing the Simtalian Naval fleet out of the harbor.”
Sterling followed suit, and after the briefest moment of hesitation, Taddy.
The three men drained their glasses.
“You know they’ll pay for that,” Sterling said with a sigh. “Simmany will blow the Hell out of something
important.”
“Oh, I know. It’s just nice to see the bad guy get his for once...” James began.
“Amen to that,” Sterling interjected.
“…especially when all the news we seem to get is about how many countries they’ve successfully
managed to invade.”
Sterling nodded grimly. “Simmany into Rosimania, Simtaly into SimGreece. Not to mention Simmany,
Simtaly and Simpan joining forces. I wish I knew where it ended.”
James shook his head. “No idea.”
Taddy, who had been quiet for much of the evening, suddenly sat up and turned up the volume on the
small radio that had been playing in the background.
“…massive air raids on Coventry, Simland, heavily concentrated on the city’s center. Preliminary
estimates are that thousands of homes were destroyed by the onslaught of bombs, both explosive and
incendiary. Casualties are not known at this time, but expected to be in the hundreds.”
Taddy let out a low whistle as he turned the radio back down. “Poor bastards.”
“To them,” Sterling said, raising his now empty glass.
“To them,” the other two repeated.
“Do you still think we shouldn’t get involved?” Sterling asked Taddy.
Taddy shrugged. “I don’t think we should, but we probably will, and if we do I’ll out-patriot the patriotest of
patriots.”
Sterling nodded. “Fair enough.”
“I still hope something happens before then,” James said, his thoughts clearly on Nick.
Sterling and Taddy looked at him, understanding in their eyes.
It was Taddy’s turn to raise his glass first. “To an unexpected miracle.”
James didn’t trust his voice, but raised his glass as he nodded.
“To miracles,” Sterling agreed.
                                                    *****
All around the country, and Simsfield and Portsimouth were no exception, people were gathered around
their radios, waiting to hear what the President had to say about the ongoing war and what it would mean
for Simerica.
The Bradford farmhouse was no different. Jefferson occupied the corner of the sofa closest to the radio,
owing to his slight deafness in his old age, Dotty seated to his left while Danny sat on the floor near her
feet. James and Cindy occupied the other love seat, James closest to the radio so that he could turn the
volume up and down as needed.
Through the crackle of the radio static, the announcer introduced the President. Moments later, his familiar
voice filled the room.
“My friends,
This is not a fireside chat on war. It is a talk on national security, because the nub of the whole purpose of
your President is to keep you now, and your children later, and your grandchildren much later, out of a last-
ditch war for the preservation of Simerican independence and all of the things that Simerican independence
means to you and to me and to ours.”
All across the nation, they listened. They listened as he compared the crisis presented by the war to the
crisis of the economic collapse, and how Simericans would great it with the same determination.
They listened as he told them about the alliance between Simmany, Simtaly, and Simpan, their desires for
world domination and what it would mean for Simerica.
“In other words, the Axis not merely admits but the Axis proclaims that there can be no ultimate peace
between their philosophy of government and our philosophy of government.”
“Huh?” Jefferson said, struggling to hear through the crackle of the static. “What was that?”
“He said the Axis doesn’t like democracy, and that their dictatorship is the only way, and there’ll be no
peace between us unless we give in.”
“James, that is not what he said.”
James shrugged. “It’s what he meant, which is more important. Damned foreigners, thinking their way is
the only way.”
Cindy raised an eyebrow at him. “I believe you think something similar.”
“That’s different. Because I know our way is the right way.”
“Will you please be quiet?” Danny asked. “I want to hear what else he has to say.”
“…Frankly and definitely there is danger ahead -- danger against which we must prepare. But we well know
that we cannot escape danger, or the fear of danger, by crawling into bed and pulling the covers over our
heads.”
He talked about how trying to bargain and appease the Simmans had failed, and the fate of the nations
who had done so, about the efforts of the Simerican government to ferret out those with Simman
sympathies who would have Simerica become a dictatorship as well, and about the futility of trying to
negotiate a peace with the warring parties.
“The people of SimEurope who are defending themselves do not ask us to do their fighting. They ask us for
the implements of war, the planes, the tanks, the guns, the freighters which will enable them to fight for
their liberty and for our security. Emphatically we must get these weapons to them, get them to them in
sufficient volume and quickly enough, so that we and our children will be saved the agony and suffering of
war which others have had to endure.”
“That’ll make Sterling happy.”
“Not to mention a few other families in the neighborhood. Silas Alcott recently made a big investment in
the Portsimouth Shipyard,” Cindy added.
“Really?” James asked, his interest piqued. “I was under the impression that their interests were hit as
hard as ours when the market crashed.”
Jefferson gave his son and daughter-in-law a bit of an annoyed look, and turned the radio up.
“We must be the great arsenal of democracy. For us this is an emergency as serious as war itself. We
must apply ourselves to our task with the same resolution, the same sense of urgency, the same spirit of
patriotism and sacrifice as we would show were we at war.”
The speech ended soon after that, and James turned the radio down.
“Well, what do you think, Pops?”
“I think we’re inching closer to this war faster than anyone realizes,” he said with a sigh, “and I worry about
what that will mean for this family.”
Jefferson’s eyes traveled to Danny. “You’re not old enough to fight yet, but you will be before you know it.
I know you’ll do your duty to your country, and I pray you’ll stay safe while doing so.”
He turned to Dotty. “I know you want to see for yourself that the world is round, but wait until the boys have
a chance to put out the fires of evil that are burning right now.”
Jefferson got up, oh so slowly, and went to the window, looking in the direction of Portsimouth. “Nick is too
kind for his own good sometimes,” he muttered, only loud enough for himself to hear. “He’ll want to go
running in and play the hero, but he needs to remember that he’s got people at home that need him just as
much as those he’s never met.”
As he stared out the window, he thought about Shirley and Howie, and Freddy, about Viola, and Cyrus. He
wasn’t as close to them as he was to James, or the grandchildren he lived with, but he still worried about
what would happen to them in the future.
He then turned to look at his eldest son, and his lovely wife. James was looking at him, his expression a
cross between puzzlement and resignation. Jefferson nodded, answering the unspoken question.
“These next few years will be hardest for you two. It’s one thing to give yourself up to a cause; it’s another
thing entirely to give up someone you love. You want to protect you children, but sometimes, you just
can’t.”
James got up and hugged his father tight.
“There, there, son. There’s no need to worry about me; your mother’s waiting on the other side, and I’ve
missed her so very much these years. It’s you that I worry about.”
“We’ll manage. You know the lengths I’ll go to in order to keep my family safe.”
“I do.”
Jefferson looked over to Cindy. “Take good care of my boy.”
She reached up to brush away a tear. “You know I will.”
Jefferson nodded. He had said what he needed to say; now the only thing left to do was wait.
He did not have to wait for long.
Later that night, after making sure the twins were tucked safely in their beds, Cindy went to find James. He
was exactly where she expected him to be, seated at the desk in the study.
“I’m heading up to bed. You coming?”
“In a minute.”
Cindy pressed a kiss to his temple. “Don’t be too long.”
When Cindy had left, James put his head down on the desk.
“I don’t know if I can do this as well as you did, Papa. But I’m sure as Hell going to try.”
                                                     *****
He’d planned the timing of his visit carefully. His mother was out visiting his Aunt Viola; Dotty and Danny
were at school. His father would be the only one home, and he was the one Nick need to speak to.
Alone.
Knowing the door to the kitchen was always unlocked, it was how Nick let himself in to the farmhouse.
Much to his surprise, his father was there, his hand hovering over the still-warm crust of one of his mother’s
pies. James was so absorbed in his task that he didn’t notice his eldest son’s presence Nick spoke.
“I don’t think Mama will appreciate coming home to find a chunk missing from tonight’s dessert.”
James snatched his hand back. “I was going to claim it broke off.”
“She always knows it’s you,” Nick replied.
James sighed. “I figured as much, but she lets me get away with it. Most of the time.”
The two men exchanged a smile.
“What bring you home today, son? Don’t get me wrong; I’m glad to see you but I know you’ve got a lot
going on with school and such.”
“There’s something I wanted to talk to you about, without everyone else around.”
James ushered Nick into the dining room, where they both sat down.
“What’s on your mind, Nick?”
Nick drew in a deep breath. “Papa, I want to ask Alice to marry me.”
James nodded. “I was expecting as much. I’m kind of surprised that you haven’t already asked her.”
“I probably should have,” he muttered.
James repressed the urge to snicker. “You don’t need ask me if you want to get married, you know. And
I’m guessing you’ve already got the okay from her father.”
