“Not smart.”
“They blame me,” Knibbs said. “Understandable. I’m the nearest censor. Nothing to do with me, of course. I don’t control the BBC. Nevertheless, I think it’s time we gave Benghazi a rest.”
“What about the Poles?” Lester asked. He pointed to the censored paragraphs. “They weren’t there. I put them in for contrast. The Poles fight like hell.”
“And if they get captured, the Germans promptly shoot them. Not always, but often enough. So, for the Poles’ sake, no tales of Polish ferocity. Not for a while, anyway.”
Lester went home. His wife took one look at him and returned to her book. “And you can shut up, for a start,” he said.
* * *
Lampard sat at a desk in a spare room at Senso Unico and carefully scanned the typewritten sheets listing the names of officers recently killed in action in the Western Desert.
He paid no attention to anyone above the rank of captain; nor was he interested in New Zealanders or Australians or Indians. He was looking for junior officers in English regiments (not Scottish) and only in certain regiments at that—the closer to London, the better. He might accept the Gloucestershires, at a pinch, but not the Durham Light Infantry, and certainly not the Lancashire Fusiliers.
Then he looked at the next-of-kin. Most of the addresses were in England, but a few were in Cairo or Alexandria. After all, Egypt was a neutral country; you couldn’t stop somebody’s wife living there if she could wangle the passage. India was full of officers’ wives, and when their husbands got posted to Egypt the wives sometimes followed. And occasionally a chap met an English girl in Cairo working as a secretary at GHQ or the embassy, and married her.
Lampard made a short-list of nine, all first-lieutenants or captains from decent regiments, with next-of-kin living in Cairo. He studied the addresses and crossed out two. Wrong parts of town. He stared hard at the remaining seven names: Benson, Challis, Fitzroy, d’Armytage, Tait, Spencer and Cox. He didn’t like Tait, it looked hard and unpleasant, but he couldn’t think why. He crossed it out. There was something wrong with Cox, too. Lampard frowned and rolled the pencil between his fingertips. Of course. There was a Cox in his patrol. No relation, but Lampard was superstitious about such things. Cox was deleted. That left five.
He returned the lists to the sergeant who had produced them, thanked him and left. It was tea time. Perfect.
* * *
Most people considered Cairo in midsummer too hot for tennis. After the stupefying, relentless, furnace-heat of the desert, Dunn and Gibbon found Cairo quite mild. They played a couple of sets at the Gezira Sporting Club in order to work up a sweat and go for a swim. The luxury of diving into a few hundred thousand gallons of water had the same appeal as an open brewery to a drunk: they kept climbing out for the sheer pleasure of jumping in again.
They were sitting on the marble edge of the pool, legs in the water, skin glittering like fresh paint, when Dunn said, “Funny thing. All the time we’re in the desert I dream about getting back here, and now I’m back here—”
“You can’t wait to go out on patrol again.”
Dunn thrashed the water to a foam. “Oh well,” he said. “I suppose it’s not a very bright remark.”
“Don’t get all depressed, Mike, for Christ’s sake,” Gibbon said. “You’re right, it wasn’t very bright, but that’s nothing to be ashamed of because after all you’re not very bright yourself, are you?”
Dunn stood up, jumped in, heaved himself out and said: “I think I’m fairly bright.”
“If you’ve got to think about it,” Gibbon said, “don’t bother.”
“I passed out tenth from top at my OCTU. Lots of chaps failed OCTU. That shows something, doesn’t it?”
“Shows you’re a good soldier. Good soldiers aren’t bright. Quite the opposite. Good soldiers advance into a storm of withering fire when someone orders them to go and capture something. And guess what happens?”
“They bloody well capture it,” Dunn said stubbornly.
“No, they get withered. It’s what withering fire does. It withers people.” Gibbon looked into the pool and followed a young woman swimming underwater, silver dribbles of air escaping her mouth. “I still haven’t got my MC,” he said. “It’s a swindle.”
“Who do you blame?” Dunn asked. “Luftwaffe Intelligence, or our admin?”
“Keep still.” Gibbon got up, stood on Dunn’s shoulders, balanced for a second, and dived in. The kick-back sent Dunn sprawling.
