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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
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
his concerned underlings into the RollsRoyce and to lie wan and palely
resigned upon the soft leather seat.
"Drive on, Giuseppe," he murmured, like an aristocrat giving the order
to the driver of the tumbril.
On the long hot dusty drive into Asmara, the Count lay without interest
in his surroundings, without even attempting to marshal his defence
against the charges he knew he must soon face. He was resigned, abject
his only solace was the considerable damage he would do this upstart,
ill bred peasant, once he returned to Rome, as he was certain he was
about to. He knew that he could ruin the man politically and it gave
him a jot of sour pleasure.
Giuseppe, the driver, knowing his man as he did, made the first stop
outside the casino in Asmara's main street.
Here, at least, Count Aldo Belli was treated as a hero, and he perked
up visibly as the young hostesses rushed out on to the sidewalk to
welcome him.
Some hours later, freshly shaven, his uniform sponged and pressed,
his hair pomaded, and buoyed UP on a fragrant cloud of expensive eau de
cologne, the Count was ready to face his tormentor. He kissed the
girls, tossed back a last glass of cognac, laughed that gay reckless
laugh, snapped his fingers once to show what he thought of the peasant
who now ran this army, clenched his buttocks tightly together to
control his fear and marched out of the casino into the sunlight and
across the street into the military headquarters.
His appointment to meet General Badoglio was for four o'clock and the
town hall clock struck the hour as he marched resolutely down the long
gloomy corridor, following a young aide-de-camp. They reached the end
of the corridor and the aide-de-camp threw open the big double mahogany
doors and stood aside for the Count to enter.
His knees felt like boiled macaroni, his stomach gurgled and seethed,
the palms of his hands were hot and moist, and tears were not far
behind his quivering eyelids as he stepped forward into the huge room
with its lofty moulded ceiling.
He saw that it was filled with officers from both the army and the
airforce. His disgrace was to be made public, then, and he quailed.
Seeming to shrivel, his shoulders slumping, his chest caving and the
big handsome head drooping, the Count stood in the doorway. He could
not bear to look at them, and miserably he studied his gleaming toe
caps
Suddenly, he was assailed by a strange, a completely alien sound and he
looked up startled, ready to defend himself against physical attack.
The roomful of officers were applauding, beaming and gri
slapping palm to palm and the Count gaped at them, then glanced quickly
over his shoulder to be certain there was no one standing behind him,
and that this completely unexpected welcome was being directed at
him.
When he looked back he found a stocky, broad, shouldered figure in the
uniform of a general advancing upon him. His face was hard and
unforgiving, with a fierce grey mustache over the grim trap of his
mouth and glittering eyes in deep dark sockets.
If the Count had been in command of his legs and his voice, he might
have run screaming from the room, but before he could move the
General seized him in a grip of iron, and the mustache raking his
cheeks was as rank and rough as the foliage of the trees of the Danakil
desert.
"Colonel, I am always honoured to embrace a brave man," growled the
General, hugging him close, his breath smelling pleasantly of garlic