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Authors: Andrew Mackay

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“Alan and Sam saved our lives, Aurora; they saved the life of my only child. The debt of gratitude which I owe the boys is so massive that it would take me several lifetimes to repay
it.” Mendoza suddenly stopped talking as if he had run out of energy. He was physically as well as emotionally drained and exhausted and he was breathing heavily. After several seconds
Mendoza gathered his thoughts, and sighed wearily before he answered, “Believe me, my sweet, it gives me no pleasure that I have been ordered to fight against the British…”

“Then why are you going to do it, Papa?” Aurora persisted. “I thought that the enemy of my enemy is my friend. Those Nazi animals raped me, Papa, and they were going to kill
me, but Alan and Sam stopped them. The Nazis are the boys’ enemies; does that not make them our enemies as well? The Nazis murdered Sam’s parents, one of his brothers is missing and has
probably been killed, and his other two brothers are still fighting the Nazis. Surely, the most effective way for us to start repaying our debt to the two boys is to join them in the fight against
the Nazis instead of joining the Nazis in their fight against the boys?”

Mendoza did not answer. There was no way that he could argue against his daughter’s logic.

“But the Spanish people will suffer if I switch sides and fight against the Germans, Aurora. The Germans will think that we are filthy turncoats and traitors. At the very least they will
cut off food supplies and at the very worst they may decide to invade us after they have finished off the British.” Mendoza bit his fist in horror as he contemplated the terrible consequences
of any attempt to switch sides. He stared off into the distance as he imagined the sight of hundreds of thousands of German jackboots trampling over the sacred soil of his beloved Fatherland.

“The trouble is that you think too much about the welfare of the Spanish people and not enough about the honour of Spain,” Aurora said wearily. “Honour demands that a son of
Spain avenges the rape of a daughter of Spain at the hands of the Germans. The Spanish people are made of sterner stuff than you think, Papa: they will understand.”

After a few seconds thought and reflection Mendoza gently placed his hand on top of his daughter’s hand. “I must… I must think about it, Aurora.” Mendoza smiled
weakly.

“Very well.” Aurora slid her hand out from underneath her father’s. “I will leave you to think about it, Papa.”

Aurora stood up, straightened her skirt and bowed formally. Mendoza nodded. He was already deep in thought as he seriously considered his options. If Mendoza was not willing to take action to
restore his daughter’s honour, the honour of the Mendoza family and the honour of Spain, then she would.

Lieutenant-Colonel Nicholas Griffiths VC played with the wax-tipped ends of his bushy moustache as he listened to the briefing continue. He looked across the row of chairs and
he was pleased to see that his officers were as rapt with excitement as he was. They were hanging on the Brigadier’s every word. Griffiths smiled at his men the way that a father would smile
at his children. Yes, he considered the young officers to be his sons. Although they had only been together as a unit for a short time he thought of his men as being part of his family, and not
just the officers - the rank and file as well. They were young and (for the most part) fit and healthy, they were as keen as mustard, and literally chafing at the bit to be let loose at the enemy.
Yes, there was a definite buzz in the air. Griffiths gripped his swagger stick tighter. He could feel a tingling in his spine and the hair on the back of his neck was standing on edge. He tried to
remember the last time that he had felt that way. Griffiths remembered that when he was a schoolboy at St John’s he used to feel the same excitement and sense of anticipation before a
cross-country run, or before a swimming race, or before a rugby match. He remembered that he used to feel that way when he was a student at St Catherine’s College, Cambridge and he was about
to take part in a rowing race against their arch-rivals, Oxford. He reminisced fondly as he remembered the day that he had been awarded a Blue in recognition of his achievements and prowess as a
rower. Griffiths looked across at his officers again. Some of them were barely old enough to have graduated from varsity and he knew for a fact that some of them had only just done so when this
unnecessary war had started. Griffiths shook his head sadly as he thought about how many of his fine young men would not live to see the end of the War. It was all such a damn shame and such a
tragic waste of life.

