Gavin Lyall - All Honourable Men
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- Название:All Honourable Men
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- Издательство:Bloomsbury Publishing
- Жанр:
- Год:1997
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:5 / 5. Голосов: 1
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All Honourable Men: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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She realised she was looking at a row of bodies, collected against the bank.
“You heard shooting,” Ranklin growled. “That’s what it causes. Now will you get on that horse?”
She may have looked a little paler, but: “I’d be more scared on my own in this country. I’ll stick with you, so give me something to do. Who are you going to shoot at?”
“I’m not sure.” He waved to O’Gilroy. “Tie up the horses upstream, away from the mules.” Those, more than a dozen of them, were tethered a hundred yards down the riverbed. They should be closer, but these were civilian animals, not accustomed to gunfire.
He went on: “It might be better to blow this gun up than actually fire it at anyone-”
“Oh, you’ll fire it at someone, all right.”
Ranklin clenched his teeth. Of course he wanted to shoot this gun, as much as any of the Arabs, but he needed a sensible target. Or to persuade himself he had one.
He reopened the survey map. He couldn’t be sure of his exact position, but the map showed the line of the riverbed well enough that he could guess within a few yards. Measuring with the boxwood protractor he reckoned the gun had been firing at nineteen degrees magnetic, and the attackers’ trench lay at about forty-three – “about” because it was a linear target. But he’d need to be pretty exact about the range, always the most difficult. Or maybe not: the important thing might be to let the Turkish troops know they were now under fire, give their morale a jolt. Or would that just be confirming to Zurga that the gun had been captured?
Damn it, fire the thing and you may be lucky, even hit Zurga. You won’t if you don’t.
He had O’Gilroy, Corinna and two Arabs as his crew.
“Hoick up the trail and swing her round . . . No! Wait!” He stooped to the sight and squinted; it was focussed on a dead pine standing out on the bank two hundred yards upstream. He might as well keep that as the aiming point; it was meaningless in itself, just a reference point from which you measured the angles of targets. “All right, move her now . . . point about here . . .” He adjusted the sight to show the aiming point again and found they had moved only fifteen degrees. “Bit further round . . . stop! . . . back a fraction . . .” With O’Gilroy translating orders into action, the Arabs jostled each other to help. They were willing slaves if he proved master of this weapon.
He checked the clinometer and set O’Gilroy to digging in the slightly high right wheel with an empty shell-case, then indicated he needed the trail spade shoved firmly into the earth. The Arabs took a moment to get the point of this – keeping the gun as firm as possible against the recoil – then began stamping the spade down to China.
The elevating wheel was set to 1950 metres; that didn’t mean it was actually that far to the monastery – the map made it 1800 – just that that setting was right for this wind (there was none, thank God), temperature, pressure and the fact that the monastery was perhaps two hundred feet higher. Which meant that, to fire at the trench . . . Figures jostled in his head and he organised and related them, if this then that, a familiar routine that boiled down to microscopic twiddles on the two aiming wheels. This was home . . .
He straightened up. O’Gilroy was already in the right-hand seat, finding out how the breech-lever and firing lanyard worked. “Right,” Ranklin ordered. “You be number two: Corinna, you load.” He handed her the round: it was about the diameter of a wine bottle but far heavier and rather longer, almost half being the brass case that held the charge. “Lay it over your right forearm and push it firmly home with your left palm – and get that damned coat off, it’ll catch in everything.”
She gave him a sharp look but said nothing and tossed the expensive fur coat aside.
“Load.”
She had to kneel on the shingle and damp sand, leaning in to her left behind O’Gilroy’s back. It was not dignified, and if Ranklin had been less preoccupied he might have overheard what she was muttering. O’Gilroy did hear and turned his head, startled.
He recovered himself to report: “Ready!”
“Put your hands over your ears,” Ranklin instructed – but he was talking about the noise to come, and demonstrating to the Arabs. “Fire!”
26
Corinna balanced the fourth shell on her forearm and rammed it home savagely. It slid more easily now that the grease from previous shells was building up nicely on her jumper sleeve.
“When does -” she clapped her greasy hands briefly to her greasy ears “- the utter fascination -” she took the fifth shell “- of artillery-”
“Fire!”
“-set in?”
“Stop. That’ll do. What did you say?”
“No matter.”
Ranklin had no idea whether they’d hit anything, all he could tell was that the shells had exploded. And nearer the trench than the monastery.
Anyway, there was no point in going on firing into the mist. Better to switch aim and try to hit the second gun. He laid out the survey map and fell comfortably into the world of figures and calculations again. But this was a trickier problem, since the only idea he had about that gun’s position was the rough bearing he’d taken from the shell-scrape at the monastery, and an assumption that it, too, must be in this dry riverbed. Moreover, now he was trying to hit a small target, not just pass a message to a big one.
Then he realised he’d sent a message to Zurga, too. He’d hardly believe the Hon. Patrick or the Arabs could have laid and fired this gun, so probably he’d guessed that the man in the sheepskin waistcoat really was the Warrior Sheep. Which evened things up, you might say. But what would Zurga now do?
And the answer to that was very easy: he was a gunner, so he’d rush back to direct the one gun he still had. Someone else could bring back the troops from the trench if need be (and the ravine would stop them from attacking this gun from where they were; they must come down into the stream bed and then past Bertie’s outpost, so he was safe from surprise).
Then he remembered that Zurga had probably spent the last two days scouting this area: measuring and taking bearings, picking the gun positions . . . Damn it! – he’d know to a yard just where this gun was!
“We’ve got to move!” He peered desperately up and down the riverbed. Now it didn’t matter being close to the far bank, he wouldn’t be trying to shoot over it. What he needed was any scant cover . . . there , a clutter of rocks tumbled from the opposite bank a couple of hundred yards down-stream . . .
“Swing her right around! And HAUL !”
With the two Arabs carrying the trail, O’Gilroy pushing the barrel and he and Corinna at each wheel, a thousand pounds of gun began to trundle, horribly slowly and reluctantly, across shingle, obstinate rocks and grasping patches of wet sand, down the riverbed beach.
Keeping the momentum, they covered fifty yards, then a hundred . . . There was a distant fusillade of rifle fire: Bertie’s men were in action. Mentally, Ranklin patted himself on the back for his foresight in sending them forward – then knew that God would punish his hubris by bogging down the gun in the soft centre of the riverbed. They still had to swing across that.
“All right, hold it, take a breather.” They had come nearly level with his chosen rocks on the far side.
“Ammunition?” O’Gilroy suggested.
“Fetch it later.” Ranklin was choosing the least-soft place to cross. “O’Gilroy, you take the trail-”
BANG – a shrapnel shell had exploded behind them, more-or-less over their old position. So Zurga was back: nobody else would know so precisely where they were supposed to be. In a way, he welcomed that: he’d rather have Zurga firing accurately at the wrong place than someone else dropping shells all over the shop.
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