The Shadow of War Jack Murray (books for 10th graders .TXT) đ
- Author: Jack Murray
Book online «The Shadow of War Jack Murray (books for 10th graders .TXT) đ». Author Jack Murray
âWeshould call the tank, âPigâ. It bloody loves this weather,â said Arthur, wipingthe rain off his face.
âYouârenot such a big fan of the rain, I take it?â replied Danny, down below. He wasmanning the machine gun but was likely to be unemployed unless the local deercame armed with anti-tank guns.
âNo, Iâm bleedinâ not,â growled Arthur.
âWe need the rain. How do things grow, otherwise?â pointed outDanny reasonably.
âGo on back to the sticks, country boy,â replied Arthur. The tankseemed to dive at that point into a large pothole. âBloody hell, what wasthat?â
He was told they were going through a ditch. The tank suddenlyreared up again, throwingArthur backwards, much to his chagrin. The laughter of the other men was asmuch sympathy as Arthur was ever going to get. He rubbed the back of his headand continued to grouse as they advanced.
Therewere five men in the tank. They were still in training, so roles were rotated eachday. Three people sat in the compact turret of the A13. The commander, a gunnerand the wireless operator
âArewe near our objective?â shouted Arthur, who was the gunner. His positionoffered no hatch and his only view of what lay aheadwas through the narrow aperture of his gun sight. As the tank bumped around somuch, he had little idea of where they were.
âWhy donât you get your arse up top and see for yourself?â shoutedCorporal Phil Lawrence who was the commander of the tank on this day. Lawrence,much to the delight of Danny and Arthur had joined them at Thursley a couple ofweeks previously having had a request to join the Royal Tank Regiment accepted.
âI did. Itâs too wet,â pointed out Arthur. âWhat if we come across an Italian tank?â
Thisbrought a volley of abuse from the boys below. Reluctantly, Arthur opened theturret again and looked out. The rain had eased off to a mild drizzle. Dropletsfell from his steel helmet.
Therewas a shout from below, âWell?â
âJustup ahead. Iâll have to open the gate,â replied Arthur. He climbed out of theturret and opened a wooden farm gate originally intended to keep hostile cattleor sheep at bay. The tank followed Arthur through the gate onto a road. Acrossof the field was their destination. It was a pub, âThe Fox and Houndâ.
Fivemen emerged from the top of the tank and jogged towards the pub.
âDoyou think itâs all right to leave it there?â asked Danny as he entered the pub.
âLeaveit out,â said Arthur, âEven Jerry wouldnât invade on a day like this. Mineâs abitter, as you asked.â The others laughed and called out their orders to Dannywho strode towards the bar,
Thebarmaid sized up Danny and turned her smile on full beam. She was probablytwice Dannyâs age but that didnât matter, she thought. There had been plentylike Danny before. There would be again. She never could resist a man inuniform. She leaned forward giving Danny an eyeful of her ample bust.
âWhatcan I do for you?â
Dannysmiled and said, âYour smile is enough, darling, but, now that you mention it,five halves of bitter.â
âCheeky,Iâve got my eye on you.â
âAndIâve got my eye on you, love,â said Danny with a wink. The other locals at thebar roared their approval at the exchange.
âGota live one there, Mildred,â shouted one.
Dannybrought the drinks back in two relays. âThanks for the help,â he saidsardonically.
âDidnâtwant to cramp your style,â said Arthur.
Dannyglanced back at Mildred and waved before turning back to his friends, andreplied, âMore your generation, Arthur.â
Agentle clip round the back of the head was Dannyâs reward. The five comradessavoured their half pints. They knew that training was at an end. It was only amatter of time before they would be posted to a theatre of conflict. Opinionsvaried on where this would be.
âGreece,âsaid Lawrence, âHas to be. Theyâre an ally and theyâve been invaded. Unless wesupport them, how do we expect to get other allies?â
âGoodpoint,â agreed Arthur. âYou should be a politician. Theyâre the damn fools thattook us out of Africa when we were minutes away from kicking the âEyetiesâ out.Now look.â
Thetwo men looked at Danny. He was shaking his head in a manner they had grownused to and also to respect.
âLookslike the child disagrees,â said Lawrence.
âHejust wants to be playing with his toys,â continued Arthur.
Dannygrinned, âI like the big toy outside. Never had anything like that when I wasgrowing up.â
âLetme know when you grow up,â said Arthur, as his six-foot two friend collectedthe glasses and brought them back to the bar for a refill.
âHere,here,â said Lawrence, âHeâs back on the pull.â
WhenDanny returned from the bar with another round, he looked at their eager facesand said, âYeah, it could be Greece but Iâm with Arthur. It has to be NorthAfrica.â
Lawrencelooked glum. He knew the boys were right.
âWewere all but home and dry there. Itâs like Stoke going one nil up and thenpulling Stanley Matthews off because they think the gameâs over. We could have hadAfrica sorted and then dealt with bloody Greece. Old Adolf would have beensurrounded on all sides.â
âHeâsno Denis Compton, though,â said Arthur puffing on his pipe.
âWho?âasked Lawrence.
âMatthews.â
âGetout of it,â replied Lawrence, a native of that jewel in the midlands.
âIdonât see Matthews coming in at number three for Surrey, any time soon,âguffawed Arthur.
Dannyignored Arthur and replied to Lawrence, âLike or not, weâve not got enough menout there at the moment. They need to cut Jerry off from all that oil.â
âHarkat him,â said Arthur, âFifteen weeks or so of training and heâs a proper littlegeneral now.â
Theother two men in the group, were around Dannyâs age remained quiet through allthis nonsense. Jim Donnelly and Will Anderson sat looking on in silence. Theywere happy to listen to their fellow recruits. Donnelly was small in staturewith a gap-toothed smile. He operated the radio while Anderson, a mechanic bytrade, doubled on the machine gun and made repairswhen the tank broke down, which was a frequent occurrence.
âYouârequiet,â said Arthur, looking at Anderson. âIs the tank all right?â
Andersonwiggled his hands to indicate that this was a fifty-fifty answer.
âWhatâswrong?â asked Danny.
âEnginesounded ropey back there,â
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