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Isobel tightened and looked at him quickly from the side of her eyes. No. He’d said it inadvertently, his mind concentrated on the fighting men below. She had often wondered where she stood with Homer Crawford the man, as opposed to El Hassan the idealist. The tip of her tongue licked the side of her mouth as she surreptitiously took him in. But Crawford the man would have to wait; there was no time, no time.

Isobel swung her glasses. “The one starting to go in a circle? There, it stopped.”

“One of the snipers got its commander,” Homer said. “You can’t fight a tank without the commander’s head being up through the hatch. That’s a popular fallacy. You can’t see well enough to fight your tank unless you’ve got your head up. And that’s suicide when you’re against guerrillas. The colonel ought to send his infantry out first.”

Isobel said, “What did you mean when you said that he’s up to something?”

Homer’s eye was still glued to the eyepiece of his glass. “He’s leaving his entrenchments and sending his vehicles out to capture our… our strong points.”

“You mean our water, don’t you?”

Bey came snaking up to them on his belly. He came abreast of Homer and brought forth his own binoculars. He watched for a moment and then muttered a curse under his breath.

“Guémama better start pulling back those men more quickly,” he said.

“He will. He’s a good man,” Homer told him. “What’s up?”

“Evidently Colonel Ibrahim has decided to come out of retirement. He’s sent small motorized elements to Effok, In Fedjeg, Otoul and even to Tahifet.”

“And?”

“And has taken them all, of course. Our men fall back, fighting a stubborn rear-guard action, taking as few casualties as possible.”

“I don’t get it,” Homer bit out. “He’s using up his fuel and ammunition and losing more men than we are. Certainly he can’t figure, with the thousand odd troops he has, to be able to take and hold enough of the oases and water holes in this vicinity to push us out completely.”

Bey said, “What worries me is the possibility that he knows something we don’t. That he’s figuring on being relieved or has a new source of fuel, ammunition and men on tap.”

“The roads are cut. Our men hold every source of water from here to Libya, and the Reunited Nations has put thumbs down on aircraft, which eliminates an air lift.”

“Yeah,” Bey said, unhappily.

That evening, following the day’s last meal, Cliff came into the headquarters tent, grinning broadly. “Hey, guess what we’ve liberated.”

“A bottle of Scotch?” Kenny said hopefully.

“A king-size portable radio transmitter. Ralph Sandell knew about it. The Sahara Afforestation Project people were going to use it to propagandize the tribesmen into coming in and taking jobs in the new oases.”

Dave Moroka, who’d been censoring press releases, shook his head. “That’s why we need an El Hassan in this country,” he complained. “They put a couple of million dollars into a radio transmitter, never asking themselves how many of the bedouin own radios.”

Jack Peters said, “Wait a moment, you chaps. Didn’t Bey capture a couple of Arab Legion radio technicians today?”

“They defected to us,” Homer Crawford said, looking up from an improvised desk where he was poring over some supply papers with Isobel. “What did you have in mind, Jack?”

“There are radios in Tamanrasset. In fact, there’s probably a radio in every one of those military vehicles of Ibrahim’s. Why can’t we blanket these Arab Union chaps with El Hassan propaganda? Quite a few of them are from Libya, Tunisia and Egypt. In short, they’re Africans and susceptible to El Hassan’s dream.”

“Good man. Take over the details, Jack,” Homer said. He went back to his work with Isobel.

Jimmy Peters entered with some papers in hand. He said, seriously, “The temperature is rising in the Reunited Nations—and everywhere else, for that matter. Damascus and Cairo have been getting increasingly belligerent. Homer, it looks as though the Arab Union is getting ready to go out on a limb. Weeks have passed since Colonel Ibrahim first took Tamanrasset, and the Reunited Nations, the United States, the Soviet Complex and all others interested in North Africa have failed to do anything. Everybody, evidently, afraid of precipitating something that couldn’t be ended.”

All eyes went to Homer Crawford, who ran a black hand back over his hair in weariness. “I know,” he said. “Something is about to blow. Dave has sent some of his best men into Tamanrasset to pick up gossip in the souks. Morale was dragging bottom among the legionnaires just a couple of days ago. Now they seem to have a new lease.”

“In spite of the sabotage our people have been committing?” Isobel said.

“That’s falling off somewhat,” Cliff said. “At first our more enthusiastic followers were able to pull everything from heaving Molotov cocktails into tanks to pouring sugar in hover-jeep gas tanks, but the legionnaires have both smartened up and gotten very tough.”

“Good,” Dave Moroka said now.

They looked at him.

“Atrocities,” he said. “In order to guard against sabotage, the legionnaires will be taking measures that will antagonize the people in Tamanrasset. They’ll shoot a couple of teenage kids, or something, then they’ll have a city-wide mess on their hands.”

Isobel said unhappily, “It seems a nasty way to win a war.”

Dave grunted his contempt of her opinion. “There is no way of winning a war other than a nasty one.”

Bey came in, yawning hugely. His energy was inconceivable to the others. So far as was known, he hadn’t slept, other than sitting erect in a moving vehicle, for the past four days. He said to Homer, “Fred Ostrander has been bending my ear for the past hour or so. Do you want to talk to him?”

“About what?” Homer said.

“I don’t know. He has a lot of questions. I think he’s beginning to suspect—just suspect, understand—that possibly the whole bunch of us aren’t receiving our daily instructions from either Moscow or Peking.”

Dave and Cliff both laughed.

Homer sighed and said, “Show him in. He’s the only thing we have in the way of a contact with the United States of the Americas and sooner or later we’re going to have to make our peace with both them and the Soviet Complex. In fact, what we’re probably going to have to do is play one against the other, getting grants, loans, economic assistance…”

“Technicians, teachers, arms,” Bey continued the list.

Kenny Ballalou looked at him and snorted. “Arms! If there’s anything this part of the world doesn’t need it’s more arms. In fact, that goes for the rest of the world, too. In the old days when the great nations were first beginning to attempt to line up the neutrals, they sent aid to such countries by the billions—and most of it in arms. How ridiculous can you get? Putting arms in the hands of most of the governments of that time was like handing a loaded pistol to an idiot.”

Bey hung his head in mock humility. “I bow before your wisdom,” he said. He left the room to get Ostrander.

The C.I.A. man had lost a fraction of his belligerence, but none of his arrogance and natty appearance. Homer wondered vaguely how the other managed to remain so spruce in the inadequate desert camp.

Jack Peters said, “What did you wish to ask El Hassan? I will translate.”

“Never mind that, Jack,” Homer said. “We’ll get tougher about using our official language when we’ve gone a little further in building our new government.” He said to Ostrander, “What can I do for you? Obviously, my time is limited.”