âI'm afraid so, madam,' he said, replacing his formal headgear before the sun got at what was left of his hair.
Mrs Letherington blinked in the glare of the sun and beckoned her trusty lieutenant forward to be introduced. âThis is my deputy, Miss Ann Arkwright.'
The Ambassador bowed towards a sandy-haired woman whose freckled skin would doubtless soon begin to suffer from the sunlight.
âAnd â' Mrs Letherington half turned as a young man in crumpled jeans and grubby T-shirt appeared at her elbow â âthis is Colin Stubbings, who is acting as our military adviser for the tour.'
Only years of training in the diplomatic service kept the Ambassador's eyebrows in place rather than raised to his hair-line as he surveyed an unattractive youth who had not quite outgrown acne. Anthony Heber-Hibbs charitably attributed the incipient beard to the difficulties of shaving on a long-haul flight, but not even charity could cause him to forgive the libidinous logo on the young man's T-shirt.
âYour adviser?' he asked politely.
âColin has made a special study of the Anglo-Lassertan campaign,' she explained quickly, sensing his reaction, âespecially the Engagement at Bakhalla.'
âHas he?' responded the Ambassador without enthusiasm.
âHe's a student of military history at the university,' she went on, âand naturally, since he lost his father out here â George Stubbings was a Sergeant in the action â he's always taken a particular interest in what went on in the campaign.'
âQuite so,' said Heber-Hibbs, hastily pulling himself together. âWell, I mustn't keep you standing here in the sun. Very bad for you all, especially if you're not used to it. Now, I understand that you're staying at the Coningsby Hotel in Gatt-el-Abbas, soâ¦'
âThat's where the general staff holed up during the Bakhalla campaign,' Colin Stubbings informed him. âMiles behind the firing line. And well out of danger, of course.' He shrugged. âLucky for some, you might say, but not for my mother.' He hitched his shoulder in the direction of a large woman in a floral dress now descending the airline steps as if her feet hurt. âMost of dad's platoon got wiped out.'
âColin,' Mrs Letherington informed Heber-Hibbs, perhaps feeling some further explanation was warranted, âwas awarded the Tarsus College History Prize for an essay on what Anthony Eden should really have done when Nasser annexed the Suez Canal.'
âDid he indeed,' murmured the Ambassador.
âInstead of what he did do,' added Colin Stubbings gratuitously.
âNaturally,' said Anthony Heber-Hibbs at his smoothest. âIt wouldn't have been a matter of speculation otherwise, would it? Only fact â which always gives one so much less scope, don't you think?'
âI don't mind telling you that it's fact that we've come out here for,' announced Stubbings bluntly. âTo find out what really happened at Bakhalla.'
âAh,' said Anthony Heber-Hibbs.
â“Theirs not to reason why”, of course, “Theirs but to do and die”,' quoted Stubbings, âand die they did.' He sniffed. âNot much of a poet, Tennyson, but at least he got Balaclava right.'
âYes, indeed,' agreed the Ambassador, hoping that there had been no other parallels in the Engagement at Bakhalla with the ill-fated Charge of the Light Brigade, or, come to that, with the Charge of the Heavy Brigade either.
âSomeone had blundered,' declared Stubbings firmly.
âThe Earl of Cardigan, I think,' murmured Heber-Hibbs. âOr was it Lord Lucan? I'm afraid I'm not an authority on the Crimean War.'
âI meant someone had blundered here in Lasserta,' asserted Stubbings. âAnd we don't know who.' He paused and then added ominously, âYet.'
âIt's too soon for us to be able to examine the official records, you see,' murmured Mrs Letherington obliquely. âThe thirty-year rule and all that.'
âWe have to wait another ten years before we can look at them,' put in Ann Arkwright from the sidelines. Her voice quavered slightly. âI lost my brother out here and I'd really like to know how and why before then.'
âIt's ten years to wait only if the records aren't embargoed for another fifty years after that,' said Colin Stubbings. He sniffed. âI wouldn't put it past them to do that either, things being what they were at Bakhalla.'
âI quite understand,' said Heber-Hibbs readily. Like almost everyone else he knew, the Ambassador considered thirty years much too soon for official records to be available to the general public. He did his best to sound sympathetic. âDifficult for you.'
