<SPAN name="chap20"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER TWENTY </h3>
<h3> The Storm Breaks in the West </h3>
<p>The following evening—it was the 20th day of March—I started for
France after the dark fell. I drove Ivery's big closed car, and within
sat its owner, bound and gagged, as others had sat before him on the
same errand. Geordie Hamilton and Amos were his companions. From what
Blenkiron had himself discovered and from the papers seized in the Pink
Chalet I had full details of the road and its mysterious stages. It was
like the journey of a mad dream. In a back street of a little town I
would exchange passwords with a nameless figure and be given
instructions. At a wayside inn at an appointed hour a voice speaking a
thick German would advise that this bridge or that railway crossing had
been cleared. At a hamlet among pine woods an unknown man would clamber
up beside me and take me past a sentry-post. Smooth as clockwork was
the machine, till in the dawn of a spring morning I found myself
dropping into a broad valley through little orchards just beginning to
blossom, and I knew that I was in France. After that, Blenkiron's own
arrangements began, and soon I was drinking coffee with a young
lieutenant of Chasseurs, and had taken the gag from Ivery's mouth. The
bluecoats looked curiously at the man in the green ulster whose face
was the colour of clay and who lit cigarette from cigarette with a
shaky hand.</p>
<p>The lieutenant rang up a General of Division who knew all about us. At
his headquarters I explained my purpose, and he telegraphed to an Army
Headquarters for a permission which was granted. It was not for nothing
that in January I had seen certain great personages in Paris, and that
Blenkiron had wired ahead of me to prepare the way. Here I handed over
Ivery and his guard, for I wanted them to proceed to Amiens under
French supervision, well knowing that the men of that great army are
not used to let slip what they once hold.</p>
<p>It was a morning of clear spring sunlight when we breakfasted in that
little red-roofed town among vineyards with a shining river looping at
our feet. The General of Division was an Algerian veteran with a brush
of grizzled hair, whose eye kept wandering to a map on the wall where
pins and stretched thread made a spider's web.</p>
<p>'Any news from the north?' I asked.</p>
<p>'Not yet,' he said. 'But the attack comes soon. It will be against our
army in Champagne.' With a lean finger he pointed out the enemy
dispositions.</p>
<p>'Why not against the British?' I asked. With a knife and fork I made a
right angle and put a salt dish in the centre. 'That is the German
concentration. They can so mass that we do not know which side of the
angle they will strike till the blow falls.'</p>
<p>'It is true,' he replied. 'But consider. For the enemy to attack
towards the Somme would be to fight over many miles of an old
battle-ground where all is still desert and every yard of which you
British know. In Champagne at a bound he might enter unbroken country.
It is a long and difficult road to Amiens, but not so long to Chilons.
Such is the view of Petain. Does it convince you?'</p>
<p>'The reasoning is good. Nevertheless he will strike at Amiens, and I
think he will begin today.'</p>
<p>He laughed and shrugged his shoulders. '<i>Nous verrons</i>. You are
obstinate, my general, like all your excellent countrymen.'</p>
<p>But as I left his headquarters an aide-de-camp handed him a message on
a pink slip. He read it, and turned to me with a grave face.</p>
<p>'You have a flair, my friend. I am glad we did not wager. This morning
at dawn there is great fighting around St Quentin. Be comforted, for
they will not pass. Your <i>Marechal</i> will hold them.'</p>
<p>That was the first news I had of the battle.</p>
<p>At Dijon according to plan I met the others. I only just caught the
Paris train, and Blenkiron's great wrists lugged me into the carriage
when it was well in motion. There sat Peter, a docile figure in a
carefully patched old R.F.C. uniform. Wake was reading a pile of French
papers, and in a corner Mary, with her feet up on the seat, was sound
asleep.</p>
<p>We did not talk much, for the life of the past days had been so hectic
that we had no wish to recall it. Blenkiron's face wore an air of
satisfaction, and as he looked out at the sunny spring landscape he
hummed his only tune. Even Wake had lost his restlessness. He had on a
pair of big tortoiseshell reading glasses, and when he looked up from
his newspaper and caught my eye he smiled. Mary slept like a child,
delicately flushed, her breath scarcely stirring the collar of the
greatcoat which was folded across her throat. I remember looking with a
kind of awe at the curve of her young face and the long lashes that lay
so softly on her cheek, and wondering how I had borne the anxiety of
the last months. Wake raised his head from his reading, glanced at Mary
and then at me, and his eyes were kind, almost affectionate. He seemed
to have won peace of mind among the hills.</p>
<p>Only Peter was out of the picture. He was a strange, disconsolate
figure, as he shifted about to ease his leg, or gazed incuriously from
the window. He had shaved his beard again, but it did not make him
younger, for his face was too lined and his eyes too old to change.
