Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Cry Wolf

    Page 38
    Prev Next


      smell of him was like the taste of his mouth. She felt the softness of

      her own body crave the hardness of his and she pressed herself to

      him,

      finding pleasure in the pain of contact, in the bruising pressure of

      his mouth against her lips.

      She knew she was arousing emotions that soon would be beyond either of

      their control, and the knowledge made her reckless and bold.

      The thought occurred to her that she had it in her power to drive him

      demented with passion, and the idea aroused her further, and

      immediately she wanted to exercise that power.

      She heard his breathing roaring in her ears, then realized that it was

      not his it was her own, and each gust of it seemed to swell her chest

      until it must burst.

      It was so cramped in the cockpit of the car, and their movements were

      becoming wild and unrestrained. Vicky felt restricted and itching with

      constraint. She had never known this wildness before, and for a

      fleeting instant she remembered the skilful, gentle minuet of formal

      movements which had been her loving with Gareth Swales, and she

      compared it to this stormy meeting of passions; then the thought was

      borne away on the flood, on the need to be free of confinement.

      Outside the car, the chill of the desert night prickled the skin of her

      back and flanks and thighs, and she felt the fine golden hairs come

      erect on her forearms. He flapped out the bed-roll and spread it on

      the earth. Then he returned to get her, and the heat of his body was a

      physical shock. It seemed to burn with all the pent-up fires of his

      soul, and she pressed herself to it with complete abandon, delighting

      in the contrast of his burning flesh and the cool desert breeze upon

      her bare skin.

      Now at last there was nothing to prevent the range of her hands and she

      knew they were cold as ghost fingers on him, delighting to hear his

      gasp again at their touch. She laughed then, a hoarse throaty

      chuckle.

      "Yes." She laughed again, as he lifted her easily and dropped to his

      knees on the bed-roll, holding her against his chest.

      "Yes, Jake." She let the last restraint fly. "Quickly, quickly my

      darling: It was a raging, a roaring of all her senses. It was an

      aching, tumultuous storm that ended at last and afterwards the vast

      hissing silence of the desert was so frightening that she clung to him

      like a child and found to her amazement that she was weeping. the

      tears scalded her eyes and yet were as icy as the touch of frost upon

      her cheeks.

      General De Bono's first cautious but ponderous thrust across the

      Mareb River, into Ethiopia, met with a success that left him stunned.

      Ras Muguletul the Ethiopian commander in the north, offered only token

      resistance then withdrew his forty thousand men southwards to the

      natural mountain fortress of Ambo Aradam. Unopposed, De Bono drove the

      seventy miles to Adowa and found it deserted. Triumphantly he erected

      the monument to the fallin Italian warriors and thereby expunged the

      stain of defeat from the arms of Italy.

      The great civilizing mission had begun. The savage was being tamed,

      and introduced to the miracles of modern man amongst them the aerial

      bomb.

      The Royal Italian Air Force ranged the skies above the towering

      Ambas, reporting all troop movements and swooping down to bomb and

      machine-gun any concentrations. The Ethiopian forces were confused and

      scattered under their tribal commanders. There were half a dozen

      breaches in their line that a forceful commander could have exploited

      indeed even General De Bono sensed this and made another convulsive

      leap forward as far as Makale. However, here he stopped appalled at

      his own audacity, stunned by his own achievement.

      Ras Muguletu was skulking on Ambo Aradam with his forty thousand,

      while Ras Kassa and Ras Seyoum were struggling to move the great

      unwieldy masses of their two armies through the mountain passes to link

      up with the army of the Emperor on the shores of Lake Tona.

      They were disordered, vulnerable, ripe to be cut down like wheat and

      General De Bono closed his eyes, covered his brow with one hand and

      turned his head aside.

      History would never accuse him of recklessness and impetuosity.

