High Citadel / Landslide

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High Citadel / Landslide Page 18

by Desmond Bagley


  Willis had gone pale. ‘But what about Forester and Rohde?’

  ‘I think they’re dead too,’ said O’Hara coldly. ‘Have you any idea what it’s like up there? Look, Willis; I flew men and equipment for two Yankee mountaineering expeditions and one German. And with all their modern gadgets they failed in their objectives three-quarters of the time.’ He waved his arm at the mountains. ‘Hell, half these mountains don’t even have names, they’re so inaccessible.’

  Armstrong said, ‘You paint a black picture, O’Hara.’

  ‘Is it a true picture?’

  ‘I fear it is,’ said Armstrong ruefully.

  O’Hara shook his head irritably. ‘This isn’t doing any good. Let’s get that contraption down to the bridge.’

  II

  It was not as difficult as O’Hara anticipated getting the trebuchet down the mountain road. Willis had done a good job in mounting it for ease of transportation and it took only three hours to get back, the main difficulty being to manoeuvre the clumsy machine round the hairpin bends. At every bend he half expected to see Miss Ponsky running up to tell them that the communists had made their attack, but all was quiet and he did not even hear the crack of a rifle. Things were too quiet, he thought; maybe they were running out of ammunition—there was none of the desultory firing that had gone on the previous day.

  They pushed the trebuchet off the road to the place indicated by Willis, and O’Hara said expressionlessly, ‘Benedetta, relieve Jenny; tell her to come up and see me.’

  She looked at him curiously, but he had turned away to help Willis and Armstrong dismantle the trebuchet preparatory to erecting it as a weapon. They were going to mount it on a small knoll in order to get the height, so that the heavy weight on the shorter arm could have a good fall.

  Miss Ponsky came up to him and told him that everything had been quiet. He thought for a moment and then said, ‘Did you hear any trucks?’

  ‘Not since they took away the jeep this morning.’

  He rubbed his chin. ‘Maybe we hit them harder than we thought. You’re sure they’re still there?’

  ‘Oh, yes,’ she said brightly. ‘I had that thought myself some hours ago so I waggled something in full view.’ She blushed. ‘I put my hat on a stick—I’ve seen it done in old movies on TV.’

  He smiled. ‘Did they hit it?’

  ‘No—but they came close.’

  ‘You’re doing all right, Jenny.’

  ‘You must be hungry—I’ll make a meal.’ Her lips twitched. ‘I think this is fun, you know.’ She turned and hurried up the road, leaving him standing dumbfounded. Fun!

  Assembling the trebuchet took two hours and when it was completed Armstrong, begrimed but happy, said with satisfaction, ‘There, now; I never expected to see one of these in action.’ He turned to O’Hara. ‘Forester came upon me sketching a trebuchet for Willis; he asked if I were drawing the scales of justice and I said that I was. He must have thought me mad, but it was perceptive of him.’

  He closed his eyes and recited as though quoting a dictionary entry. ‘From the medieval Latin trebuchetum; old French, trébuchet; a pair of scales, an assay balance.’ He opened his eyes and pointed. ‘You see the resemblance?’

  O’Hara did see. The trebuchet looked like a warped balance, very much out of proportion, with one arm much longer than the other. He said, ‘Does this thing have much of a kick—much recoil?’

  ‘Nothing detectable; the impact is absorbed by the ground.’

  O’Hara looked at the crazy system of ropes and pulleys. ‘The question is now—will the beast work?’

  There was an edge of irritability to Willis’s voice. ‘Of course it will work. Let’s chuck this thing.’ He pointed to a round boulder about the size of a man’s head.

  ‘All right,’ said O’Hara. ‘Let’s give it a bang. What do we do?’

  ‘First we haul like hell on this rope,’ said Willis.

  The rope was connected, through a three-part pulley arrangement, to the end of the long arm. As O’Hara and Willis pulled, the arm came down and the shorter arm with the weight rose into the air. The weight was a big, rusty iron bucket which Willis had found and filled with stones. As the long arm came to the ground, Armstrong stepped forward and threw over a lever and a wooden block dropped over the arm, holding it down. Willis picked up the boulder and placed it in the hub-cap which served as a cup.