When I spoke to him he looked towards Mary and held up a warning finger.</p>
<p>'I go back to England,' he whispered. 'Your little <i>mysie</i> is going to
take care of me till I am settled. We spoke of it yesterday at my
cottage. I will find a lodging and be patient till the war is over. And
you, Dick?'</p>
<p>'Oh, I rejoin my division. Thank God, this job is over. I have an easy
<i>trund</i> now and can turn my attention to straight-forward soldiering. I
don't mind telling you that I'll be glad to think that you and Mary and
Blenkiron are safe at home. What about you, Wake?'</p>
<p>'I go back to my Labour battalion,' he said cheerfully. 'Like you, I
have an easier mind.'</p>
<p>I shook my head. 'We'll see about that. I don't like such sinful waste.
We've had a bit of campaigning together and I know your quality.'</p>
<p>'The battalion's quite good enough for me,' and he relapsed into a
day-old <i>Temps</i>.</p>
<p>Mary had suddenly woke, and was sitting upright with her fists in her
eyes like a small child. Her hand flew to her hair, and her eyes ran
over us as if to see that we were all there. As she counted the four of
us she seemed relieved.</p>
<p>'I reckon you feel refreshed, Miss Mary,' said Blenkiron. 'It's good to
think that now we can sleep in peace, all of us. Pretty soon you'll be
in England and spring will be beginning, and please God it'll be the
start of a better world. Our work's over, anyhow.'</p>
<p>'I wonder,' said the girl gravely. 'I don't think there's any discharge
in this war. Dick, have you news of the battle? This was the day.'</p>
<p>'It's begun,' I said, and told them the little I had learned from the
French General. 'I've made a reputation as a prophet, for he thought
the attack was coming in Champagne. It's St Quentin right enough, but I
don't know what has happened. We'll hear in Paris.'</p>
<p>Mary had woke with a startled air as if she remembered her old instinct
that our work would not be finished without a sacrifice, and that
sacrifice the best of us. The notion kept recurring to me with an
uneasy insistence. But soon she appeared to forget her anxiety. That
afternoon as we journeyed through the pleasant land of France she was
in holiday mood, and she forced all our spirits up to her level. It was
calm, bright weather, the long curves of ploughland were beginning to
quicken into green, the catkins made a blue mist on the willows by the
watercourses, and in the orchards by the red-roofed hamlets the blossom
was breaking. In such a scene it was hard to keep the mind sober and
grey, and the pall of war slid from us. Mary cosseted and fussed over
Peter like an elder sister over a delicate little boy. She made him
stretch his bad leg full length on the seat, and when she made tea for
the party of us it was a protesting Peter who had the last sugar
biscuit. Indeed, we were almost a merry company, for Blenkiron told
stories of old hunting and engineering days in the West, and Peter and
I were driven to cap them, and Mary asked provocative questions, and
Wake listened with amused interest. It was well that we had the
carriage to ourselves, for no queerer rigs were ever assembled. Mary,
as always, was neat and workmanlike in her dress; Blenkiron was
magnificent in a suit of russet tweed with a pale-blue shirt and
collar, and well-polished brown shoes; but Peter and Wake were in
uniforms which had seen far better days, and I wore still the boots and
the shapeless and ragged clothes of Joseph Zimmer, the porter from
Arosa.</p>
<p>We appeared to forget the war, but we didn't, for it was in the
background of all our minds. Somewhere in the north there was raging a
desperate fight, and its issue was the true test of our success or
failure. Mary showed it by bidding me ask for news at every
stopping-place. I asked gendarmes and <i>Permissionnaires</i>, but I learned
nothing. Nobody had ever heard of the battle. The upshot was that for
the last hour we all fell silent, and when we reached Paris about seven
o'clock my first errand was to the bookstall.</p>
<p>I bought a batch of evening papers, which we tried to read in the taxis
that carried us to our hotel. Sure enough there was the announcement in
big headlines. The enemy had attacked in great strength from south of
Arras to the Oise; but everywhere he had been repulsed and held in our
battle-zone. The leading articles were confident, the notes by the
various military critics were almost braggart. At last the German had
been driven to an offensive, and the Allies would have the opportunity
they had longed for of proving their superior fighting strength. It
was, said one and all, the opening of the last phase of the war.</p>
<p>I confess that as I read my heart sank. If the civilians were so
over-confident, might not the generals have fallen into the same trap?