“Yes, I wrote him and got his blessing. And while I don’t need to ask your permission, I would like it. After
all, we’ll be living here after we get married.”
James felt a wave of nostalgia wash over him. He remembered the day Nick had been born. Now his
eldest was a grown man, ready to start a life with his sweetheart.
“Of course you can marry Alice. Goodness knows this family could use some happy news. Your mother
will be especially thrilled,” James said, thinking about the fact that he would soon owe her that new coat.
Nick smiled. “I know she will.”
“Well, I suppose there’s something you’ll need if you’re going to propose to Alice. Come with me.”
James led Nick upstairs to the room he shared with Cindy. He went to the dresser, opened the top drawer,
and rummaged around for a moment until he found what he was looking for.
“This ring,” he said, handing it to Nick, “has been in the family since your however many great-grandfather
John gave it to his wife. It has been given to the firstborn son to pass on to his bride. I guess it’s yours
now, to give to Alice.”
Nick eyed the ring, nodding. “Won’t Mama miss it?”
“No; she’s been waiting for you to ask for it for a while now. Besides, I was planning on using a little of
what Papa left me in his will to buy her something a little fancier. Goodness knows with all the sacrifices
she’s made that she deserves it.”
“I’m sure she’ll love whatever you pick out for her.”
James watched Nick as he studied the ring before slipping it into his pocket. “Is something wrong, son?”
“I was just thinking…honestly, Papa, I’m not sure I like the idea of Alice wearing the same ring that Great-
Grandmother Jan did.”
James was startled by Nick’s statement. “What makes you say that?”
“Oh, something Aunt Vi said once, about how she was against Aunt Vi marrying Uncle Sterling, and just a
general impression I always got from Grandma and Grandpa that they weren’t really fond of her.”
“Well, I can’t refute anything there. My grandmother was a bitch, there’s no nice way of saying it, and my
grandfather wasn’t much better. But I never thought about how it would be for someone else to wear the
ring that she wore. Your mother certainly never objected, but then again she never knew her.”
“What about Grandma?”
“She never actually wore the ring; Grandpa had given it to the late Mrs. Alcott, as he was supposed to
marry her, and she didn’t return it until years later.”
Nick nodded.
James sighed. “It’s a tradition for this to be the ring used in proposals, but if you want to get something
different for Alice, I’ll understand.”
Nick considered for a moment. He really didn’t want his Alice to wear the exact same ring as such a
horrible woman, but he didn’t want to be the one to end a family tradition either.
“Well, she wasn’t the only person to wear the ring,” he said slowly. “Maybe I could just get the stone reset?
That way, it would still kind of be the same ring, but not.”
James nodded slowly. “I think that’s a great compromise. Make it into something that’s your own.”
“That’s what I’ll do, then. I’m sure that what Grandpa left me will be enough to pay for it.”
James walked Nick back downstairs.
“Take good care of that ring, Nick, and the girl you’re giving it to.”
“I will, Papa. I’ll bring her home as soon as I can after she says yes so Mama can fuss over her.”
“Sounds good. Safe trip back to school. I’m sure we’ll be seeing you sooner rather than later.”
*************************************************************************************************************************
So with that, we’ll end chapter 27 on a somewhat happy note.
My generation 5 heir Jefferson is now gone. So many of generation 5 have now passed; it makes me very
sad. But generation 7 will be getting married soon, which means that generation 8 isn’t too far away.
That’s a much happier thought.
You can leave comments on the Bradford Legacy thread at Boolprop, on my Live Journal, or on my
Dreamwidth, whichever you prefer.
Continue on for outtakes, and a little meta on where things are headed.

So the first members of generation 7 are now college students, getting up to what college students usually
get up to. These next few chapters will be very history heavy; it’s kind of necessary when chronicling a
fictionalized version of actual events.
I posted a longer meta on my LiveJournal about how the war will affect the story; head over there if you’re
looking for more specifics. As far as this chapter is concerned, we’re up to approximately the beginning of
1941. So the war is almost here, sadly.
The italicized portions of the radio speeches are taken directly from Franklin Roosevelt’s fireside chats.
The first is from his “On the European War” speech given September 3, 1939 and the second from his “On
National Security” speech, better known as the Arsenal of Democracy speech given December 29, 1940.
Of course, I’ve changed the names of the countries and such so they’re consistent with my legacy ‘verse.
Alice got Cheesed, as I said she would. Though I was a little worried at first, as she was platinum from a
“Go to College” want. But nope, she is now Grilled Cheese, and has eaten about 20 of the necessary 200
sandwiches for her LTW. I’ll have to get moving on that one; I have a feeling the rest of the Bradfords will
be sick of grilled cheese by the time this is over.
That’s all there is for now.
*cue I’m Sexy and I Know It*

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The Bradford Legacy - Chapter 27

  • 1. Last time, the war in SimEurope inched ever closer to Simsfield. In the meantime, generation five began to depart, with the most noted passings being Lizzie and Jason Seiff, Melanie Alcott, and Marsha Bradford. The many deaths brought James, Taddy, and Sterling closer. Meantime, the kids did their best to be kids and the youngest of generation 7 started to become teens. Nick wrote to Alice’s father, asking him to let her stay East, and they came to an understanding regarding their relationship. We’ve also reached the point where the events leading up to World War II will start happening. I plan on dealing with several aspects of the war pretty head-on, so consider this your warning for that. Blanket warning about language, topics, adult situations, etc. James has only 1 nice point, and he likes to swear like a sailor, and Cindy’s a Romance Sim, with some type of purple-hearted want in her panel at all times. Oh, and just about all of generation 7 (except Nick) are 1-nice-point-newspaper-thieves. Please enjoy Chapter 27 of The Bradford Legacy.
  • 2. As they’d promised to do after the passing of the elder Seiffs, James, Sterling, and Taddy were enjoying an evening out at the Simsfield Tavern. They talked about the goings-on of their families, what was happening at their respective jobs, and when those topics had been exhausted, they moved on to current events.
  • 3. “I still don’t like it,” Sterling said. “No good can come of letting Simmany march in and take whatever territory they want.” “Ausimtria wanted it, by all accounts,” Taddy pointed out as he took another swig of his drink. “Just because the leadership of the country wanted it doesn’t mean that they whole country does,” James interjected. “James, I’m shocked,” Sterling said. “I didn’t think that you were interested in sticking your nose in international business.”
  • 4. “Normally, I’m not. I’m still waiting to see this damned Depression come to an end. But unlike you two, my son is nearly of the age where he’d have to serve if Simerica decides to stop sticking its proverbial head in the sand. Of course I’m paying attention to what’s going on.” “I’m sure you’ve got nothing to worry about,” Taddy stated. “No one wants another world war.” “Simmany seems to,” Sterling retorted.
  • 5. “Hey, no bickering, you two. We’re on the same side, remember?” James said. The other two reluctantly nodded. “Now, how the hell do you pronounce that Simman word everyone’s using? I can’t make heads or tails of it.” “You never could speak anything but Simlish to save your life,” smirked Sterling. “Anschluss. It means ‘union,’ or something like that.” “Implying a non-hostile takeover,” Taddy pointed out again. “It was wanted.”
  • 6. “Regardless of that,” replied Sterling, refusing to rise to Taddy’s bait, “the fact remains that we can’t keep allowing Simmany to just take over other countries without so much as blinking. If someone doesn’t physically stop them, and soon, who knows how far they’ll push their borders.” “It’s not our problem,” Taddy insisted. “Let Simland and SimFrance take care of it; they’re the ones who have the most to lose. As James said, we’ve got our own problems to worry about.” “We can’t live in our little Simerican bubble forever. Simmany’s doing their best to take over SimEurope one country at a time. Simpan’s busy expanding their navy, so you know they have conquest on the brain too. With the President trying to rearm the country, you know what he’s thinking.”
  • 7. James sighed, an uncharacteristic reaction for him. “I don’t like any of it. Let’s hope Simland and SimFrance are able to put Simmany in their place before too much longer, so we don’t have to send our boys over there to clean up their mess, again. As for Simpan, they’re awful far away. I don’t think they’re interested in us.” “I’ll drink to that,” Taddy said. “Here, here,” agreed Sterling. “Even if I don’t think that’s how things will play out, this is one instance where I would be happy to be proved wrong.” *****
  • 8. Not long after their get-together, George Horace Alcott departed the world at the ripe old age of 82.
  • 9. Sterling was distraught, as was understandable. Viola and James were supportive, but as they watched Sterling grieve their thoughts were often on their own father. He was only a few years younger than George Horace, and Jefferson was definitely showing his age. They knew it wouldn’t be too much longer before they were mourning his loss. *****
  • 10. As summer came to a close, it was time for Nick to pack up his things and head off to college. Each of the family members wished him well in their own way.
