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For What Its Worth - Keyes

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---For Whats Its Worth - Part 3

--- Paris, June 1915

The heavy truck rumbled down the fashionable boulevard, its cargo of war materiel a stark and grim reminder to those few privileged souls about in that quarter at that time of day that not far out West brave French - and British, and Belgian - soldiers were giving their all, their future and their lives in what was now being termed the fight for civilisation.

Roger Keyes looked away, back down at the tiny cup of too-thick coffee upon the small wrought iron table. The pavement café was almost deserted at this hour of the afternoon, only two elderly veterans of 1871 sitting inside with the Jewish proprietor. It seemed to be like that everywhere in Paris, Keyes mused - all the young, healthy men were at the battlefront - that, or dead.

He picked up the newspaper that lay beside the delicate cup, "L'Homme Enchaine' published by the Radical Georges Clemenceau. Before the war it had been titled "L'Homme Libre" but, in protest at government censorship, he had changed it from 'The Free Man' to 'The Enchained Man'. Keyes scanned the front cover, and sighed deeply. The headlines were what the relevant minister would call 'encouraging', the content bland. Even in the middle of the biggest crisis since August 1914 there were no details on the Battle of Skaggerak, only a brief mention, no intimation that the Dardanelles offensive was soon to be abandoned, nor about the gathering crises in Rome or Athens. There was mention of political upheaval in Britain, all spoken in a positive light - reorganisation, new initiatives, new energies. Keyes doubted that things were truly that rosy.

From inside a small clock upon the wall struck two deep dull bongs. Two o'clock in the afternoon…Keyes sighed again. There had been a major derailment outside Paris to the North, the line torn up by the lateral slewing of the heavily-laden wagons. The best estimate of the authorities at the Gare du Nord was seven or eight in the evening before trains to Calais would be running again. He had bitten down on his natural instinct to find a motor vehicle and drive himself there - an afternoon in Paris was little loss and a mad drive o the coast would provide little gain in time upon a later train. So, he stayed…and had an afternoon to kill.

Taking a sip of the bitter, gritty coffee, Keyes reminisced on his journey up from Marseilles. Rather to his surprise Prince Sixtus de Bourbon-Parma had continued to take an interest in him, insisting that they share a berth and exerting his evident diplomatic authority to secure them one on the first available train Northwards. Keyes had enjoyed a most interesting few hours, sitting talking, sipping brandy. In himself Prince Sixtus was a fascinating man - scion of an old respected, but deposed, noble family, loyal to France though banned by law from serving in her armed forces, thus an artillery officer in the army of the king of Belgium, that and in dire diplomatic circumstances a potential weapon that the French Prime Minister Viviani had tried to utilise against the increasingly neutralist Italy. And that to no avail Sixtus had informed him. On their trip North they had talked of many things - of France and Italy, of the vanished noble duchies of central Italy, of Sixtus' sister Zeta, married to the Archduke Karl, heir to the Habsburg throne of Austria-Hungary, of the war in the West where the Entente armies were still recovering after the costly bloody failure of the Artois Offensive, of the war in the East where the Russians were reported to be in full retreat. They had talked of victory and defeat, their hopes and fears, the best cases and the worst cases - the whole gamut of conversation when two intelligent articulate men met in the field of discussion.

Once at Paris, Sixtus had bid his farewell, a government Renault there to meet him, sweep him to the Elysee Palace for a debriefing with President Poincare and the Prime Minister. Keyes knew that he would have little good to tell them, scarce a hope of Italian intervention in the near future, but Sixtus would not shrink from making the realisation plain to the French leadership; they could not have a better man.

"Is there anything I can get you?" the Jewish proprietor inquired at the Briton's side, his accented French cutting deep into his thoughts. Keyes swallowed down the last of the bitter, noisome liquid, but down upon a grimace of distaste and rose courteously from his seat.

"Non merci", he said, "I have business to attend to."

Watched by the curious Jew, Keyes struck out along the road for the British embassy . . .

By Jon' N. Davies

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