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    Cry Wolf

    Page 43
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      voiced precisely the Count's own feelings, feelings which had over the

      last few weeks" desperate adventures, become deep-seated convictions.

      He struggled up on one elbow, lifted his noble head with its anguished

      brow and looked at the little sergeant.

      "Gino," he said. "You are a philosopher."

      "You do me too much honour, my Count."

      "No! No! I mean it. You have a certain gutter wisdom, the

      perceptions of the streets, a peasant philosopher." Gino would not

      himself have put it quite that way, but he bowed his head in

      acquiescence.

      "I have been unfair to my brave boys," said the Count, and his whole

      demeanour changed, becoming radiant and glowing with good will,

      like that of a reprieved prisoner. "I have thought only of myself my

      own glory, my own honour, recklessly I have plunged into danger,

      without reckoning the cost. Ignoring the terrible risk that I might

      leave my brave boys without a leader orphans without a father." Gino

      nodded fervently. "Who could ever replace you in their hearts, or at

      their head?"

      "Gino." The Count clapped a fatherly hand to his shoulder.

      "I must be less selfish in the future."

      "My Count, you cannot know how much pleasure it gives me to hear it,"

      cried Gino, and he trembled with relief as he thought of long,

      leisurely days spent in peace and security behind the earthworks and

      fortifications of Chaldi camp.

      "Your duty is to command!"

      "Plan! said the Count.

      "Direct!" said Gino.

      "I fear it is my destiny."

      "Your God-given duty." Gino backed him up, and as the Count sank down

      once more upon the cot, he fell with renewed vigour upon the injured

      shoulder.

      "Gino," said the Count at last. "When last did we speak of your

      wages?"

      "Not for many months, my Count."

      "Let us discuss it now," said

      Aldo Belli comfortably. "You are a jewel without price. Say, another

      hundred lire a month."

      "The sum of one hundred and fifty had crossed MY

      mind, murmured Gino respectfully.

      The Count's new military philosophy was received with unbounded

      enthusiasm by his officers, when he explained it to them that evening

      in the mess tent, over the liqueurs and cigars. The idea of leading

      from the rear seemed not only to be practical and sensible, but

      downright inspired. This enthusiasm lasted only until they learned

      that the new philosophy applied not to the entire officer cadre of

      the

      Third Battalion, but to the Colonel only. The rest of them were to be

      given every opportunity to make the supreme sacrifice for God, country

      and Benito Mussolini. At this stage the new philosophy lost much

      popular support.

      In the end, only three persons stood to benefit from the rearrangement

      the Count, Gino and Major Luigi Castelani.

      The Major was so overjoyed to learn that he now had what amounted to

      unfettered command of the battalion that for the first time in many

      years he took a bottle of grappa to his tent that evening, and sat

      shaking his head and chuckling fruitily into his glass.

      The following morning's burning, blinding headache that only grappa can

      produce, combined with his new freedom, made the Major's grip on the

      battalion all the more ferocious. The new spirit spread like a fire in

      dry grass. Men cleaned their rifles, burnished their buttons and

      closed them to the neck, stubbed out their cigarettes and trembled a

      little while Castelani rampaged through the camp at

      Chaldi, dealing out duties, ferreting out the malingerers and

      stiffening spines with the swishing cane in his right hand.

      The honour guard that fell in that afternoon to welcome the first

      aircraft to the newly constructed airfield were so beautifully turned

      out with polished leather and glittering metal, and their drill was so

      smartly performed, that even Count Aldo Belli noticed it, and commended

      them warmly.

      The aircraft was a three-engined Caproni bomber. It came lumbering in

      from the northern skies, circled the long runway of raw earth, and then

      touched down and raised a long rolling storm of dust with the wash of

      its propellers.

      The first personage to emerge from the doorway in the belly of the

      silver fuselage was the political agent from Asmara, Signor Antolino,

      looking more rumpled and seedy than ever in his creased, ill-fitting

      tropical linen suit. He raised his straw panama. in reply to the

      Count's flamboyant Fascist salute, and they embraced briefly, the man

      stood low on the social and political scale before the Count turned to

      the pilot.

      "I wish to ride in your machine." The Count had lost interest in his

      tanks, in fact he found himself actively hating them and their

      Captain. In sober mood he had refrained from executing that officer,

      or even packing him off back to Asmara. He had contented himself with

      a full page of scathing comment in the man's service report, knowing

      that this would destroy his career. A complete and satisfying

      vengeance, but the Count was finished with tanks. Now he had an

      aircraft. So much more exciting and romantic.

      "We will fly over the enemy positions," said the Count, at a

      respectable height." By which he meant out of rifle shot.

      "Later," said the political agent, with such an air of authority that

      the Count drew himself up in a dignified manner, and gave the man a

      haughty stare before which he should have quailed.

      "I carry personal and urgent orders from General Badogho's own lips,"

      said the agent, completely unaffected by the stare.

