Over The Hills And Faraway.. Book 2 ;RelationshipsChapter 16: Operation Granby ; Kuwait November 1990-March 1991 free porn video

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We flew out from RAF Brize Norton on the 14th November in some huge Yank aircraft, a Galaxy I think, they all look alike to me. As I sat in my relatively comfortable seat I thought of the last time I had gone to war; in a luxurious cruise liner no less, the QE II. Of course we had travelled squaddie class and didn't have white coated stewards waiting on us hand foot and finger. It took nearly 5 weeks to get down to the Islands, and I made some good mates amongst 3 Para, my travelling companions. There were two Para lads who were even younger than I was and the three of us spent much of our off duty time together. One of the poor buggers is still on the Falklands; I saw him practically disintegrate as a rocket propelled grenade, or an anti-tank shell, hit him as we struggled up Mount Longdon. In fact some of his brains and blood splattered all over me, which was one of the reasons why I was nearly out of my mind when I came across the Argie. I shook my head to get those past images out of my head.

Wurzel was sat next to me on the aircraft and he wasn't a happy bunny. He had waited over two years to get his end away with Mandy and less than six months of married bliss, and practically non –stop shagging, and he's being sent off to war! Still it's one of the perks of the army that you get sent 'in harm's way' from time to time, besides which the rest should do him good as he looked absolutely shagged out!

"I'm jacking it in when we get back to Blighty (UK)" Wurzel suddenly announced "how can I keep leaving Mandy on her tod (alone)? She nearly broke her heart when I left; I couldn't put her through all that pain again."

'If you can't take a joke you shouldn't have joined' is an old army saying. Not that I was such a mean bastard to tell Wurzel that, instead I said

"She's not on her tod now, Cindy's at home with her."

"Is she buggery!" Wurzel said angrily "She spends most of her time in Basingstoke with that husband of hers."

"Well I'm sure Mandy will have Debs around most nights." I was trying to sooth the poor lovesick sod, but he knew when he got married that sometimes Mandy would be left alone when he got sent away on detachments. That's what you do in the army; travel the world, go to exotic places, meet interesting people ... and kill them!

I managed to get some sleep and woke up when the sound of the engines changed, announcing that we were coming into land at some remote airbase in Saudi Arabia.

You've got to hand it to the Yanks, they can sure organise things. We landed and got processed through a huge hanger; we had all our kit off loaded, had a meal and a crap and were allocated coaches, all in about 2 hours. MoD couldn't' organise a piss up in a brewery, and had they been in charge we would still be getting off the aircraft. The USAF seemed to be running the airbase, and as far as I could see there were no Saudis on the site.

The coaches set off along a road that ran as straight as an arrow across a terrain mostly of scrubland, not exactly desert but not too far removed from the Alberta prairie. The road had a smooth tarmaced surface, and we must have been bombing along about 70 mph. Occasionally we would pass fields of crops, I had no idea what sort, but Wurzel would exclaim.

"Wheat; barley, rye, how the hell do they raise crops like that in this sort of land?"

We found out later when we crested a ridge and saw a whole lot of circular fields spread out before us; they were irrigated by series of water sprinklers like suburbanites use when the summer is long and dry and their lawns start turning brown. These sprinklers were huge, and the water shot out for about 100 feet or more; seems the Saudis use desalinated water, which is supposed to be tasteless, for irrigation.

We de- bussed for a comfort stop by a field of maize (I knew what it was because I'd seen 'North by North West'). Reckon the Saudis breakfast corn flakes from that field would have had a bit of a taste by the time 60 squaddies had finished watering it!

After about 4 hours driving we arrived at a tented city, that's the only way to describe the camp, it was so huge. We were allocated tents and told to get some sleep as the next morning we would start training.

The next 3 months were a mixture of training and boredom, more training and more boredom, and then, just as we thought it couldn't get any worse, more training and still more boredom! At first we just had to get used to living and moving through desert terrain. Next we had to learn how to attack fortified positions, i.e. those protected by 'berms' (bulldozed sand hills), tank traps (ditches), and concrete pill boxes and the like. We spent weeks learning and practising techniques to get past these defences.