Blenkiron alone was unperturbed. Mary said nothing, but she sat with
her chin in her hands, which with her was a sure sign of deep
preoccupation.</p>
<p>Next morning the papers could tell us little more. The main attack had
been on both sides of St Quentin, and though the British had given
ground it was only the outposts line that had gone. The mist had
favoured the enemy, and his bombardment had been terrific, especially
the gas shells. Every journal added the old old comment—that he had
paid heavily for his temerity, with losses far exceeding those of the
defence.</p>
<p>Wake appeared at breakfast in his private's uniform. He wanted to get
his railway warrant and be off at once, but when I heard that Amiens
was his destination I ordered him to stay and travel with me in the
afternoon. I was in uniform myself now and had taken charge of the
outfit. I arranged that Blenkiron, Mary, and Peter should go on to
Boulogne and sleep the night there, while Wake and I would be dropped
at Amiens to await instructions.</p>
<p>I spent a busy morning. Once again I visited with Blenkiron the little
cabinet in the Boulevard St Germain, and told in every detail our work
of the past two months. Once again I sat in the low building beside the
Invalides and talked to staff officers. But some of the men I had seen
on the first visit were not there. The chiefs of the French Army had
gone north.</p>
<p>We arranged for the handling of the Wild Birds, now safely in France,
and sanction was given to the course I had proposed to adopt with
Ivery. He and his guard were on their way to Amiens, and I would meet
them there on the morrow. The great men were very complimentary to us,
so complimentary that my knowledge of grammatical French ebbed away and
I could only stutter in reply. That telegram sent by Blenkiron on the
night of the 18th, from the information given me in the Pink Chalet,
had done wonders in clearing up the situation.</p>
<p>But when I asked them about the battle they could tell me little. It
was a very serious attack in tremendous force, but the British line was
strong and the reserves were believed to be sufficient. Petain and Foch
had gone north to consult with Haig. The situation in Champagne was
still obscure, but some French reserves were already moving thence to
the Somme sector. One thing they did show me, the British dispositions.
As I looked at the plan I saw that my old division was in the thick of
the fighting.</p>
<p>'Where do you go now?' I was asked.</p>
<p>'To Amiens, and then, please God, to the battle front,' I said.</p>
<p>'Good fortune to you. You do not give body or mind much rest, my
general.'</p>
<p>After that I went to the <i>Mission Anglaise</i>, but they had nothing
beyond Haig's communique and a telephone message from G.H.Q. that the
critical sector was likely to be that between St Quentin and the Oise.
