The pony-back ride downhill through the thickly wooded forests from the Ivenici plateau to the block-house took Mallory and his men barely a quarter of the time it had taken them to make the ascent. In the deep snow the going underfoot was treacherous to a degree, collision with the bole of a pine was always an imminent possibility and none of the five riders made any pretence towards being an experienced horseman, with the inevitable result that slips, stumbles and heavy falls were as frequent as they were painful. Not one of them escaped the indignity of involuntarily leaving his saddle and being thrown headlong into the deep snow, but it was the providential cushioning effect of that snow that was the saving of them, that and, more often, the sure-footed agility of their mountain ponies: whatever the reason or combination of reasons, bruises and winded falls there were in plenty, but broken bones, miraculously, there were none.
The block-house came in sight. Mallory raised a warning hand, slowing them down until they were about two hundred yards distant from their objective, where he reined in, dismounted and led his pony into a thick cluster of pines, followed by the others. Mallory tethered his horse and indicated to the others to do the same.
Miller said complainingly: 'I'm sick of this damned pony but I'm sicker still of walking through deep snow, don't we just ride on down there?'
'Because they'll have ponies tethered down there. they'll start whinnying if they hear or see or smell other ponies approaching.'
They might start whinnying anyway.'
'And there'll be guards on watch,' Andrea pointed out,
'I don't think, Corporal Miller, that we could make a very stealthy and unobtrusive approach on pony-back.'
'Guards. Guarding against what? As far as Neufeld company are concerned, we're halfway over the Adriatic at this time.'
'Andrea's right,' Mallory said. 'Whatever else you may think about Neufeld, he's a first-class officer who es no chances. There'll be guards.' He glanced up i the night sky where a narrow bar of cloud was just r reaching the face of the moon. 'See that?'
'I see it,' Miller said miserably.
'Thirty seconds, I'd say. We make a run for the far gable end of the block-house — there are no embrasures there. And for God's sake, once we get there, keep dead quiet. If they hear anything, if they as much as suspect that we're outside, they'll bar the doors and use Petar and Maria as hostages. Then we'll just have to leave them.'
'You'd do that, sir?' Reynolds asked.
'I'd do that. I'd rather cut a hand off, but I'd do that. I've no choice, Sergeant.'
'Yes, sir. I understand.'
The dark bar of cloud passed over the moon. The five men broke from the concealment of the pines and pounded downhill through the deep clogging snow, heading for the farther gable-wall of the block-house.
Thirty yards away, at a signal from Mallory, they slowed down lest the sound of their crunching, running footsteps be heard by any watchers who might be keeping guard by the embrasures and completed the remaining distance by walking as quickly and quietly as possible in single file, each man using the footprints left by the man in front of him.
They reached the blank gable-end undetected, with the moon still behind the cloud. Mallory did not pause to congratulate either himself or any of the others. He at once dropped to his hands and knees and crawled round the comer of the block-house, pressing close in to the stone wall.
Four feet from the corner came the first of the embrasures. Mallory did not bother to lower himself any deeper into the snow — the embrasures were so deeply recessed in the massive stone walls that it would have been quite impossible for any watcher to see anything at a lesser distance than six feet from the embrasure. He concentrated, instead, on achieving as minimal a degree of sound as was possible, and did so with success, for he safely passed the embrasure without any alarm being raised. The other four were equally successful even though the moon broke from behind the cloud as the last of them, Groves, was directly under the embrasure. But he, too, remained undetected.
Mallory reached the door. He gestured to Miller, Reynolds and Groves to remain prone where they were he and Andrea rose silently to their feet and pressed their ears close against the door.
Immediately they heard Droshny's voice, thick with menace, heavy with hatred.
'A traitress! That's what she is. A traitress to our cause. Kill her now!'
'Why did you do it, Maria?' Neufeld's voice, in contrast to Droshny's, was measured, calm, almost gentile.'
480
'Why did she do it?' Droshny snarled. 'Money. That's why she did it. What else?'
'Why?' Neufeld was quietly persistent. 'Did Captain Mallory threaten to kill your brother?'
'Worse than that.' They had to strain to catch Maria's low voice. 'He threatened to kill me. Who would have looked after my blind brother then?'
'We waste time,' Droshny said impatiently. 'Let take them both outside.'