  • 11. With their first year of college in full swing, Nick and Alice did their best to make time for each other. Between Nick’s very full course load and Alice’s working as a secretary part-time for Sterling, their dates often consisted of study sessions in SimHarvard’s library or in one of their dorm’s common rooms. One day, Alice noticed something was wrong with Nick. Even though he had an anatomy exam the next day, he was still reading the newspaper, his brow furrowed in concentration. “Honey, I don’t think the Herald’s started printing diagrams of the abdomen. You might want to open your textbook for that.” Nick looked up, confused. “Why would I be reading the newspaper for diagrams?” “You were studying it just as hard as you should be studying for your exam tomorrow. I just wanted to make sure you knew that it wasn’t your notes or your textbook.”
  • 12. Nick folded up the newspaper, but the frown remained on his face. “You’re right, of course. I do need to study. I shouldn’t let myself get wrapped up in international news that has no real affect on me at this moment.” Alice pursed her lips. “You don’t need to be snarky, Nick. You were the one who invited me over here to study tonight.” Nick’s shoulders dropped. “I was, and I should have left the newspaper in my room. I know that I get cranky anytime I read it. I’m sorry.”
  • 13. Alice smiled, and Nick knew he was forgiven. He opened up his textbook, and began to review the various diagrams in preparation for his exam.
  • 14. At nine o’clock, the two gathered their books and Nick walked Alice back to her dorm. As it was a warm night, they both put their schoolwork on the front step and settled down to watch the stars for a few moments.
  • 15. As she lay against his chest, Alice could sense that Nick was not as focused on the sky above as she was. “What are you thinking? And don’t lie and say you’re thinking about me, because I know you’re not.” Nick chuckled. “How do you know me so well?” “It’s a talent.”
  • 16. His arm tightened around her. “The leaders of Simland, SimFrance, Simtaly, and Simmany met, and they’ve agreed to let Simmany take back land that was given to Czechosimvakia because it’s full of ethnic Simmans.” “So?” He shifted a bit so he could face her. “Don’t you see? The Simlish Prime Minister is so scared of getting Simland involved in another world war that he’s giving in to Simmany’s bullying.” “Simland lost a lot during the Great War.” “That’s not an excuse for not standing up when it’s the right thing to do.” “I thought that the people of SimFrance and Simland were pleased with the agreement. And didn’t the Simmans say they have no other territorial demands in SimEurope?” “That’s what they said after they took over Ausimtria, too. The Simlish Prime Minister may be deluded into thinking that this agreement means peace in our time, but I’m not buying it.”
  • 17. “You sound like your Uncle Sterling – it’s nearly all he talks about with his colleagues. He doesn’t think that Simmany will stop until SimFrance or Simland, or Simerica for that matter, decided to step in and stop them by force.” “Uncle Sterling and I have a lot in common, then. I know that no one wants war and all that it brings, but I wonder,” he said as he sighed, “if Simmany will understand any other way.” “I hope it doesn’t come to that.” “Hope is not a strategy,” Nick said, kissing her forehead. “No, it’s not. But sometimes, it’s all we have.” *****
  • 18. After her conversation with Nick that night, Alice made a point of keeping up with the news of the world. None of what was coming out of SimEurope was good, but she was at least better able to predict Nick’s mood swings from what she read.
  • 19. She began to understand where Nick was coming from, especially when she read about the way the Simmans were treating some of their own citizens. She just couldn’t understand how readily the Simmans were turning on their neighbors and friends.
  • 20. But it wasn’t until she read about the night of organized violence that came to be known as the Night of Broken Glass that she fully understood why Nick and Sterling were so worried about what the Simman régime meant for the world as a whole. Nick was due to take her out for a date that night, but he knew that something was wrong straight away by how pale she was. “You saw the papers, then,” he said, sinking down on the sofa next to her.
  • 21. “How could they do that? Destroying all those homes and businesses, and letting the churches burn as the firefighters just watched.” “Synagogues, Alice. But you’re right. It’s abominable behavior.” “All because they have different beliefs. Nick, it’s just not right. Those poor people.” “Now do you understand why so many of us our so worried?” She nodded. “But shouldn’t we do something? It just seems so wrong that there’s no response at all.” “Well, as I heard it, we’re recalling our ambassador from Simmany, but not breaking of diplomatic relations with them.” “Why not?”
  • 22. “Who knows? Probably don’t want to cut all ties, just in case we need to talk to them for some reason.” Alice shook her head. “Someone needs to do something.” “I agree with you, sweetheart. But who and what? With any luck, Simland and SimFrance will pull their heads out of their asses before long and force him to stop, but I probably shouldn’t hold my breath.” “No,” she said with a sigh. “They suffered the worst during the Great War. They know what it means. They won’t fight back unless there’s no other way.”
  • 23. Nick put his arm around her. “I’m sorry this spoiled our afternoon, even if I’m kind of glad that you understand why I get so riled up about the news from SimEurope now.” “Do you honestly think we’ll get involved?” Alice felt his shoulder rise in a shrug. “I have no idea. We should, but we probably won’t. There are too many that think the world should be as isolated as it was during Grandpa John’s time. But they forget that it keeps getting smaller. Everything that happens affects everyone else, even if they don’t know it yet.” *****
  • 24. Even though his freshman year of college was over and most of his classmates were enjoying their break, Nick was still busy with his studies. He’d decided to take a few extra classes over the summer so he could graduate sooner, start medical school sooner. Cindy fretted over his plans, but James had dissuaded her. “Sterling did the same thing, with law school, and he wasn’t any worse for wear after it. A little exhausted, but nothing worse than that.”
  • 25. Alice was not idle either. With no classes to attend, she spent three full days each week at Sterling’s law office, answering the phone, filing papers and occasionally doing a bit of typing. She could have gone back to working at the general store; in fact, it would have been easier for her than arranging to get to Portsimouth on a regular basis. But James had hired another part-time clerk when she’d left for college, and, being perfectly honest, she liked being a secretary better. It wasn’t as physical, the customers far easier to deal with, and Sterling didn’t mind if she let the radio play quietly in the background.
  • 26. The other two lawyers in his practice were pleasant enough, though she liked working for Sterling the best. He always greeted her when he came into the office, made sure she had a way to get home, and would often send her to buy lunch for the staff, herself included. The money she was earning went right into paying for college. There were moments when she wondered if she wasn’t being a bit frivolous; after all, she was just going to get married and be a mother after Nick graduated. But she would quickly shake those thoughts away. She really was enjoying her studies, getting to read all those great works of literature. And what else was there for her to do? College was a good a way as any to pass the time, and it kept her close to Nick. The coming school year would be better, as Shirley and Rosalie would be joining her at SimRadcliffe.
  • 27. Shortly before the fall term was set to start, Alice was busy pulling files Sterling would need for court the next day. She didn’t look up from the drawer as she heard the door open, as she recognized the tread of Sterling and one of his colleagues.
  • 28. “I’m telling you it means trouble,” Sterling was saying. “Without the Simviets to worry about, Simmany will start to march West across SimEurope.” “Simland and SimFrance will stop them before it gets to that,” the other man said. “They haven’t shown much of a backbone thus far. If they didn’t stand up for Ausimtria or Czechosimvakia, I don’t know what it will take for them to draw a line in the sand.”
  • 29. The other man shrugged. “No telling. We’ll find out soon enough; no sense in worrying about it until then.” He turned to Alice. “Do you have…” She opened a drawer and pulled out an envelope. “In chronological order, just like you asked.” “Thank you. Okay, I’m off to get this mess sorted out. Have a good afternoon.”
  • 30. Sterling nodded before opening the door that led to his office. Alice stared at it for a moment after it closed, wondering what had happened to get her boss so upset. After that moment passed, she went back to pulling the files Sterling had asked for.
  • 31. It was nearly five when Alice had collected everything Sterling had asked for. She knocked on the office door and entered when bid to do so. “Everything you need is here,” she said, handing him the paperwork. “Thank you, Alice. You’ve been invaluable, you know. Sure I can’t convince you to stay on for a while after you get married? I can train you to be a real legal secretary.” She smiled. “Thank you, but no. Once Nick starts his residency, I imagine my free time will be rather occupied with household matters.”
  • 32. Sterling chuckled. “Well, if you ever find yourself in a pinch, I’ll gladly take you on short term again.” “Thank you.”
  • 33. Alice bit her lip. “Mr. Alcott? May I ask you something?” “Alice, you can call me Sterling. I’ve told you so a dozen times at least; we’re practically family.” “It just doesn’t seem right, not yet anyway.” “I’ll have to speak to my nephew about that,” he said with a smirk.