* * *
The two Curtiss P-40 Tomahawks were on their way home when they met six Macchi 202s flying in the opposite direction.
The Italian machine was a more advanced fighter, with a greater rate of climb. The Tomahawk was more rugged, could take more punishment, and at lower levels it could out-turn the Macchi. The Tomahawk had six machine guns; the Macchi had two, plus two cannon. Both formations were at about eight thousand feet; at that height the types more or less matched each other in performance. So it came down to the caliber of the pilots. In general, Macchi 202 pilots were good.
Flight Lieutenant Michael Melville led the pair of Tomahawks. He was a Canadian who had flown with the Desert Air Force for nearly a year and he had scored five kills. His wingman was Sergeant-Pilot James Blunt, from Scotland. Six months in the desert, no kills. Destroying enemy aircraft was not his prime job. He was there to guard Melville’s tail and leave Melville free to do the damage.
The Italians divided. Three climbed steeply. The other three made straight for the enemy.
Both Melville and Blunt had experienced a flutter of fear when they first saw the pattern of dots and knew what it meant. Melville’s heart began a runaway pounding, while Blunt’s stomach lurched toward sickness. The sensations were familiar and they vanished quickly. When he first flew on operations, Blunt had been worried by this fact of fear, but Melville had told him that every pilot suffered a bit of twitch before combat, and now Blunt no longer worried. His stomach settled down as the dots began to magnify.
This happened fast. The closing speed was over six hundred miles an hour and the sleek, slippery shape of the 202, like a Spitfire crossed with a 109, soon became clear. Melville’s reflector sight was switched on, the gun-trigger on his joystick was set to fire, his straps were tightened, his seat slightly lowered to create more protection from the back-armor. No need for him to tell Blunt anything. They had flown as a team too long for that. Now the enemy colorings were visible: sand-brown with olive-green splotches, white spinner and wingtips. The three climbing fighters showed blue-gray undersurfaces. Blunt automatically searched the rest of the sky. Empty. The odds were six-to-two, but Italian pilots were not famous for long air battles. They usually scrapped briskly and departed. Anyway, if the fight went badly for the Tomahawks the answer was to shove the stick hard forward. The Tomahawk could dive like a truckload of bricks.
Melville led Blunt into a head-on attack which was calculated to test the Italians’ resolve. For a couple of seconds the air sparkled with tracer and then the enemy had whipped past. Melville was bending into a hard left turn and as Blunt followed he felt his machine bounce a little on the Italians’ slipstreams.
The turn tightened, dragging his guts down and sucking the blood from his brain. This was all very familiar. Up ahead, Melville’s eyes were browning-out too, but he forced the turn until his fingertips prickled and the aircraft was flirting with a skid. When he straightened out, the three Macchis were a mile away, still turning.
The skid that Melville had avoided caught Blunt. Briefly his controls felt sluggish and he knew the wings had lost some of their grip on the air. When he could see clearly again he had drifted far from his leader. At once he searched the sky above. Nothing. That was wrong. He looked at his leader and saw two Macchis pull out of a swooping dive and close on him from beneath. “Break left!” he shouted. And turned hard into them, to scare them off with a long-range burst. He fired, the whole scene blurred and shuddered. When he released the trigge
r the enemy had gone but the other Tomahawk was in his gun-sight and it was ablaze.
Blunt was so shocked that for a moment he could only stare. A long moment, perhaps four or five seconds. Long enough for an Italian pilot to swing behind him and pump two or three cannon shells into the left wing-root of the Tomahawk. The wing detached itself as if perforated. The rest of the aircraft fell in a fast and giddy spin that nailed Blunt to his seat.
The six Macchis resumed their original formation and circled the columns of smoke while their leader noted the time and place for his combat report. Then they cruised home.
The adjutant waited two days before he emptied Melville’s and Blunt’s tents, just in ease they walked in from the desert. He waited two more days and then sent all their belongings to the Committee of Adjustment in Cairo. He didn’t know what happened to the stuff after that and he didn’t care. He was just glad the whole sorry affair could be forgotten. In James Blunt’s case that was not easy: he had been bright and amusing and on the edge of promotion. However, the adjutant had won his wings in the Royal Flying Corps in 1917, and so he had considerable experience in how to forget men.