      The Count's stiffly dignified when altered immediately.

      "A glass of wine, then," he said affably, and took the " man's arm

      leading him to the waiting Rolls.

      The General stands now before Ambo Aradam. He has the main

      concentration of the enemy at bay upon the mountain, and under heavy

      artillery and aerial bombardment. At the right moment he will fall

      upon them and the outcome cannot be in doubt."

      "Quite right," nodded the Count sagely; the prospect of fighting a

      hundred miles away to the north filled him with the reflected warmth of

      the glory of Italian arms.

      "Within the next ten days, the broken armies of the Ethiopians will be

      attempting to withdraw along the road to Dessie and to link up with

      Baile Selassie at Lake Tona but the Sardi Gorge is like a dagger in

      their ribs. You know your duty." The Count nodded again, but warily.

      This was much closer to home.

      "I have come now to make the final contact with the Ethiopian Ras who

      will declare for us, the Emperor-designate of Ethiopia our secret ally.

      It is necessary to coordinate our final plans, so that his defection

      will cause the greatest possible confusion amongst the ranks of the

      enemy, and his forces can be best deployed to support your assault up

      the gorge to Sardi and the Dessie road."

      "Ah!" the Count made a sound which signified neither agreement nor

      dissent.

      "My men, working in the mountains, have arranged a meeting with the

     
    Emperor-designate. At this meeting we will make the promised payment

      that secures the Ras's loyalty." The agent made a moue of distaste.

      "These people!" and he sighed at the thought of a man who would sell

      his country for gold. Then he dismissed the thought with a

      J wave of his hand. "The meeting is fixed for tonight. I have brought

      one of my men with me who will act as a guide.

      The place arranged is approximately eighty kilometres from here and we

      will move out at sundown which will give us ample time to reach the

      rendezvous before the appointed hour of midnight."

      "Very well, the Count agreed. "I will place transport at your

      disposal." The agent held up a hand. "My dear Colonel, you will be

      the leader of the delegation to meet the Ras."

      "Impossible." The Count would not so swiftly abandon his new

      philosophy. "I have my duties here to prepare for the offensive." Who

      knew what new horrors might lurk out in the midnight wastes of the

      Danakil?

      "Your presence is essential to the success of the negotiations your

      uniform will impress the-" My shoulder, I am suffering from an injury

      which makes travel most inconvenient I shall send one of my officers.

      A Captain of tanks, the uniform is truly splendid."

      "No. "The agent shook his head.

      "I have a Major a man of great presence."

      "The General expressly instructed that you should lead the delegation.

      If you doubt this,

      your radio operator could establish immediate contact with Asmara."

      The

      Count sighed, opened his mouth, closed it again, and then regretfully

      abandoned his vow to remain within the perimeter of Chaldi camp for the

      duration of the campaign.

      "Very well," he conceded. "We will leave at sundown." The Count was

      not about to plunge recklessly into danger again. The convoy which

      left Chaldi that evening in the fiery afterglow of the sunset was led

      by two CV.3 cavalry tanks, then followed four truck-loads of

      infantry,

      and behind them the remaining two tanks made up a formidable rear

      guard.

      The Rolls was sandwiched neatly in the centre of this column. The

      political agent sat on the seat beside the Count, with his feet firmly

      on the heavy wooden case on the floorboards. The guide that the agent

      had produced from the fuselage of the Caproni was a thin, very dark

      Galla, with one opaque eyeball of blue jelly caused by tropical

      ophthalmia which gave him a particularly villainous cast of features.

      He was dressed in a once-white sham ma that was now almost black with

      filth, and he smelled like a goat that had recently fought a polecat.

      The Count took one whiff of him and clapped his perfumed handkerchief

      to his nose.

      "Tell the man he is to ride in the leading tank with the

      Captain," and a malicious expression gleamed in his dark eyes as he

      turned to the Captain of tanks. "In the tank, do you hear? On the

      seat beside you in the turret." They drove without lights, jolting

      slowly across the moon-silver plains under the dark wall of the

      mountains.

      There was a single horseman waiting for them at the rendezvous, a dark

      shape in the darker shadows of a massive camel-thorn. The agent spoke

      with him in Amharic and then turned back to the Count.

      "The Ras suspects treachery. We are to leave the escort here and go on

      alone with this man."

      "No," cried the Count. "No! No! I refuse - I simply refuse." It

      took almost ten minutes of coaxing, and the repeated mention of General

      Badoglio's name, to change the Count's stance. Miserably, the Count

      climbed back into the Rolls, and Gino looked sadly at him from the

      front seat as the unescorted, terribly vulnerable car moved out into

      the moonlight, following the dark wild horseman on his shaggy pony.

      In a rocky valley that cut into the towering bulk of the mountains,

      they had to abandon the Rolls and complete the journey on foot. Gino

      and Giuseppe carrying the wooden case between them, the

      Count with a drawn pistol in his hand, they staggered on up the

      treacherous slope of rocks and scree.