'No.' Neufeld's voice, still calm, admitted of no argument. 'A blind boy? A terrified girl? What are you, man?'
'A Cetnik!'
'And I'm an officer of the Wehrmacht.'
Andrea whispered in Mallory's ear: 'Any minute and someone's going to notice our foot-tracks in the snow.'
Mallory nodded, stood aside and made a small gesturing motion of his hand. Mallory was under no illusion as to their respective capabilities when it came to bursting open doors leading into rooms filled with armed men. Andrea was the best in the business and proceeded to prove it in his usual violent and lethal fashion.
A twist of the door handle, a violent kick with the sole of the right foot and Andrea stood framed in the doorway. The wildly swinging door had still not reached the full limit of travel on its hinges when the room echoed to the flat staccato chatter of Andrea's Schmeisser: Mallory, peering over Andrea's shoulder through the swirling cordite smoke, saw two German soldiers, lethally cursed with over-fast reactions, slumping wearily to the floor. His own machine-pistol levelled, Mallory followed Andrea into the room.
There was no longer any call for Schmeissers. None of the other soldiers in the room was carrying any weapon at all while Neufeld and Droshny, their faces frozen into expressions of total incredulity, wen clearly, even if only momentarily, incapable of any movement at all, far less being capable of the idea of offering any suicidal resistance.
Mallory said to Neufeld: 'You've just bought your self your life.' He turned to Maria, nodded towards the door, waited until she had led her brother outside, then looked again at Neufeld and Droshny and said curtly: 'Your guns.'
Neufeld managed to speak, although his lips moved in a strangely mechanical fashion. 'What in the name of God-'
Mallory was in no mind for small talk. He lifted his Schmeisser. 'Your guns.'
Neufeld and Droshny, like men in a dream, removed their pistols and dropped them to the floor.
'The keys.' Droshny and Neufeld looked at him in almost uncomprehending silence. 'The keys,' Mallory repeated. 'Now. Or the keys won't be necessary.'
For several seconds the room was completely silent, then Neufeld stirred, turned to Droshny and nodded Droshny scowled — as well as any man can scowl when his face is still overspread with an expression of baffled astonishment and homicidal fury — reached into his pocket and produced the keys. Miller took them, unlocked and opened wide the cell door wordlessly and with a motion of his machine-pistol invited Neufeld, Droshny, Baer and the other soldiers to enter, waited until they had done so, swung shut the door, locked it and pocketed the key. The room echoed again as Andrea squeezed the trigger of his machine-pistol and destroyed the radio beyond any hope of repair. Five seconds later they were all outside, Mallory, the last in to leave, locking the door and sending the key spinning to fall yards away, buried from sight in the deep snow.
Suddenly he caught sight of the number of ponies tethered outside the block-house. Seven. Exactly the right number. He ran across to the embrasure outside the cell window and shouted: 'Our ponies are tethered two hundred yards uphill just inside the pines. Don't forget.' Then he ran quickly back and ordered the others to mount. Reynolds looked at him in astonishment.
'You think of this, sir? At such a time?'
'I'd think of this at any time.' Mallory turned to Petar, who had just awkwardly mounted his horse, then turned to Maria. 'Tell him to take off his glasses.'
Maria looked at him in surprise, nodded in apparent understanding and spoke to her brother, who looked at her uncomprehendingly, then ducked his head obediently, removed his dark glasses and thrust them deep inside his tunic. Reynolds looked on in astonishment, then turned to Mallory.
'I don't understand, sir.'
Mallory wheeled his pony and said curtly: 'It's not necessary that you do.'
'I'm sorry, sir.'
Mallory turned his pony again and said, almost wearily: 'It's already eleven o'clock, boy, and almost already too late for what we have to do.'
'Sir.' Reynolds was deeply if obscurely pleased that Mallory should call him boy. 'I don't really want to know, sir.'
'You've asked. We'll have to go as quickly as our ponies can take us. A blind man can't see obstructions, can't balance himself according to the level of the terrain, can't anticipate in advance how he should brace himself for an unexpectedly sharp drop, can't lean in the saddle for a corner his pony knows is coming. A blind man, in short, is a hundred times more liable to fall off in a downhill gallop than we are. It's enough that a blind man should be blind for life. It's too much that we should expose him to the risk of a heavy fall with his glasses on, expose him to the risk of not only being blind but of having his eyes gouged out and being in agony for life.'
