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army on the way, storming the mountain fortress and releasing the

British prisoners held there, before retiring in good order.

Such heroics were outside the realms of the General's imagination.

"Caro."

"The General placed an arm about the gold, braided shoulders of his

aide. "We must compose a reply to the Duce. He must be made to

realize my difficulties." He patted the shoulder affectionately and

his face lightened once more into its habitual expression as he began

composing.

"My dear and respected leader, please be assured of my loyalty to you

and to the glorious fatherland of Italy." The Captain hastened to take

up a message pad and scribble industriously. "Be assured also that I

never cease to toil by night and by day towards--" It took almost two

hours of creative effort before the General was satisfied with his

flowery and rambling refusal to carry out his orders.

"Now," he ceased his pacing and smiled tenderly at the Captain,

"although we are not yet ready for an advance in force, it will serve

to placate Il Duce if we initiate the opening phases of the southern

offensive."

The General's plans for the invasion, when it was finally put in hand,

had been laid with as ponderous regard to detail as his earlier

preparations. Historical necessity dictated that the main attack

should be centred on Adowa.

Already a marble monument, brought from Italy and engraved with the

words "The dead of Adowa avenged with the date left open, lay amongst

the huge mountains of his stores.

ndary flanking attack However, the plan called for a secc, farther

south through one of the very few gateways to the central highlands,

This was the Sardi Gorge. A narrow opening that was riven up from the

desert floor, splitting like an axe-stroke the precipitous mountain

ranges, and forming a pass through which an army might reach the

plateau that reared seven thousand feet above the desert.

The first phase of this plan entailed the seizure of the approaches to

the Sardi Gorge and particularly important 1: in this dry and scalded

desert would be the water supplies of the attacking army.

The General crossed the floor to the large-scale map, of Eastern

Africa which covered one wall, and he picked up the ivory pointer to

touch an isolated spot in the emptiness below the mountains.

"The Wells of Chaldi, he read the name aloud. "Whom shall we send?"

The Captain looked up from his pad, and observed how the spot was

surrounded by the forbidding yellow of the desert.

He had been in Africa long enough to know what that meant, and there

was only one person who he would wish were there.

"Belli," he said.

"Ah," said the General. "Count Aldo Belli the fire eater

"The clown, "said the Captain.

"Come, caro," the General admonished his aide mildly.

"You are too harsh. The Count is a distinguished diplomat, he was for

three years ambassador to the court of St. James in London. His

family is old and noble and very very rich."

"He is a blow-hard,"

said the Captain stubbornly, and the General sighed.

"He is a personal friend of Benito Mussolini. II Duce is a constant

guest at his castle. He has great political power-"

"He would be well out of harm's way at this desolate spot," said the

Captain, and the General sighed again.

"Perhaps you are correct, caro. Send for the good Count if you

please." Captain Crespi stood on the steps of the headquarters

building,

beneath the portico with its imitation marble columns and the clumsily

painted fresco depicting a heroic band of heavily muscled Italians

defeating heathens, ploughing the earth, harvesting the corn, and

generally building an empire.

The Captain watched sourly as the huge Rolls-Royce open tourer bumped

down the dusty, pot-holed main street.

Its headlights glared like monstrously startled eyes, and its burnished

sky-blue paintwork was dulled by a light flouring of pale dust. The

purchase price of this vehicle would have consumed five years of his

service pay, which accounted for much of the Captain's sourness.

Count Aldo Belli, as one of the nation's great landowners and amongst

the five most wealthy men in Italy, did not rely on the army for his

transportation. The Rolls had been adapted and designed to his

personal specifications by the makers.

As it slid to a graceful halt beneath the portico, the k Captain

noticed the Count's personal arms blazoned on the front door. - a

rampant golden wolf supporting a shield with a quartered device of

scarlet and silver. The legend unfurled beneath it read, "Courage arms

me." As the car stopped, a small wiry sun-blackened little man in the

uniform of a black shirt sergeant leaped from the seat be-side the

driver and dropped on one knee in the roadway with a bulky camera at

the ready to capture the moment when the figure in the wide rear seat

of the Rolls should descend.

Count Aldo Belli adjusted his black beret carefully, sucked in his

belly and rose to his feet as the driver scurried around to hold open

the door. The Count smiled. It was a smile of flashing white teeth

and powerful charisma. His eyes were dark and romantic with the

sweeping lashes of a lady of fashion, his skin was lightly tanned to a

golden olive and the lustrous curls of his hair that escaped from under

the black beret shone in the sunlight. Although he was almost

thirty-five years of age, not a single grey strand adulterated that

splendid mane.

From his commanding position his height was exaggerated, so he seemed

to tower god-like above the men who scampered about him. The highly

polished cross-straps glittered across his chest as did the silver

deaths head cap badges. The short regimental dagger on his hip set

with small diamonds and seed pearls was to the Count's own design,

and the ivory-handled revolver had been hand-made for him by Beretta;

the holster was belted in tightly to subdue a waistline that was

showing signs of rebellion.

The Count paused and glanced down at the little sergeant.

"Yes, Gino?"he asked.

"Good, my Count. just a little up with the chin." The Count's chin

caused them both much concern. At certain angles, it showed an

alarming tendency to duplicate itself like the ripples on a pond. The

Count threw up his chin sternly, rather like 11 Duce, and the gesture

ironed out the jowls below.

"Bellissimo," cried Gino, and tripped the shutter. The Count stepped

down from the Rolls, enjoying the way the soft sparkling leather of his

high boots gave like the bellows of a concertina above his instep as he

moved, and he hooked the thumb of his gloved left hand into the belt

above his dagger as he flung his right arm up and outwards in the

Fascist salute.

"The General awaits you, Colonel,"Crespi greeted him.

"I came the moment I received the summons." The Captain made a move.

He knew the summons had been delivered at ten o'clock that morning and

it was now almost three in the afternoon. The Count's primping had

taken most of the day, and now he glowed from bathing and shaving and

massaging and smelled like a rose garden in full bloom.

"Clown," thought the Captain again. It had taken Crespi ten years of

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