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    Cry Wolf

    Page 34
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    up into the soft underbelly of the hull. It blew the engine block off

      its seating, tore off the big front wheels like wings from a roast

      chicken, and stove in the steel floor of the hull with a great

      Thor's hammer stroke.

      If Gareth Swales's feet had been in contact with the steel floor of the

      hull, the shock would have been transmitted directly into the bones of

      his feet and legs, and he would have suffered that dreadful but

      characteristic wound of the tank man below the knees his legs would

      have been transformed into bags of shattered bone.

      He was, however, suspended half in and half out of the driver's hatch

      with both legs kicking frantically in the air, and the shock of the

      blast came up like carbon dioxide in a bottle of freshly opened

      champagne. He was the cork and he was shot out of the hatch, still

      kicking.

      The effect on the Ras was the same. He came out of the turret,

      propelled high by the blast and he met Gareth at the top of his

      trajectory. The two of them came down to earth simultaneously, with

      the Ras seated between Gareth's shoulder blades, and the wonder of it

      was that neither of them was impaled upon the war sword which went with

      them and finally pegged deep into the earth six inches from Gareth's

      ear as he lay face down and feebly tried to dislodge the Ras from his

      back.

      "I warn you, old chap," he managed to gasp. "One day you are going to

      go too far." The sound of oncoming engines, many of them and all

      roaring in high revolutions, made Gareth's efforts to dislodge the

      Ras more determined. He sat up spitting sand and blood from his

      crushed lips, and looked up to see the remaining Italian transports

      bearing down on them like the starting grid of the Le Mans Grand

      Prix.

      "Oh my God!" gasped Gareth, his scattered wits reassembling hastily,

      and he crawled frantically into the shattered and still smoking carcass

      of the Hump, beginning to shrink down out of sight before he realized

      that the Ras was no longer with him.

      "Rassey, you stupid old bastard come back, he shouted despairingly. The

      Ras, once again armed with his trusty broadsword,

      was staggering out on unsteady stork's legs, stunned by the shell burst

      but still fighting mad, and there was no doubting his intentions. He

      was going to take on the entire motorized column single-handed, and as

      he hurried to meet them, shouting a challenge, he loosened up with a

      few hissing two-handed cuts with the sword.

      Gareth had to duck under the swinging blade, going in low in a flying

      rugby tackle, to bring the old warrior down in an untidy heap.

      He dragged him, still shouting and struggling furiously, under cover of

      the broken steel hull, just as the first Italian truck roared past

      them. The pale-faced occupants paid them not the slightest attention.

      they were intent on one thing only and that was following their

      Colonel.

      "Shut up!" growled Gareth, as the Ras tried to provoke them with some

      of the foulest oaths in the Amharic language. Finally he had to hold

      the Ras down, wrap his sham ma around his head, and sit on it while the

      Italian Fiats thundered past, and the rolling clouds of dust spread

      over them as though driven by the khamsin.

      Once through the dust and confused stampede of trucks, Gareth thought

      he glimpsed the hump-backed shape of Priscilla the Pig, and he released

      the Ras for a moment to wave and shout, but the car disappeared almost

      instantly, hard on the trail of a lumbering Fiat,

      and Gareth heard the short crashing burst of the Vickers clearly, even

      above the thunder of many engines.

      Then suddenly they were all past, streaming away, the engine sounds

      fading, the dust settling and then there was another sound,

      faint yet but growing with every second.

      Although most of the Harari and Galla horsemen had long ago given up

      the pursuit in favour of the more enjoyable and profitable occupation

      of looting the capsized and damaged Italian trucks, a few hundred of

      the more hardy souls still flogged on their foundering mounts.

      This thin line of horsemen came sweeping forward, ululating and

      casually cutting down the Italian survivors from the destroyed trucks

      who fled before them on foot.

      "All right, Rassey." Gareth unwound the sham ma from around his head.

      "You can come out now. Call your boys up, and tell them to get us out

      of here." In the few moments of respite while the main body of

      motorized infantry came through the batteries, Major Castelani hurried

      from gun to gun, lashing with tongue and cane until he had contained

      the infectious panic of his gunners and had them under his hand

      again.

      Then out of the dust clouds, appearing at short pistol range as

      suddenly as a ghost ship, but with the Vickers machine gun in its

      turret crackling wickedly and the muzzle blast flickering in an angry

      throbbing red glow, was a second Ethiopian armoured car.

      It was enough to destroy the semblance of control that Castelani had

      forced heavy-handedly upon the gun crews.

      As the armoured car swung across their line at point-blank range,

      raking the exposed guns with a withering. burst of machine-gun fire,

      the loaders dropped their ready shells and almost knocked the layers

      from their seats in their anxiety to get behind the armoured shield of

      the gun. They all huddled there with their heads well down. The

      driver of the armoured car, after that one rapid pass down the front of

      the batteries, swung the vehicle abruptly back into the screen of

      dust.