'I hadn't thought — I mean — I'm sorry, sir.'
'Stop apologizing, boy. It's really my turn, you know — to apologize to you. Keep an eye on him, will you?'
Colonel Lazlo, binoculars to his eyes, gazed down over the moonlit rocky slope below him towards the bridge at Neretva. On the southern bank of the river, in the meadows between the south bank and the beginning of the pine forest beyond, and, as far as Lazlo could ascertain, in the fringes of the pine forest itself, there was;ú disconcertingly ominous lack of movement, of any sign of life at all. Lazlo was pondering the disturbingly sinister significance of this unnatural peacefulness when a hand touched his shoulder. He twisted, looked up and recognized the figure of Major Stephan, commander of the Western Gap.
'Welcome, welcome. The General has advised me of your arrival. Your battalion with you?' 'What's left of it.' Stephan smiled without really smiling. 'Every man who could walk. And all those who couldn't.'
'God send we don't need them all tonight. The General has spoken to you of this man Mallory?' Major Stephen nodded, and Lazlo went on: 'If he fails? If the Germans cross the Neretva tonight — '
'So?' Stephan shrugged. 'We were all due to die tonight anyway.'
'A well-taken point,' Lazlo said approvingly. He lifted his binoculars and returned to his contemplation the bridge at Neretva.
So far, and almost incredibly, neither Mallory nor any of the six galloping behind him had parted company with their ponies. Not even Petar. True, the incline of the slope was not nearly as steep as it had been im the Ivenici plateau down to the block-house, It Reynolds suspected it was because Mallory had imperceptibly succeeded in slowing down the pace of their earlier headlong gallop. Perhaps, Reynolds — thought vaguely, it was because Mallory was subconsciously trying to protect the blind singer, who was riding almost abreast with him, guitar firmly strapped over his shoulder, reins abandoned and both hands clasped desperately to the pommel of his saddle, unbidden, almost, Reynolds's thoughts strayed back that scene inside the block-house. Moments later, was urging his pony forwards until he had drawn alongside Mallory.
'Sir?'
'What is it?' Mallory sounded irritable.
'A word, sir. It's urgent. Really it is.'
Mallory threw up a hand and brought the company to a halt. He said curtly: 'Be quick.'
'Neufeld and Droshny, sir.' Reynolds paused in a moment's brief uncertainty, then continued. 'Do you reckon they know where you're going?'
'What's that to do with anything?'
'Please.'
'Yes, they do. Unless they're complete morons. And they're not.'
'It's a pity, sir,' Reynolds said reflectively, 'that you hadn't shot them after all.'
'Get to the point,' Mallory said impatiently.
'Yes, sir. You reckoned Sergeant Baer released them earlier on?'
'Of course.' Mallory was exercising all his restraint 'Andrea saw them arrive. I've explained all this. They — Neufeld and Droshny — had to go up to the Ivenici plateau to check that we'd really gone.'
'I understand that, sir. So you knew that Baer was following us. How did he get into the block-house?'
Mallory's restraint vanished. He said in exasperation: 'Because I left both keys hanging outside.'
'Yes, sir. You were expecting him. But Sergeant Baer didn't know you were expecting him — and even if he did he wouldn't be expecting to find keys so conveniently to hand.'
'Good God in heaven! Duplicates!' In bitter chagrin, Mallory smacked the fist of one hand into the palm of the other. 'Imbecile! Imbecile! Of course he would have his own keys.'
'And Droshny,' Miller said thoughtfully, 'may know a short cut.'
'That's not all of it.' Mallory was completely back on balance again, outwardly composed, the relaxed calmness of the face the complete antithesis of his racing mind. 'Worse still, he may make straight for his camp radio and warn Zimmermann to pull his armoured divisions back from the Neretva. You've earned your passage tonight, Reynolds. Thanks, boy How far to Neufeld's camp, do you think, Andrea?'
'A mile.' The words came over Andrea's shoulder, for Andrea, as always in situations which he knew called for the exercise of his highly specialized talents, was already on his way.
Five minutes later they were crouched at the edge j the forest less than twenty yards from the perimeter. Neufeld's camp. Quite a number of the huts had illuminated windows, music could be heard coming am the dining hut and several Cetnik soldiers were moving about in the compound. Reynolds whispered to Mallory: 'How do we go about it, sir?'
