Страница 70 из 116
Rolls.
The temptation to intervene now overwhelmed Jake. He knew it was not
the correct tactical moment, but he thought, "The hell with it, I'm not
a general, and those poor bastards out there need help." He shoved his
right foot down hard on the throttle and the engine bellowed, but
before he could pull forward and run at the bank, he was forestalled
by
Gareth Swales. He had been watching Jake, and the play of emotion over
his face was plain to read. At the moment he revved the engine, Gareth
swung the front end of the Hump across his bows, blocking him
effectively.
"I say, old chap, don't be an idiot," Gareth called across the narrow
space. "Calm the savage breast, you'll spoil the whole show."
"Those poor, Jake shouted back angrily.
"They've got to take their chances. "Gareth cut him short.
"I told you once before your sentimental old-fashioned ideas would get
us both into trouble." At this stage the argument was drowned by the
Ras. He was standing tall in the turret above Gareth. He had armed
himself with the broad, two-handed war sword, and now the excitement
became too much for him to bear longer in silence. He let out a series
of shrill ululating war cries, and swung the sword in a great hissing
circle around his head both the silver blade and his brilliant set of
teeth catching the sun and flashing like semaphores.
He punctuated his shrill war cries with wild kicks at his driver,
urging him in heated Amharic to have at the enemy, and Gareth ducked
and twisted out of the way of his flying feet.
"A bunch of maniacs!" protested Gareth as he dodged.
"I've got myself mixed up with a bunch of maniacs!"
"Major
Swales!" shouted Gregorius, unable to stay out of the argument a
moment longer. "My grandfather orders you to advance!"
"You tell your grandfather to-" but Gareth's reply was cut short as a
foot caught him in the ribs.
"Advance!" shouted Gregorius.
"Come on, for chrissake," yelled Jake.
"Yaahooo!" hooted the Ras, and swung around in the turret to wave on
his men at arms. They needed no further invitation. In a loose mob,
they spurred their ponies past the stymied cars and, brandishing their
rifles above their heads, robes streaming in the wind like battle
ensigns, they lunged up the steep bank into the open and galloped
furiously on to the flank of the scattered Italian column.
"Oh my God," sighed Gareth. "Every man a bloody general-"
"Look!"
shouted Jake, pointing back down the course of the dry river-bed, and
they all fell abruptly silent at the spectacle.
It seemed as though the very earth had opened, disgorgeing rank upon
rank of wildly galloping horsemen. Where a moment before the sweep of
land below the mountains had been empty and silent, now it swarmed with
men and horses, hundreds upon hundreds of them, dashing headlong upon
the lumbering Italian column.
The dust hung over it all, rolling forward like the fog off a winter
sea, shrouding the sun, so that horses and machines were dark infernal
shapes below the sombre clouds, and the ruddy sun glinted dully on the
steel of rifle and sword.
"That does it," Gareth agreed bitterly, and reversed his car to clear
Jake's front, before swinging away, engine roaring and the wheels
spi
Jake turned wide of the other car and took the bank at an angle to
lessen the gradient, and the two cumbersome machines burst out into the
plain, wheel to wheel.
Before them was the open flank of massed soft-ski
tempting a target as they had ever been offered in their long and
warlike careers. The two iron ladies swept forward together,
and it seemed to Jake that there was a new tone to the deep engine note
as though they sensed that once again they were fulfilling the true
reason for their existence. Jake glanced quickly at the Hump as she
sailed along beside him. Her angular steelwork, with its flat abrupt
surfaces from which rose the tall turret, still gave her the ugly
old-maidish silhouette, but there was a new majesty in the way she
plunged forward her bright Ethiopian colours fluttered gaily as a
cavalry pe
earth like the hooves of a thoroughbred. Beneath him, Priscilla drove
forward as gamely, and Jake felt a warm flood of affection for his two
old ladies.
"Have at them, girls!" he shouted aloud, and Gareth Swales, head
protruding from the driver's hatch of the Hump, turned towards him.
There was a freshly lit cheroot clamped in the corner of his mouth,
seeming to have sprouted there miraculously of its own accord, and
Gareth gri
"Nob Xegitind carbomndum!" Jake caught the words faintly above the
roar of wind and motor, then turned his full attention back to
controlling the racing machine, and bringing her as swiftly as possible
into the gaping breach in the Italian line.
Abruptly the pattern of movement ahead of him changed. The exultantly
pursuing Italian warriors had realized belatedly that the roles had
been neatly switched.
The Count picked up the horseman in the sight, and led off just a
touch, a hair's breadth, for the Marmlicher was a high-velocity rifle
and the range was not more than a hundred metres.
He saw the hit clearly, the man lurched in the saddle and sprawled
forward over the horse's neck, but he did not fall. The rifle dropped
from his hands and cartwheeled across the earth, but the man clung
desperately to the horse's mane while quick crimson spread across the
shoulder of his dirty white robe.
The Count fired again, aiming for the junction of the horse's neck and
shoulder, and saw the jarring impact spin the animal off its feet,
so that it fell heavily upon its wounded rider, crushing the air from
his lungs in a short high wail.
The Count laughed, wild with excitement. "How many, Gino? How many is
that?"
"Eight, my Colonel."
"Keep counting. Keep counting," he urged, as he swung the rifle,
seeking the next target, peering eagerly over the open vee sight. Then
suddenly he froze, the rifle barrel wavering and sinking to point at
his glossy toe caps His lower jaw unhinged and slowly sank, as if in
sympathy with the rifle barrel. His recent affliction, forgotten in
the excitement of the chase, returned suddenly with a force that turned
his bowels to water and his legs to rubber.
"Merciful Mary!" he whispered.
The entire horizon was moving, an Unbroken line from one edge of his
vision to the other. It took him many seconds to assimilate what he
was seeing, to realize that instead of fifteen horsemen, there were
suddenly thousands upon thousands, and that rather than ru
him they were now moving towards him at a velocity which he would not
have believed possible. As he stared, he saw rank upon rank of the
enemy seemingly rising from the very earth ahead of him, and rushing
towards him through a curtain of fine pale dust. He saw the lowering
sun glint red as blood upon the naked blades, and the drumming of
galloping hooves sounded like the thunder of a giant waterfall. Yet
faintly through the thunder, he heard the blood-freezing war shrieks of