I. The New Friend
F RESH FROM THEIR STUPENDOUS EUROPEAN TOUR, WHERE THEY PERFORMED
BEFORE SEVERAL OF THE CROWNED HEADS OF EUROPE, GARNERING THEIR PLAUDITS
AND PRAISE WITH MAGNIFICENT DRAMATIC PERFORMANCES, COMBINING BOTH COMEDY
AND TRAGEDY, THE STRAND PLAYERS WISH TO MAKE IT KNOWN THAT THEY SHALL
BE APPEARING AT THE ROYAL COURT THEATRE, DRURY LANE, FOR A LIMITED
ENGAGEMENT IN APRIL, AT WHICH THEY WILL PRESENT MY LOOK-ALIKE BROTHER
TOM!, THE LITTLEST VIOLET-SELLER AND THE GREAT OLD ONES COME (THIS LAST
AN HISTORICAL EPIC OF PAGEANTRY AND DELIGHT); EACH AN ENTIRE PLAY IN ONE
ACT! TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE NOW FROM THE BOX OFFICE.
It is the immensity, I believe. The hugeness of things below. The darkness of dreams.
But I am woolgathering. Forgive me. I am not a literary man.
I had been in need of lodgings. That was how I met him. I wanted
someone to share the cost of rooms with me. We were introduced by a
mutual acquaintance, in the chemical laboratories of St. Bart’s. “You
have been in Afghanistan, I perceive,” that was what he said to me, and
my mouth fell open and my eyes opened very wide.
“Astonishing,” I said.
“Not really,” said the stranger in the white lab-coat, who was to
become my friend. “From the way you hold your arm, I see you have been
wounded, and in a particular way. You have a deep tan. You also have a
military bearing, and there are few enough places in the Empire that a
military man can be both tanned and, given the nature of the injury to
your shoulder and the traditions of the Afghan cave-folk, tortured.”
Put like that, of course, it was absurdly simple. But then, it
always was. I had been tanned nut-brown. And I had indeed, as he had
observed, been tortured.
The gods and men of Afghanistan were savages, unwilling to be
ruled from Whitehall or from Berlin or even from Moscow, and unprepared
to see reason. I had been sent into those hills, attached to the-th
Regiment. As long as the fighting remained in the hills and mountains,
we fought on an equal footing. When the skirmishesdescended into the caves and the darkness then we found ourselves, as it were, out of our depth and in over our heads.