It was the boredom that wore down and destroyed morale; we knew that once we got into action we would be OK, but sitting on your jacksie (arse) waiting for the word to go was a bugger. We were kept 'in the picture', as much as we needed to know.We were told that there would an air war to destroy the Iraqi air force and the Iraqi war machine infrastructure. Then the battlefield would be isolated, and we would go in and do our stuff as planned.

About the middle of December we were reacquainted with our APCs. I have no idea how they got from UK to Tent City, but it must have been another example of first rate organisation, so I think that the US had done the logistics. To raise morale we were allowed to paint individual names on the side of our APC. Yogi Beddows had 'Jellowstone Park Ranger' Wurzel had 'Mandy '( obviously ) and I had 'Iron Hammer', which I thought pretty cool, but my section, almost all Spurs fans to a man, weren't too enamoured ... Tough!! (For our transatlantic cousins 'Spurs' refers to the North London football club Tottenham Hotspurs).

One of the biggest niggles was the lack of booze. The Saudis were dead against us having any alcohol and made sure nothing was smuggled in. Then there was the fact of being away from home. Wurzel was like a bear with a sore head, until the army managed to rig up a system that allowed blokes to talk over a satellite link to their loved ones. I did manage to talk to Pippa for a few minutes each session, but I gave most of my air time to Wurzel.

We played football, inter battalion and also against other units, cricket, rugby, tug of war, you name it we did it to keep busy and we did as much physical activity as we could. We also held pub quizzes, without a pub! It was during one of these quizzes that we discovered that one of my section had a dyslexic tongue! Toddy Singleton had joined the section in August and I hadn't had much chance to get to know him, what with all the fuss of getting ready to go overseas, and me living off camp. It started off when we were doing one of those psychological tests from a magazine. One of the questions asked was 'What animal would you like to be?' We had the usual answers Lion, Eagle, Tiger etc. (I said cockroach; they were on earth before mankind and would be here when mankind disappears.). Toddy said 'a brontosaurus'.

"Don't be daft Toddy" said Spud "they've been extinct for millions of years."

"Are they buggery" said Toddy. "Me and me girlfriend saw one in Chessington zoo last May!"

A lot of 'don't be stupid's and 'I know what I saw' until I was brought in to adjudicate.

"What did this brontosaurus look like?" I asked. We couldn't understand Toddy's rather vague description, until Jetex suddenly gave a hoot of laughter and said,

"He means a hippopotamus!"

"Are you sure they're called that hippopwachercall it?" asked Toddy, looking puzzled "I could have sworn the keeper said brontosaurus. I remember coz my bird said that she had a sore arse from sitting on the bus so long getting there!"

"He was taking the piss" said Jetex, "he could see that you was a Tottenham tosser!"

"Next time I'm down that zoo I'll lamp (hit) the sod" Toddy said angrily "bloody carrot cruncher!" (On reflection the keeper had probably said 'Rhinoceros'. Toddy also had dyslexic hearing!)

We had more Toddisms. He was talking about his girlfriend's brother and said, "She's got the full shilling but her brother's acoustic!"

"What 'yer mean, he plays the acoustic guitar?" asked Sparky Marks.

"Nah! He couldn't even play a bloody kazoo, he's acoustic." Toddy went on to explain who his girlfriend's brother could be compared with. "He's like that bloke in that film, the one with that bloke who was in that western film, set in New York."

This sent us off in many directions, including Clint Eastwood in 'Coogan's Bluff', and the TV series 'McCloud', and it was about an hour later when we finally came up with the 'western' film set in New York was 'Midnight Cowboy'! From there it was a small step to Dustin Hoffman in 'Rain man', Toddy meant autistic!

The trouble is now that whenever I mean to say autistic I say acoustic, and people look at me like I'm stupid.