Personally Heber-Hibbs favoured a hundred-year rule, and, given the choice, he would have advised the authorities to leave records undisturbed for at least another hundred years after that for the dust from any battle to settle. Mercifully the Anglo-Lassertan campaign had been only twenty years earlier â well and truly inside the thirty-year rule. This, he was now beginning to realize, was something to be profoundly thankful for.
âIt's what they usually do with official records when there's something they want to hide,' asserted Colin Stubbings trenchantly. âMark them down as not to be opened for another fifty years.'
Mr Anthony Heber-Hibbs, a man grown old in the Diplomatic Service, decided against enlightening the lad with the truth. What actually happened to records that might damage the reputations of either the living or the great and dead was much simpler than merely placing them under a dated embargo.
They were lost.
Without trace.
Accidentally on purpose, you might say.
âAnd we shall want to visit the cemetery, of course,' Mrs Letherington was saying, her face clouding. âMy husband's graveâ¦'
âI quite understand,' responded Heber-Hibbs gently. âAnd naturally if there's any way in which my staff and I can be of assistance to your partyâ¦'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The Ambassador summoned his Military Attaché as soon as he got back to the Embassy.
âChristopher,' he said, âyou'd better fill me in. I have a feeling that this party means business. What exactly went wrong at Bakhalla?'
âNobody really seems to know, sir.' He frowned. âThat's the whole trouble.'
âWhich is why the widows and orphans have come out here with their battle guru,' deduced Heber-Hibbs. âTo find out. Go on.'
âIt would appear that one platoon of the East Calleshires suddenly wheeled away from the main action and disappeared out of view.'
âNever seen again?'
âNot alive,' said Christopher Dunlop ominously.
âIt's happened before, of course,' remarked the Ambassador. âIt's not the first time.'
âSir?'
âThe lost Legion of the Ninth. Went missing north of Eboracum â that's York to you and me â around
AD
117.'
âNever seen again?'
âNeither dead nor alive,' said Heber-Hibbs. âLike the lost army of Cambyses. That disappeared in a desert too.'
âCambyses, sir?'
âKing of Persia. Herodotus tells us that the king lost thirty-thousand men who'd been sent out to occupy an oasis in the desert. Never seen again either, not one of 'em.'
The Military Attaché coughed. âThey found this platoon of the East Calleshires all right, sir, but dead. They'd suddenly moved out of range of the covering fire, but no one could say why.'
âStrange,' mused Heber-Hibbs.
âWiped out to a man,' the Military Attaché said. âAt the time it was put down to lack of intelligence, but they weren't really sure.'
âNever a good thing,' agreed Heber-Hibbs gravely. âNot having enough intelligence, I mean. Always makes for difficulties.'
âI was talking in the military sense, sir,' said Dunlop hastily. âI meant a lack of good intelligence.'
âAhâ¦'
âThere were plenty of well-trained brains about at the time,' Dunlop assured him. âNo doubt about that.'
âWhich is something,' said Heber-Hibbs, who had served in several foreign stations where there hadn't been.
The Military Attaché forged on. âIt seems that the Colonel did all the right things â went by the book and all that â but he was blown up early on, visiting an observation post.'
âDid the wrong thing for the right reasons, I expect,' said Heber-Hibbs with a touch of melancholy.
âAs did his successor after he'd been killed â an officer called Arkwright, I believe. He very bravely went off into the desert in an armoured car after the missing platoon.'
âThe legion of the lost ones, the cohort of the damned,' said Heber Hibbs, misquoting Kipling, âthe poor little lambs who lost their wayâ¦'
âYe-es, sir. I suppose you could put it like that. But I fear it didn't do any of them any good.'
âAnd I dare say,' sighed Heber-Hibbs, âthere were good reasons for our involvement in this débâcle?'
âYes, sir.' The Military Attaché cleared his throat. âAs you know, sir, we have this long-standing defence treaty with the sheikhs of Lassertaâ¦'
âA half-baked agreement,' responded Heber-Hibbs spiritedly, âhatched up between Sheikh Ben Mirza Ibrahim Hajal Kisra's great-grandfather and Queen Victoria's ministersâ¦'
âTo come to the aid of the sheikhdom of Lassertaâ¦'
âA benighted country that was only a half-baked protectorate at the time,' swept on Her Britannic Majesty's Ambassador to the state in question with some vigour.
