Chapter 274: Bucaramanga: The Key to the Northeast
Krugger turned to his adjutant, his expression already set.
"Tell the men to prepare the horses," he said. "We leave for Medellín tonight."
He cast one last glance toward the map.
"If the Spanish wish to hide behind the walls of Honda, let them. They have focused so much on denying us the river that they have left the road to Maracaibo wide open."
A faint, dry note entered his voice.
"Let them sit in their fortress and rot. We shall take their last great port."
He paused, then added more quietly, almost as a calculation spoken aloud:
"Once the port is ours, we may import arms freely—and sell Carlos’s goods abroad. That will give us the funds for the next campaign. We will also need more people. This may serve as an opportunity to bring in new settlers."
—
Krugger departed that same day, leaving a trusted officer in command of the defenses of Mompox.
The journey to Medellín was swift, but it did little to ease the strain.
Only upon arrival did he allow himself a moment to breathe.
Two months.
Two months under constant bombardment. For a man of sixty-five, it was no small matter. Even for one long accustomed to war, the toll was undeniable. Fatigue had settled deep into his bones, and though he would not admit it openly, it followed him with every step.
He made his way toward the mansion that now served as the town hall.
—
Krugger collapsed into a heavy leather chair in the command room.
His boots were still caked with the dried mud of the Magdalena. His joints burned with a steady, relentless ache that no amount of brandy could fully dull. The strain of command—of constant vigilance—had carved itself into him.
"General," came a careful voice.
A young Westphalian officer, Dieter, stepped forward and laid a map upon the desk.
"You should rest. The physicians insist—"
"The physicians," Krugger interrupted, his voice rough, "are not fighting a war on and unknow continent, Dieter."
He shifted slightly in the chair, wincing despite himself.
"If I sleep, the Spanish may choose that moment to strike."
Dieter hesitated.
He nodded, but his concern did not fade.
In truth, his worry extended beyond the old general’s health. It was something deeper—something neither Krugger nor Carlos seemed willing to acknowledge.
On paper, the army belonged to Carlos.
In reality, it held together because of Krugger.
The Germans trusted him—he was one of their own, a Prussian officer formed in discipline and order. The mestizo troops trusted him as well—for he had trained them, shaped them, given them purpose within the ranks.
But without him...
Dieter knew what would follow.
Division.
The Germans would look to one of their own. The mestizos would do the same. No matter who took command, one side would feel slighted. And from that resentment, conflict would grow.
It was the quiet weakness of a mixed army—one that functioned well under a single unifying figure, but risked fracture the moment that figure disappeared.
Krugger had not seen it.
Or perhaps he had chosen to ignore it.
Carlos, for his part, seemed equally unconcerned.
Dieter exhaled softly.
He said nothing.
Not yet.
There would be time enough to raise such concerns—once their immediate objective was secured.
Maracaibo came first.
Still, the thought lingered.
And with it, a quiet unease about the future.
—
As Krugger rested, the door opened.
Carlos entered without ceremony.
"Father-in-law," he said, his tone measured. "I have heard about Honda. But there is... something favorable in it."
Krugger opened his eyes slowly, momentarily disoriented. For a brief instant, the exhaustion showed plainly.
Then recognition returned, and with it, a faint smile.
"What is it?" he asked.
Carlos stepped closer, a sharper energy about him.
"If we take Maracaibo," he said, "we can threaten the supply lines to Bogotá directly."
He gestured lightly, as if tracing the map in his mind.
"The west is already in the hands of the fanatics. The east is ours. With Maracaibo under our control, any effort to move resources into the interior becomes far more difficult."
A slight pause.
"And from there, we may intercept what little does pass."
His expression hardened—not with anger, but with certainty.
"Once Maracaibo falls, the rest of New Granada becomes... considerably easier to take."
Krugger watched him in silence for a moment.
The exhaustion remained—but beneath it, calculation stirred once more.
The war, it seemed, was entering its next phase.
Krugger’s eyes brightened at once.
"That is good," he said, leaning forward despite the weight in his limbs. "At last, a path to stability. A state that does not live under constant threat—neither from the Spanish Crown nor from every opportunist beyond it."
He paused, his gaze returning to the map.
"But we must account for Honda. For now, it is too well fortified. To take it would cost us thousands—and even if we succeeded, there remains Bogotá behind it. Thousands more troops. Perhaps tens of thousands."
He shook his head slightly.
"At present, it is not worth the price."