  ‘We’re ready,’ he said. ‘I’ve already aligned the thing in the general direction of the bridge; we need someone down there to call the fall of the shot.’

  ‘I’ll go,’ said O’Hara. He walked across to where Benedetta was keeping watch and slid down beside her, being careful to keep his head down. ‘They’re going to let fly,’ he said.

  She turned her head to look at the trebuchet. ‘Do you think this will work?’

  ‘I don’t know.’ He grimaced. ‘All I know is that it’s a hell of a way to fight a war.’

  ‘We’re ready,’ shouted Armstrong.

  O’Hara waved and Armstrong pulled the firing lever sharply. The weight dropped and the long arm bearing the missile flipped up into the air. There was an almighty crash as the iron bucket hit the ground, but O’Hara’s attention was on the rock as it arched over his head. It was in the air a long time and went very high; then it reached the top of its trajectory and started to fall to earth, gaining speed appreciably as it plummeted. It fell far on the other side of the bridge, beyond the road and the burned vehicles, into the mountainside. A plume of dust fountained from the side of the hill to mark its fall.

  ‘Jesus!’ whispered O’Hara. ‘The thing has range.’ He slipped from his place and ran back. ‘Thirty yards over—fifteen to the right. How heavy was that rock?’

  ‘About thirty pounds,’ said Willis offhandedly. ‘We need a bigger one.’ He heaved on the trebuchet. ‘We’ll swing her a bit to the left.’

  O’Hara could hear a babble of voices from across the river and there was a brief rattle of rifle fire. Or should I call it musketry? he thought, just to keep it in period. He laughed and smote Armstrong on the back. ‘You’ve done it again,’ he roared. ‘We’ll pound that bridge to matchwood.’

  But it was not to prove as easy as he thought. It took an hour to fire the next six shots—and not one of them hit the bridge. They had two near misses and one that grazed the catenary rope on the left, making the bridge shiver from end to end. But there were no direct hits.

  Curiously, too, there was no marked reaction from the enemy. A lot of running about and random shooting followed each attempt, but there was no coherent action. What could they do after all, O’Hara thought; nothing could stop the rocks once they were in flight.

  ‘Why can’t we get the range right—what the hell’s the matter with this thing?’ he demanded at last.

  Armstrong said mildly, ‘I knew a trebuchet wasn’t a precision weapon, in a general way, of course; but this brings it home. It does tend to scatter a bit, doesn’t it?’

  Willis looked worried. ‘There’s a bit of a whip in the arm,’ he said. ‘It isn’t stiff enough. Then again, we haven’t a standard shot; there are variations in weight and that causes the overs and unders. It’s the whip that’s responsible for the variations from side to side.’

  ‘Can you do anything about the whip in the arm?’

  Willis shook his head. ‘A steel girder would help,’ he said ironically.

  ‘There must be some way of getting a standard weight of shot.’

  So the ingenious Willis made a rough balance which, he said, would match one rock against another to the nearest half-pound. And they started again. Four shots later, they made the best one of the afternoon.

  The trebuchet crashed again and a cloud of dust rose from where the bucket smashed into the ground. The long arm came over, just like a fast bowler at cricket, thought O’Hara, and the rock soared into the sky, higher and higher. Over O’Hara’s head it reached its highest point and began to fall, seeming to go true to its target. ‘This
is it,’ said O’Hara urgently. ‘This is going to be a smash hit.’

  The rock dropped faster and faster under the tug of gravity and O’Hara held his breath. It dropped right between the catenary ropes of the bridge and, to O’Hara’s disgust, fell plumb through the gap in the middle, sending a plume of white spray leaping from the boiling river to splash on the underside of the planking.

  ‘God Almighty!’ he howled. ‘A perfect shot—and in the wrong bloody place.’