'We don't do anything at all. We just leave it to Andrea.'
Groves spoke, his voice low. 'One man? Andrea? leave it to one man?'
Mallory sighed. Tell them, Corporal Miller.'
'I'd rather not. Well, if I have to. The fact is,' Miller went on kindly, 'Andrea is rather good at this sort of thing.'
'So are we,' Reynolds said. 'We're commandos. We've been trained for this sort of thing.'
'And very highly trained, no doubt,' said Miller approvingly. 'Another half-dozen years' experience and a dozen of you might be just about able to cope with him. Although I doubt it very much. Before the night is out, you'll learn — and I don't mean to be insulting, Sergeants — that you are little lambs to Andrea's wolf.' Miller paused and went on sombrely: 'Like whoever happens to be inside that radio hut at this moment.'
'Like whoever happens — ' Groves twisted round and looked behind him. 'Andrea? He's gone. I didn't see him go.'
'No one ever does,' Miller said. 'And those poor devils won't ever see him come.'
He looked at Mallory. 'Time's a-wasting.'
Mallory glanced at the luminous hands of his watch, Eleven-thirty. Time is a-wasting.'
For almost a minute there was a silence broken only by the restless movements of the ponies tethered deep in the woods behind them, then Groves gave a muffled exclamation as Andrea materialized beside him. Mallory looked up and said: 'How many?'
Andrea held up two fingers and moved silently into the woods towards his pony. The others rose and followed him, Groves and Reynolds exchanging glances which indicated more clearly than any words could possibly have done that they could have been even more wrong about Andrea than they had ever been about Mallory.
At precisely the moment that Mallory and his companions were remounting their ponies in the woods fringing Neufeld's camp, a Wellington bomber came sinking down towards a well-lit airfield — the same airfield from which Mallory and his men had taken off less than twenty-four hours previously. Termoli, Italy. It made a perfect touchdown and as it taxied along the runway an army radio truck curved in on an interception course, turning to parallel the last hundred yards of the Wellington's run down. In the left-hand from seat and in the right-hand back seat of the truck sat two immediately recognizable figures: in the front, the piratical splendidly bearded figure of Captain Jensen, in the back the British lieutenant-general with whom Jensen had recently spent so much time in pacing the Termoli Operations Room.
Plane and truck came to a halt at the same moment. Jensen, displaying a surprising agility for one of his very considerable bulk, hopped nimbly to the ground and strode briskly across the tarmac and arrived at the Wellington just as its door opened and the first of the passengers, the moustached major, swung to the ground.
Jensen nodded to the papers clutched in the major's hand and said without preamble: 'Those for me?'
The major blinked uncertainly, then nodded stiffly return, clearly irked by this abrupt welcome for a in just returned from durance vile. Jensen took the papers without a further word, went back to his seat the jeep, brought out a flashlight and studied the papers briefly. He twisted in his seat and said to the radio operator seated beside the General: 'Flight plan as stated. Target as indicated. Now.' The radio operator began to crank the handle.
Some fifty miles to the south-east, in the Foggia area, the buildings and runways of the RAF heavy bomber base echoed and reverberated to the thunder scores of aircraft engines: at the dispersal area at the west end of the main runway several squadrons Lancaster heavy bombers were lined up ready for take-off, obviously awaiting the signal to go. The signal was not long in coming.
Halfway down the airfield, but well to one side the main runway, was parked a jeep identical to one in which Jensen was sitting in Termoli. In the back seat a radio operator was crouched over a radio, earphones to his head. He listened intently, and then looked up and said matter-of-factly: 'Instructions as stated. Now. Now. Now.'
'Instructions as stated,' a captain in the front seat repeated. 'Now. Now. Now.' He reached for a wooden box, produced three Very pistols, aimed directly across the runway and fired each in turn. The brilliantly arcing flares burst into incandescent life, green, red and green again, before curving slowly back to earth.
The thunder at the far end of the airfield mounted to rumbling crescendo and the first of the Lancasters began to move. Within a few minutes the last of them had taken off and was lifting into the darkly hostile night skies of the Adriatic.