      Jake had been just as startled by the encounter as were the gunners;

      at one moment he had been joyously tearing along after a fat

      wallowing

      Fiat, and at the next he had emerged from a cloud of dust to be

      confronted by the gaping muzzles of the big guns.

      "My God, Greg, "Jake shouted up at the boy in the turret.

      "We nearly ran right into them."

      "Volleyed and thundered do you remember the poem?"

      "Poetry, at a time like this?" growled Jake, and he gave Priscilla the

      throttle.

      "Where are we going?"

      "Home, and the sooner the quicker. That's a powerful argument they are

      pointing at us."

      "Jake-" Gregorius began to protest, when there was a bang and a flash

      that glowed briefly even through the shrouds of dust, and close beside

      the high turret passed a

      100 men. shell. The air slammed against their eardrums and the shriek

      of it made both of them flinch violently, the air.

      stank of the electric sizzle of its passing, and it burst half a mile

      beyond them in a tall tower of flame and dust.

      "Do you see what I mean?" asked Jake.

      "Yes, Jake oh yes, indeed As he spoke, the dust clouds that had

      covered them so securely now subsided and drifted aside, exposing them

      unmercifully to the attentions of the Italian guns, but revealed also

      was another tempting target. The Ethiopian cavalry were still coming

      on, and after a few futile volleys had burst around the tiny elusive

      shape of the speeding car, Castelani resigned himself to the


      limitations of his gunners and switched targets.

      "Shrapnel," he bellowed. "Load with shrapnel fuse for air burst."

      He hurried along the battery, repeating the order to each layer,

      emphasizing his orders with the cane. "New target. Massed horsemen.

      Range two thousand five hundred metres, fire at will." The Ethiopian

      ponies were small shaggy beasts, bred for sure-footed ascent of

      mountain paths, rather than sustained charges across open plains they

      had, moreover, been pastured for weeks now on the dry sour grass of the

      desert, and in consequence their strength was by this time almost

      expended.

      The first shrapnel burst fifty feet above the heads of the leading

      riders. It popped open like a gigantic pod of the cotton plant,

      blooming with sudden fearsome splendour the milky blue sky. It bloomed

      with a crack as though the sky had shattered, and instantly the air was

      filled with the humming, hissing knives of flying shrapnel.

      A dozen of the ponies went down under the first burst, pitching forward

      abruptly over their own heads and flinging their riders free.

      Then the sky was filled with the deadly cotton balls, and the

      continuous crack of the bursts sent the ponies wheeling and the riders

      crouching low on their withers or swinging out of the saddle to hang

      low under the bellies of their mounts. Here and there a braver soul

      would kick his feet free of the stirrups and pick up a dismounted

      comrade on each of the leathers, the gallant little ponies labouring

      under their triple burdens. Within seconds, the entire Ethiopian army

      its single remaining armoured vehicle and all its cavalry were in a

      retreat every bit as headlong as that of the motorized Italian column

      which was still on its way back to the Wells of Chaldi. The field was

      left entirely to Castelani's artillery and the stranded crew of the

      Hump.

      From the shelter of the shattered hull, Gareth Swales watched his hopes

      of quick rescue fading rapidly in the shape of the dwindling cavalry.

      "Don't blame them, not really," he told the Ras, and then he looked

      across at the speeding armoured car. Priscilla the Pig was rapidly

      overhauling the cavalry.

      "He saw us, - I know he did." There had "Him I do," he muttered.

      been a moment when Priscilla the Pig had passed within a quarter of a

      mile of them, had in fact turned directly towards them for a few

      moments. "Do you know something, Rassey old fellow, I do believe we

      are being set up for a couple of Patsys." He glanced at the Ras, who

      lay beside him like an old hunting dog that has been worked too hard;

      his chest laboured like a blacksmith's bellows, and his breathing

      whistled shrilly in his throat.

      "Better take those choppers out of your mouth, old chap or else you're

      going to swallow them. The fighting's over for the day. Take it nice

      and easy now. We've got a long walk home tonight." And Gareth

      Swales transferred all his attention back to the disappearing car.

      "Big-hearted Jake Barton is leaving us here and going home to spoon up

      the honey. Who was the chap that David pulled the same trick on? Come

      on, Rassey, you are the Old Testament expert wasn't it

      Uriah the Hittite?" He shook his head sadly. Gareth was already ready

      to believe the worst. "I take it very much amiss, Rassey, I can tell

      you.

      Probably have done exactly the same myself, mind you but I do take it

      amiss gaming from a fine upright citizen like Jake Barton." The Ras

      had not listened to a word of it. He was the only man in the two

      armies for whom the battle had not ended.

      He was just having a short rest, as behave a warrior of his advanced

      years. Now, with a single bound, he was on his feet again,

      snatching up his sword and heading directly for the centre of the

      Italian batteries. Gareth was taken completely off balance, and the

      Ras had covered fifty yards of the necessary two thousand to the enemy

      positions before Gareth could overtake him.

      It was unfortunate that one of the Italian gun-layers had his

      binoculars focused on the derelict hull of the Hump at that moment.

