beside each truck.

'My children,' said Aldo Belli, as he began to pace down the line.

'My brave boys,' and he looked at them, not really seeing the

mis-buttoned tunics, the stubble on their chins, nor the hastily

pinched-out cigarettes behind the ears. His vision was misted with

sentiment, his imagination dressed them in burnished breastplates and

horsetail plumes.

'You are thirsty for blood?' the Colonel asked, and threw back his

head and laughed a reckless carefree laugh. 'I will give you buckets

of it,' he said. 'Today you will drink your fill. The men within

earshot shuffled their feet and glanced uneasily at each other. There

was a definite preference for Chianti amongst them.

The Count stopped before a thin rifleman, still in his teens, with a

dark shaggy mop of hair hanging out from under his helmet.

'Bambino,' said the Count, and the youth hung his head and grinned in

sickly embarrassment. 'We will make a warrior out of you today,'

and he embraced the boy, then held him off at arm's length and studied

his face. 'Italy gives of her finest, none are too young or too noble

to be spared sacrifice on the altar of war.' The boy's ingratiating

grin changed swiftly to real alarm. -Sing, bambino, sing!' cried the

Count, and himself opened 'La

Giovinezza' in his soaring baritone while the youth quavered

uncertainly below him. The Count marched on, singing, and reached the

head of the column as the song ended. He nodded to Castelani, too

breathless to speak, and the Major let out another bull bellow.

'Mount up!' The formations of black-shirted troopers broke up into

confused activity as they hurried to the cumbersome trucks and climbed

aboard.

The Rolls-Royce stood in pride of place at the head of the column,

Giuseppe sitting ready at the wheel with Gino beside him, his camera at

the ready.

The engine was purring, the wide back seat packed with the Count's

personal gear sports rifle, shotgun, travelling rugs, picnic hamper,

straw wine carrier, binoculars, and ceremonial cloak.

The Count mounted with dignity and settled himself on the padded

leather. He looked at Castelani.

'Remember, Major, the essence of my strategy is speed and surprise. The

lightning blow, swift and merciless, delivered by the steel hand at the

enemy's heart.' Sitting beside the driver in the rear truck of the

column, eating the dust of the forty-nine trucks ahead,

and already beginning to sweat freely in the oven heat of the steel

cab, Major Castelani inspected his watch.

'Mother of God,' he growled. 'It's past eleven o'clock.

We will have to move fast if we At that moment, the driver swore and

braked heavily, and before the truck had come to a halt, Castelani had

leapt out on to the running board and climbed high on to the roof of

the cab.

'What is it?'he shouted to the driver ahead.

'I do not know, Major,' the man shouted back.

Ahead of them the entire column had come to a halt, and Castelani

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