  • 34. Alice smiled. “What were you and Mr. Small talking about when you came in?” Sterling’s expression became serious. “The Simmans and the Simviets came to a non-aggression agreement.” “What does that mean?” “In the simplest of terms, it means they aren’t going to fight each other. They’re also going to share resources, with isn’t a good thing either.” “And you believe that it means Simmany will start focusing their attention elsewhere?” “For certain. They’re itching to fight someone, more than likely the Simlish or the SimFrench. It’s just a matter of time before we find out who. Of course, the Simmans and the Simviets don’t see eye to eye on a lot of issues, so maybe the pact won’t last and they’ll just end up fighting each other.”
  • 35. Alice nodded somberly. “Things just keep going from bad to worse, don’t they?” Sterling nodded, not feeling the need to say anything in response. “Do you need a ride back to Simsfield?” “No, not today, thank you. Nick had his last summer class today, and he’s taking me out on the town to celebrate a bit before fall term starts next week.” “Get going, then,” he said. “Go on, have fun with your boyfriend.” Alice smiled at him. “Thank you, Mr.…Sterling.”
  • 36. Sterling watched Alice, a slight spring in her step, as she left his office. Once he heard the outer door close, he wiped his face with his hands. He crossed to a cabinet, pulling from it the decanter that he kept there for moments like this. He filled a glass with several fingers of its contents, and raised it. “Have fun while you can, kids. No telling how long it will last.” *****
  • 37. Nick was packed and ready to head back to SimHarvard to start his sophomore year of college. In addition to Nick being ready to return, Walter, Shirley, and Rosalie were also prepared to join him in college. The night before he left, Cindy and James invited the Alcotts and the Seiffs over for dinner to give their children a proper send-off. Despite the relative festiveness of the occasion, conversation was anything but light. Two days ago, they’d learned that Simmany had invaded SimPoland, in defiance of the Treaty of Simsailles that ended the Great War. That morning, word came that Simland and SimFrance had declared war on Simmany. After dinner, everyone gathered in the parlor of the old farmhouse, waiting to hear what the President had to say when he addressed the country over the radio. They listened to the voice through the crackle of the static, wanting to know what the events occurring in far away SimEurope meant for them.
  • 38. “I don’t think that he means to get us involved,” Taddy said to James and Sterling. “Taddy, hush,” Calla said gently. “I can’t hear.” “It is right that I should recall to your minds the consistent and at time successful efforts of your Government in these crises to throw the full weight of the United States into the cause of peace.” “See, I told you!” Taddy boomed.
  • 39. “I doubt it will end up being that simple, Taddy,” Sterling replied. “Simmany seems hell-bent on dominating SimEurope, and if it comes to that you know that Simerica won’t leave Simland in the lurch.” “Will you two hush up?” Viola asked. “Save the commentary until after the speech is over.” “Let no man or woman thoughtlessly or falsely talk of Simerica sending its armies to SimEuropean fields. At this moment there is being prepared a proclamation of Simerican neutrality.”
  • 40. James snorted. “Hard to remain neutral when so many of us can trace our roots back to one of the countries involved.” Taddy opened his mouth to reply, but a hard glance from Calla stopped him. “… I cannot ask that every Simerican remain neutral in thought as well. Even a neutral has a right to take account of facts. Even a neutral cannot be asked to close his mind or close his conscience. I have said not once but many times that I have seen war and that I hate war. I say that again and again. I hope the United States will keep out of this war. I believe that it will. And I give you assurance and reassurance that every effort of your Government will be directed toward that end.”
  • 41. After the broadcast ended, the adults in the room, Nick now included in that group, looked at each other. “I hope we can stay out of it,” Viola sighed, her eyes drifting towards Howie. Calla nodded in agreement, as her eyes sought Gilbert’s fair head as he sat by the fireplace.
  • 42. Cindy’s eyes strayed to Nick. He had a serious expression on his face, but that was nothing out of the ordinary. She wondered what he was thinking. Nick looked at James. “I’d have to go, if we get involved, wouldn’t I?” James’ mouth suddenly went dry, and he could only nod in response to his son’s question.
  • 43. “It’s nothing you need to worry about now, Nicky,” Cindy cooed, slipping and calling him by his childhood nickname. “It will probably get settled before it comes to that.” “I hope so, Mama. But as Uncle Sterling said, Simmany wants what’s not theirs. Someone has to stop them. I want to help stop them. I’d volunteer to go fight them if it comes to that. What they’re doing isn’t right.” “No, it’s not. And you’re not the only one who’d volunteer to give the Simmans a good licking,” Howie piped up, causing Viola to draw in a sharp breath. Gilbert didn’t say anything, but nodded, a resolved look on his face. Calla went pale, and she groped blindly for Taddy’s hand.
  • 44. Cindy managed to keep her voice steady as she replied. “That’s very honorable of you. But let’s not put the cart before the horse and worry about things that might not even come to pass.” Nick nodded and said no more. He knew enough had already been said. Not long after, the guests excused themselves to go home, each of them worried about how much closer the problems of the world seemed to their doorsteps that September night. *****
  • 45. With the news of the war weighing heavily on their minds, Walter, Shirley and Rosalie headed off to join Nick and Alice at college.
  • 46. Shirley and Rosalie were in the same dorm as Alice, though that was a blessing and a curse. Alice was delighted to have her friends so close by, but Rosalie was trying on a good day, and Shirley and Rosalie were very much like oil and water. Fortunately, their class schedules were radically different so there was always an excuse when one needed a break from the rest of the group.
  • 47. Walter settled into Landgraab Hall with Nick, though the elder lad was in the middle of the process to become a member of the fraternity his grandfather Elias had founded. Nick was hoping to move into the fraternity house before the end of the school year, and had promised Walter he’d pull whatever string necessary to get his friend a membership as well.
  • 48. As they had in their teenage years, the five of them often gathered to pass an afternoon, though they were no longer as idle as they had been in their teenage years. Textbooks and notebooks were their near- constant companions as they lounged on the grassy quad in the summerlike afternoons of late fall.
  • 49. It was on such an afternoon about a month after school started that they were discussing the state of things in between reading and reviewing class notes. “They were right to refuse the so-called peace offer,” Nick said, mostly to Walter and Alice, as Shirley had her nose in a book and Rosalie was furrowing her brow over a notebook.” Alice nodded, but Walter didn’t react. “Don’t you agree?”
  • 50. Walter shrugged. “You think Simerica should intervene somehow, Nick. I don’t, unless our hand gets forced somehow. The Great War didn’t have any winners, certainly not us. Why commit resources to a foreign war, when the last time we did it just resulted in the loss of lives?” Shirley looked up from her book at that moment. “I didn’t realize you were an Isolationist, Walter.” “So what if I am? The majority of the country is. I was under the impression that you were, too, Shirley, since you never talk about it.”
  • 51. She raised an eyebrow. “With my father? I’d get shot if I started spouting Isolationist ideology. I’m not sure that things are quite as dire as he thinks they are, but I also don’t think we should wait until the last minute before we act. No sense in getting caught with our proverbial pants down.” “Really, Shirley, must you use such expressions?” “Oh, stuff it, Miss Prissy Pants. What’s that that you’ve got your undivided attention? I know it’s not homework, since you were strutting around bragging about how you didn’t have homework because of your good marks on your last test.”
  • 52. Shirley reached over and snatched the notebook away from Rosalie before she knew what happened. As Shirley began to read it, she laughed. “You’re making a list of the eligible bachelors?” “The suitable ones, yes. How else will I narrow my choices down?” Shirley howled with laughter as she flipped to the next page. “Why is there a list of girls on the next page?” “For my brother. He hasn’t shown any interest in any of the ladies of his acquaintance, so I thought I’d help him out a bit.”
  • 53. “Better not to meddle, Rosalie,” Alice advised. “I’m sure he’s getting pressure from your parents in that regard.” “That’s the thing – he’s not. Father and Mother are taking the attitude that he’ll figure out who to marry when he’s ready.” “He’s still young, Rosalie. My parents didn’t meet until Papa was almost done with college. Give him time.” “Under different circumstances, I might. However, when you combine the threat of a war with his recent behavior, I feel I must intervene. Someone has to carry on the Seiff name, and it can’t be me.”
  • 54. “If you’re referring to his friendship with Clarence, I don’t see what the issue is. Sure, he’s a bit of a troublemaker, but he never gets himself into anything too serious,” Shirley pointed out. Rosalie sighed, knowing that her friends wouldn’t ever understand her. “Still, I can bring some more respectable people around the house when I’m home, and hope for the best.” Shirley rolled her eyes. “Worry about getting yourself a husband first, Rose. Then you can play matchmaker for the poor souls who haven’t been as lucky as you.”
