MUSSOLINI AND THE AXEMAN’S JAZZ-1

2010 Words

MUSSOLINI AND THE AXEMAN’S JAZZ Sarajevo, 1914 Stone turrets and crenelated columns loomed on either side of the Archduke’s motorcade. The crowd parted before the open carriages, an indistinct blur of faces. Francis Ferdinand swallowed some of the unease that had been plaguing him all day: a bitter bile, a constant burn at the back of his throat. It was his fourteenth wedding anniversary. Sophie sat beside him, a bouquet of scarlet roses at her bosom. There Serbs and Croats were a friendly crowd; as the heir apparent of Austria-Hungary, Francis Ferdinand stood to give them an equal voice in his empire. Besides, Sophie was a Slav, the daughter of a noble Czech family. Surely his marriage to a northern Slav had earned him the sympathy of these southern ones. Yet the Archduke could not di

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