      ROM GENERAL DE BONO COMMANDER OF THE ITALIAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE

      AT MA KALE TO BENITO MUSSOLINI PRIME MINISTER OF ITALY HAVING

      CAPTURED

      ADO WA AND MA KALE I CONSIDER MY IMMEDIATE OBJECTS HAVE BEEN ATTAINED

      STOP IT IS NOW VITALLY NECESSARY TO CONSOLIDATE THESE SUCCESSES' TO

      FORTIFY MY POSITION AGAINST ENEMY COUNTER ATTACK AND TO SECURE MY

      LINES

      OF SUPPLY AND COMMUNICATIONS." ROM BENITO MUSSOLINI PRIME MINISTER

      OF

      ITALY MINISTER OF WAR TO GENERAL DE BONO OFFICER COMMANDING THE

      ITALIAN

      EXPEDITIONARY FORCE IN AFRICA HIS MAJESTY WISHES AND I COMMAND YOU TO

      ADVANCE WITHOUT HESITATION ON AMBA ARA DAM AND BRING THE MAIN BODY OF

      THE ENENMY TO BATTLE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE STOP REPLY TO ME." ROM

      GENERAL DE BONO TO THE PRIME MINISTER OF ITALY GREETINGS AND

      FELICITATIONS I WISH TO POINT OUT TO YOUR EXELLENCY THAT THE

      OBJECTIVE

      AMBA ARA DAM IS TACTICALLY UNDESIRABLE ... THE TERRAIN FAVOURS AMBUSH

      CONDITION OF ROADS VERY POOR ... TRUST MY JUDGEMENT ... URGE YOUR

      EXCELLENCY TO RECONSIDER AND TO TAKE COGNIZANCE OF THE FACT THAT THE

      MILITARY SITUATION MUST TAKE PRECEDENCE OVER ALL POLITICAL

      CONSIDERATION." FROM BENITO MUSSOLINI TO MARSHAL DE BONO PREVIOUSLY

      OFFICER COMMANDING THE ITALIAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE IN AFRICA HIS

      MAJESTY ORDERS ME TO CONVEY HIS FELICITATIONS ON YOUR ELEVATION TO

      THE

      RANK OF MARSHAL OF THE ARMY AND TO THANK YOU FOR THE IMPECCABLE

      EXECUTION OF YOUR DUTY IN RECAPTURING ADO WA STOP WITH THE ATTAINMENT

      OF

      THIS OBJECTIVE I CONSIDER THAT YOUR MISSION IN EASTERN AFRICA HAS

      BEEN

      COMPLETED STOP YOU HAVE EARNED THE GRATITUDE OF THE NATION BY YOUR

      OBVIOUS MERITS AS A SOLDIER AND YOUR STEADFAST DISCHARGE OF YOUR DUTY

      AS A COMMANDER STOP YOU ARE REQUESTED TO HAND OVER YOUR COMMAND TO

      GENERAL PIE TRO BADOGLIO ON HIS IMMINENT ARRIVAL IN AFRICA..

      Marshal De Bono accepted both his promotion and his recall with such

      good grace that it could have been mistaken, by an uninformed observer,

      for profound relief. His departure for Rome was completed with such

      despatch as to avoid by a hair's breadth the semblance of indecorous

      haste.

      General Pietro Badoglio was a fighting soldier. He had staffed the

      headquarters before Adowa, although he had played no part in that

      debacle, and he was a veteran of Caporetto and Vittorio Veneto. He

      believed that the purpose of war was to crush the enemy as swiftly and

      as ruthlessly as was possible, with the use of any weapon at his

      disposal.

      He came ashore at Massawa with a furious impatience, angry with

      everything he found, and impatient of the policies and concepts of his

      predecessor, although in truth seldom had an incoming commander been

      handed such an enviable strategic situation.

      He
    inherited a huge, well-equipped army with a buoyant morale, in a

      commanding tactical position and backed by a magnificent network of

      communications and a logistics inventory that was alpine in

      proportions.

      The small but magnificently equipped airforce of the expedition was

      flying unopposed over the Ambo mountains, observing all troop movements

      and pouncing immediately on any Ethiopian concentrations.