      The belligerence of the Italian gunners was in inverse proportion to

      the number and proximity of the enemy and all of them were giddy with

      elation at the total and unexpected victory that had dropped into their

      laps.

      The first shell dropped close beside the broken hull of the Hump,

      as Gareth caught up with the Ras. Gareth stooped and picked up a

      rounded stone, about the size of a cricket ball.

      "Frightfully sorry, old chap," he panted, as he cupped the stone in his

      right hand. "But we really can't go on like this." He made allowance

      for the brittle old bone of the Ras's skull, and with the stone he

      tapped him carefully, almost tenderly, above the ear, on the polished

      black bald curve of the Ras's pate.

      As the Ras dropped, Gareth caught him, one arm under his knees and the

      other around the shoulders, as though he was a sleeping child. The

      shells were falling heavily about him as Gareth ran back for cover,

      carrying the Ras's unconscious form across his chest.

      Jake Barton heard the crumping explosion of the shells, and shouted up

      at Gregorius, "What are they shooting at now?" Gregorius climbed

      higher out of the turret and peered back. The crushed hull of the Hump

      would have been unnoticed at that range, just another speck like a

      clump of camel-thorn or an amorphous pile of black rock.

      Indeed, both men had looked at it fifty times in the last few minutes

      without recognizing it, but the shell bursts, which began to leap about

      it in fleeting graceful ostrich feathers of dust and smoke, drew

      Gregorius's eye immediately.

      "My grandfather!" he cried . anxiously. "They have been hit, Jake."

      Jake swung the car and halted it, clambering out of the hatch, blowing

      dust from the lens of his binoculars and then focusing them. The

      picture of the destroyed car leaped into close-up and he recognized

      instantly the two distant figures, one in tailored tweeds, the other in

      flowing robes and swirling skirts; the two of them were locked together

      breast to breast and for an unbelieving moment

      Jake thought they were doing a Strauss waltz in the midst of an

      artillery barrage. Then he saw Gareth lift the Ras off the ground and

      stagger with him to the shelter of the overturned car.

      "We must rescue them, Jake," Gregorius exclaimed passionately.

      "They will be killed out there, if we do not." Perhaps it was the

      telepathic transfer of Gareth Swales's suspicions, but Jake experienced

      the sudden guilty prick of temptation. At that moment he knew he

      loved

      Vicky Camberwell, and there was an easy way to clear the field.

      "Jake!" Gregorius called again, and suddenly Jake felt himself so

      sickened by his own treacherous thoughts that there was a hollow

      nauseous feeling in the centre of his gut, and he felt the swift flow

      of saliva from under his tongue.

      "Let's go," he said, and dropped down into the driver's hatch. He

      swung Priscilla the Pig in a tight skidding turn and ran straight for


      the forest of shell-bursts.

      They drew no fire, the Italians were concentrating on the stationary

      target and they seemed to be making better practice as they figured the

      range. It was a matter of seconds before the Hump took a direct hit,

      and Jake pressed the throttle flat to the floorboards, but Priscilla

      the Pig chose this moment to show her true nature. He felt her baulk,

      and the note of her engine changed momentarily, missing and stuttering,

      power falling off then suddenly she picked up again and roared onwards

      at full power.

      "Good little darling. "Jake peered ahead through the visor, and swung

      slightly out to the left, to come in under cover of the Italians"

      own shell-bursts and the capsized hull of the Hump.

      A shell burst directly ahead, and Jake weaved the big car expertly

      around the gaping smoking crater, pulled in sharply and spun around to

      a sliding halt, facing back the way he had come, ready for a quick

      pull-away. He was hard up under cover of the destroyed hull, partially

      screened from the Italians, and ten paces from where Gareth Swales was

      sitting holding the Ras's frail body on his lap.

      "Gary!" yelled Jake, sticking his head out of the hatch, and

      Gareth looked up at him with a startled unbelieving expression. He had

      been so deafened by shell-bursts that he had not realized that Jake had

      come back for him. Jake had to shout again.

      "Come on, damn you to hell," and this time Gareth moved with alacrity.

      He picked up the Ras like a bundle of dirty laundry and ran with him to

      the car. A shell burst so close that it almost knocked him off his

      feet, and stones and clouds of earth splattered against the armoured

      steel.

      However, Gareth kept his feet and handed up the Ras to the willing

      hands and loving care of his grandson.

      "Is he all right?" Greg demanded anxiously.

      "Hit by a stone, he'll be all right," Gareth grunted, and leaned for an

      instant against the side of the car, his breathing sobbing painfully in

      his throat, his hair and mustache thick with white dust,

      and the sweat cutting deep wet runners down his filth-caked cheeks.

      He looked up at Jake. "I thought you weren't coming back," he

      croaked.

      "It crossed my mind." Jake reached down and took his hand. He boosted

      him up the side of the car, and Gareth held his hand for a second

      longer than was necessary, squeezing slightly.

     


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