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‘Why don’t you break the rule of a lifetime and comment on the . . . what was it?’

‘Broad historical sweep.’ He pulled over a teacup. ‘What are rules for if not to be broken?’

I poured a generous measure into his cup and took a gulp from the flask because I hated to see a man drink alone.

‘It’s difficult to know where to begin,’ he said.

I poured another shot into his cup. ‘Does this make it any easier?’

‘A bit of lubrication never hurt.’ He gave a wan smile, full of understanding of human frailty, especially his own.

‘Just so long as we don’t flood the engine. Tell me about the Mission House siege. What happened there?’

‘Wooh!’ He pretended to be startled and rolled his eyes as if the task was beyond the compass of mortals.

‘Look, buddy,’ I said, snatching his cup away from him, ‘I’m not sure if you understand the mechanism at work here. I’m pouring libations into your cup not because you’re a darling of the gods but because I want you to tell me something. Information that in any decent town I would get for nothing.’ He reached for the cup and I held it up by my ear, out of his way. He watched it like a dog watches the butcher.

‘Does that make sense to you?’

He nodded, still staring at the cup.

‘What was the mission about? What was the objective? Surely you can tell me that?’

‘Great mystery surrounded the precise nature of the objective. It seemed to involve a lot of getting shelled; a lot of stealing enemy barbed wire; a lot of walking across open ground towards machine-gun outposts.’

‘How do you steal barbed wire?’

‘Not easily, that is for sure. And not without a terrible loss of life. But General Llanbadarn wanted them to bring some back. No one knows why. He had just come back from Buenos Aires. He kept a woman there, so it was said. Not that that explains it, but there were some who suggested the objective stemmed from a boast he made to his mistress.’

‘Stealing barbed wired seems like a pretty crummy objective,’ said Calamity.

‘It was certainly no Monte Cassino. But it was always the same when he came back from Buenos Aires – he invariably had a new plan, one which was distinguished only by being more completely stupid than the previous one.’

‘Are you saying the men weren’t allowed to run?’

‘They were told to proceed at walking pace so as not to destroy the symmetry of the lines. The cameras were there, you see. Although they did not last long.’

‘I don’t understand why anyone would order his troops to walk into machine-gun fire.’

‘That’s because you aren’t a military man. General Llanbadarn was old school. He learned his tactics by studying the great battles of World War I, particularly the Somme.’

‘Was the Somme great?’

‘In magnitude, yes. The magnitude of the carnage. In terms of troop dispositions there are arguably far better models in the annals of military history: Salamis, Agincourt, Custer’s last stand . . . but the Somme had one factor which made it especially attractive for a strategic thinker of General Llanbadarn’s rare mettle, namely, he had heard of it.’

‘He sounds like an idiot.’

‘Military historians are a disputatious lot but on that point there is unanimity.’ He stopped and pointed at my ear. I put the cup back down in front of him and refilled it.

‘The men were, of course, terrified. They had heard the rumour that the general wanted the barbed wire to give to his mistress as a trophy. There was talk of a rebellion. That’s when they saw the angel. She filled their hearts with the fire of courage and off they went. And this is where the true story parts company with the version portrayed on screen.’

‘They were all slaughtered?’

‘Yes, of course. But there was something else. Something truly terrible happened that day, even worse than the slaughter. But no one knows what. They refuse to speak about it. A handful of men limped back to camp; Clip died in mysterious circumstances; and the chaplain went mad.’

‘How mad?’

‘Oh, utterly, utterly bonkers. The neurobiological equivalent of a man’s hair turning white overnight.’

‘But you don’t know what happened?’

‘It’s a military secret. You could ask the chaplain; he preaches at the community shelter by the war memorial; but, as I say, he lost his marbles and has never recovered them.’

I held the flask in front of his face and waggled it. ‘You sure you don’t know?’

‘Sincerely I don’t. As I say, no one will talk about it. Is there anything else I can help you with? If you’re thinking of modelling the battle you’ll need some of these.’ He placed a curatorial hand on some toy soldiers. The label said, ‘32nd Airbourne’.

‘Is that how you spell airborne?’

‘Alas, no, they were not really the airborne – they had no planes. They were from Fairbourne. Dropped the “F” in a hopelessly misguided attempt to big themselves up.’

I walked to the door and he held it open with a cloying smile.

‘What makes you think I want to model it, anyway?’

‘All that stuff about the trainspotters was a smokescreen. I knew as soon as you walked in what you were after. Goodbye. Oh, and if you do want to make a model of the Mission House siege, don’t forget this.’

He handed me a small plastic figurine of an angel.

Outside the door Calamity looked peeved and said, ‘It’s not supposed to work like that.’

‘I guess he must have read the Pinkerton manual before you. You can’t win them all.’

She gave me a sour look. I sent her off to check up on the dead student, Emily Bishop, to see if she had a roommate who might talk. I had an appointment with Myfanwy.

*     *     *

Something about the way the date with Tadpole ended last night had made me uneasy about leaving Myfanwy in her care. I went back to the office, picked up her LPs and made the climb up to the top of the hill. Everything seemed fine when I arrived. Myfanwy was asleep again and Tadpole was combing her hair and spreading it out over the pillow. It seemed to me to be an unwarranted invasion of the patient’s privacy, and not really within her remit, but I wasn’t sure whether I should say so. She looked up at my entrance and we locked glances. It was one of those moments, the first meeting after a quarrel or something like it.

She beamed at me. ‘Louie, I’m so glad you’re here, I was so worried. About what happened, you know, last night. I was horrible, I don’t know how you will ever forgive me.’

‘It’s OK, don’t worry about it.’

‘But how can I not? I cheated you. I said I’d give you the man’s name and then I didn’t. No wonder you hate me.’

‘I don’t.’

‘Look, here it is, I’ve written it down for you.’ She handed me a slip of paper on which was written, ‘Caleb Penpegws. Corporal or something. In the army. The one that went to Patagonia’.

‘I’m sorry, I don’t know all the details.’

‘This is fine.’

‘What have you got under your arm? Looks like records.’

‘The doctor told me to bring them in. They might cheer Myfanwy up.’

‘Oh, how lovely! Let me help you.’ She took the records and put them down on a table. ‘I’ll see if we can find a record player.’ She walked up to me and looked into my face. ‘Do you forgive me, then?’

‘There’s nothing to forgive.’

‘But I was horrible last night.’

I waved the slip of paper and put it in my pocket. ‘This more than makes up for it.’

‘You forgive me, then?’

‘Of course.’

‘Oh, Louie! You are so wonderful!’ She threw her arms round me and pulled me in and kissed me on the lips. I tried to struggle free but they obviously do a lot of press-ups at the Soldiers for Jesus boot camp and I found her grip hard to break. She continued pressing her lips on mine, making a long drawn out “Mmmm” sound. I found myself staring over her shoulder at the sleeping face of Myfanwy. And Myfanwy was staring, eyes wide open, at me.