  • 55. “Okay, I’m going to put a stop to this now, before you descend into full-on bickering,” Nick said. “Shirley, don’t pick on Rosalie. Rosalie, don’t meddle in business that’s not yours. Walter, you and I will just have to agree to disagree on matters of foreign policy. Alice, how about you and I take a walk, and forget that we’ve got studying to worry about for an hour or so?” “That sounds lovely,” she said, getting up. “We’ll see you all later.”
  • 56. The couple paused briefly at Alice’s dorm to drop off their school things before continuing along towards the edge of campus where the river was. It was one of their favorite spots. “Why is Rosalie the way she is? Your Uncle Taddy and Aunt Calla are so relaxed.” Nick shrugged. “Sometimes, I think she’s so prim and proper because they aren’t. My parents and them, and Uncle Sterling and Aunt Vi to a lesser extent, got up to a lot of high jinks when they were our age. Prohibition was law, of course, and they spent an awful lot of time at a speakeasy. My dad actually managed one for a time.”
  • 57. Alice feigned shock. “But that still doesn’t explain why she’s matchmaking for Gilbert. He’s barely a teenager; doesn’t he get a little leeway on settling down?” Nick kicked a rock in his path. “I think that’s more about her wanting to keep him out from Clarence Alcott’s influence than anything else. Shirley won’t point it out, because they’re cousins and she’s clannish, but he’s developing a reputation as a bit of a cad. He’s been caught by the police down at the beach more than once, with all different kinds of company.” “The part of the beach where teenage couples go to escape the prying eyes of their parents?” she asked, bumping his hip with hers. “How do you know about that, Miss Kalson?” he asked, a cheeky grin on his face. “Oh, I might have been there once or twice when I was his age, in the company of a handsome young man.”
  • 58. Nick chuckled, and pulled Alice close for a kiss or two.
  • 59. “Why don’t you try talking to Gilbert? He looks up to you like a brother, and you might be able to convince him to limit his time with Clarence better than Rosalie can.” Nick nodded. “Probably a good idea. I’ll see if I can get home this weekend if for no other reason than that. See if you can get Shirley to put a bug in Howie’s ear about spending more time with Gilbert, too.” “I will. Maybe Shirley in all her brashness will decide to read Clarence the riot act while she’s at it. I know he’s an only child so I’m certain his parents indulge him.” “Now that we’ve got that sorted out, let’s pretend that we’re the only two people in the world for a few minutes.” “I think that’s an excellent idea.” *****
  • 60. Rosalie was sitting in the parlor of her dorm, sipping at her afternoon tea. She was very, very pleased with herself. After much careful planning and execution, she had landed a date with the man she wanted for her husband.
  • 61. It hadn’t been easy. Bruce Thorne was a year older than her, in Nick’s class, and she’d had to spend far too much time biting her tongue around her cousin so that she could make the right connections to meet her target. From there, it was a matter of joining the right clubs and societies so she was in front of him more often than not. Of course, she also had to deflect the attention of the other ladies around him as well. Bruce was a handsome man, not lacking for female attention. As she took one last sip of her tea, she certainly hoped it would be worth it in the long run.
  • 62. There was a dance that night, hosted by Bruce’s fraternity, and she was his date. She took special care with her hair and makeup, wanting to look perfect. She wasn’t the only one from the dorm going to that dance, as Nick and Alice were attending as well. She watched the other woman come down the stairs as she sat on a sofa in the foyer waiting. Alice fairly glowed, and for a moment, Rosalie was jealous of how the redhead looked. But then she remembered that she could wear red, unlike Alice, and she would stand out that evening because of her vibrant dress.
  • 63. Nick and Bruce arrived at nearly the same time, each bringing flowers for their dates. Both couples walked out the door together.
  • 64. The next day, Rosalie was in the best of moods. The evening had gone perfectly. Despite all the requests from the other girls in the room, Bruce had remained attentive to her and her alone. Her feet were sore and blistered from dancing in her high heels, but she hadn’t complained once. The night had been worth every ounce of pain.
  • 65. After getting ready for the day (and carefully wrapping up her poor feet), she went down to breakfast, where Shirley was asking Alice about the night. “He still hasn’t asked you yet? What’s the boy waiting for?” “Shirley, I know he’s going to. It’s up to him to decide when the moment’s right.” “What are you two talking about?” Rosalie inquired as she set her plate down next to the other two.
  • 66. “Nick still hasn’t asked Alice to marry him yet. I don’t know what’s taking him so long.” “And I told Shirley that we have an understanding, and he’ll ask when he’s ready. Which I’m sure won’t be until he’s nearly done with his schooling. I’m not worried, so don’t you go doing it on my behalf.” Shirley let out a breath in a harrumph, and earned herself a reproachful look from Alice and Rosalie. “Speaking of marriage proposals, Shirley, when is Walter planning on asking you?” Rosalie asked.
  • 67. Alice barely suppressed a smirk as Shirley stuttered and sputtered. “That’s none of your business, Miss Prissy Pants,” she finally managed to choke out. “If you can’t stand the heat, stay out of the kitchen, then,” was Rosalie’s simple reply. “Did you have a good time last night, Rosalie?” Alice asked, eager to shift the topic of conversation.
  • 68. “I had such a lovely time. Bruce and I got along famously, and I can’t help but thing that he might be the One, if you know what I mean.” “You’ve known him for all of about an hour, and you already know that you’re going to marry him? Have you told him yet?” “Of course not! That’s the kind of decisions a man has to come to on his own. Though that doesn’t mean we can’t help push them in the right direction.”
  • 69. “So, you’ll at least let us know when the wedding is?” Shirley deadpanned, with a wink in Alice’s direction. “Of course I shall! And if you two are still single, you’ll be bridesmaids, of course.” “Great,” Shirley said with enthusiasm that only Alice knew was false. “If you two will excuse me,” Alice said as she got up, “I have to get ready for class.”
  • 70. Alice hurried away from the table where Rosalie was now animatedly discussing her wedding to a man she’d only had one date with. As she pulled her books together, she thought about what an odd person Rosalie was, but that she was rather grateful to her that day for deflecting Shirley’s unwanted questions about why Nick had not yet given her an engagement ring. Because Alice had been wondering that herself for a while. *****
  • 71. The rest of the school year passed in a blur, and before long, exams were looming on the horizon for the college students. Though all of them were concerned with getting good marks, some of them found it harder to study than others. The news from SimEurope was not good, and it made for some heated discussions around the study tables.
  • 72. “Simmark never stood a chance,” sighed Nick to no one in particular. “They had no army to speak of.” Alice and Shirley nodded, but Walter and Rosalie remained unmoved. Nick spoke again. “If the Allies hadn’t botched their response in Norsimway, they might have been in better position to do something. But now…” “Is Norsimway lost too?” asked Alice. Nick nodded. “Probably. The King and the government members will able to escape, so that’s one good thing.”
  • 73. “What does Simmany want with them anyway? They’ve don’t have a lot of resources,” Shirley noted. “With Norsimway in Simman hands, they control the North Sea shipping lanes, and it gives them a better position to attack Simland,” Nick replied.
  • 74. A silence fell back over the table. After a few moments, Walter spoke. “We should probably do something to help Simland and SimFrance. After all, Simmany’s always been steamed at them after the outcome of the Great War. I imagine they’ll need all the help we can get.” Nick suppressed a smirk. “Don’t think the President’s cash and carry policy is enough anymore?” “Not really. But I’m not sure what else we can do, without committing manpower which isn’t going to happen.” Nick nodded. “Glad to see you’ve smartened up a bit.”
  • 75. Less than a month later, the exams barely finished, the five of them were gathered for a last hurrah before returning home for another break. The occasion, however, was less than festive. “So Simberlain’s out, and Simchill’s in. Well, after the debacles with Czechosimvakia and Norsimway, it was only a matter of time, I suppose,” Nick sighed. “The Simlish seem pleased about it; he’s an old warhorse and he won’t let Simland just give up without a good fight. SimFrance on the other hand, I’m more worried about.”
  • 76. At that moment, the paperboy dropped the afternoon edition of the Herald on the front step. Walter got up and grabbed it, and then brought it back in as he read the headlines. “Sounds like you’ve good cause to be worried, Nick. Simmany’s launched invasions of SimBelgium, Holsimland, and SimFrance.” Everyone gasped at the news, and Nick snatched the paper away from Walter.
