Part 26 (1/2)

”Yes, Comrade.” His face faded from the screen.

Tamanra.s.set lies at an alt.i.tude of approximately 4,600 feet, about average for the Ahaggar plateau. Around it, such peaks as the Tahat reach 9,600 feet above sea level. The country is rugged, jagged, bleak beyond belief. With the possible exception of Southern Afghanistan in the Khyber area, there is no place in the world more suited for guerrilla warfare, less suited for the proper utilization of modern armor, particularly when the latter is forced to work without air cover.

Homer Crawford, equipped with an old-style telescope, was spread-eagled on top a rock outcropping, his only companion Isobel Cunningham. Directly before him, possibly two miles in distance, was the desert city of Tamanra.s.set, to the right, a kilometer or so, Amsel where palatable water was to be found at eighteen meters depth.

”Our friend, the colonel, is up to something,” he grumbled.

She had a pair of binoculars, of considerably less power than his gla.s.s.

”It looks as though Guemama's boys are on the run,” she said.

”As per orders. The primary theory of partisan warfare is not to get killed. The guerrilla never stands and fights. If the regular forces he opposes can bring him to bay, they've got him.” He interrupted himself to clip out, ”Look at that tank, darling! There on the left!”

Isobel tightened, 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 Ha.s.san the idealist. The tip of her tongue licked the side of her mouth, as she surrept.i.tiously took him in. But Crawford the man would have to wait, there was no time, no time.

Isobel swung her gla.s.ses. ”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 gla.s.s. ”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.

”Guemama 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.”