There were four of us in a half track and a little way back lay the fifth.
The Sun got him good roasted and peeled him like a spud.
Tannoy, the radio man was the next one to go, slow like a withering vine, sounded like static on the line then he went dead.
Fitzroy, the Sepoy, more of a boy than a man prayed for a day and then went on his way to whatever heaven it is that Sepoys go.
Bill, a bull of a man from Mill Hill and who spoke with a permanent stutter uttered his last and I travelled on at half mast cursing the Sun and the Sand and the hand I'd been dealt.
Felt the scorpion sting as I pulled up and funny thing too I could swear that the scorpion looked like Frank Sinatra.