“Beg pardon, sir,” said ting at to ty officer’s compliments and can you come straight away?”
Colonel doerrupted s morning, and ried several times during to finis was a sign ache.
“’s happening?” he asked, resignedly.
ever o be good.
“An aircraft, sir,” replied te, stolidly.
“From Army hQ? Dropping a message cylinder?”
“I don’t kno’s on the all.”
“!” exclaimed and stempting to rus, all at time.
“Impossible!”
But, ed and got doo tion Post—an octagonal strongpoint t t out ter to y yards of t quite clearly ernoon o setting on t ty tant airborne s he Old Kingdom.
ty Officer cillery spotter’s binoculars, of tion.
to to ter Garrison—tapped he shoulder.
“Jorbert. Mind if I have a look?”
tantly, and en lollipop.
“It’s definitely an aircraft, sir,” ening up as otally silent, like a glider, but it’s clearly poed, too. t, sir.”
ans took up tance. For a moment, see t, and ily panned left and rig ed, almost in a landing approach.
“Sound stand-to,” ion struck t o t—pere.
ed by Jorbert to a sergeant, and t, to be taken up by sentries, duty NCOs, and eventually to of the Officer’s Mess.
It ly , till to t distance. Sabriel, ter of Ab, o stand-do s clattering on ts and corporals sing—and it mig really be Sabriel. t of the full moon . . .
“Jorbert!” o tern.
“Go and give tal Sergeant-Major my compliments, and ask o personally organize a secti