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Rule, Brittania!

The Clubland Heroes Are Back, and it’s Vintage Stuff Again!
The Clubland Heroes Are Back, and it’s Vintage Stuff Again!
rule  brittania
The SIS Building (or MI6 Building) at Vauxhall Cross, London, houses the headquarters of the British Secret Intelligence Service. Photo: Laurie Nevay/CC BY-SA 2.0
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This article is a work of fiction.


Whitehall: Early 2024

The brow of Sir Marmaduke Neighton-Bray, DSO, MC, and Chief of MI6, was furrowed. It was plain to the assembled men who had just been summoned from nearly a hundred years of retirement that Sir Marmaduke was a worried man. “Gentlemen,” he said, in a voice barely above a whisper, to signify that this was a very hush-hush operation, “gentlemen, I take it I do not have to spell out the reasons for your being here today. I refer to the events in the Middle East which is three thousand and five hundred kilometres away, where we have no business, and never have had any, except for the monstrous fact that the settled order of the world has been repeatedly disrupted by dangerous gaggles of unwashed juveniles in the city of Gaza directing rocky projectiles against their occupying Israeli soldiers. Can’t have that, what? Ask Fierce Morgan! I need hardly tell you of what the harvest has been for us, and for the civilised Western world at large. Suffice to say that England is in peril.”

“You wouldn’t think our monkey-faced citizens shared your concerns, Sir Marmaduke,” said Richard Hannay in a quiet, level voice. “Not if Rochdale, and that anarchist Galloway, are any sign of what we are up against. A foul plot against the Old Country. I knew it was all up with what once made us great when they chucked apartheid in South Africa. I’ve never been back to the Cape. Not all the memories of my pals in Jo’burg nor the spoor of the wildebeest in the veldts of Madikwe will take me back there. But if there is a fighting chance of saving apartheid somewhere in the world, count me in. I’m your man—even if I’m able to manage just around thirty-nine steps at a time.”

“Stout Fella!” murmured John Geste, once of the Foreign Legion, brother of the late Michael (‘Beau’) and Digby Geste, and steadfast friend, from the days of their desert adventures, of the Cousins Hank and Buddy from across the Atlantic. “You can count me in, too. Though it does seem, don’t you know, that we’ve changed sides somewhat. Not that we’ve had much of a choice, not after that spot of bother in ’39-’45. Why, even the Huns have flipped.”

“Sho’ thing,” opined Hank. “One gen-o-cide to make up for the earlier one. And that ain’t all. It’s Uncle Sam in charge now, and y’all are its poodles, just like Uncle Sam is AIPAC’s poodle.”

“Beggin’ to differ, Hank,” said Buddy. “Me, I should have said chihuahuas, myself.”

“Have it yer way, Buddy,” said Hank amiably.

“I’m always the first to sign up, but why us, if I may ask—considering we’re around a hundred-and-forty years old (each, I mean, not together)?” asked Squadron Leader James Bigglesworth (VC, MC, DSO, DFC), blue of eyes and square of jaw.

“It’s what Hannay has been lamenting,” said Sir Marmaduke grimly. “Things aren’t what they used to be. I find myself having to fall back on the old times, the old heroes, the old values. Our Armed Forces aren’t what they used to be. Just the other day, HMS Useless and HMS Futility collided into each other off the coast of Bahrain. Eight years ago, a Trident missile fired from a Royal Navy submarine flew off course, and after years of working on correcting the defect, last month another missile splashed into the water close to the submarine. (It needs to be said though that thanks to the ingenuity of our boys, it missed the submarine.) Just recently, a malfunction prevented HMS Prince of Wails from departing for a NATO exercise (called Steadfast Defender 2024)—a bit galling, considering that Prince of Wails was a replacement for an earlier carrier which had had to be cancelled because of a defective starboard propeller shaft coupling. Calling you fellows back is a decision that has been taken in the highest echelons of Whitehall. Any questions?”

‘I’m sure,’ said John Geste, “that I speak for all of us when I say that it’s—er—an honour and—er—a privilege and all that for us to be called to steer the vessel in this—er—hour of need, assuming that’s not an unfortunate metaphor to employ in the present circumstances. As for questions: I can think of at least one other sport who would have been the first to volunteer on an occasion such as this. ‘Bulldog’ Drummond. Why is he not here?”

“Not available,” said Sir Marmaduke tersely. Placing his finger on the side of his nose, he added, “We’ll take it on a need-to-know basis

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