  • 77. “Damn,” he said under his breath as he scanned the paper. “This isn’t good.” Alice and Shirley exchanged worried looks, and even Rosalie looked mildly concerned. “Now what?” Walter asked. “We’ll just have to wait to see if they’re able to stop the Simmans, or if we’ll have another batch of surrenders on our hands.” “Simchill’ll be reaching out to the President for support, that’s for sure. Hopefully, he has a plan in mind.”
  • 78. “And what if he doesn’t?” Alice asked. “What do we do then?” “We pray,” Nick said, taking her hand. “It’s about the only thing we can do at this point.” *****
  • 79. Dotty flung the newspaper across the room, and sank back onto the sofa, disgusted. Her dreams of sipping a Café au lait somewhere on the Champs Simlysées while gazing at the Arc de Trisimphe were even more unrealistic now than they had been a few years ago. Hopefully, there’ll still be a SimParis to see when all this is over, she thought with a sigh.
  • 80. Danny poked his head into the room. “By the look on your face, I’m guessing you saw that the Simmans are marching through the streets of your beloved SimParis as we speak.” She turned and glared at him. “You don’t need to rub in that you were right about it not being a good time for SimEuropean travel.”
  • 81. “Hey,” he said, “There’s no need for that. Be thankful that you are here in Simerica; goodness knows that Simmany’s going to stick it to the SimFrench for their role in ‘humiliating’ them after the Great War.” Dotty sighed aloud. “How can you be so calm and practical at a time like this when the rest of the world is ready to burst into flames?”
  • 82. “I don’t know,” he admitted. “I guess I’m just taking stock of the situation to see how to best react to it. For example, Simtaly just now declared war on Simland and SimFrance, and is invading the latter from the south. So despite being ‘friends’ with Simmany, they’ve not really done anything to support their mass expansion, which makes me wonder how good of ‘friends’ they really are.” “Which means?” Danny shrugged. “Not sure. But knowing your enemy is the first key to victory.”
  • 83. “You’re certainly more calm about all this than Nick is. He’s always looking a little green around the gills when someone mentions the war.” “That’s easy to understand. If we declared war on Simmany tomorrow, Nick would have to go. He wouldn’t necessarily have any time to plan anything, he’d just have to go. Me, on the other hand, I have time to figure out what path I want to go down, since I’ve got a few years before I’m old enough to be drafted.”
  • 84. “I didn’t think you’d be so willing to serve.” “It’s not necessarily about willingness; it’s about accepting what’s to come and making the best of it.” “And what does that mean for Danny Bradford?” “Well, if I’m going to have to join the military, I’m not doing it as a nobody. I’ll get myself a commission somehow, and be an officer.” “You, an army lieutenant?” “Or a navy ensign. Either one would be acceptable.”
  • 85. “The navy? Really, Danny? You don’t even like to swim.” “As long as your ship stays afloat, you shouldn’t have to,” he grinned. “But that’s a few years away yet. There’s time for both of us to make plans. You can’t sit around and sulk about not getting to see the great cities of the world forever, after all.” “Ha ha. Very funny, Danny.” “I’m serious, Dotty. What do you want to do with yourself?” “I’m not sure,” she admitted. “I’ll go to college at least, or risk breaking Mama and Papa’s hearts if I don’t. After that…well, as you said, there’s still time to make plans.” *****
  • 86. It hadn’t been an easy few months, news-wise. Between the SimFrench surrendering, the Simviets snatching up territory in eastern SimEurope, and the Simtalians stretching their reach into Simfrica, it seemed that no news was good news. “And those damnable U-however-you-pronounce-it underwater boats the Simmans have!” cursed Viola. “Sinking ships left and right. How are we supposed to get supplies to the Simlish with them patrolling the Simlantic?”
  • 87. “I thought it was the responsibility of the Simlish to transport those supplies,” Cindy pointed out. “The real issue is that they don’t seem to distinguish between ships carrying war supplies and those that aren’t. And since they’re underwater, it’s very hard to find them.” “Oh, someone will figure out how to eventually. It’s just a matter of how much damage they’ll inflict before then,” Viola sighed, as she got up to refill everyone’s cups.
  • 88. After Viola sat back down, everyone sipped at their tea and nibbled on the baked goods she’d made. “Why are we always talking about a war that’s taking place thousands of miles from here? It’s not like we’re directly involved,” Calla said. “Yet,” Viola said, a bit harsher than she intended. “All these Isolationists are doing is delaying the inevitable. We need to be doing more to get ourselves prepared. You agree with me, right Cindy?”
  • 89. Cindy hesitated. “Well, I do think that we’re going to get involved at some point, whether we like it or not, so it makes sense to be prepared. But the mother in me wants to leave them be and let them sort it out themselves, so my family stays here where it’s safer.” Viola felt a bit reproached by Cindy’s remark. “Of course we all feel that way. But wouldn’t you feel better about Nick or Danny fighting if you knew there was a orchestrated plan and the best possible resources behind them?” “I don’t know if I could ever feel ‘better’ about sending my boys off to fight, Viola.”
  • 90. “Fair enough,” she relented. Her eyes drifted towards the big headlines on the newspaper that was sitting at the other end of the table.. “Why do you even bother to read that anymore?” Calla asked. “There’s never anything good in there anymore.” “No, but I at least like to know what atrocities are occurring overseas. The Simmans bombed Simdon, so the Simlish returned the favor and bombed Berlsim.”
  • 91. Cindy shook her head. “Those aren’t even military targets. Those poor civilians.” “I know,” Viola said. “It doesn’t seem right, somehow, to get the general populace involved. Though I don’t blame Simland for retaliating. Probably just trying to show that they’re not going to give up without a good fight.” “I don’t mind them attacking Simmany in that way, somehow,” Cindy mused. “It seems like the whole country is brainwashed, and maybe a few tons of explosives will knock some sense back into them.” “We can only hope.”
  • 92. “Calla, why so quiet?” Cindy asked. “Oh,” she said with a shrug. “Taddy gets upset when he hears about the war; he’s of the mind that we should just stay out of it, you know.” “Sterling may have mentioned that once or twice,” Viola said wryly. “So I’ve just started tuning all the war talk out. With any luck, it will be over soon and everything will go back to normal.”
  • 93. Viola opened her mouth, but a sharp look from Cindy stopped her. “That’s what we all want, Calla, but I’m not sure it’s realistic. You’re better off keeping one eye on things,” Cindy said. Calla looked indifferent, but that was nothing new. Her head always seemed to be in the clouds. “Cindy’s right. Watch what’s going on, and pray for it to change. That’s about all we can do now.” *****
  • 94. With another school year upon them, the college kids packed up their trunks and headed back to the city. Rosalie had spent most of her summer securing her place as the future Mrs. Bruce Thorne, and the rest of the circle had accepted him into their little group. With him around, Rosalie was always on her best behavior, and so there was less bickering between the girls, which made Nick and Walter happy.
  • 95. Nick couldn’t quite get a read on Bruce and where he stood in regards to the war in SimEurope. When he brought it up to Walter one day, Walter had snorted back a laugh. “Really, Nick? Can’t you see that he’s just like Rosalie in that respect? He can’t see past the end of his own nose, let across an ocean.” And Nick had no choice but to agree. Bruce was rather self-centered, but that was probably the main reason he and Rosalie were so well suited.
  • 96. By the end of September, the school year was back in full swing, and the six of them had resumed their old habit of group study sessions. And as they had in years past, the talk inevitably turned to what was happening overseas.
  • 97. “Some success the Simerica First Committee’s had so far,” said Walter sarcastically. Not a month after they get organized and the President manages to get a conscription bill through Congress.” Bruce looked up from his book. “Well, a draft doesn’t mean war, necessarily.” “It means that we’re thinking about it more seriously than we have,” Nick replied in a tone that caused Alice to look up.
  • 98. “What’s that group all about, again?” Shirley asked. “I know you were going on about it the other day, but I wasn’t really paying attention.” Walter gave her a bit of a pointed look as he answered. “It’s a group that’s trying to pressure Simerica into staying out of the war. It got started by a bunch of college kids, but since its founder is from SimYale, you know it’s no good.” “Har, har, har,” Shirley deadpanned, not impressed by Walter’s jab at SimHarvard’s rival school. “So, what do they plan on doing?”
  • 99. “Give speeches, it sounds like,” Nick answered. “I don’t know how much they’ll actually do beyond that. Since the fall of SimFrance, opinions about entering the war have shifted. There’s a lot of people who don’t want to leave Simland to stand alone against Simmany.” “I can’t say I blame them. The Simlish are standing strong against Simmany’s Blitz, but that constant bombing, and at night at that, must be wearing on them,” Alice sighed. Nick nodded, a grim expression on his face. “I can’t even imagine what it’s like to be bombarded on a nightly basis.”
