'No! Oh, please God, no.'

'What is it? 'jake head popped out of the driver's hatch with alarm.

'They've done it again.'

'Who ?' But Jake need not have asked.

The following car had swung off the direct track, and was now storming

up through the rain-blurred camel-Thorn trees, heading for the old

tented camp in the grove, and only incidentally running directly into

the area where the heavy fighting was still rattling and crackling in

the rain.

'Catch her,' Gareth said. 'Head her off.' Jake swung off the track

and went zigzagging up through the grove with the rear wheels spinning

and spraying red mud and slush. But Miss Wobbly had a clear start and

a straight run up the secondary track directly into the enemy advance;

she disappeared amongst the trees and curtains of rain.

Jake brought the car bellowing out into the camp to find Miss

Wobbly parked in the open clearing. The tents had been flattened and

the whole area trodden and looted, cases of rations and clothing burst

open and soaked with rain; the muddy red canvas of the tents hung

flapping in the trees or lay half buried.

From the turret, Sara was firing the Vickers into the trees of the

grove, and answering fire whined and crackled around the car. Jake

glimpsed running Italian figures, and turned the car so that his own

gun would bear.

'Get into them, Greg,' he yelled, and the boy crouched down behind the

gun and fired a long thunderous burst that tore shreds of bark off the

trees and dropped at least one of the running Italians. Jake lifted

himself out of the driver's hatch, and then froze and stared in

disbelief.

Victoria Camberwell was out of the armoured car, plodding around in the

soup of red mud, oblivious to the gunfire that whickered and crackled

about her.

'Vicky!' he cried in despair, and she stooped and snatched something

out of the mud with a cry of triumph. Now at last she turned and

scampered back to Miss Wobbly, crossing a few feet in front of

Jake.

'What the hell-' he protested.

'My typewriter and my toilet bag,' she explained reasonably,

holding her muddy trophies aloft. 'One has got my make-up in it, and

I

can't do my job without the other,' and then she smiled like a wet

bedraggled puppy.

'We can go now, 'she said.

The track up the gorge was crowded with men and 'animals, toiling

wearily upwards in the icy rain.

The pack animals slipped and slithered in the loose footing.

Gareth's relief was intense when he saw the bulky shapes of the Vickers

strapped to the humpy backs of a dozen camels, and the cases of

ammunition riding high in the panniers. His men had done their work

and saved the guns.

'Go with them, Greg,' he ordered. 'See them safely up to the first

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