The Bridge
by
Book Details
About the Book
Italy. May 1944.
Waiting for the final push on Monte Cassino captain
Bere and his British survey patrol find themselves
bogged down in the Apennine mountains. Torrential rain
has turned the camp into a quagmire. Desperately low
on supplies, captain Bere goes again against his
better judgement and allows two of his young soldiers,
Goodman and Armstrong, to take a Jeep down the
mountain into Velino, a small hillside village ravaged
by the war. The plan is to collect whatever supplies
they can and return to base camp.
Driving through the valley Goodman and Armstrong see
that the river Rapido has turned into a raging torrent
and is running dangerously high. Worse still, its
clear that the small wooden bridge they need to cross
en route to Velino may well not survive the volume of
water crashing downstream. A hasty retreat is on the
cards. However, once in Velino they find themselves
seduced by the warmth of Felices caf where they
enjoy their first decent meal in weeks and a little
too much wine. Precious time is wasted; and by the
time they set out on the return journey the bridge has
already been washed away.
Down by the river the soldiers radio base camp and
explain their predicament; but before they can receive
further orders Goodman and Armstrong are gunned down
by a small group of Italian partisans. The partisans
strip the soldiers of anything of useful and then
throw the bodies into the mutinous waters of the
Rapido. They drive the Jeep back to Velino.
However, Goodman survives.
Badly injured and in need of urgent medical
attention, Goodman makes his way precariously upstream
where he eventually comes upon an old villa set deep
in the Apennines. Here he is taken in by the lady of
the house, the mysterious Sofia, who nurses him back
to health. Sofia, a medical doctor, advises Goodman to
spend a week or so recuperating before making his way
back to his unit. Given his surroundings and the not
unpleasant company, Goodman is happy to comply.
But Goodman soon realises that not everything is at it
seems.
For a start he keeps having a recurring nightmare.
But is it a nightmare? Or is it in some way very
real? Almost too real. Always the same, it involves
a distinguished looking gentleman stalking the villa
with a shotgun. Who is this man, and what does he
want? And one night, during a lively barbecue in the
courtyard of the villa, this same gentleman suddenly
arrives and for whatever reason sets about confronting
Sofia. When he asks Sofia for explanations about his
nightmares and about the man with the shotgun, Goodman
finds himself being given half-truths and riddles.
Confused and angry, Goodman has difficulty
distinguishing between his dreams and the everyday
world of life in and around the villa. On top of this,
he finds himself attracted to Maria, a local beauty,
who lives by herself in an isolated cottage on the
outskirts of a wood just below the Apennines.
Meanwhile, back at base camp, captain Bere decides he
has little alternative but to spend at least one day
searching for Goodman and Armstrong. Given their last
radio message he suspects the two soldiers are dead,
but nevertheless he feels he owes it to their families
and himself to try and find out what really happened
down by the river. Depressed and concerned Bere and
his patrol set out on a hazardous journey down the
mountain. When they eventually reach Velino they find
the village has been destroyed, washed away by the
flood and a deluge of mud that has erupted off the
mountain like a volcano. In vain they search for the
two soldiers before making their way dejectedly back
to base camp.
Back at the villa Goodman comes under the spell of
not only Maria but also Sofia; and the young soldier,
now almost fully recovered, finds himself having
passionate affairs with both women at the same tim
About the Author
A former stage actor James Allan Kennedy has been writing seriously for about ten years. During this time he has written eight screenplays, two novels and a number of short stories. He lives in the United Kingdom, in Cornwall, with his wife Dorothy and is currently working on his third novel Molly & Malone.