'I did say, I believe,' Jensen remarked conversationally and comfortably to the General in the back seat, 'that they are the best in the business. Our friends from Foggia are on their way.'
'The best in the business. Maybe. I don't know What I do know is that those damned German and Austrian divisions are still in position in the Gustav Line. Zero hour for the assault on the Gustav Line is he glanced at his watch — 'in exactly thirty hours.'
'Time enough,' Jensen said confidently.
'I wish I shared this blissful confidence.'
Jensen smiled cheerfully at him as the jeep moved off, then faced forward in his seat again. As he did the smile vanished completely from his face and hi fingers beat a drum tattoo on the seat beside him.
The moon had broken through again as Neufeld, Droshny and their men came galloping into camp and reined in ponies so covered with steam from their heaving flanks and distressed breathing as t<> have a weirdly insubstantial appearance in the pal< moonlight. Neufeld swung from his pony and turned to Sergeant Baer.
'How many ponies left in the stables?'
Twenty. About that.'
'Quickly. And as many men as there are ponies Saddle up.'
Neufeld gestured to Droshny and together they ran towards the radio hut. The door, ominously enough on that icy night, was standing wide open. They were still ten feet short of the door when Neufeld shouted: The Nevetva bridge at once. Tell General Zimmermann — '
'He halted abruptly in the doorway, Droshny by his shoulder. For the second time that evening the faces of men reflected their stunned disbelief, their total uncomprehending shock.
Only one small lamp burned in the radio hut, that one small lamp was enough. Two men on the floor in grotesquely huddled positions, one lying partially across the other: both were unmistakably dead. Beside them, with its face-ripped off and interior smashed, lay the mangled remains of what had once been a transmitter. Neufeld gazed at the scene for some time before shaking his violently as if to break the shocked spell and turned to Droshny. 'The big one,' he said quietly. The big one did this.'
'The big one,' Droshny agreed. He was almost smiled, 'You will remember what you promised, Hauptman Neufeld? The big one. He's for me.'
'You shall have him. Come. They can be only minutes ahead.' Both men turned and ran back to compound where Sergeant Baer and a group of soldiers were already saddling up the ponies, machine-pistols only,' Neufeld shouted. 'No rifles. It will be close-quarter work tonight. And Sergeant Baer?'
'Hauptmann Neufeld?'
'Inform the men that we will not be taking prisoners.'
AS those of Neufeld and his men had been, the ponies of Mallory and his six companions were almost Invisible in the dense clouds of steam rising from their sweat-soaked bodies: their lurching gait, which could not now even be called a trot, was token enough of the obvious fact that they had reached the limits of exhaustion. Mallory glanced at Andrea, who nodded and said: 'I agree. We'd make faster time on foot now ' 'I must be getting old,' Mallory said, and for a moment he sounded that way. 'I'm not thinking very well tonight, am I?' 'I do not understand,'
'Ponies. Neufeld and his men will have fresh ponies from the stables. We should have killed them — or at least driven them away.'
'Age is not the same thing as lack of sleep. Ii never occurred to me, either. A man cannot think of everything, my Keith.' Andrea reined in his pony and was about to swing down when something on the slope below caught his attention. He pointed ahead.
A minute later they drew up alongside a very narrow-gauge railway line, of a type common in Central Yugoslavia. At this level the snow had petered out and the track, they could see, was overgrown and rusty, but for all that, apparently in fair enough mechanical condition: undoubtedly, it was the sam< track that had caught their eye when they had paused to examine the green waters of the Neretva dam on the way back from Major Broznik's camp that morning. Bin what simultaneously caught and held the attention of both Mallory and Miller was not the track itself, but a little siding leading on to the track — and a diminutive wood-burning locomotive that stood on the siding. Tin locomotive was practically a solid block of rust and looked as if it hadn't moved from its present position since the beginning of the war: in all probability, h hadn't.
Mallory produced a large-scale map from his tunic and flashed a torch on it. He said: 'No doubt of it, this is the track we saw this morning. It goes down along the Neretva for at least five miles before bearing off the south.' He paused and went on thoughtfully: 'I wonder if we could get that thing moving.'
'What?' Miller looked at him in horror. 'It'll fall to bs if you touch it — it's only the rust that's holding damn thing together. And that gradient there!' He in dismay down the slope. 'What do you think our terminal velocity is going to be when we hit one of monster pine trees a few miles down the track?'