The northern pillar of our defence, south of Arras, which they had been
nervous about, had stood like a rock. That pleased me, for my old
battalion of the Lennox Highlanders was there.</p>
<p>Crossing the Place de la Concorde, we fell in with a British staff
officer of my acquaintance, who was just starting to motor back to
G.H.Q. from Paris leave. He had a longer face than the people at the
Invalides.</p>
<p>'I don't like it, I tell you,' he said. 'It's this mist that worries
me. I went down the whole line from Arras to the Oise ten days ago. It
was beautifully sited, the cleverest thing you ever saw. The outpost
line was mostly a chain of blobs—redoubts, you know, with
machine-guns—so arranged as to bring flanking fire to bear on the
advancing enemy. But mist would play the devil with that scheme, for
the enemy would be past the place for flanking fire before we knew
it... Oh, I know we had good warning, and had the battle-zone manned in
time, but the outpost line was meant to hold out long enough to get
everything behind in apple-pie order, and I can't see but how big
chunks of it must have gone in the first rush.... Mind you, we've
banked everything on that battle-zone. It's damned good, but if it's
gone—'He flung up his hands.</p>
<p>'Have we good reserves?' I asked.</p>
<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>'Have we positions prepared behind the battle-zone?'</p>
<p>'I didn't notice any,' he said dryly, and was off before I could get
more out of him.</p>
<p>'You look rattled, Dick,' said Blenkiron as we walked to the hotel.</p>
<p>'I seem to have got the needle. It's silly, but I feel worse about this
show than I've ever felt since the war started. Look at this city here.
The papers take it easily, and the people are walking about as if
nothing was happening. Even the soldiers aren't worried. You may call
me a fool to take it so hard, but I've a sense in my bones that we're
in for the bloodiest and darkest fight of our lives, and that soon
Paris will be hearing the Boche guns as she did in 1914.'</p>
<p>'You're a cheerful old Jeremiah. Well, I'm glad Miss Mary's going to be
in England soon. Seems to me she's right and that this game of ours
isn't quite played out yet. I'm envying you some, for there's a place
waiting for you in the fighting line.'</p>
<p>'You've got to get home and keep people's heads straight there. That's
the weak link in our chain and there's a mighty lot of work before you.'</p>
<p>'Maybe,' he said abstractedly, with his eye on the top of the Vendome
column.</p>
<p>The train that afternoon was packed with officers recalled from leave,
and it took all the combined purchase of Blenkiron and myself to get a
carriage reserved for our little party. At the last moment I opened the
door to admit a warm and agitated captain of the R.F.C. in whom I
recognized my friend and benefactor, Archie Roylance.</p>
<p>'Just when I was gettin' nice and clean and comfy a wire comes tellin'
me to bundle back, all along of a new battle. It's a cruel war, Sir.'
The afflicted young man mopped his forehead, grinned cheerfully at
Blenkiron, glanced critically at Peter, then caught sight of Mary and
grew at once acutely conscious of his appearance. He smoothed his hair,
adjusted his tie and became desperately sedate.</p>
<p>I introduced him to Peter and he promptly forgot Mary's existence. If
Peter had had any vanity in him it would have been flattered by the
frank interest and admiration in the boy's eyes. 'I'm tremendously glad
to see you safe back, sir. I've always hoped I might have a chance of
meeting you. We want you badly now on the front. Lensch is gettin' a
bit uppish.'</p>
<p>Then his eye fell on Peter's withered leg and he saw that he had
blundered. He blushed scarlet and looked his apologies. But they
weren't needed, for it cheered Peter to meet someone who talked of the
possibility of his fighting again. Soon the two were deep in
technicalities, the appalling technicalities of the airman. It was no
good listening to their talk, for you could make nothing of it, but it
was bracing up Peter like wine. Archie gave him a minute description of
Lensch's latest doings and his new methods. He, too, had heard the
rumour that Peter had mentioned to me at St Anton, of a new Boche
plane, with mighty engines and stumpy wings cunningly cambered, which
was a devil to climb; but no specimens had yet appeared over the line.