  But he had a sudden hope that what he had said to Willis up at the camp would prove to be wrong; that he was not a dead man—that the enemy would not get over the bridge—that they all had a fighting chance. As hope surged in him a knot of tension tightened in his stomach. When he had no hope his nerves had been taut enough, but the offer of continued life made life itself seem more precious and not to be lost or thrown away—and so the tension was redoubled. A man who considers himself dead has no fear of dying, but with hope came a trace of fear.

  He went back to the trebuchet. ‘You’re a bloody fine artilleryman,’ he said to Willis in mock-bitter tones.

  Willis bristled. ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘I mean what I say—you’re a bloody fine artilleryman. That last shot was perfect—but the bridge wasn’t there at that point. The rock went through the gap.’

  Willis grinned self-consciously and seemed pleased. ‘It looks as though we’ve got the range.’

  ‘Let’s get at it,’ said O’Hara.

  For the rest of the afternoon the trebuchet thumped and crashed at irregular intervals. They worked like slaves hauling on the ropes and bringing rocks to the balance. O’Hara put Miss Ponsky in charge of the balance and as the afternoon wore on they became expert at judging the weight—it was no fun to carry a forty-pound rock a matter of a couple of hundred yards, only to have it rejected by Miss Ponsky.

  O’Hara kept an eye on his watch and recorded the number of shots, finding that the rate of fire had speeded up to above twelve an hour. In two and a half hours they fired twenty-six rocks and scored about seven hits; about one in four. O’Hara had seen only two of them land but what he saw convinced him that the bridge could not take that kind of pounding for long. It was a pity that the hits were scattered on the bridge—a concentration would have been better—but they had opened a new gap of two planks and several more were badly bent. It was not enough to worry a man crossing the bridge—not yet—but no one would take a chance with a vehicle.

  He was delighted—as much by the fact that the enemy was helpless as by anything else. There was nothing they could do to stop the bridge being slowly pounded into fragments, short of bringing up a mortar to bombard the trebuchet. At first there had been the usual futile rifle-fire, but that soon ceased. Now there was merely a chorus of jeers from the opposite bank when a shot missed and a groan when a hit was scored.

  It was half an hour from nightfall when Willis came to him and said, ‘We can’t keep this up. The beast is taking a hell of a battering—she’s shaking herself to pieces. Another two or three shots and she’ll collapse.’

  O’Hara swore and looked at the grey man—Willis was covered in dust from head to foot. He said slowly, ‘I had hoped to carry on through the night—I wanted to ruin the bridge beyond repair.’

  ‘We can’t,’ said Willis flatly. ‘She’s loosened up a lot and there’s a split in the arm—it’ll break off if we don’t bind it up with something. If that happens the trebuchet is the pile of junk it started out as.’

  O’Hara felt impotent fury welling up inside him. He turned away without speaking and walked several paces before he said over his shoulder, ‘Can you fix it?’

  ‘I can try,’ said Willis. ‘I think I can.’

  ‘Don’t try—don’t think. Fix it,’ said O’Hara harshly, as he walked away. He did not look back.

  III

  Night.

  A sheath of thin mist filmed the moon, but O’Hara could still see as he picked his way among the rocks. He found a comfortable place in which to sit, his back resting against a vertical slab. In front of him was a rock shelf on which he carefully placed the bottle he carried. It reflected the misted moon deep in its white depths as though enclosing a nacreous pearl.

  He looked at it for a long time.

  He was tired; the strain of the last few days had told heavily on him and his sleep had been a matter of a few hours snatched here and there. But Miss Ponsky and Benedetta were now taking night watches and that eased the burden. Over by the bridge Willis and Armstrong were tinkering with the trebuchet, and O’Hara thought he should go and help them but he did not. To hell with it, he thought; let me have an hour to myself.

  The enemy—the peculiarly faceless enemy—had once more brought up another jeep and the bridge was again well illuminated. They weren’t taking any chances of losing the bridge by a sudden fire-burning sortie. For two days they had not made a single offensive move apart from their futile barrages of rifle-fire. They’re cooking something up, he thought; and when it comes, it’s going to surprise us.

  He looked at the bottle thoughtfully.