The squadron he had joined then was called Hornet Squadron and it was called Hornet Squadron now. It was led by a New Zealander, Squadron Leader Fanny Barton. On the day the two pilots’ belongings were packed off to Cairo, Barton got a telephone call from Wing HQ. An hour later he was in the wing commander’s office, which was a captured Italian army trailer, slightly bullet-holed, previously owned by a small general. The doors and windows were wide open and a teasing breeze wandered through from time to time, swapping static heat for moving heat. It rattled the papers on the table, papers held down by the nose cone of a shell or a hunk of shrapnel or an infantry dagger, and then it faded away as if exhausted by its own tiny effort. “I was at a meeting yesterday, Fanny,” the wing commander said, “and if a vote had been taken, you would have got the chop.”
It took a few seconds for the full meaning to sink in. “I’d have lost the squadron?” Barton said.
“You’d be flying a desk in Cairo. The Desert Air Force has a small glut of chaps eminently qualified to do your job and itching to get their hands on it, this being the only fighter war of any consequence outside Russia. Or the Pacific, I suppose. Would you like to go back there? Defend New Zealand from the yellow peril? No, I thought not. And I can tell from your cross-eyed expression that you wish to know why the chop should fall on you.”
“I certainly bloody well do.”
“It’s because your squadron hasn’t scored in a month. And the month before that wasn’t very brilliant either. Don’t kick the table, Fanny,” the wing commander said patiently, “you’ll only spill the ink.”
“Sorry, sir,” Barton said. “I meant to kick the waste basket. Must have missed.”
“Yes. That’s your problem nowadays, isn’t it? Missing things.”
“We can’t hit what isn’t there.”
“Other squadrons seem to manage it.”
“My boys have seen exactly four enemy aircraft in the last three weeks, fired their guns once, couldn’t get anywhere near the rest. Jerry’s got the legs of us whenever he likes.”
“That’s not quite the full story, is it?” The wing commander scrabbled among some papers and found a crumpled carbon copy. “I take it Melville and Blunt can be written off?” Barton nodded. “And a couple of weeks ago you lost . . . who was it?”
“Shepherd and . . .” Barton squeezed his face to make his memory work. “Pelican. No, not Pelican, that’s what the boys called him. Pelligrin. He was French. They collided on takeoff. Sheer bad luck.”
“Some squadron commanders are unlucky. At least, that’s what yesterday’s meeting seemed to think. And the meeting wasn’t in a mood to hang around waiting for your luck to change. My guess is you’ve got a week, at most.”
“Jesus Christ,” Barton said. He looked as he felt: as if an old friend had kicked him in the ribs. “I’m doing my best, sir. What more can I do?”
“Get lucky.” The wing commander screwed up the carbon copy and threw it away. “Nobody’s blaming you, Fanny. It’s just that we do need results.”
Barton usually drove fast, flogging the engine, spinning the wheel, slamming the gear-changes. Not now. Now he drove slowly back to the airfield. Bitterness had sapped his strength and he felt slightly ill.
He had been with Hornet Squadron, off and on, since the war began. He’d taken charge in France when the CO was killed. He’d commanded it in the Battle of Britain and he’d led it on some very hairy sweeps over northern France in 1941 until German flak made a mess of his Spitfire and he’d just scraped home over the white cliffs of Dover, demolishing some farmer’s barn in the process. Four months in hospital, then two months as a flying instructor at an OCU, during which he’d nagged and nagged until he got sent to Africa to rejoin the squadron.
At first there had been bags of trade. Lately things were quiet. That wasn’t his fault. Men got killed. So what? What did the silly bastards at HQ expect: all profit, no loss?
“They’ve got scrambled eggs for brains,” he told Kellaway, the adjutant.
“Ah. You’ve heard, then.” Kellaway was emptying sand from one of his desert boots. “How the devil does the stuff get in?” he wondered.
“Heard what?” Barton asked.
“Takoradi.” Kellaway saw Barton frown, and explained: “The Takoradi flap. Cairo’s cocked things up as usual and all of a sudden they’ve got more kites than pilots at Takoradi. Didn’t you know? I thought that’s what Wing wanted to see you about.”