They talked of Bali, and Rhys Davids, and Bishop, and McCudden, and all
the heroes who had won their spurs since the Somme, and of the new
British makes, most of which Peter had never seen and had to have
explained to him.</p>
<p>Outside a haze had drawn over the meadows with the twilight. I pointed
it out to Blenkiron.</p>
<p>'There's the fog that's doing us. This March weather is just like
October, mist morning and evening. I wish to Heaven we could have some
good old drenching spring rain.'</p>
<p>Archie was discoursing of the Shark-Gladas machine.</p>
<p>'I've always stuck to it, for it's a marvel in its way, but it has my
heart fairly broke. The General here knows its little tricks. Don't
you, sir? Whenever things get really excitin', the engine's apt to quit
work and take a rest.'</p>
<p>'The whole make should be publicly burned,' I said, with gloomy
recollections.</p>
<p>'I wouldn't go so far, sir. The old Gladas has surprisin' merits. On
her day there's nothing like her for pace and climbing-power, and she
steers as sweet as a racin' cutter. The trouble about her is she's too
complicated. She's like some breeds of car—you want to be a mechanical
genius to understand her ... If they'd only get her a little simpler
and safer, there wouldn't be her match in the field. I'm about the only
man that has patience with her and knows her merits, but she's often
been nearly the death of me. All the same, if I were in for a big fight
against some fellow like Lensch, where it was neck or nothing, I'm
hanged if I wouldn't pick the Gladas.'</p>
<p>Archie laughed apologetically. 'The subject is banned for me in our
mess. I'm the old thing's only champion, and she's like a mare I used
to hunt that loved me so much she was always tryin' to chew the arm off
me. But I wish I could get her a fair trial from one of the big pilots.
I'm only in the second class myself after all.'</p>
<p>We were running north of St Just when above the rattle of the train
rose a curious dull sound. It came from the east, and was like the low
growl of a veld thunderstorm, or a steady roll of muffled drums.</p>
<p>'Hark to the guns!' cried Archie. 'My aunt, there's a tidy bombardment
goin' on somewhere.'</p>
<p>I had been listening on and off to guns for three years. I had been
present at the big preparations before Loos and the Somme and Arras,
and I had come to accept the racket of artillery as something natural
and inevitable like rain or sunshine. But this sound chilled me with
its eeriness, I don't know why. Perhaps it was its unexpectedness, for
I was sure that the guns had not been heard in this area since before
the Marne. The noise must be travelling down the Oise valley, and I
judged there was big fighting somewhere about Chauny or La Fere. That
meant that the enemy was pressing hard on a huge front, for here was
clearly a great effort on his extreme left wing. Unless it was our
counter-attack. But somehow I didn't think so.</p>
<p>I let down the window and stuck my head into the night. The fog had
crept to the edge of the track, a gossamer mist through which houses
and trees and cattle could be seen dim in the moonlight. The noise
continued—not a mutter, but a steady rumbling flow as solid as the
blare of a trumpet. Presently, as we drew nearer Amiens, we left it
behind us, for in all the Somme valley there is some curious
configuration which blankets sound. The countryfolk call it the 'Silent
Land', and during the first phase of the Somme battle a man in Amiens
could not hear the guns twenty miles off at Albert.</p>
<p>As I sat down again I found that the company had fallen silent, even
the garrulous Archie. Mary's eyes met mine, and in the indifferent
light of the French railway-carriage I could see excitement in them—I
knew it was excitement, not fear. She had never heard the noise of a
great barrage before. Blenkiron was restless, and Peter was sunk in his
own thoughts. I was growing very depressed, for in a little I would
have to part from my best friends and the girl I loved. But with the
depression was mixed an odd expectation, which was almost pleasant. The
guns had brought back my profession to me, I was moving towards their
thunder, and God only knew the end of it. The happy dream I had dreamed
of the Cotswolds and a home with Mary beside me seemed suddenly to have
fallen away to an infinite distance. I felt once again that I was on
the razor-edge of life.</p>
<p>The last part of the journey I was casting back to rake up my knowledge
of the countryside. I saw again the stricken belt from Serre to Combles
where we had fought in the summer of '17. I had not been present in the
advance of the following spring, but I had been at Cambrai and I knew
all the down country from Lagnicourt to St Quentin. I shut my eyes and
tried to picture it, and to see the roads running up to the line, and
wondered just at what points the big pressure had come. They had told