The other Toddism that I sometimes fall into is 'Acapulco'. Once again it came from Toddy, describing a pub he had visited over Watford way, which is practically in the North of England as far as Londoners are concerned.

"We was in this pub near where that Elsan John lives (we knew enough about Toddisms to translate that as Elton John). They had this girl group what sang Acapulco, bloody great they were; very fit sorts, well tasty!" (Extremely attractive)

"What, they were singing Mexican songs?" asked Ric Little.

"Nah!" said Toddy "English stuff, nuffink foreign."

There was then a heated discussion whether Acapulco was in Mexico or Brazil. Jetex cited the Girl from Iponemah as being just down the road from Acapulco, whereas Aggy Ryder swore blind that an Elvis film with the title 'Viva Acapulco' was set in Mexico.

"You mean 'Viva Las bloody Vegas', yer plonker." This comment was from Toddy, who had forgotten that he had started the barney in the first place by mentioning the girl group, singing Acapulco.

Once again I was called on to adjudicate. "Let's look at this logically" I said "can you remember any titles of the songs?" That drew a blank but I persevered. "What about instruments used by the backing group, guitars, zithers, sitars, this should give us a clue."

"They didn't have no backing group," Toddy said wearily,"they was singing Acapulco!"

The penny dropped, he meant a capella!

I can hear you saying to yourselves 'Why is he going on about these stupid things? What about Desert Storm, the attack on the Republican Guard and the other exciting things that happened?' Well, the truth is there are a lot of times in the army, any army, when you are just sitting around on your jacksie waiting for something to happen. This can be just as stressful as being in combat; at least in combat you can get rid of your anger fear and frustration by shooting at something. Waiting to go into action is frustrating, and the fear factor builds up the longer you are kept waiting. These somewhat silly episodes with Toddy helped to bring down the stress factor; having a laugh is the best defence against low morale.

This was especially true at the time of the 'Acapulco' discussion. It was Christmas Day, always a bad time to be away from home; we had no alcohol to at least have a pint to lift our spirits, and we were in the middle of a shit storm.

You will have heard of sand storms, when sand is blown at gale force, and you get to know what sandblasting really means? Well a shit storm is a dust storm, that creep up like a quiet fart, until suddenly you are surrounded by a fog of choking, blinding, irritating, gets in everywhere, sharp, clogging, and ubiquitous dust. We had been warned to expect it and as we had APCs equipped with a filter system, designed to cut down the amount of chemical and biological agents, used in an NBC (Nuclear Biological Chemical) attack, from getting inside the vehicle, we weren't too badly off. Those poor sods who weren't armoured infantry had to put on their SR 6 respirators or a wet cloth over their mouth and nose, and suffer.

The half hour or so of the storm we whiled away laughing at Toddisms rather than being in a strop (bad mood), as the heat inside the APC rose and tempers frayed. After the shit storm came the clean-up. We had put sheets over the engine and gun but still the dust got in, and hours were spent getting rid of it. Our personal weapons were inside with us so it wasn't too bad. Cloggy Clegg swore blind he had some dust under his foreskin, but unless he had been trying to carnally mount one of the camels belonging to the local Arabs I don't see how he could have. Mind you, he was a Millwall supporter ... say no more!

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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 1 IntroductionsChapter 5

I never found out where Annalise came from, anything about her family, or even how old she was. I gathered that she had been born in the German Democratic Republic, or East Germany as it was generally known. I learned all my German from her, and eventually, when I spoke it well enough, I realized her accent was from the east. Germans often remarked on my Silesian accent. Lying in bed between your teacher's thighs, buried up to your balls in her warm welcoming twat, is the best way to learn a...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 9 The ERB

A few weeks after my unintended appearance at the dogging Oscars with Dilys I was called into the company office. There was a new infantry battalion being formed, and I was one of the 'lucky' ones chosen to make up the numbers. It is a well-known fact that when MoD call for 'volunteers' for new units the battalions get rid of all those men who pose a bit of a problem to them; not just the stupid, but the barrack room lawyers, the womanisers, the drunks, or those like me, who had been...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 1 IntroductionsChapter 4