âTo come to their aid against their ancient tribal enemies if we deem it necessary,' finished the Military Attaché. âI think that's the exact wording.'
âIn exchange for what?' demanded Heber-Hibbs rhetorically. He, of all people, was well aware of there being no such thing as a free lunch, in the world of international diplomacy as everywhere else.
The Military Attaché took this question literally. âIn theory, sir, in exchange for the Lassertans permanently keeping the Sultan of Zonaras at bay.'
âSay no more,' growled the Ambassador.
There was, in fact, no need for either man to say anything. What had really been being defended at Bakhalla was the only known seam of queremitte ore in the free world. The hard-wearing qualities of this rare mineral had long been much prized by the armaments and space industries, as well as by more ordinary manufacturers. The Sultan of Zonaras was by no means the only man who would have liked to get his hands on queremitte twenty years ago â or now.
âNot so much a case, sir, of trade following the flag,' ventured the Military Attaché with an ironic smile, âas of the flag following trade.'
âBut we still don't really know what made the Engagement at Bakhalla such a disaster, then?' persisted the Ambassador.
âNo, sir.'
âI suppose I should have known myself, but I was Third Secretary in Chile at the time, with other things on my plate, and anyway Lasserta was a long way away.' He frowned. âSurely, man, it shouldn't have been too difficult to see off the Zonarans?'
âIt shouldn't,' replied Christopher Dunlop cautiously, âbut it was.'
âWell, let me tell you, Christopher, that there's a cocky little lad staying at the Coningsby Hotel who intends to find out why it was.' The Ambassador stroked his chin. âThat is, if he doesn't know already.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Colin Stubbings didn't know.
But as a student of military history he did know that time spent in reconnaissance is seldom wasted. While the remainder of the party from Calleshire was bathing and resting, he slipped out of the Coningsby Hotel and made his way to Bakhalla in one of the battered vehicles that in the town of Gatt-el-Abbas constituted cars for hire.
He found the site of the battle easily enough â a stretch of desert leading towards the Kisra Pass. It was this which had had to be held against the warring Zonarans in their advance southwards if Lasserta was to be saved. Tidily to one side lay the white-walled military cemetery, its occupants as neatly ordered as on the parade ground, but he would pay his respects there later â after he had found out what had gone wrong at the Engagement at Bakhalla.
All he had to go on was what a surviving mate of his father had told him. âI couldn't see what happened all that well, lad,' the old soldier had said, âbecause I was over on the west flank with a bunch of Lassertans â not that they were up to much. Couldn't really call 'em fighters. That's why we were there, I suppose.'
âDad's lotâ¦' Colin had prompted him.
âIt was a funny thing.' The man had frowned. âSuddenly your dad's platoon just wheeled away from the main advance and set off into the desert to the east, your dad leading. For no reason at all that anyone could see.'
âBut under orders surely?' Colin had said, mindful too of
The Charge of the Light Brigade
and the disputed blame for giving the orders there.
âNot that anyone would admit to giving,' the old soldier had said carefully. âProper Valley of Death it looked from where I was, and hellish hot. Didn't stop the Adjutant going after them in an armoured car to see what they were up to.'
âLeading from behind, I suppose.' Colin Stubbings hadn't forgotten âthe sneer of cold command' either.
He'd got the shake of a grizzled head for an answer. âHe bought it too.'
âCommunications all gone?'
âThere was strict radio silence. We'd got orders to advance and take up our positions behind a good layer of trees and scrub well up the wadi to the north â that's where the blighters were coming from. There was nothing to the east but open ground. “B” platoon must have been a sitting target out there.'
Stubbings could see the scrubland himself now. It constituted a broad band of low but thick growth to the north. He turned his head and looked east, and rubbed his eyes ⦠To the east there was rather more in the way of trees, and much better cover than ahead. No wonder his father had led his men that way ⦠it must have seemed like Sanctuary Wood in a wilderness.