      During one of the first dinners at the new headquarters, Lieutenant

      Vittorio Mussolini, the younger of the Duce's two sons, one of the

      dashing Regia Aeronautica aces, regaled his new commander with accounts

      of his sorties over the enemy highlands and Badoglio, who had not had

      close aerial support in any of his previous campaigns, was delighted

      with this new and deadly weapon. He listened transfixed to the young

      flier's descriptions of the effect of aerial bombardment particularly

      an account of an attack on a group of three hundred or more enemy

      horsemen led by a tall, dark-robed figure. The young Mussolini told

      him, "I released a single hundred-kilo bomb from an altitude of less

      than a hundred metres, and it fell precisely in the centre of the

      galloping horsemen. They opened like the petals of a flowering rose,

      and the dark-robed leader was thrown so high by the blast that he

      seemed to almost touch my wing-tip as I passed. It was a spectacle of

      great beauty and magnificence." Badoglio was happy that his new

      command included young men with such fire in their veins, and he leaned

      forward in his seat at the head of the table to peer down over the

      glittering silver and sparkling leaded crystal at the flier in his

      handsome blue uniform. The classical features and dark curly head of

      hair were the artist's conception of young Mars. Then he turned to the

      airforce

      Colonel who sat beside him.

      "Colonel, what is the opinion of your young men in the Regia

      Aeronautica? I have heard much argument for and against but I would be

      interested to have your opinion.

      Should we use the nitrogen mustard?"

      "I think I speak for all my young men." The Colonel sipped his wine

      and glanced for confirmation at the young ace who was not yet twenty

      years of age. "I think the answer must be yes, we must use every

      weapon available to us." Badoglio nodded. The thinking agreed with

      his own, and the next morning he ordered the canisters of mustard gas

      shipped from the warehouses of

      Massawa, where De Bono had been content to let them lie, and despatched

      them to every airfield where flights of the Regia Aeronautica were

      based. Thousands upon thousands of the wild tribesmen of Ethiopia

      would come to know the corrosive dew when later they endured

      bombardment by artillery and aerial attack with a stoicism greater than

      most European troops were able to muster yet they could never come to

      terms with this terrible substance that turned the open pastures of

      their mountain fastness to fields of terror. Barefoot, as most of them

      were, they were pathetically vulnerable to the silent insidious weapon

      that flayed the skin from their bodies, and then stripped the living

      flesh from the bone.

      This single decision was one of many made that day by the new

      commander, and signalled the change from De Bono's humbling, but not

      unkindly civilizing invasion, to the new concept of total war war with

      only one objective.

      MUSSOlini had wanted a hawk, and he had chosen well.

      The hawk stood in the centre of the lofty second-storey headquarters

      office at Asmara, He was too consumed with furious impatience to sit at

      the wide desk, and when he paced the tiled floor,

      his heels cracked on the ceramic like drum beats. The elasticity of

      his stride was that of a man far younger than sixty-five.

      He carried his head low on boxer's shoulders, thrusting his chin

      forward a heavy chin below a big shapeless round nose, a short-cropped

      grey mustache and a wide hard mouth.

      His eyes were deep sunken into dark cavities, like those of a corpse,

      but their glitter was alive and aware as he worked swiftly through the

      lists of his divisional and regimental commanders,

      assessing each by one criterion only, "Is he a fighting man?" Too

      often the answer was "no,", or at the least uncertain, so it was with a

      fierce pleasure that he recognized one who was without question a

      hard-fighting man on whom he could rely.

      "Yes," he nodded vehemently. "He is the only field commander who has

      displayed any initiative, who has made any attempt to come to grips

      with the enemy." He paused to lift his reading glasses to his eyes and

      glance again at the reports he held in his other hand. "He has fought

      one decisive action, inflicting almost thirty thousand casualties

      without loss himself. That in itself is an achievement that seems to

      have gone without suitable recognition. The man should have had a

      decoration, the order of St. Maurice and St. Lazarus at the least.