He rested one hand against the table.
"As a political center, Bogotá has value only so long as its voice can reach the people. Without the river—and without the coast—the Viceroy’s orders are little more than echoes in an empty cathedral."
Krugger bent over the map, his breathing heavier now, though his eyes retained their sharpness.
"To secure what we have gained, we must turn the Magdalena into a one-way passage."
His finger traced the river northward.
"We fortify Nare and Puerto Boyacá. Place our batteries on the high ground overlooking the narrows. If the Spanish attempt to send vessels down from Honda, they will sail into a slaughterhouse."
A faint, grim certainty entered his tone.
"We do not need to take their fortress. We need only ensure that nothing leaves it."
He coughed, turning slightly aside. A handkerchief rose to his lips.
For a brief instant, a stain of red appeared.
He folded the cloth at once and set it aside, as though it were of no consequence.
"Maracaibo must be ours before the new Viceroy arrives," he continued, his voice steady once more. "If he is as capable as he has shown, his first act will be to cut the flow of contraband."
His gaze hardened.
"And without those resources... we are finished."
A short pause.
"But if we take Maracaibo, the situation changes. We would not require Spain’s permission to trade. We would not even need to send a fleet. Other European powers will come to us of their own accord."
He tapped another point on the map.
"But before that—we must secure Bucaramanga. Without it, the road to Maracaibo remains closed."
He looked up at Carlos.
"What do you know of the place?"
Carlos had noticed the handkerchief.
For a moment, his attention lingered there—a slight frown forming—but the question pulled him back. He shifted his focus to the map.
"I have been there," he said. "It is, in truth, an indigenous settlement—more than a town in the Spanish sense. The people there have begun to align themselves with New Granada, largely for economic reasons."
He traced the plateau with his finger.
"To take it by force would be costly. We would lose more than we gain. But if we reach an agreement—if we annex it peacefully—we not only preserve our strength... we gain a secure position on the plateau."
Krugger gave a faint nod.
"Just so," he replied, his voice lower now. He slipped the folded handkerchief into his pocket, out of sight. "But ’peaceful’ is a flexible word in these mountains."
He met Carlos’s gaze.
"We require more than their land. We require their loyalty. If they open their gates because they believe in your cause—then they become more than subjects. They become our eyes in the highlands."
Carlos leaned further over the table, studying the terrain.
"Bucaramanga is the key to the northeast," he said. "If we do not have to break the door, we may use what lies within to advance."
A brief pause, then his tone sharpened slightly.
"There is another factor. Bucaramanga is a town of laborers—but it stands in the shadow of Girón."
His expression hardened.
"The elites of Girón treat the people of the plateau as inferiors—as tools. If we offer the leaders of Bucaramanga something different..."
He looked up.
"If we promise that they will no longer answer to the hidalgo families of Girón—that they will stand as an independent province under our protection..."
A faint, controlled smile appeared.
"They will give us the keys themselves."
Krugger remained silent for a moment, studying Carlos with a more measured expression.
"Yet you have only just come to terms with the elites," he said at last. "Would they not react... poorly, if you now move to elevate an indigenous group at the expense of one of their own?"
The question lingered in the air.
Carlos did not hesitate.
On the contrary, a faint smile appeared—controlled, deliberate.
"That," he replied, "is precisely what I intend."
He straightened slightly, though his eyes remained fixed on the map.
"I have already made it clear to them that I can create new elites if necessary. For now, they believe it is only a threat—something theoretical."
A brief pause.
"But if I continue to favor them without limit, their arrogance will grow. They will forget the conditions under which they hold their position."
He tapped the region of Bucaramanga lightly.
"What better place," he continued, "to give substance to that threat... than here?"
Krugger watched him without interruption.
"To raise an indigenous elite in Bucaramanga," Carlos went on, "serves more than one purpose. It demonstrates that loyalty—not lineage—is the foundation of power. And it reminds the old families that their position is not permanent."
His tone remained calm, almost matter-of-fact.
"Once such an example exists, those same families will be forced to restrain themselves. They will work harder to remain useful—if only to avoid being replaced."
Another pause.
"And beyond that, it serves as a message. To other settlements. To other communities who have long remained outside the system."
He looked up.
"If they see that alignment with us brings not subjugation, but elevation... they will come willingly."
The room fell quiet again.
Krugger exhaled slowly, his expression thoughtful.
Carlos’s plan was not merely military.
It was structural.