Britannia's Fist: From Civil War to World War: An Alternate History
winked. “We can’t keep Mr. Stanton and Mr. Seward waiting. They are mighty important people.” As they walked out, Sharpe noticed that Lincoln was wearing well-worn slippers. Amazing.
    Lincoln’s office was where he held his most intimate conversations. He had adjourned the full cabinet to confer with his two senior ministers over the implications of Sharpe’s report. “You know Colonel Sharpe, don’t you, Stanton?”
    “Of course,” Stanton smiled at seeing Sharpe. “How can I forget Sergeant Cline and those dispatches from President Davis he dropped into our hands? Give my regards to the good sergeant, Sharpe. And tell him there’s more gold where that came from.”
    He began to introduce Sharpe to Seward, but Seward said, “We know each other, Mr. President. His father and I were friends when we were young. I regret that he passed so soon. I was also the one who recommended to the governor of New York that he ask Sharpe to raise a regiment in ’62 when you called for three hundred thousand more men. And look how well he’s done.” Turning to his only rival in the cabinet, he said genially, “You see, he may belong to Mr. Stanton, but I take credit for him.” Stanton frowned. A sense of humor at his own expense was not one of Edwin McMasters Stanton’s finer points.
    However, sticking to business was. “If you’ve finished patting yourself on the back, Bill, let’s get down to what we are here for.”
    “Yes, Colonel, let us hear more about George the Contraband.” Lincoln was leaning back in a cane-backed rocker, one knee draped over the other, his slipper dangling half off.
    Sharpe noticed that his sock was darned. It occurred to him that the precariously hanging slipper was not a form of rudeness but a compliment. He was trusted. That was a relief. After Gettysburg, Meade had turned his acid tongue on Sharpe and stripped him of his duties to coordinate all the collection resources of the Army outside those in his own bureau. Meade was a general of the old school in a new war. It was not a happy headquarters. How strange that the commander in chief was capable of spreading trust and calm, where so many generals could not.
    “Tell us the story about how you found him.”
    Sharpe was no mean storyteller himself. This was business, and the facts were what mattered, yet he had to convince, and that was the storyteller’s art.
    “Mr. President,” Sharpe leaned forward. “Before you can understand George, you have to understand what we do in the Bureau of Military Information. Since we were formed in February, thousands of men, white and black, have passed through our hands—prisoners of war, deserters, refugees, and contrabands. My chief interrogator, John Babcock, and I have developed a fine nose for the truth and just as fine a technique to get at it. We are rarely deceived.
    “Those who come to us willingly are apt to exaggerate or invent what they think we want to hear. It is a common thing and easily found out, for already we have such a body of information on the organization, strengths, leaders, and problems of the Army of Northern Virginia that a simple comparison will tell if the story rings true or false. We know every regiment in Lee’s Army, its commander, and its strength. We know the state of their horses, the rations and forage they receive or not, the arrival of reinforcements or not. We follow them when they move their regiments, brigades, and divisions from one place to another, and issue updated maps and orders of battle to the general commanding on a regular basis.”
    Lincoln asked, “Do you mean you get all of this from simple interrogations?”
    “No, sir, we take our information from any and all sources at our disposal—and that means, in addition to interrogations, reports of my scouts and agents, examination of enemy documents, even personal letters, reports from the Signal Corps, the cavalry, the agents of the Secretary of War, and even the Provost Marshal of

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