  • 100. “And it’s sentiment like that that allowed the draft bill through,” Walter stated. “Not that it affects us much right now.” “It will when you turn twenty-one,” Shirley pointed out. Nick nodded solemnly. “You sometimes forget that I’m a year older than all of you. I’ll have to register on my birthday, but I’ll probably get deferred as I’m in college.” “I certainly hope so,” Alice said softly.
  • 101. “I thought you were all gung-ho when it came to fighting,” Walter commented. “Well, I’ll do what’s necessary,” Nick replied. “If I’m called upon to serve, I’ll do so willingly.” “Me, too,” Walter nodded, looking at Bruce as he did so. “I shall do what is required of me, of course,” he said. Nick and Walter exchanged a look as everyone went back to their books. *****
  • 102. “Anything good in the mail?” Jefferson asked as James placed a few envelopes on the desk. “No bills, if that’s what you mean,” James said with a bit of a cheeky grin. “I think it’s all just plain, boring letters. If you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to run. I was on my way to the store when the mailman came, and I wanted to bring it in.” “Go,” Jefferson said, waving his hand. “If there’s something that needs to be dealt with, we’ll do so when you get home.”
  • 103. After James left, Jefferson flipped through the mail absently. When he came across one addressed to him in a vaguely familiar hand, he opened it.
  • 104.
  • 105. It was after dark when James returned home from the store, and when Cindy heard the door open she rushed to meet him. “Thank goodness you’re back,” she said as she gave him a quick peck on the lips. “Why? What’s wrong?” “Your father wouldn’t join us for dinner; he just sat in his study, staring at a piece of paper.” James immediately felt guilty for dropping the mail and running; something in the post must have upset him. “I’ll go see if I can figure out what’s going on.”
  • 106. James didn’t knock as he usually did when he entered the study. He found his father sitting at the desk, just as Cindy had described, his eyes fixed on a single page of paper. “Papa?” “I’m the last one,” he said softly. James waited, knowing that his silence would prompt the older man to speak. “There was a letter from Jane Hutchins in the mail; Victor’s passed on. And so I am the only one of my school friends left.”
  • 107. James stayed silent, this time because he didn’t know what to say. “It’s horrible thing, watching your childhood friends die. I wish I knew why I’m the one to outlast them all.” “If I knew, I’d tell you,” James said honestly. “I know you would, son,” Jefferson replied as he got up very slowly. “I’m heading to bed. It’s been a tiring afternoon.”
  • 108. “Are you sure you don’t want something to eat first? Cindy’s heating up a plate for me and I’m sure it would be no trouble for her to do one for you, too.” “No, I’m not very hungry this evening. You enjoy your dinner.”
  • 109. James went reluctantly into the dining room, where his dinner was waiting for him. When he didn’t immediately dig in as was his habit, Cindy sat down and waited for him to talk.
  • 110. “I don’t think my father’s going to be around much longer.” “What makes you say that?” “I’ve never seen him so…defeated. It’s like he’s just waiting to die.”
  • 111. “That’s horrible,” Cindy said. “How old is he now?” “84, the same as Uncle Victor was. He seemed to finally be getting his spirit back a little, but the news today just crushed him.” “It can’t have been easy for him these past few years.” “No, especially not since Mama passed. If she were still here, I think he could bear it, but without her…”
  • 112. Cindy pressed a kiss to his temple. “Eat your dinner, and then come to bed. Tomorrow, take the day and do something with your father, just the two of you. If he’s not long for this world, enjoy what time you can with him.” James nodded. “You’re right. You usually are.” “Of course I am,” she replied. “And don’t leave your dirty plate on the table for me to find in the morning, mister. Put it in the sink at least.” “Yes, ma’am.” She raised an eyebrow. “Unless you want to sleep on the sofa, I suggest you never call me ‘ma’am’ again.” *****
  • 113. James raised his glass. “To the Simlish, for blowing the Simtalian Naval fleet out of the harbor.” Sterling followed suit, and after the briefest moment of hesitation, Taddy. The three men drained their glasses.
  • 114. “You know they’ll pay for that,” Sterling said with a sigh. “Simmany will blow the Hell out of something important.” “Oh, I know. It’s just nice to see the bad guy get his for once...” James began. “Amen to that,” Sterling interjected. “…especially when all the news we seem to get is about how many countries they’ve successfully managed to invade.”
  • 115. Sterling nodded grimly. “Simmany into Rosimania, Simtaly into SimGreece. Not to mention Simmany, Simtaly and Simpan joining forces. I wish I knew where it ended.” James shook his head. “No idea.” Taddy, who had been quiet for much of the evening, suddenly sat up and turned up the volume on the small radio that had been playing in the background.
  • 116. “…massive air raids on Coventry, Simland, heavily concentrated on the city’s center. Preliminary estimates are that thousands of homes were destroyed by the onslaught of bombs, both explosive and incendiary. Casualties are not known at this time, but expected to be in the hundreds.”
  • 117. Taddy let out a low whistle as he turned the radio back down. “Poor bastards.” “To them,” Sterling said, raising his now empty glass. “To them,” the other two repeated. “Do you still think we shouldn’t get involved?” Sterling asked Taddy. Taddy shrugged. “I don’t think we should, but we probably will, and if we do I’ll out-patriot the patriotest of patriots.” Sterling nodded. “Fair enough.” “I still hope something happens before then,” James said, his thoughts clearly on Nick. Sterling and Taddy looked at him, understanding in their eyes. It was Taddy’s turn to raise his glass first. “To an unexpected miracle.” James didn’t trust his voice, but raised his glass as he nodded. “To miracles,” Sterling agreed. *****
  • 118. All around the country, and Simsfield and Portsimouth were no exception, people were gathered around their radios, waiting to hear what the President had to say about the ongoing war and what it would mean for Simerica. The Bradford farmhouse was no different. Jefferson occupied the corner of the sofa closest to the radio, owing to his slight deafness in his old age, Dotty seated to his left while Danny sat on the floor near her feet. James and Cindy occupied the other love seat, James closest to the radio so that he could turn the volume up and down as needed.
  • 119. Through the crackle of the radio static, the announcer introduced the President. Moments later, his familiar voice filled the room. “My friends, This is not a fireside chat on war. It is a talk on national security, because the nub of the whole purpose of your President is to keep you now, and your children later, and your grandchildren much later, out of a last- ditch war for the preservation of Simerican independence and all of the things that Simerican independence means to you and to me and to ours.”
  • 120. All across the nation, they listened. They listened as he compared the crisis presented by the war to the crisis of the economic collapse, and how Simericans would great it with the same determination. They listened as he told them about the alliance between Simmany, Simtaly, and Simpan, their desires for world domination and what it would mean for Simerica. “In other words, the Axis not merely admits but the Axis proclaims that there can be no ultimate peace between their philosophy of government and our philosophy of government.”
  • 121. “Huh?” Jefferson said, struggling to hear through the crackle of the static. “What was that?” “He said the Axis doesn’t like democracy, and that their dictatorship is the only way, and there’ll be no peace between us unless we give in.” “James, that is not what he said.” James shrugged. “It’s what he meant, which is more important. Damned foreigners, thinking their way is the only way.” Cindy raised an eyebrow at him. “I believe you think something similar.” “That’s different. Because I know our way is the right way.”
  • 122. “Will you please be quiet?” Danny asked. “I want to hear what else he has to say.” “…Frankly and definitely there is danger ahead -- danger against which we must prepare. But we well know that we cannot escape danger, or the fear of danger, by crawling into bed and pulling the covers over our heads.” He talked about how trying to bargain and appease the Simmans had failed, and the fate of the nations who had done so, about the efforts of the Simerican government to ferret out those with Simman sympathies who would have Simerica become a dictatorship as well, and about the futility of trying to negotiate a peace with the warring parties.
  • 123. “The people of SimEurope who are defending themselves do not ask us to do their fighting. They ask us for the implements of war, the planes, the tanks, the guns, the freighters which will enable them to fight for their liberty and for our security. Emphatically we must get these weapons to them, get them to them in sufficient volume and quickly enough, so that we and our children will be saved the agony and suffering of war which others have had to endure.” “That’ll make Sterling happy.” “Not to mention a few other families in the neighborhood. Silas Alcott recently made a big investment in the Portsimouth Shipyard,” Cindy added. “Really?” James asked, his interest piqued. “I was under the impression that their interests were hit as hard as ours when the market crashed.”
  • 124. Jefferson gave his son and daughter-in-law a bit of an annoyed look, and turned the radio up. “We must be the great arsenal of democracy. For us this is an emergency as serious as war itself. We must apply ourselves to our task with the same resolution, the same sense of urgency, the same spirit of patriotism and sacrifice as we would show were we at war.”
