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Pokalov spoke for three minutes. He was brimful of energy and excitement, but it was still a long three minutes. They understood nothing until his final words: “Na Moskvu!” Borodin led the applause. Pokalov smiled and joined in.

“Please,” Wragge said to Borodin.

“The general congratulates the squadron on its stunning victories, and is proud to announce that the Bolsheviks have retreated to Orel, which with your help General Denikin will now take on his glorious way to Moscow.”

They waited. “Is that all?” Dextry said.

“What he failed to say is that three battalions of the enemy have shot their officers and deserted to join our ranks, and one Cossack cavalry brigade has tired of retreating and gone home. There are indications of a Bolo collapse.”

“Are there?” Jessop said. “Tell that to Tommy Hopton and Mickey Blythe.”

“We must expect casualties,” the C.O. said. “It’s the price we pay for victory.” Nobody applauded that. It had been a hard day and Wragge wanted to put it behind him. “What are Denikin’s plans?” he said to Borodin. “What does he want of us?”

“Ground-strafing at Orel.”

“Sweet blind O’Reilly,” Jessop said. “Haven’t we done our share of that? Strafing fixed defences is bloody dangerous.”

“Look at it this way,” the C.O. said. “One last Big Push and the enemy’s done for.”

“They told us that in France,” Dextry said. “Told us over and over again.”

“And we won in the end.” Wragge cranked up a smile and shook the general’s hand. “I think champagne is called for, don’t you?”

2

The search parties went out again next morning. The C.O. told the adjutant that he was damned if he would walk away and leave two dead men as if they didn’t matter. The adjutant agreed but, he said, the hard facts had to be faced. “I know, I know,” Wragge said. “A lot of good men vanished in France. Took off, never seen again. Lost. I know that, Uncle. Look, we’ll hold a memorial service of some kind. Get Lacey to sort something out. Noon today.”

The squadron doctor left the train after the morning sick parade and found Borodin waiting in the Chevrolet. “I asked the troops to unload it,” he said. “We could drive around. Might see something.”

“Rubbish. You just want to take me for a ride.”

“I was thinking of the search parties. They might need your professional advice.”

“About what? Two men jumped out of an aeroplane. They’re dead. What else?” She got in the car. “I don’t mind if you lie, all men lie, but don’t fudge the facts.”

He started the engine and they drove away “You sound as if you’ve had a rough morning.”

“I look at hairy, sweaty, male bodies every day, Borodin. How d’you think I feel?”

“Ah, but the men love you, Mrs Perry.”

“Some of them love themselves. There’s a mechanic who keeps coming back because he’s sure he’s ruptured himself, and you know where that usually happens.”

“Lower stomach?”

“Groin. I examine him, he lets out a long groan. He hasn’t got a hernia, but he’s proud of his pathetic manhood.”

“Let me guess. Abnormal.”

“Who cares? Size is an accident of birth. In France, in Forward Casualty Clearing, I saw a hundred naked men a day. Some wanted me to hold their hand, usually the ones who were dying, but nobody ever asked me to measure their genitalia, which was just as well because sometimes there was nothing left to measure.”

That silenced him. They had crossed the field and now he was driving carefully between Scots pines. “Where are we going?” she said.

“Anywhere. I too get tired of the company of men. Especially Englishmen.”

“What’s wrong with them? Apart from phantom hernias.”

“They thought they came to save Russia. Actually they came for the fun of flying aeroplanes at someone else’s expense. Now it’s not such fun and they’re turning sour. Russia’s fault, of course.”

“You sound a little sour yourself.”

He stopped the car beside a huge cypress. It had split down the middle and some branches almost touched the ground. “Do you like climbing trees?”

“Did once.”

“I climbed them with the Tsar. He enjoyed playing hide-and-seek, and he was happiest hiding up a tree. Come on.”

The branches were thick and horizontal and easy to climb. Squirrels fled and poked their heads out to watch the invaders. The doctor and the count found a comfortable perch thirty feet up. “This was a good idea,” she said. “I feel deliciously free. What did you and the Tsar talk about when you were hiding?”

“He told jokes. He wasn’t the Tsar then, only the heir. Nobody laughed in the Imperial court. Too stuffy. I was just a boy, he made me laugh.”

“What sort of jokes?”

“Oh… silly riddles.” He thought. “What do you get when you cross a crocodile with a parrot?”

“Give up.”

“A big surprise when it bites your leg off and says, ‘Who’s a pretty boy, then?’ He found that hilarious. Sometimes he laughed so much that I had to finish telling the joke. Then he’d laugh even more.”

“He sounds like a cheerful chap.”

“He was cheerful when he was hiding. The rotten thing is he couldn’t hide forever, could he?”

“Nobody can. We all have to grow up.” She stroked his jaw. “You know, you’re not bad-looking, for a decadent bastard aristocrat. Have you another name? Apart from…”

“Pierre Alexander Porphyrevich. The last two are after my father. He was also a brilliant chemist. He taught at the St Petersburg School of Medicine for Women. Music and chemistry. Both a complete mystery to me.”

“You have an open mind, Pierre Alexander Thingummy, even if it is absolutely empty.”

“We should be getting back,” he said. “Susan Perry.” They climbed down.

*

Lacey welcomed the challenge.

His big problem was the absence of coffins and graves. A service needed a focus, a visible memorial. He talked to a flight sergeant and they sketched a wooden plaque, nailed to an upright. “Make it a bit wider,” the flight sergeant said, “and it looks sort of like a cross.”

“Excellent.” Lacey gave him the inscription.

He went to his Pullman, shut his eyes and put himself in the C.O.’s shoes. Then he wrote the eulogy. It took ten minutes: Lacey was fluent under pressure. That left him time to concentrate on the tricky bit, his own poetic contribution. The squadron expected verbal fireworks, and he’d exhausted Rupert Brooke. Lacey reached for his small library of British verse and got down to some serious larceny.

With half an hour to go, the flight sergeant brought him an armourer with a bugle. “The Marines left it behind, sir,” he said. “Miller here says he used to be in a Salvation Army band.” Lacey auditioned him on the spot. “Good enough,” he said. “You’ll close the show. After the rifles.” He inspected the plaque for spelling mistakes and found none, checked the depth of the hole dug by the plennys in the field, and told Wragge the order of battle.

At twelve noon the hollow square had formed. The flight sergeant held the post in its hole, not touching the plaque where the paint was still tacky. Brazier handed Wragge a spade and he shovelled some earth into the hole and gave the spade to an aircrew member who did his bit and passed it on until all the officers had helped erect the sign. Oliphant was last. He tramped the soil down firmly and stood back.

Wragge read aloud the inscription: In Memoriam, Thomas Hopton and Michael Blythe, Merlin Squadron, Royal Air Force, and the date. It was a calm morning, soft sunshine, good haymaking weather back in England. He spoke the lines Lacey had written, about how often in war the phrase Lost in action was used but never more tragically, and splendidly, than in this case. He said that Hopton and Blythe had died fighting and that they had known exactly what they were doing at the end, and it was an ending of great courage. He talked of their pluck and devotion to duty and huge strength of character. “Let this memorial, and this raw earth, be their burial ground,” he said.