And now Sandy-hair had returned to his German friends, to complete whatever treason he was transacting with them . . .
dummy4
It didn't make any sense at all.
Time was passing.
He toyed with the idea of seizing this opportunity to start running again—to spring to life and start running— but finally rejected it as unsound. He dare not move to test the strength of his leg, which he had damaged in his fall, but he could add its likely weakness to the greater tiredness and lassitude which enveloped him, and to the doubts within him; and the addition told him that if he ran he would not run far before they caught him.
And, also, if he ran he would be disobeying Sandy-hair's explicit instruction:
So he lay there, and stayed dead, even though he didn't
Eventually he heard the familiar crunching footfalls again, far away but coming closer.
He thought:
He closed his eyes and held his breath.
'Don't move,' murmured Sandy-hair above him. 'They've gone, but I said I'd dispose of you, and it's not safe in the dummy4
open, so that's what I'm going to do— for appearances'
sake ... I'm going to drag you off the line into the bushes—
right?'
If it was right it was also decidedly uncomfortable as Bastable felt his wrists being seized and his arms stretched, and his boots bumped and scraped over the granite chippings of the railway track. But at least he knew what was happening to him.
Then the going became softer, and the light penetrating his eyelids was shadowed.
He opened his eyes, and beheld a nightmare, and closed them again instantly because the nightmare was impossible.
Bushes swished around him, and twigs cracked underfoot ahead of him.
He opened his eyes again fearfully, and saw that he was in a small clearing enclosed by bushes.
The bushes parted and the nightmare came back, scowling frightfully at him.
The Brigadier was alive.
XVI
'Sit up, Willis!' said the sandy-haired staff officer.
Bastable stared up through a tracery of leaves at the blue sky far above. He didn't want to sit up. He wanted to die.
He had failed.
dummy4
'Sit up!' repeated Sandy-hair sharply.
He had not merely failed: he had failed miserably and shamefully and impossibly. He had failed at point-blank range.
'Don't play silly buggers with me, man!' rasped the Brigadier.
'Sit up this instant!'
Harry Bastable raised himself on to his elbows and faced his failure.
Its extent was printed on the Brigadier's face, across his cheek and the side of his neck in a fiery red powder- burn—
and also in the ferocious expression of anger on the rest of the Brigadier's face.
And finally in the pistol in the Brigadier's hand which pointed unwaveringly at his heart across the little clearing in which they lay.
'Now then—' The Brigadier spoke through clenched teeth, as though his face hurt him. 'Now then—'
'Sir!' The sandy-haired staff officer raised his hand. 'If it's all the same to you, sir—he's mine.'
'Yours?' The Brigadier started to turn towards Sandy-hair, and then winced as the movement creased his powder-burn.
'Well. . . he's certainly your responsibility, Freddie—I grant you that. Because when you deceived Obergruppenfuhrer Keller you risked both of us getting the kybosh. God only dummy4
knows what you would have said if he'd decided to examine the corpse!'
'I should have said that I wanted to interrogate him myself, sir—without delay and without interference,' said Sandy-hair suavely.
'And you think Keller would have let you?'
'Our need is greater than his, sir—he isn't going straight back to British lines, and we are. So it's our risk .. . Besides which, Keller's got a far-more-urgent job than interrogating British agents; the sooner he gets the details of