Two months before the day of our wedding Miriam told me that she had miscarried and had lost the baby. I was home on leave and at her house when she made the announcement. Her parents had made themselves scarce when I arrived, and I had thought they were leaving us love birds alone for our benefit, but of course they just wanted to be out of the way when the news was broken. "So there's no need for you to marry me now." Miriam said, looking gravely at me-she was a solemn little piece, not...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 3 Preparations before battle

When I opened my eyes next morning the sun was streaming into the bedroom. After the calming vision of Dawn on Still Waters I had slept like a log; a long unbroken sleep with no more bad dreams. Although still nowhere near top form I felt much better than I had for days. Maggie entered the room dressed to go out. She sat on the bed and gave me a mouth full of her toothpaste flavoured tongue. "You've had a lovely long sleep, though at first you tossed and turned and cried out. Were you...

4 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 3 Paradise Regained and LostChapter 16 I meet my Waterloo

Six days after my birthday Ffion and I were sat together at a table in the opulent surroundings of the Officers Mess dining room in Trenchard Barracks. We had met on every one of the intervening six days, taking foolhardy risks of discovery as we made love where ever and whenever we could. We had even made love in Ffion's house, when Gareth and Geraint were away for the night at some motor cycle rally. I had crept into the house through the garden, after Ffion had left the gate in the panel...

4 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 10 The Dark Side of the Loon

July 5th-20th, 2002. Plaistow. London I returned in triumph to The Crown with my supporters, and spent the evening in joyous celebration. People clapped me on the back, and bought me trays full of foaming pints and Jim Beam chasers. "Well done, Des." "Nice one, Dewey." "Good on yer, Dave." Friends from the army, childhood, and neighborhood kept me buoyant on a wave of euphoria and alcohol, and, when at last I was poured into my bed at 23 Kitchener Road, the morning star was...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 29 Through the Eye of a Needle

The day after returning from Lanzarote I was spent; physically, emotionally and monetarily, but hopefully all only momentarily. I chuckled as the silly thought came into my mind. The person in front of me, in the queue of people waiting for the ATM outside Iver railway station to become vacant, looked around in surprise. "I'm glad someone can find something funny to laugh about, mate." I raised an eyebrow "Anything in particular got you down, pal, or is it just the trivial round and...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 2 RelationshipsChapter 3 Aldershot September December 1987 Life with Emma

The cab driver kept giving me funny looks as we drove through a deserted Aldershot. I could see him peering in the rear-view mirror at me but when I glanced at him he quickly looked away. He dropped me off outside the barracks and drove away shaking his head and muttering, "Squaddies today what are they like?" It was only when I got into my room and saw myself in the mirror that I realised what he had been looking at; my mouth was smeared with the vermilion lipstick from Emma's nipples....

4 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 6 Advance to Contact

The next week passed with me going over in my mind moves to inflict the most damage on Martin Hodge in the shortest possible time. I also needed to make arrangements to obviate serving a long spell as a guest of Her Majesty. My defence stratagem was planned, but I required a top notch defence lawyer to bring the plan to fruition. As ever when I was in a bind I called on Harry Ledbetter. He was now a Lieutenant Colonel at the Ministry of Defence in Whitehall. In fact his spell in...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 28 Lady Madeline CroftonFoxe

8th Febuary, 2009. Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea. London An an expensive, high performance car is always a useful accessory when dealing with Sloane Rangers, or indeed with any other type of female, I drove to Bayswater in the Porsche. I parked as close as possible to Gemma's house, then rapped on the lion headed Georgian brass knocker on the front door. It opened to my knock so quickly someone must have been in the hallway. On first acquaintance the petite and slim Lady...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 10 Bosnia 19934

The aircraft lurched to the left and rapidly lost altitude. I am only really happy flying when I have a parachute strapped to my back, and my heart had lurched with the aircraft. The airstrip we were heading for was surrounded by mountains, and the Hercules' pilots had to weave a perilous approach into the place. Eventually the plane levelled off and started its descent. It was the tenth anniversary of Miriam and my wedding, and I had hoped to celebrate the event in the bosom of my family,...