  • 125. The speech ended soon after that, and James turned the radio down. “Well, what do you think, Pops?” “I think we’re inching closer to this war faster than anyone realizes,” he said with a sigh, “and I worry about what that will mean for this family.”
  • 126. Jefferson’s eyes traveled to Danny. “You’re not old enough to fight yet, but you will be before you know it. I know you’ll do your duty to your country, and I pray you’ll stay safe while doing so.”
  • 127. He turned to Dotty. “I know you want to see for yourself that the world is round, but wait until the boys have a chance to put out the fires of evil that are burning right now.”
  • 128. Jefferson got up, oh so slowly, and went to the window, looking in the direction of Portsimouth. “Nick is too kind for his own good sometimes,” he muttered, only loud enough for himself to hear. “He’ll want to go running in and play the hero, but he needs to remember that he’s got people at home that need him just as much as those he’s never met.”
  • 129. As he stared out the window, he thought about Shirley and Howie, and Freddy, about Viola, and Cyrus. He wasn’t as close to them as he was to James, or the grandchildren he lived with, but he still worried about what would happen to them in the future.
  • 130. He then turned to look at his eldest son, and his lovely wife. James was looking at him, his expression a cross between puzzlement and resignation. Jefferson nodded, answering the unspoken question. “These next few years will be hardest for you two. It’s one thing to give yourself up to a cause; it’s another thing entirely to give up someone you love. You want to protect you children, but sometimes, you just can’t.”
  • 131. James got up and hugged his father tight. “There, there, son. There’s no need to worry about me; your mother’s waiting on the other side, and I’ve missed her so very much these years. It’s you that I worry about.” “We’ll manage. You know the lengths I’ll go to in order to keep my family safe.” “I do.”
  • 132. Jefferson looked over to Cindy. “Take good care of my boy.” She reached up to brush away a tear. “You know I will.”
  • 133. Jefferson nodded. He had said what he needed to say; now the only thing left to do was wait.
  • 134. He did not have to wait for long.
  • 135. Later that night, after making sure the twins were tucked safely in their beds, Cindy went to find James. He was exactly where she expected him to be, seated at the desk in the study. “I’m heading up to bed. You coming?” “In a minute.” Cindy pressed a kiss to his temple. “Don’t be too long.”
  • 136. When Cindy had left, James put his head down on the desk. “I don’t know if I can do this as well as you did, Papa. But I’m sure as Hell going to try.” *****
  • 137. He’d planned the timing of his visit carefully. His mother was out visiting his Aunt Viola; Dotty and Danny were at school. His father would be the only one home, and he was the one Nick need to speak to. Alone.
  • 138. Knowing the door to the kitchen was always unlocked, it was how Nick let himself in to the farmhouse. Much to his surprise, his father was there, his hand hovering over the still-warm crust of one of his mother’s pies. James was so absorbed in his task that he didn’t notice his eldest son’s presence Nick spoke. “I don’t think Mama will appreciate coming home to find a chunk missing from tonight’s dessert.”
  • 139. James snatched his hand back. “I was going to claim it broke off.” “She always knows it’s you,” Nick replied. James sighed. “I figured as much, but she lets me get away with it. Most of the time.” The two men exchanged a smile. “What bring you home today, son? Don’t get me wrong; I’m glad to see you but I know you’ve got a lot going on with school and such.” “There’s something I wanted to talk to you about, without everyone else around.”
  • 140. James ushered Nick into the dining room, where they both sat down. “What’s on your mind, Nick?”
  • 141. Nick drew in a deep breath. “Papa, I want to ask Alice to marry me.” James nodded. “I was expecting as much. I’m kind of surprised that you haven’t already asked her.” “I probably should have,” he muttered. James repressed the urge to snicker. “You don’t need ask me if you want to get married, you know. And I’m guessing you’ve already got the okay from her father.”
  • 142. “Yes, I wrote him and got his blessing. And while I don’t need to ask your permission, I would like it. After all, we’ll be living here after we get married.” James felt a wave of nostalgia wash over him. He remembered the day Nick had been born. Now his eldest was a grown man, ready to start a life with his sweetheart. “Of course you can marry Alice. Goodness knows this family could use some happy news. Your mother will be especially thrilled,” James said, thinking about the fact that he would soon owe her that new coat.
  • 143. Nick smiled. “I know she will.” “Well, I suppose there’s something you’ll need if you’re going to propose to Alice. Come with me.”
  • 144. James led Nick upstairs to the room he shared with Cindy. He went to the dresser, opened the top drawer, and rummaged around for a moment until he found what he was looking for.
  • 145. “This ring,” he said, handing it to Nick, “has been in the family since your however many great-grandfather John gave it to his wife. It has been given to the firstborn son to pass on to his bride. I guess it’s yours now, to give to Alice.” Nick eyed the ring, nodding. “Won’t Mama miss it?” “No; she’s been waiting for you to ask for it for a while now. Besides, I was planning on using a little of what Papa left me in his will to buy her something a little fancier. Goodness knows with all the sacrifices she’s made that she deserves it.”
  • 146. “I’m sure she’ll love whatever you pick out for her.” James watched Nick as he studied the ring before slipping it into his pocket. “Is something wrong, son?” “I was just thinking…honestly, Papa, I’m not sure I like the idea of Alice wearing the same ring that Great- Grandmother Jan did.” James was startled by Nick’s statement. “What makes you say that?” “Oh, something Aunt Vi said once, about how she was against Aunt Vi marrying Uncle Sterling, and just a general impression I always got from Grandma and Grandpa that they weren’t really fond of her.”
  • 147. “Well, I can’t refute anything there. My grandmother was a bitch, there’s no nice way of saying it, and my grandfather wasn’t much better. But I never thought about how it would be for someone else to wear the ring that she wore. Your mother certainly never objected, but then again she never knew her.” “What about Grandma?” “She never actually wore the ring; Grandpa had given it to the late Mrs. Alcott, as he was supposed to marry her, and she didn’t return it until years later.” Nick nodded.
  • 148. James sighed. “It’s a tradition for this to be the ring used in proposals, but if you want to get something different for Alice, I’ll understand.” Nick considered for a moment. He really didn’t want his Alice to wear the exact same ring as such a horrible woman, but he didn’t want to be the one to end a family tradition either.
  • 149. “Well, she wasn’t the only person to wear the ring,” he said slowly. “Maybe I could just get the stone reset? That way, it would still kind of be the same ring, but not.” James nodded slowly. “I think that’s a great compromise. Make it into something that’s your own.” “That’s what I’ll do, then. I’m sure that what Grandpa left me will be enough to pay for it.”
  • 150. James walked Nick back downstairs. “Take good care of that ring, Nick, and the girl you’re giving it to.” “I will, Papa. I’ll bring her home as soon as I can after she says yes so Mama can fuss over her.” “Sounds good. Safe trip back to school. I’m sure we’ll be seeing you sooner rather than later.”
  • 151. ************************************************************************************************************************* So with that, we’ll end chapter 27 on a somewhat happy note. My generation 5 heir Jefferson is now gone. So many of generation 5 have now passed; it makes me very sad. But generation 7 will be getting married soon, which means that generation 8 isn’t too far away. That’s a much happier thought. You can leave comments on the Bradford Legacy thread at Boolprop, on my Live Journal, or on my Dreamwidth, whichever you prefer. Continue on for outtakes, and a little meta on where things are headed. 
  • 152. So the first members of generation 7 are now college students, getting up to what college students usually get up to. These next few chapters will be very history heavy; it’s kind of necessary when chronicling a fictionalized version of actual events. I posted a longer meta on my LiveJournal about how the war will affect the story; head over there if you’re looking for more specifics. As far as this chapter is concerned, we’re up to approximately the beginning of 1941. So the war is almost here, sadly. The italicized portions of the radio speeches are taken directly from Franklin Roosevelt’s fireside chats. The first is from his “On the European War” speech given September 3, 1939 and the second from his “On National Security” speech, better known as the Arsenal of Democracy speech given December 29, 1940. Of course, I’ve changed the names of the countries and such so they’re consistent with my legacy ‘verse.
  • 153. Alice got Cheesed, as I said she would. Though I was a little worried at first, as she was platinum from a “Go to College” want. But nope, she is now Grilled Cheese, and has eaten about 20 of the necessary 200 sandwiches for her LTW. I’ll have to get moving on that one; I have a feeling the rest of the Bradfords will be sick of grilled cheese by the time this is over.
  • 154. That’s all there is for now. *cue I’m Sexy and I Know It*