“Me? No. Why? Nothing to do with us.”
“Chum of mine says he heard that the solution to the problem is to send a squadron of fighter pilots to Takoradi, lickety-split.”
“Wing said nothing about that.”
“He says he also heard we’re top of the list.”
“Oh, shit.” Barton slumped into a chair. “If the boys get sent to Takoradi we can kiss goodbye to the squadron. We’ll never see them again.”
“Well, that’s the gen according to my chum, and he should know.”
Barton stared at Kellaway’s brass buttons. They had been polished so often that the little eagles were worn down to a blur. He must have cut the buttons off his old uniform and sewn them on his tropical tunic. Buttons like that said more than medals. They had seen a lot of service, all through the twenties and thirties. Kellaway had chums in all sorts of useful places, and they helped each other. If one of Kellaway’s chums heard Takoradi linked with Hornet Squadron, he would let Kellaway know. Lickety-split.
“I don’t suppose your chum had any magic answer to the curse of Takoradi?”
“No.” Kellaway curled his forefinger behind his thumb and flicked a large and hairy centipede off his desk. “It’s like Whipsnade Zoo in here . . . If I were you, Fanny, I’d try and have a word with Baggy Bletchley.”
Barton told Prescott, his signals officer, to find Air Commodore Bletchley as soon as possible. “He’s got an office in Alex,” Barton said, “but he won’t be there.” This was true. Prescott’s men hunted Bletchley from one airfield to another and reported at last that he was visiting a Hurricane squadron south of Sidi Barrani. When Barton landed there forty minutes later, Bletchley had gone to see some Australians near Buqbuq. Barton followed fast and got him.
They sat under a canvas awning and drank tea made the way the Australians liked it: strong enough to stun a tapeworm.
“You surprise me, Fanny,” Bletchley said. “I’d have thought your boys would have jumped at the chance to see a different bit of Africa.” It was no degrees, and even in sweat-stained khaki drill he still had something of the sleekness of the good career officer.
“From Cairo to Takoradi is nearly four thousand miles, sir,” Barton said. “Which means it’s nearly four thousand back again. That’s not a fun trip.”
“Dear me. And I thought you New Zealanders liked to travel.” Bletchley had a gentle, slightly twis
ted smile which made Barton feel like a schoolboy who had disappointed his teacher. “Ever been to Takoradi, Fanny? On the Gold Coast. Aptly named. Golden beaches, sparkling sea. You fly down the coast to the Niger—one of the truly great rivers of the world—and then turn east over land as green as emerald to a place called Kano. Kano! Not just an ancient African town but a fortress city that lives behind its own battlements! On to Fort Lamy in Chad. A piece of France set down in the heart of the dark continent. To Khartoum, where the two Niles meet and great history has been made. From there it’s a doddle, you just follow the river past the splendors of Luxor to the fleshpots of Cairo. Do you realize, Fanny,” Bletchley said, “before the war, Imperial Airways flew the rich and the powerful along this route? And now you can have the same unforgettable experience and be paid for your pleasure?” He threw up his hands at the wonder of it all.
“What would we fly?” Barton asked. “Hurricanes?”
“Yes. Brand-new.”
“And hung with long-range tanks like a bull’s balls. You left out a few stops, sir. It’s five hundred miles over emerald-green jungle to Kano. After Kano there’s Maiduguri, then Fort Lamy, Geneina, El Fasher and El Obeid, then Khartoum. After Khartoum it’s still a thousand miles via Atbara, Wadi Haifa and Luxor before you reach Cairo.”
“Goodness,” Bletchley said. “You’ve done your homework.”
“I met a guy in Tommy’s Bar once who’d just done a ferry job from Takoradi. Took him more than a week.”
“Ample time to view the scenery.”
“He said every stop is a dump. He said Kano to Khartoum is seventeen hundred miles of bugger-all. Nothing grows, nothing lives. Not a nice place to have engine-failure.”
Bletchley finished his tea. He swirled the dregs and looked at the leaves.
“He told me ten percent of the kites never make it to Cairo,” Barton said. “He told me you could navigate by the wrecks.”
A Good Clean Fight Page 9