'The ponies are finished,' Mallory said mildly, 'and know how much you love walking.' Miller looked at the locomotive with loathing.
'There must be some other way.'
'Shh' Andrea cocked his head. 'They're coming, I can hear them coming.'
'Get the chocks away from those front wheels,' Miller shouted. He ran forward and after several violent and well-directed kicks which clearly took into no account future state of his toes, succeeded in freeing the triangular block which was attached to the front of the locomotive by a chain: Reynolds, no less energetically, did the same for the other chock.
All of them, even Maria and Petar helping, flung their weight against the rear of the locomotive, locomotive remained where it was. They tried in, despairingly: the wheels refused to budge even faction of an inch. Groves said, with an odd mixture urgency and diffidence: 'Sir, on a gradient like this, Would have been left with its brakes on.'
'Oh my God!' Mallory said in chagrin. 'Andrea. Quick — Release the brake lever.'
Andrea swung himself on to the footplate. He said complainingly: 'There are a dozen damned levers up here-'
'Well, open the dozen damned levers, then.' Mallory glanced anxiously back up the track. Maybe Andrea had heard something, maybe not: there was certainly no one in sight yet. But he knew that Neufeld and Droshny, who must have been released from the block-house only minutes after they had left then themselves and who knew those woods and path better than they did, must be very close indeed by this time.
There was a considerable amount of metallic screeching and swearing coming from the cabin after perhaps half a minute Andrea said: 'That's the lot.'
'Shove,' Mallory ordered.
They shoved, heels jammed in the sleepers and backs to the locomotive, and this time the locomotive moved off so easily, albeit with a tortured squealing of rusted wheels, that most of those pushing were caught wholly by surprise and fell on their back on the track. Moments later they were on their feet and running after the locomotive which was already perceptibly beginning to increase speed. Andrea reached down from the cab, swung Maria and Petar aboard m turn, then lent a helping hand to the others. The last Groves, was reaching for the footplate when he sudden I v braked, swung round, ran back to the ponies, unhitched the climbing ropes, flung them over his shoulder and chased after the locomotive again. Mallory reached down and helped him on to the footplate.
'It's not my day,' Mallory said sadly. 'Evening rather First, I forget about Baer's duplicate keys. Then about the ponies. Then about the brakes. Now the ropes I wonder what I'll forget about next?'
'Perhaps about Neufeld and Droshny.' Reynolds voice was carefully without expression.
'What about Neufeld and Droshny?'
Reynolds pointed back up the railway track with barrel of his Schmeisser. 'Permission to fire, sir.' Mallory swung round. Neufeld, Droshny and and an indeterminate number of other pony-mounted soldiers had just appeared around a bend in the track and were more than a hundred yards away, 'permission to fire,' Mallory agreed. 'The rest of get down.' He unslung and brought up his own Schmeisser just as Reynolds squeezed the trigger of his, For perhaps five seconds the closed metallic confines of the tiny cabin reverberated deafeningly to the crash of the two machine-pistols, then, at a nudge from Mallory, the two men stopped firing. There was no target left to fire at. Neufeld and his men had loosed off a few preliminary shots but immediately realized that the wildly swaying saddles of their ponies made an impossibly unsteady firing position as compared to cab of the locomotive and had pulled their ponies into the woods on either side of the track. But not all of them had pulled off in time: two men lay motionless and face down in the snow while their ponies still galloped down the track in the wake of the locomotive.
Miller rose, glanced wordlessly at the scene behind, tapped Mallory on the arm. 'A small point occurs me, sir. How do we stop this thing.' He gazed apprehensively through the cab window. 'Must be doing sixty already.'
'Well, we're doing at least twenty,' Mallory said agreeably. 'But fast enough to out-distance those ponies. Ask Andrea. He released the brake.'
'He released a dozen levers,' Miller corrected. 'Any could have been the brake.'
'Well, you're not going to sit around doing nothing,?' Mallory asked reasonably. 'Find out how to stop the damn thing.'
Miller looked at him coldly and set about trying to find out how to stop the damn thing. Mallory turned as Reynolds touched him on the arm. 'Well?'
Reynolds had an arm round Maria to steady her on the now swaying platform. He whispered: They going to get us, sir. They're going to get us for sure. Why don't we stop and leave those two, sir? Give them a chance to escape into the woods?'