His mind drifted back to the last war where he had started as a young Second Lieutenant in the local regiment, The Royal Regiment of Fens Fusiliers, the RRiFFs. Griffiths had served throughout
the war and had survived without a scratch. He puffed out his chest with pride as he looked down at the ribbon medals pinned to the chest of his black Battle Dress. He remembered the day when he
had been awarded the Victoria Cross by the King himself when Griffiths was a captain serving on the Western Front. He had risked life and limb to rescue a dozen of his men who had been seriously
wounded during the Battle of the Somme and who were lying in No Man’s Land bleeding to death. Griffiths could not abandon his men to their fate and had picked each of them up in a
fireman’s lift, and had carried them back to an Emergency Aid Station one at a time.

A file of faces seemed to cross before his eyes as he remembered his closest comrades in arms:- Mason, Hook, Witherspoon and Ansett. They had all been in the War right from the beginning and
they had all survived more all less intact, physically if not emotionally. Griffiths checked himself. Apart from Mason. His good friend Ted Mason had been killed in a German artillery barrage as he
tended the wounded in an Army Hospital behind the front lines. Yes, they had had their differences since the War, but they had been political differences of opinion, not personal differences. Their
differences had not prevented them from remaining friends, even if relationships had at times become strained. Griffiths shook his head sadly. Yes, he would have liked to have seen more of his
friends but had not been able to since the start of the new War and the recent unpleasantness. Now all of them were dead. They had all been killed since the Invasion. Griffiths shook his head
bitterly.

Griffiths remembered the private talk that he had had with the Prime Minister only a month or so before. He had known the PM for years and had previously been in command of his personal
bodyguard. The PM had emphasised that it was absolutely essential that his unit put up a good show in the fighting which was to come. Griffiths’ unit was an experimental unit and had only
been established and armed with great reluctance by the powers that be after relentless pressure from the PM It was vital that his unit gave a good account of itself and proved its worth. If
Griffiths was successful, then those in power would agree to the raising of more and more similar units. The floodgates would be well and truly opened and Griffiths might well find himself in
command of a brigade, or perhaps even a division. Griffith’s eyes clouded over as he daydreamed. Brigadier Griffiths… General Griffiths! Why not? Griffiths chuckled to himself. He had
to admit, it did have a certain ring to it.

Griffiths glanced over at his officers again. They were so focused on listening to the briefing that they had not noticed that their Colonel was looking at them. Captain, no sorry, Major Mason,
had proven himself in the late unpleasantness in the fighting against the Germans. Griffiths smiled to himself. How ironic it was that he now found himself serving with another Mason, the son of
his old friend, Ted Mason, whom he had served with more than twenty-five years ago. Griffiths was sure that his old friend was looking down on them both from heaven with a smile on his lips. As for
the other officers, all of them apart from Captain John Baldwin were either ex-military and had served in either the last War or this one, or were veterans from the old Party street-fighting days.
Griffiths looked at Baldwin again. He was an unknown commodity and his only ‘military experience’ had been service for three years in the Cambridge University Officer Training Corps.
However, beggars couldn’t be choosers and Griffiths realised that in the present climate and under the current conditions he couldn’t afford to be too fussy. And anyway, Baldwin was a
Cambridge graduate and although he was not a member of Cats and had been a member of an inferior college, Magdalene, Baldwin was still a varsity man.

Griffiths turned his attention back to the briefing and the matter in hand. Operation Thor, the long-awaited-for invasion of Scotland. Griffiths glanced at his officers once more and nodded to
himself. Yes, he was confident that the 1
st
Battalion of the British Union of Fascists Militia would deliver a bloody blow against Churchill and the rest of his Jew-loving Bolshevik
war-mongering clique, and they would bring this unhappy and unnecessary civil war to an end once and for all.

“Welcome home, sir,” Alan smiled. “ It’s good to have you back.”

“Thank you, Alan,” Peter Mason replied. “It’s good to be back.”

Sam and Alan had waited at the end of the German lesson to welcome their old teacher back to St John’s. The boys leaned against their school desks as they spoke to Mason.

“How do you feel, sir?” Sam asked.

“Rather delicate,” Mason replied as he tenderly rubbed his chest.

So you bloody well should feel, Sam thought to himself. I shot you twice in the chest at point blank range, you treacherous bastard. It’s a bloody miracle that you’re still
alive.