      Good men must be singled out and rewarded. Look at this this is

      typical!

      When he was aware that the enemy had armoured resources, he was soldier

      enough to lure that armour into a baited trap, to lead it skilfully and

      with cool courage on to his entrenched artillery. It was a bold and

      resourceful stroke for an infantry commander to make and it deserved to

      succeed. If only his artillery commander had been a man of equally

      steely nerves, he would have succeeded in luring the entire enemy

      armoured column to its total destruction. It was no fault of his that

      the artillery lost their nerve and opened fire prematurely." The

      General paused to focus his reading glasses on the large glossy

      photographic print which depicted Colonel Count Aldo Belli standing

      like a successful big game hunter on the carcass of the Hump. The

      shattered hull was pierced by shot and in the background lay half a

      dozen corpses in tattered shammas. These had been collected from the

      battlefield and tastefully arranged by Gino to give the photograph

      authenticity. Against his better judgement and his strong instincts of

      survival, Count Aldo Belli had returned to make these photographic

      records only after Major Castelani had assured him that the enemy had

      deserted the field. The Count had not wasted too much time about it,

      but had his photographs taken, urging Gino to haste, and when it had

      been done he had returned swiftly to his fortified position above the

      Wells of Chaldi and had not moved from there since. However, the

      photographs were an impressive addendum to his official report of the

      action.

      Now Badoglic, growled like an angry old lion. "Despite the

      incompetence of his junior officers, and there my heart aches for

      him,

      this man has wiped out half the enemy armour as well as half the

      opposing army." He hit the report fiercely with his reading glasses.

      "The man's a fire eater no question about it. I know one when I see

      one. A fire-eater. This kind of example must be encouraged good work

      must be rewarded. Send for him. Radio him to come in to headquarters

    &nb
    sp; immediately." As far as Count Aldo Belli was concerned, the campaign

      had come upon a not unpleasant hiatus.

      The camp at the Wells of Chaldi had been transformed by his engineers

      from an outpost of hell into a rather pleasant refuge, with functional

      amenities, such as ice making machines and a water-borne sewerage

      system. The de fences were now of sufficient strength to give him a

      feeling of security. The engineering as always was of the highest

      quality with extensive covered earthworks, and Castelani had laid out

      carefully over-lapping fields of fire, and barbed-wire de fences in

      depth.

      The hunting in the area was excellent by any standards, with game drawn

      to the water in the Wells from miles around. The sand-grouse in the

      evenings filled the heavens with the whistle of their wings, and

      wheeled in great dark flocks across the setting sun, affording

      magnificent sport.

      The bag was measured in grain bags of dead birds.

      In the midst of this pleasantly relaxed atmosphere, the new commanding

      officer's summons exploded like a 100 kilo aerial bomb.

      General Badoglio's reputation had preceded him. He was a notorious

      martinet, a man who could not be sidetracked from single-minded purpose

      by excuse or fabrication. He was insensitive to political influence or

      power considerations so much so that it was rumoured that he would have

      crushed the very Fascist movement itself with force if the issue had

      been put into his hands back in 1922. He had an almost psychic power

      to detect subterfuge, and to place a finger squarely on malingerers or

      lack-guts.

      They said his justice was swift and merciless.

      The shock to the Count's system was considerable. He had been singled

      out from thousands of brother officers to face this ogre's wrath for he

      could not convince himself that the small deviations from reality, the

      small artistic licences contained in his long,

      illustrated reports to De Bono had not been instantly discovered. He

      felt like a guilty schoolboy summoned to dire retribution behind the

      closed doors of the headmaster's study. The shock hit him squarely in

      the bowels, always his weak spot, bringing on a fresh onslaught of the

      malady first caused by the waters of Chaldi Wells, from which he had

      believed himself completely cured.

      It was twelve hours before he could summon the strength to be helped by

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026