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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 ru
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.
owe you one, old son."
"I'll call on you, "Jake gri
"Any time. Any time at all." At that moment, Priscilla the Pig roared
heroically, then abruptly backfired in opposition to the Italian
shell-bursts.
Her engine spluttered, surged, farted despairingly, and then fell
silent. "Oh, you son of a bitch!" said Jake with great and passionate
feeling."
"Not now!"
"Reminds me of a girl I knew in Australia,-"
Later, "Jake told him. "Get on the crank handle."
"My pleasure, old boy," and a near miss burst beside them and knocked
him off his precarious perch on the sponson.
Gareth picked himself up and dusted his lapels fastidiously as he
limped to the crank handle.
After a full minute at the handle, spi
organ-grinder with no effect at all, Gareth fell back panting again.
"I say, old chap, I'm a bit bushed," and they changed places quickly.
Jake stooped over the crank handle, ignoring the tempest of bursting
shells and swirling dust clouds, and the thick muscles in his arm
writhed as he spun the crank.
"She's dead, Gareth shouted after another minute. Jake persevered, his
face turning darkly red and the veins in his throat swelling into thick
blue cords but at last even he released the handle with disgust and
stepped back gasping.
"The tool kit is under the seat, "he said.
"You aren't going to do your handyman act here and now?"
Incredulously Gareth made a wide gesture that took in the bloody
battlefield, the Italian guns and the bursting shells.
"You've got a better idea?" Jake asked brusquely, and Gareth looked
about him forlornly, suddenly straightening his slumping shoulders, the
droop of his mouth lifting into that eternally jaunty grin.
"Fu
conjurer he indicated the apparition that appeared suddenly out of the
curtains of leaping dust and fuming cordite.
Miss Wobbly slammed to a dead stop beside them and both hatches flew
open. Sara's dark head appeared in one and Vicky's golden one in the
other.
Vicky leaned across towards Jake, cupping her hands to her mouth as she
shouted in the storm of shellfire, "What's wrong with
Priscilla?" And Jake gasped, still red-faced and sweating. "She's
thrown one of her fits."
"Grab the tow rope," Vicky instructed. "We'll pull you out." The
Ethiopian camp swarmed with victorious swaggering warriors; their
laughter was loud and their voices boastful. Admiring womenfolk, who
watched them from the cooking fires, were preparing the night's feast.
The big, black iron pots bubbled with a dozen varieties of wat, and the
smell of spices and meat lay heavily on the evening cool.
Vicky Camberwell bent over her typewriter, seated under the flap of her
tent, and her long supple fingers flew at the keys as the words tumbled
from her describing the courage and fighting qualities of a people who,
armed only with sword and horse, had routed a modern army equipped with
all the most fearsome weapons of war. When she was in literary flight,
Vicky sometimes overlooked small details that might detract from the