'Thanks for the thought. But don't be mad. With us they have a chance — a small one to be sure, but a chance. Stay behind and they'll be butchered.'
The locomotive was no longer doing the twenty miles per hour Mallory had mentioned and if it hadn't approached the figure that Miller had so fearfully mentioned it was certainly going quickly enough to make it rattle and sway to what appeared to be the very limits of its stability. By this time the last of the trees to the right of the track had petered out, the darkened waters of the Neretva dam were clearly visible to the west and the railway track was now running very close indeed to the edge of what appeared to be a dangerously steep precipice. Mallory looked back into the cab. With the exception of Andrea, every one now wore expressions of considerable apprehension their faces. Mallory said: 'Found out how to stop this damn thing yet?'
'Easy.' Andrea indicated a lever. 'This handle here.'
'Okay, brakeman. I want to have a look.'
To the evident relief of most of the passenger in the cab, Andrea leaned back on the brake-lever. There was an eldritch screeching that set teeth on edge, clouds of sparks flew up past the sides of the cab as some wheels or other locked solid in the lines, then the locomotive eased slowly to a halt, both the intensity of sound from the squealing brakes and the number of sparks diminishing as it did so. Andrea, duty done, leaned out of the side of the cab with the bored aplomb of the crack loco engineer: one had the feeling that all he really wanted in life that moment was a piece of oily waste and a whistle-cord to pull.
Mallory and Miller climbed down and ran to the edge of the cliff, less than twenty yards away. At st Mallory did. Miller made a much more cautious j>roach, inching forward the last few feet on hands id knees. He hitched one cautious eye over the edge of It precipice, screwed both eyes shut, looked away and st as cautiously inched his way back from the edge of [the cliff: Miller claimed that he couldn't even stand on the bottom step of a ladder without succumbing to the I overwhelming compulsion to throw himself into the abyss.
Mallory gazed down thoughtfully into the depths. They were, he saw, directly over the top of the dam wall, which, in the strangely shadowed half-light cast by the moon, seemed almost impossibly far below in the dizzying depths. The broad top of the dam wall was brightly lit by floodlights and patrolled by at least half a dozen German soldiers, jackbooted and helmeted. Beyond the dam, on the lower side, the ladder Maria had spoken of was invisible, but the frail-looking swing bridge, still menaced by the massive bulk of the boulder on the scree on the left bank, and farther down, ' the white water indicating what might or might not have been a possible — or passable — ford were plainly In sight. Mallory, momentarily abstracted in thought, gazed at the scene below for several moments, recalled that the pursuit must be again coming uncomfortably close and hurriedly made his way back to the locomotive. He said to Andrea: 'About a mile and a half, I should think. No more.' He turned to Maria. 'You know there's a ford — or what seems to be a ford some way below the dam. Is there a way down?'
'For a mountain goat.'
'Don't insult him,' Miller said reprovingly.
'I don't understand.'
'Ignore him,' Mallory said. 'Just tell us when we get there.'
Some five or six miles below the Neretva dam General Zimmermann paced up and down the fringe of the pine forest bordering the meadow to the south of the bridge at Neretva. Beside him paced a colonel, one of his divisional commanders. To the south of them could just dimly be discerned the shapes of hundreds of men and scores of tanks and other vehicles, vehicles with all their protective camouflage now removed, each tank and vehicle surrounded by its coterie of attendants making last-minute and probably wholly unnecessary adjustments. The time for hiding was over. The waiting was coming to an end. Zimmermann glanced;ii his watch.
'Twelve-thirty. The first infantry battalions start moving across in fifteen minutes, and spread out along the north bank. The tanks at two o'clock.'
'Yes, sir.' The details had been arranged many hour-, ago, but somehow one always found it necessary to repeat the instructions and the acknowledgements The colonel gazed to the north. 'I sometimes wonder if there's anybody at all across there.'
'It's not the north I'm worrying about,' Zimmerman said sombrely. 'It's the west.'
'The Allies? You — you think their air armadas will come soon? It's still in your bones, Herr General?'
'Still in my bones. It's coming soon. For me, for you, for all of us.' He shivered, then forced a smile. Some ill-mannered lout has just walked over my grave.'