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They parked the car and went into the club. They found Sir Douglas Froude sitting in the garden room, for the wind was cold. A glass of sherry was on the table by him and he was talking to two old friends. He made an effort to get to his feet when he saw them, but abandoned it at John's request. "Don't get about so well as I used to, once," he said. "Come, pull a chair up, and have some of this sherry. We're down to about fifty bottles now of the Amontillado. Push that bell."

John Osborne did so, and they drew up chairs. "How are you feeling now, sir?"

"So-so, so-so. That doctor was probably right. He said that if I went back to my old habits I shouldn't last longer than a few months, and I shan't. But nor will he, and nor will you." He chuckled. "I hear you won that motor race that you were going in for."

"I didn't win it-I was second. It means I've got a place in the Grand Prix."

"Well, don't go and kill yourself. Although, I'm sure, it doesn't seem to matter very much if you do. Tell me, somebody was saying that they've got it in Cape Town. Do you think that's true?"

His nephew nodded. "That's true enough. They've had it for some days. We're still in radio communication, though."

"So they've got it before us?"

"That's true."

"That means that all of Africa is out, or will be out, before we get it here?"

John Osborne grinned. "It's going to be a pretty near thing. It looks as though all Africa might be gone in a week or so." He paused. "It seems to go quite quickly at the end, so far as we can ascertain. It's a bit difficult, because when more than half the people in a place are dead the communications usually go out and then you don't quite know what's happening. All services are usually stopped by then, and food supplies. The last half seem to go quite quickly… But as I say, we don't really know what does happen, in the end."

"Well, I think that's a good thing," the general said robustly. "We'll find out soon enough." He paused. "So all of Africa is out. I've had some good times there, back in the days before the First War, when I was a subaltern. But I never did like that apartheid… Does that mean that we're going to be the last?"

"Not quite," his nephew said. "We're going to be the last major city. They've got cases now in Buenos Aires and Montevideo, and they've got a case or two in Auckland. After we're gone Tasmania may last another fortnight, and the South Island of New Zealand. The last of all to die will be the Indians in Tierra del Fuego."

"The Antarctic?"

The scientist shook his head. "There's nobody there now, so far as we know." He smiled. "Of course, that's not the end of life upon the earth. You mustn't think that. There'll be life here in Melbourne long after we've gone."

They stared at him. "What life?" Peter asked.

He grinned broadly. "The rabbit. That's the most resistant animal we know about."

The general pushed himself upright in his chair, his face suffused with anger. "You mean to say the rabbit's going to live longer than we do?"

"That's right. About a year longer. It's got about twice the resistance that we've got. There'll be rabbits running about Australia and eating all the feed next year."

"You're telling me the bloody rabbit's going to put it across us, after all? They'll be alive and kicking when we're all dead?"

John Osborne nodded. "Dogs will outlive us. Mice will last a lot longer, but not so long as rabbits. So far as we can see, the rabbit has them all licked-he'll be the last." He paused. "They'll all go in the end, of course. There'll be nothing left alive here by the end of the next year."

The general sank back in his chair. "The rabbit! After all we've done, and all we've spent in fighting him-to know he's going to win out in the end!" He turned to Peter. "Just press that bell beside you. I'm going to have a brandy and soda before going in to lunch. We'd all better have a brandy and soda after that."

In the restaurant Moira Davidson and Dwight settled at a table in a corner, and ordered lunch. Then she said, "What's troubling you, Dwight?"

He took up a fork and played with it. "Not very much."

"Tell me."

He raised his head. "I've got another ship in my command-U.S.S. Swordfish at Montevideo. It's getting hot around those parts right now. I radioed the captain three days ago asking him if he thought it practical to leave and sail his vessel over here."

"What did he say?"

"He said it wasn't. Shore associations, he called them. What he meant was girls, same as Scorpion. Said he'd try and come if there was a compelling reason but he'd be leaving half his crew behind." He raised his head. "There'd be no point in coming that way," he told her. "He wouldn't be operational."

"Did you tell him to stay there?"

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