  Forester and Rohde would be leaving the mine for the pass at dawn and he wondered if they would make it. He had been quite honest with Willis up at the camp—he honestly did not think they had a hope. It would be cold up there and they had no tent and, by the look of the sky, there was going to be a change in the weather. If they did not cross the pass—maybe even if they did—the enemy had won; the God of Battles was on their side because they had the bigger battalions.

  With a deep sigh he picked up the bottle and unscrewed the cap, giving way to the lurking devils within him.

  IV

  Miss Ponsky said, ‘You know, I’m enjoying this—really I am.’

  Benedetta looked up, startled. ‘Enjoying it!’

  ‘Yes, I am,’ said Miss Ponsky comfortably, ‘I never thought I’d have such an adventure.’

  Benedetta said carefully, ‘You know we might all be killed?’

  ‘Oh, yes, child; I know that. But I know now why men go to war. It’s the same reason that makes them gamble, but in war they play for the highest stake of all—their own lives. It adds a certain edge to living.’

  She pulled her coat closer about her and smiled. ‘I’ve been a school teacher for thirty years,’ she said. ‘And you know how folk think of spinster schoolmarms—they’re supposed to be prissy and sexless and unromantic, but I was never like that. If anything I was too romantic, surely too much so for my own good. I saw life in terms of old legends and historical novels, and of course life isn’t like that at all. There was a man, you know, once…’

  Benedetta was silent, not wishing to break the thread of this curious revelation.

  Miss Ponsky visibly pulled herself together. ‘Anyway, there I was—a very romantic young girl growing into middle age and rising a little in her profession. I became a headmistress—a sort of dragon to a lot of children. I suppose my romanticism showed a little by what I did in my spare time; I was quite a good fencer when I was younger, and of course, later there was the archery. But I wished I could have been a man and gone away and had adventures—men are so much freer, you know. I had almost given up hope when this happened.’

  She chuckled happily. ‘And now here I am rising fifty-five and engaged in a desperate adventure. Of course I know I might be killed but it’s all worth it, every bit of it; it makes up for such a lot.’

  Benedetta looked at her sadly. What was happening threatened to destroy her uncle’s hopes for their country and Miss Ponsky saw it in the light of dream-like romanticism, something from Robert Louis Stevenson to relieve the sterility of her life. She had jibbed at killing a man, but now she was blooded and would never look upon human life in the same light again. And when—or if—she went back home again, dear safe old South Bridge, Connecticut, would always seem a little unreal to her—reality would be a bleak mountainside with death coming over a bridge and a sense of quickened life as her blood coursed faster through
parched veins.

  Miss Ponsky said briskly, ‘But I mustn’t run on like this. I must go down to the bridge; I promised Mr O’Hara I would. He’s such a handsome young man, isn’t he? But he looks so sad sometimes.’

  Benedetta said in a low voice, ‘I think he is unhappy.’

  Miss Ponsky nodded wisely. ‘There has been a great grief in his life,’ she said, and Benedetta knew that she was casting O’Hara as a dark Byronic hero in the legend she was living. But he’s not like that, she cried to herself; he’s a man of flesh and blood, and a stupid man too, who will not allow others to help him, to share his troubles. She thought of what had happened up at the camp, of O’Hara’s kisses and the way she had been stirred by them—and then of his inexplicable coldness towards her soon afterwards. If he would not share himself, she thought, perhaps such a man was not for her—but she found herself wishing she was wrong.

  Miss Ponsky went out of the shelter. ‘It’s becoming a little misty,’ she said. ‘We must watch all the more carefully.’

  Benedetta said, ‘I’ll come down in two hours.’

  ‘Good,’ said Miss Ponsky gaily, and clattered her way down to the bridge.

  Benedetta sat for a while repairing a rent in her coat with threads drawn out of the hem and using the needle which she always carried stuck in the lining of her handbag. The small domestic task finished, she thought, Tim’s shirt is torn—perhaps I can mend that.

  He had been glumly morose during the evening meal and had gone away immediately afterwards to the right along the mountainside, away from the bridge. She had recognized that he had something on his mind and had not interrupted, but had marked the way he had gone. Now she got up and stepped out of the shelter.

 

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