      In a hidden saucer of rock, around the rim of which were posted the

      shadowy, hostile figures of sentries, was a large leather tent.

      Around it were tethered scores of the wild, shaggy ponies and the

      interior was lit by smoky paraffin lamps and crowded with rank upon

      rank of squatting warriors. Their faces were so black in the dim light

      that only the whites of their eyes and the gleam of their teeth showed

      clearly.

      The political agent strode ahead of the Count, down the open aisle, to

      where a robed figure reclined on a pile of cushions under a pair of

      lanterns. He was flanked by two women, still very young, but

      full-blown heavy-breasted, and pale-skinned, dressed in brilliant

      silks, both of them wearing crudely wrought silver jewellery dangling

      from their ears and strung about their long graceful necks. Their eyes

      were dark and bold, and at another time and in different circumstances

      the Count's interest would have been intense.

      But now his knees felt rubbery, and his heart thumped like a war drum.

      The political agent had to lead him forward by the arm.

      "The Emperor-designate," whispered the agent, and the Count looked down

      on the bloated, effeminate dandy who lolled upon the cushions, his fat

      fingers covered with rings and his eyelids painted like those of a

      woman. "Ras Kullah, of the Gallas."

      "Make the correct reply,"

      instructed the Count, his voice hoarse with strain, and the Ras eyed

      the Count with apprehension as the agent made a long flowery speech.

      The Ras was impressed with the imposing figure in its sinister black

      uniform. In the lamplight, the insignia glittered and the heavy

      enamelled cross on its ribbon of watered silk blinked like a beacon.

      The Ras's eyes dropped to the jewelled dagger and ivory-handled pistol

      at the Count's belt, the weapons of a rich and noble warrior and he

      looked up again into the Count's eyes. They also glittered with an

      almost feverish fanatical light, the Count's regular features were

      flushed angrily and a murderous scowl furrowed his brow. He breathed

      like a fighting bull. The Ras mistook the signs of fatigue and extreme

      fear for the warlike rage of a berserker. He was impressed and awed.

      Then his attention was drawn irresistibly away from the Count, as

      Gino and Giuseppe staggered into the tent, sweating in the lamplight,

      and bowed over the heavy chest they carried between them. Ras Kullah

      hoisted himself into a kneeling position, with his soft paunch bulging

      forward under the sham ma and his eyes glittering like those of a

      reptile.

      With an abrupt command, he cut short the agent's speech, and beckoned

      the two Italians to him. With relief they deposited the heavy chest

      before the Ras, amid a hubbub of voices from the dark mass of watchers.

      They pressed forward eagerly, the better to see the contents of the

      chest, as the Ras prised open the clips with the jewelled dagger from

      his belt, and lifted the lid with his fat pale hands.

    &
    nbsp; The chest was closely packed with paper-wrapped rolls, like white

      candles. The Ras lifted one and slit the paper cover with the point of

      his dagger. There was a silent explosion of flat metal discs from the

      package. They cascaded into the Ras's ample lap, glittering golden and

      bright in the lantern light, and he cooed with pleasure, scooping a

      handful of the coins. Even the Count, with his own vast personal

      fortune, was impressed by the contents of the chest.

      "By Peter and the Virgin," he muttered.

      "English sovereigns," the agent affirmed. "But not a high price for a

      land the size of France." The Ras giggled and tossed a handful of

      coins to his nearest followers, and they fought and squabbled over the

      coins on their hands and knees. Then the Ras looked up at the Count

      and patted the cushions, grinning happily, motioning him to be

      seated,

      and the Count responded gratefully. The long walk up the valley and

      his fevered emotions had weakened his legs. He sank down on the

      cushions and listened to the long list of further demands that the Ras

      had prepared.

      "He wants modern rifles, and machine guns," translated the agent.

      "What is our position?" asked the Count.

      "Of course we cannot give them to him. In a month's time, or a year,

      he may be an enemy not an ally. You cannot be certain with these

      Gallas."

      "Say the correct thing."

      "He wants your assurance that the female agent provocateur and the two

      white brigands in the Harari camp are delivered to him for justice as

      soon as they are captured."

      "There is no reason against this?"

      "Indeed, it will save us trouble and embarrassment."

      "What will he do with them they are responsible for the torture and

      massacre of some of my brave lads?" The Count was recovering his

      confidence, and the sense of outrage returned to him.

      "I have eye-witness accounts of the terrible atrocities committed on

      helpless prisoners of war.

      The wanton shooting of bound prisoners justice must be done.

      They must meet retribution." The agent grinned without mirth. "I

      assure you, my dear Count, that in the hands of Ras Kullah they will

      meet a fate far more terrible than you would imagine in your worst

      nightmares," and he turned back to the Ras and said in Amharic, "You

      have our word on it. They are yours to do with as you see fit." The

      Ras smiled, like a fat golden cat, and the tip of his tongue ran across

     


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