me in Paris that the British were as far south as the Oise, so the
bombardment we had heard must be directed to our address. With
Passchendaele and Cambrai in my mind, and some notion of the
difficulties we had always had in getting drafts, I was puzzled to
think where we could have found the troops to man the new front. We
must be unholily thin on that long line. And against that awesome
bombardment! And the masses and the new tactics that Ivery had bragged
of!</p>
<p>When we ran into the dingy cavern which is Amiens station I seemed to
note a new excitement. I felt it in the air rather than deduced it from
any special incident, except that the platform was very crowded with
civilians, most of them with an extra amount of baggage. I wondered if
the place had been bombed the night before.</p>
<p>'We won't say goodbye yet,' I told the others. 'The train doesn't leave
for half an hour. I'm off to try and get news.'</p>
<p>Accompanied by Archie, I hunted out an R.T.O. of my acquaintance. To my
questions he responded cheerfully.</p>
<p>'Oh, we're doing famously, sir. I heard this afternoon from a man in
Operations that G.H.Q. was perfectly satisfied. We've killed a lot of
Huns and only lost a few kilometres of ground ... You're going to your
division? Well, it's up Peronne way, or was last night. Cheyne and
Dunthorpe came back from leave and tried to steal a car to get up to it
... Oh, I'm having the deuce of a time. These blighted civilians have
got the wind up, and a lot are trying to clear out. The idiots say the
Huns will be in Amiens in a week. What's the phrase? "<i>Pourvu que les
civils tiennent.</i>" 'Fraid I must push on, Sir.'</p>
<p>I sent Archie back with these scraps of news and was about to make a
rush for the house of one of the Press officers, who would, I thought,
be in the way of knowing things, when at the station entrance I ran
across Laidlaw. He had been B.G.G.S. in the corps to which my old
brigade belonged, and was now on the staff of some army. He was
striding towards a car when I grabbed his arm, and he turned on me a
very sick face.</p>
<p>'Good Lord, Hannay! Where did you spring from? The news, you say?' He
sank his voice, and drew me into a quiet corner. 'The news is hellish.'</p>
<p>'They told me we were holding,' I observed.</p>
<p>'Holding be damned! The Boche is clean through on a broad front. He
broke us today at Maissemy and Essigny. Yes, the battle-zone. He's
flinging in division after division like the blows of a hammer. What
else could you expect?' And he clutched my arm fiercely. 'How in God's
name could eleven divisions hold a front of forty miles? And against
four to one in numbers? It isn't war, it's naked lunacy.'</p>
<p>I knew the worst now, and it didn't shock me, for I had known it was
coming. Laidlaw's nerves were pretty bad, for his face was pale and his
eyes bright like a man with a fever.</p>
<p>'Reserves!' and he laughed bitterly. 'We have three infantry divisions
and two cavalry. They're into the mill long ago. The French are coming
up on our right, but they've the devil of a way to go. That's what I'm
down here about. And we're getting help from Horne and Plumer. But all
that takes days, and meantime we're walking back like we did at Mons.
And at this time of day, too ... Oh, yes, the whole line's retreating.
Parts of it were pretty comfortable, but they had to get back or be put
in the bag. I wish to Heaven I knew where our right divisions have got
to. For all I know they're at Compiegne by now. The Boche was over the
canal this morning, and by this time most likely he's across the Somme.'</p>
<p>At that I exclaimed. 'D'you mean to tell me we're going to lose
Peronne?'</p>
<p>'Peronne!' he cried. 'We'll be lucky not to lose Amiens! ... And on the
top of it all I've got some kind of blasted fever. I'll be raving in an
hour.'</p>
<p>He was rushing off, but I held him.</p>
<p>'What about my old lot?' I asked.</p>
<p>'Oh, damned good, but they're shot all to bits. Every division did
well. It's a marvel they weren't all scuppered, and it'll be a flaming
miracle if they find a line they can stand on. Westwater's got a leg
smashed. He was brought down this evening, and you'll find him in the
hospital. Fraser's killed and Lefroy's a prisoner—at least, that was
my last news. I don't know who's got the brigades, but Masterton's
carrying on with the division ... You'd better get up the line as fast
as you can and take over from him. See the Army Commander. He'll be in
Amiens tomorrow morning for a pow-wow.'</p>
<p>Laidlaw lay wearily back in his car and disappeared into the night,
while I hurried to the train.</p>
<p>The others had descended to the platform and were grouped round Archie,
who was discoursing optimistic nonsense. I got them into the carriage
and shut the door.</p>
<p>'It's pretty bad,' I said. 'The front's pierced in several places and
we're back to the Upper Somme. I'm afraid it isn't going to stop there.