4 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 2 RelationshipsChapter 6 The Courtship of Phillipa Goddard 28th December 1987

At nine precisely I was ringing her doorbell, there was a bit of a wait until Pippa opened the door. "Sorry to keep you waiting Dewey," she smiled as she said my name, "I was washing my hair." She had a towel wrapped around her head like a turban and was wearing black slacks, a long sleeved shirt worn outside of the slacks and a woollen waistcoat; I caught the scent of shampoo and flowers as she kissed my cheek. I followed her into the hall. "There's coffee in the pot in the kitchen,"...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 14 Spoils of war

Two days after the 'incident', Bravo 6 was deployed to Tizer — well that is as close a pronunciation as we could make of the name of the town. I say 'Bravo 6', but Big Ben and #1 section, accompanied by Danko the Bosnian Serb interpreter, were actually in Split, where the HQ of British forces in Bosnia was situated, as well as the HQ of the UN observers. A full blown UN inquiry had been launched into the 'incident' at the behest of Yugoslavia/ Serbia, and Russia. This was a blatant...

4 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 18 Mirror Lake and Dawn on Still Waters

The horse I rode into the mountains was called 'Peggy', short for Pegasus, which was quite appropriate as it was the name of the flying horse on the Parachute Regiment's badge. Peggy was a docile comfortable mount, and over time must have been ridden by many inexperienced riders, as she didn't rear or buck, not that we met anything that would cause her to do any of those things, but of course horses have a habit of seeing and hearing things that humans don't. As we rode Eddy told me...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 20 The Recruiting Officer

The Army Recruiting Office (ARO) in Reading was situated in a recently pedestrianized area of the town, near to the railway station. There were plenty of retail shops, restaurants and pubs in the vicinity, and as it was the run up to Christmas the place was crowded and bustling. With the Christmas lights sparkling the whole area scintillated with festive feeling. Unfortunately, I did not share the seasonal bonhomie. Soon after arriving in Reading I had rung home, to give my new address to my...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 22 Just a gigolo

"There's many a good tune played on an old fiddle." Gervase Brazen had made this pronouncement when he heard I'd joined the firm. "Well, I'm not looking forward to have to kiss some leathery old cheek, or waltz around a dance floor with a partner on a Zimmer frame." Gervase laughed. "The women you will be escorting may be in their sixties, and older, but over the years they have looked after themselves. They have been pampered by the best cosmeticians, beauticians, and plastic...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 2 Rest and Recuperation

2045 hours 2nd May, 2002; 23 Kitchener Road, Plaistow, London. It was dark when I came to. My 'genuine' Rolex watch, bought off a barrow in Petticoat Lane for £25, showed I'd been out for almost three hours. Everything hurt: my head, my leg, my ribs, but most of all my pride. My many extra marital relationships during our marriage debarred me from claiming the moral high ground when discovering Miriam indulging in adultery. She was merely mirroring my behaviour, and many would say...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 4 The Shiftas

There was a heightened sense of urgency when we reassembled at Camp Kenyatta. Harry re-joined us a day later, having spent the week in Nairobi, and I would bet money that he had been poodle faking in earnest, as he had a partly concealed love bite on his neck, and a look of sated sexual satisfaction on his face. The information coming out of Somalia indicated that a large number of Shifta bands would be crossing the border at the beginning of December. There was the possibility that armoured...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 17 None but the Brave

I was informed in late November 2002 I would be awarded the Military Cross in the New Year's Honours list of January 2003, for 'gallant and meritorious service in Afghanistan'. The blurb went on about 'coolly fighting off an attack when outnumbered, and saving the life of a comrade', and all that bollocks. In fact I was unconscious when I fell on top of Ergash Vakil, thus saving him from being spattered by shrapnel. Billy Turner, who had saved both Ergash's and my life by arriving in...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 33 Crisis what midlife crisis

