It was a fairly easy two-day march north from LĂźneburg to Hamburg, one of the major seaports on the North Sea of the former Hanseatic League, which had maintained its importance even while the inland Hanseatic cities declined. Antwerp had lost prominence when its access to the sea, via the River Scheldt, had been closed down by a war treaty. Amsterdam similarly had fallen on to bad times as a seaport, and Bruges' access to the sea had silted over. In the spring of 1776 Hamburg, less than fifty miles north of LĂźneburg and eighty miles from the sea via the River Elbe, would be the departure port for the Brunswick-LĂźneburg Hessen troops under the command of Baron and General Friedrich Riedesel. From Hamburg the destination for the Hessian force was New York City, in the New World, which was then under siege by British royalists.
Johann had been lucky in his last days in Lßneburg. When he had raced to the square to enlist, he had barely made it before the recruiting was closed. Then he was marched along with the other recruits from that day to the bivouac area at the edge of town, where he was measured for two sets of uniforms in the signature Hessian troop dark blue and spent the better part of a week learning to march in file and to handle and fire a Jäger rifle. All young men Johann's age were able to handle firearms, Johann no less expertly than any of the others, but the Jäger rifles were exclusive to the Hessian mercenary troops. They required special training.
On his second evening in the camp, the officer who had taken his recruitment in the LĂźneberg square came out of a small tent as Johann was passing by and interrupted Johann's progress. The man was one of the older soldiers, grizzled, but still obviously maintaining the demanding physical conditioning of the military drills. He had had a sharp eye at the recruiting table and now showed Johann now just how sharp-eyed he'd been.
"Johann, isn't it?" he asked.
"Yes, sir," Johann answered, lowering his eyes, sensing the heat of the man.
"Johann, the plaster worker?"
"Yes, sir." Had that been put down on his recruitment form? Johann couldn't remember. He'd been very nervous at the time.
"Some men came by the recruiting station yesterday looking for youâquite anxiously, if I must say."
What could Johann say? His heart was racing. The grip of the hand on his forearm was as strong as any jailer's would be.
"One of the duke's men asked even before you approached the table. A red-faced man claiming to be your master came after you'd left for the camp."
Again, what could Johann say?
"Neither need know you are here," the officer said. "If you are good to me, of course. They told me why they were looking for youâwhat you were and had done and would do."
The recruitment officer seemed to think a blow job in his tent was good for himâbut not sufficient. Johann was on all fours, with the bulky officer crouched over his back, feeding his cock inside Johann's ass and starting to pump, while the young recruit was thinking if it would ever be thus that he would need to accommodate men to be safe.
The officerâunnamed, as he never seemed to consider giving his name to Johann as requiredâwas good at his word, and he fucked Johann twice more while the men were bivouacked outside the city. In all that time, neither Rudolf nor the duke's men were able to seek him out at the mercenary troop bivouac and, rather than bemoan his loss of possible higher status in the trades, Johann was grateful that he had escaped the entrapment of Rudolf and Christina alike and the wrath of the duke. Still, he held his breath until his was marching to Hamburg along with the other recruits.
He had done no worse than his original prospects had been; he had always planned to go as a soldier adventuring beyond Lower Saxony, if he could. He had always worried that he was undersized and looked too delicate to be recruited, though. Once he started the march to Hamburg, on the open road, under the sun, he realized how confining Rudolf's smoky workshop and controlling desires had been and savored his first hint of freedom.
Toward evening on the first day of the march he saw his old friends, August and Claus, who had previously enlisted in the artillery unit, for the first time. The young men of the privileged classes were more likely to be assigned to the artillery, which, though it required more muscle power, provided a ride rather than a trudge to the next destination. The artillery pieces were transported on caissons, and the caissons were drawn by horses, so the soldiers of the artillery rode to Hamburg on the caissons, rather than walking.
As August and Claus' battery passed Johann's company on the road, forcing the soldiers off the road to stand on its verge while the guns passed, the eyes of August and Claus met Johann's. August looked surprised and Claus looked startled. For his part, Johann had thought for some time that he would find August when he could, so he was less surprised. August waved with gustoâClaus a little less enthusiastically.
"See you in New York Colony!" August called out in genuine pleasure as the caissons passed.
Johann waved and called out in return, but what he said was lost in the sound of the creaking wheels of the caissons and muffled by the dust cloud rising off the road in the wake of the guns' passage.