Mason had been busy rubbing the blackboard whilst the rest of the students had been filing out of the classroom. He had not noticed that Sam had quickly looked up and down the corridor before he
had silently closed the classroom door.

“What happened, sir?” Alan asked.

“The doctors told me that I had been shot twice in the chest,” Mason replied.

“Where, sir?” Alan asked.

“Here and here.” Mason lowered his head and pointed at the two entry wounds with his index finger. As he displayed his war wounds, Alan sat down on a chair. Sam stood up and casually
walked over to where Alan was sitting, and stood behind his seated friend. Sam put his right hand behind his back and silently extracted his Luger pistol from where it was concealed behind his
trouser waistband. He held the weapon behind his back with his forefinger lying alongside the trigger guard. He reached into his left side blazer pocket with his left hand, and took out a silencer
attachment. Sam put his left hand behind his back and expertly screwed the silencer onto the end of the Luger barrel. He coughed loudly as he cocked the weapon and flicked off the safety catch.

“Excuse me, Al. Do you have a tissue?” Sam asked.

“Sorry, Sam. I don’t,” Alan replied as he looked over his shoulder. Alan now knew that Sam was ready. Alan turned back to face Mason. “Sir, do you know who shot
you?”

Mason shook his head. “The last thing that I remember is the bomb going off in the Square,” Mason answered grimly. “The next thing I remember is regaining consciousness in
Great Ormond Street Hospital in London.”

“Great Ormond Street Hospital? I thought that Great Ormond Street was a children’s hospital, sir?” Alan asked with furrowed brows.

“It was, Alan,” Mason confirmed. “It was a children’s hospital until the Germans commandeered it for the use of sick and wounded German soldiers.”

“So where do sick and wounded British children go to now, sir?” Alan asked.

Mason shrugged his shoulders. “I don’t know, Alan.”

“Bloody Huns,” Sam swore with venom in his voice. “Yet another reason to hate the bastards. Pardon my French, sir.”

Mason shook his head. “There’s absolutely no need to apologise, Sam. I understand why you hate them. You have more reason to hate them then most, but German surgeons saved my life,
Sam,” Mason said. “So I’m sure that you’ll understand if I don’t join you in your condemnation of them.”

Sam bit his lip in order to stifle a reply that would be sure to give the game away.

“So you have absolutely no idea who shot you, sir?” Alan asked again.

“No, Alan.” Now it was time for Mason to furrow his brows. “Why are you so interested to know?”

Alan shrugged his shoulders. “No particular reason, sir, I’m just interested. It’s not every day that you meet someone who has escaped certain death.”

Mason smiled. Boys will be boys, he thought to himself with amusement. They would always be interested in death and destruction and blood and gore. “I don’t know who shot me, but the
doctors did say an interesting thing.”

“What’s that, sir?” Sam asked as a bead of sweat ran down his temple.

“I was shot at point blank range, which means that the shooters were within a few yards from me and yet I made no attempt to draw my revolver. The doctors think that I must have known the
attackers and, more than that, I must have trusted the attackers.”

“And yet you have no idea who these attackers might have been?” Alan asked.

Mason smiled. “Alan, I have been a teacher at St John’s for ten years and I live in the town. Hereward is my home. I know a lot of people in Hereward and I have a lot of friends
here. The shooters might have been regulars in my local pub; they could be present or ex-pupils; they could even have been Specials. Who knows? You boys could have shot me for all I know. God
knows, I’ve given you just cause to do so after all of these years of teaching you French and German.”

The colour drained from Sam’s face, and he started to raise his pistol.

Mason suddenly burst out laughing.

“What… what is it, sir?” Alan asked with a nervous smile on his face.

“I’m only joking, boys!” Mason was laughing so hard that tears were streaming down his face. “Of course I don’t think that you boys shot me! But the look on your
faces! Sam, you look as if you’ve seen a ghost!”

Sam laughed weakly. “When… when I saw you here today, sir, for a moment I did think that I’d seen a ghost. The last time that I heard anything about you was that you were in
intensive care with a serious chest wound.”

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