'CIC Southern Command, since July. He's been shaking up our home defence and doing a bloody good job, I should say. Right, that's enough for this lot. Show these gentlemen the door, would you, Sergeant Blackwell?'

'Right you are, sir.'

Mackie touched Gary's shoulder and led him to the railing that overlooked the big ops table. 'I know you're eager to get back to your unit. But I want you to take a moment to understand the big picture, and to see why your contribution today is so important, you and your mother's. I'm with MI-14, by the way, I think I mentioned that. We're that corner of Military Intelligence dedicated to analysing the Germans' intentions. I take it you can read the map?'

'More or less, sir.'

'We know that since establishing their first beachheads the Germans have moved forward to a preliminary covering line that runs from Uckfield to Canterbury, roughly. He pointed at the map. 'And although we've been disrupting the shipping, over the last few days they've managed to get some supplies and more men over, through the captured ports and airfields. Now we think their intention is to push forward to a deeper objective line, running from Portsmouth through Guildford and Reigate, all the way to the Thames estuary at Gravesend. Do you see? If they achieve that, they'll have sliced off the whole of south-east England, including all the airfields. And we believe that after that they will make a thrust west of London, up from Guildford to Reading. London would then be pretty much at their mercy.'

'So the plan is to stop them.'

'Quite right. Now.' He pointed to the Uckfield-Canterbury line. 'We can't hold the whole of that perimeter; we can't stop them crossing the line somewhere. Even if we hadn't left half our bloody army on the beaches at Dunkirk, we couldn't manage that. What we're trying to do is to contain their advance. Now look, can you see our assets? What we want to do is to confine their thrust roughly to the Uckfield-Guildford corridor.'

'Why there?'

'For one thing it's at the boundary between the two armies, the Ninth and Sixteenth, that make up the Germans' Army Group A. Always a weak point, that, the hinge between two forces…'

To achieve this containment British and allied units had been positioned to deter the Germans from advances elsewhere. The First London would block a push north of the high ground of the Weald. In the east a division of New Zealanders was trying to block an advance on Rams-gate; they were outnumbered, but had heavy guns capable of knocking out a Panzer advance. The Forty-fifth Division was positioned on the Weald itself, forcing the Germans to go west. North of the Weald were bodies of reserves, including Canadians, an armoured division and a tank brigade.

And in the west more reserves, including the Third Division under Montgomery – the division Gary had been transferred to – were ready to fall on the expected advance towards Guildford, when the opportunity rose, and carve it up.

'You see the pattern,' Mackie said. 'Now while all this is going on we've still got the RAF and Navy striking at the Germans supply lines, in their rear. They seem to have seriously miscalculated their logistics. They are still reliant on fuel and other supplies shipped over from France; the fuel especially is critical. That's the plan. It's all about logistics, essentially. We bottle them up, strike at them when they try to advance, and starve them of supplies. A kind of mobile siege.' He glanced at Gary. 'So what do you think?'

Gary considered. 'Sir, I'm just a regular corporal, and I've only been that a few days-'

'Oh, you're a bit more than that, Wooler.'

'This is above my head. It seems like it might have a fighting chance.'

'Yes, yes.' Mackie nodded. 'Well, that's how it seems to me. A fighting chance. But no more than that. You see, Wooler, the loss of the BEF was a dreadful blow, both materially and in terms of morale. We're putting up a fight. I think it's possible we can hold these bloody Germans on our soil, today and tomorrow. But it's certainly going to take more than we've got to drive them back into the sea. Which is where you come in.'

'And which is why,' Gary said coldly, 'what happened to Hilda was so useful.'

Mackie's face was hard. 'Yes, it was. I know how bloody this is for you, Wooler. Blame your mother, if you like. Peter's Well was sadly not the only atrocity the Nazis have committed on our soil. Himmler's einsatzgruppen, the SS killing squads, have been spilling English blood just as busily as they did on the continent. But Peter's Well was the one that was witnessed by an American. Your mother's telephone call from Tunbridge Wells was broadcast across the US by hundreds of syndicated stations. And here you are, her son and a grieving husband, an American already fighting this dreadful evil.'

'Good propaganda, right?'

'No. It's the truth, Wooler, cold and unvarnished. And it's precisely what is needed to make your countrymen realise that our fight is their fight, that the Nazis' threat to us is a threat to them. It's said that in the last twenty- four hours, despite the desperate situation, Churchill has spent more time working with the Americans than against the Germans.' He studied Gary. 'Interventionists versus isolationists – that's the language of the debates going on over there, isn't it? But didn't Jefferson himself warn that America should always fear a Europe united under a single hand? And even he didn't anticipate Hitler. Anyhow here we are. You lost Hilda, I know. But by making this contribution, you're helping to ensure there will be no more Hildas in the future.'

'I guess we all have our duty.'

'That's the spirit…'

There was movement at the ops table, and a stir among the listeners at the phones and wireless sets.

'They're moving,' Mackie said, his voice tight. 'They'll call this the Battle of England one day – win or lose. Watch and remember.'

XXXII

The fire roared down on the convoy from right and left, shells erupting from the fields and valleys of this folded, claustrophobic country. Once again the vehicles scattered. The Panzergrenadiers went roaring into the countryside, followed by a couple of the tanks, in search of pillboxes and other English defensive positions.

Ernst and the other men in the troop carriers leapt out to take up what positions they could find beside the road. Ernst found himself in a sort of drainage ditch, blocked by crisp autumn leaves; their smoky smell was rich.

'Where do you think we are?' Ernst shouted at Unteroffizier Fischer.

'God knows.' Fischer checked his watch. 'I know where we should be. On the other side of Haywards Heath by now.' He stumbled over the odd English name.

Ernst knew the route, roughly. From Uckfield they had headed west and north. The plan was to follow the A- class roads though Haywards Heath and Horsham and then make the long run up to Guildford. On the map it looked straightforward. But they had run into this sort of resistance as soon as they had left Uckfield.

More fire rained on the vehicles. It didn't come at random. The tank-busting shells were always targeted first at the lead vehicles in the column and the last, leaving the column trapped and ripe for further attack.

'India,' Ernst said.

The Unteroffizier snorted. 'We're going a bit slow, Gefreiter, but we're not that lost.'

'No. I mean, India is where the English learned this tactic, knocking out the lead and rear vehicles. How infantry can strike at a mechanised column. It's just what the Indians used to do to them in the Raj. I picked that up during our training in France.'

Kieser said, 'After the way they fell over at Dunkirk I never thought the English would fight this hard. Inch by bloody inch, eh, boys?'

The Unteroffizier said, 'But we're still rolling, lads, that's the thing to remember. The English are bastards, but we're worse. Right? The column's forming up again. Let's get back in the truck.'

Cautiously Ernst and the others clambered out onto the road surface. The units that had gone scouring into the hillside returned to the road, the burned-out tanks were being shoved aside by the heavy-lift vehicles, and the lorries' engines were coughing to life. A couple more vehicles lost, Ernst thought, and a bit more of their precious fuel used up.

The fuel was surely the crucial factor. The column had had no resupply since a convoy of fuel trucks had

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