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On
the other side of the conflict, the Southerners are exhausted.
They are fighting because they must defend their home soil, but the
enthusiasm is gone, along with the naive hope of formal recognition by
Great Britain and France. Too much of the Confederacy has been
captured, too many thousands of men killed and wounded, too many homes
and towns destroyed for anyone to feel they will have a total victory.
By now they are hoping for a partial gain of some manner of
independence, at least a grudging cessation of the hostilities so the
Yankees will just go away. Some sort of agreement is hoped for so
the people of Georgia and Tennessee and Virginia can return to a
semblance of peace and try to rebuilt what they have lost.
Florida is in an ironic position by 1864. Previously
considered a nice but nonessential sibling in the sisterhood of
Confederate states, Florida is the South's sole remaining largely
unconquered food-producing region east of the Mississippi, the main
breadbasket for the large Rebel armies fighting the Federal forces in
Georgia and Tennessee. Beef, in particular, is Florida's most
important contribution to the Confederate war effort, and thousands of
head of cattle are shipped northward by priority rail each month.
Florida's coastline is still somewhat important, with hidden
places remaining where the occasional small Rebel blockade runner can
bring out small quantities of cotton and run in equally small shipments
of foreign munitions and manufactured goods. These runs are not
productive enough to matter much in the overall war but do influence
local events in the peninsula. Generally speaking, however, the
U.S. Navy has made blockade running on the Florida coast much more
dangerous than it was the previous year.
In fact, the navy has been instrumental in transforming its
efforts in Florida from a backwater blockade to an offensive invasion at
several points along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts. Working closely
with the army authorities, naval operations have succeeded in enabling
Union forces to break up the food production capabilities in different
areas of Florida. More substantial invasions to capture the heart
of the state are being thrust ashore against numerically weaker
Confederate defenders.
But with all that effort and naval support, Tallahassee remains
the only Confederate state capital east of the Mississippi not captured
during the conflict. Each time the Federal forces have tried to
get close, they have been defeated by a ragtag rabble of the frontier
Floridian home guard along with some regular Confederate army units that
have been moved back into the state.
That is the situation that Peter Wake faces as he leads men through the
inhumanity and confusion of war. The conflict becomes continually
more complicated. This year of the war will find Wake making
decisions at sea that will bring him the unwelcome attention of his
superiors and decisions ashore that will have profound risks. Wake
will also have to make bittersweet decisions of the heart. But no
matter what, Wake will remain steadfast, and his decisions will be made
based upon that most simple point of character her has ingrained deep in
his soul: honor.


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