April 20th, 2009: Mortimer Crippen's Clinic, Devonshire Mews. "Good to see you, Des." Mort shook my hand with enthusiasm, "I've constructed what I believe is a feasible theory explaining the reason for your unusual type of ED." It was over two weeks since my last visit to the clinic, and as I had a free day from driving the shagging waggon, and indeed from shagging any of the passengers, I had decided to make the appointment and discover what, if anything, Mort had learned from my two...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 18 The Presentation

I spent the rest of Saturday in a daze. It wasn't Cupid's arrow which had impaled me but Suzannah Weston's smile. I walked around with a soppy grin on my face. I was in love with a beautiful woman — and we all know where that leads. It was a hopeless, hapless, amour. She had amply demonstrated her dislike, disdain and probably disgust, for me, making any chance of a relationship with her as far-fetched as West Ham United winning the Premier Championship, or me copping on with Debbie...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 4 Intel

The next day I moved back to my house for a couple of nights. I contacted a local estate agent, and a young lad, barely out of school, came round and measured up, and we agreed what price to put the house on the market. I was in no great hurry to sell and reckoned I would get the asking price in time. I also got in touch with a house clearance firm; practically all but the kitchen equipment could go. Most of the other furniture stemmed from my parent's era, and any new stuff in the house...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 11 Lice

"Dewey! Dewey! wake up." The voice was insistent, and I gradually swam up from the deep sleep I had been in. There was a remnant of a dream, but it left me the instant I opened my eyes. "What's up Doc?" I wasn't being facetious; I had been woken up by Doc Watson, the 2i/c of #4 section. "Sound of gunfire, coming from the direction of Little Bugs." I crawled out from my sleeping bag, put on my flak jacket and buckled on my webbing equipment before looking at my watch – 2 am, the...

4 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 4 Soldiering OnChapter 19 What happens in Las Vegas and some sound advice

I had little time for contemplation on matters of the heart because when I arrived back at CCC I found the prairie ablaze, and it was literally all hands to the pumps. The area affected was just to the east of where the Medicine Man Exercises were taking place, and it needed so much man power to contain the inferno that the exercises were put on hold, and the current BG attending Exercise Medicine Man, along with Canadian fire crews and OPFOR, were deployed. After a week of non-stop flailing...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 21 Married Life

December 2003 – November 2008: London. Bertram Weston gave us a Canary Wharf penthouse apartment as a wedding present. When I say 'gave' it was actually another tax avoidance scheme, where we paid a mere pittance of a rent to some holding company in the Bahamas and Weston was then able to claw back a large proportion of any tax he had paid in the UK. I have no idea how it works, but it seems all millionaires have similar arrangements, and pay virtually sod all income tax. Bertram Weston...

3 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 5 Paying the PiperChapter 14 A New Billet

A closely observed, and obeyed, order at MilSys was all mobile phones had to be switched off when on site, which didn't bother me as so few people knew my number I received no calls. However, when I reached my digs I switched the mobile on to order a pizza, and saw I had a text message from a Mr. Burlington. I remembered he was the father-in-law of Billy Turner, the Grenadier Guardsman who saved my life in Afghanistan, and that Mr. Burlington was the concierge/commissionaire of an of...

2 years ago
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Over the Hills and Faraway Book 2 RelationshipsChapter 8 The Courtship of Phillipa Goddard New Years Eve 1987

Pippa picked me up in her car outside the barracks at about 5pm on New Year's Eve. The party was being held at the home of a Frank and Peggy Sinclair, near Farnborough. "The Sinclair's place is a mansion" Pippa informed me. "Frank made a fortune in South Africa, diamonds I think. The Sinclair's are big benefactors to the charity and some of the guests will be my fellow workers, quite harmless," she laughed and spun the wheel past a slower car; she was a good driver, fast but careful,...

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