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front towards the Count. The first offender in this respect had found
himself reduced from Captain to Lieutenant, and no longer invited to
the hunt, and the second was already back in Massawa writing out
requisition forms in the quartermaster's division.
Gino handed the Count from the Rolls, and helped him down the steps
into the sunken shelter. Giuseppe saluted and climbed back into the
Rolls, swung away and bumped back up the ridge and over the skyline.
The Count settled himself comfortably in the canvas chair. With a
sigh, he unbuttoned the front of his jacket, and accepted the damp face
cloth that Gino handed him.
While the Count wiped the film of sweat from his forehead with the cool
cloth, Gino opened a bottle of Lacrima Cristi from the ice bucket and
placed a tall frosted crystal glass of the wine on the folding table at
the Count's elbow. Next, he loaded the
Marmlicher with shiny new brass cartridges from a freshly opened
packet.
The Count tossed the cloth aside and leaned forward in his chair to
peer through the loophole in front of him, out across the shimmering
plain where the small dark desert scrub danced in the heat.
"I have a feeling we shall have extraordinary sport today, Gino."
I hope so indeed, my Count, said the little sergeant and stood to
attention behind his chair with the loaded Ma
across his chest.
ome on, darling," croaked Jake, sweat dripping from his chin on to his
shirt front as he stooped over the crank handle and spun it for the
hundredth time.
"Don't let us down now, sweetheart." Gareth scrambled up on to the
sponson of Priscilla and took a long despairing glance back over the
turret. He felt something freeze in his belly, and his breath
caught.
The elephant was a hundred paces away, coming directly down on top of
them at a loose shambling walk, the great black ears flapping sullenly
and the little piggy eyes alight with malevolence.
Right behind it, fa
beast's heels, came the full squadron of Italian tanks. The sun
glittered on the smoothly rounded frontal armour, and caught the bright
festival flutter of their cavalry pe
the black-helmeted head of the tank commander. Through the
binoculars
Gareth could make out the individual features of each commander, they
were that close.
Within minutes they would be overrun, and there was no chance that they
could escape detection. The elephant was leading the Italians directly
to the ravine, and their scanty camouflage of scrub branches would not
stand scrutiny at less than a hundred yards.
They could not even protect themselves, the Vickers machine gun was
pointed away from the approaching enemy, and the limited traverse of
the ball mounting was not sufficient to bring it to bear. Gareth was
engulfed suddenly by a black and burning rage for the stubborn piece of
machinery beneath his feet. He took a vicious heartfelt kick at the
steel turret.
"You treacherous bitch, he snarled, and at that moment the engine fired
and, without preliminary gulping and popping, roared angrily.
Jake bounded up the side of the hull, droplets of sweat flying from his
sodden hair, red-faced as he gasped at Gareth.
"You've got the gentle touch."
"With all women there is the psychological moment, old son, "Gareth
explained, gri
Jake dropped behind the controls.
Jake gu
thorn branches. Her wheels spun in the loose sand of the ravine,
blowing up a cloud of red dust, and she tore up the steep bank and
lunged out into the open directly under the startled outstretched trunk
of the elephant.
The old bull had by this stage suffered provocation sufficient to take
him to the edge of a blind, black rage. It needed only this new
buzzing frightfulness to launch him over the edge. The leisurely pace
that he had set up until now left his mountainous strength and
endurance untouched, and now he trumpeted, a ringing ear-splitting
challenge that rolled across the vast silences of the desert like the
trumpet of doom. His ears curled back against his skull and with his
trunk coiled against his chest, he crashed forward into a terrible
ground-shaking charge.
His speed over the broken ground was greater than that of
Priscilla the Pig, and he bore down upon her like a cliff of grey
granite huge, menacing and indestructible.
The Captain of tanks had been shepherding the old elephant along
gently. He did not want him to tax his strength. He wanted to deliver
to his commanding officer an animal in the peak of its anger and
destructive capabilities.
He was sitting up in his turret, chuckling and shaking his head with
anticipation and growing delight, for the hunter's lines were only a
mile or so ahead when suddenly, directly ahead of him, the ground
erupted and an armoUred car roared out in a cloud of red dust. It was
of a model that the Captain had seen only in illustrated books of
military history like an apparition out of the remote past.
It took him some seconds to believe what he was seeing, then with a
jarring impact on his already highly strung nerve ends, he recognized
the enemy colours that the ancient machine was flying.
"Advance!" he screamed. "Squadron, advance!" and he groped
instinctively at his side for his sword. "Engage the enemy." On each
side of him his tanks roared forward, and for want of a sword, the
Captain tore his helmet off and waved it over his head.
"Charge!" he screamed. "Forward into battle!" Now at last he was not
a mere game-beater. Now he was a warrior leading his men into action.
His excitement was So contagious and the dust thrown up by the car, the
elephant and the steel tracks so thick, that the first two tanks did
not even see the fifteen-foot-deep sheer-sided ravine.
Ru
were destroyed effectively as though they had been demolished by a
100 kilo, aerial bomb, the riding wheels ripped away by the impact and
the heavy steel tracks flying loose and snaking viciously into the air
like living angry cobras. The revolving turrets were torn from their
seatings, neatly bisecting the men at the waist, who stood in the
hatches, as though with a gigantic pair of scissors.
Clinging to the rim of his own turret and peering backwards,
Gareth saw the two machines disappear into the earth, and the great
leaping towers of dust that rose high into the air to mark their
destruction.
"Two down" he shouted.
"But another four to go," Jake shouted back grimly, fighting
Priscilla over the rough earth. "And how about that jumbo?"
"How indeed!" The elephant, goaded on by the roar of engines and crash
of steel behind and by the buzzing bouncing car ahead of it, was making
incredible speed over the broken scrubby plain.
"He's right here with us," Gareth told Jake anxiously. So close was
the great beast that Gareth had to look up at it, and he saw the thick
grey. trunk uncoiling from its chest and reaching out to pluck him
from the turret.
"As fast as you like, old son, or you'll have him sitting on your