I'm off up the line as soon as I can get my orders. Wake, you'll come
with me, for every man will be wanted. Blenkiron, you'll see Mary and
Peter safe to England. We're just in time, for tomorrow it mightn't be
easy to get out of Amiens.'</p>
<p>I can see yet the anxious faces in that ill-lit compartment. We said
goodbye after the British style without much to-do. I remember that old
Peter gripped my hand as if he would never release it, and that Mary's
face had grown very pale. If I delayed another second I should have
howled, for Mary's lips were trembling and Peter had eyes like a
wounded stag. 'God bless you,' I said hoarsely, and as I went off I
heard Peter's voice, a little cracked, saying 'God bless you, my old
friend.'</p>
<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
<p>I spent some weary hours looking for Westwater. He was not in the big
clearing station, but I ran him to earth at last in the new hospital
which had just been got going in the Ursuline convent. He was the most
sterling little man, in ordinary life rather dry and dogmatic, with a
trick of taking you up sharply which didn't make him popular. Now he
was lying very stiff and quiet in the hospital bed, and his blue eyes
were solemn and pathetic like a sick dog's.</p>
<p>'There's nothing much wrong with me,' he said, in reply to my question.
'A shell dropped beside me and damaged my foot. They say they'll have
to cut it off ... I've an easier mind now you're here, Hannay. Of
course you'll take over from Masterton. He's a good man but not quite
up to his job. Poor Fraser—you've heard about Fraser. He was done in
at the very start. Yes, a shell. And Lefroy. If he's alive and not too
badly smashed the Hun has got a troublesome prisoner.'</p>
<p>He was too sick to talk, but he wouldn't let me go.</p>
<p>'The division was all right. Don't you believe anyone who says we
didn't fight like heroes. Our outpost line held up the Hun for six
hours, and only about a dozen men came back. We could have stuck it out
in the battle-zone if both flanks hadn't been turned. They got through
Crabbe's left and came down the Verey ravine, and a big wave rushed
Shropshire Wood ... We fought it out yard by yard and didn't budge till
we saw the Plessis dump blazing in our rear. Then it was about time to
go ... We haven't many battalion commanders left. Watson, Endicot,
Crawshay ...' He stammered out a list of gallant fellows who had gone.</p>
<p>'Get back double quick, Hannay. They want you. I'm not happy about
Masterton. He's too young for the job.' And then a nurse drove me out,
and I left him speaking in the strange forced voice of great weakness.</p>
<p>At the foot of the staircase stood Mary.</p>
<p>'I saw you go in,' she said, 'so I waited for you.'</p>
<p>'Oh, my dear,' I cried, 'you should have been in Boulogne by now. What
madness brought you here?'</p>
<p>'They know me here and they've taken me on. You couldn't expect me to
stay behind. You said yourself everybody was wanted, and I'm in a
Service like you. Please don't be angry, Dick.'</p>
<p>I wasn't angry, I wasn't even extra anxious. The whole thing seemed to
have been planned by fate since the creation of the world. The game we
had been engaged in wasn't finished and it was right that we should
play it out together. With that feeling came a conviction, too, of
ultimate victory. Somehow or sometime we should get to the end of our
pilgrimage. But I remembered Mary's forebodings about the sacrifice
required. The best of us. That ruled me out, but what about her?</p>
<p>I caught her to my arms. 'Goodbye, my very dearest. Don't worry about
me, for mine's a soft job and I can look after my skin. But oh! take
care of yourself, for you are all the world to me.'</p>
<p>She kissed me gravely like a wise child.</p>
<p>'I am not afraid for you,' she said. 'You are going to stand in the
breach, and I know—I know you will win. Remember that there is someone
here whose heart is so full of pride of her man that it hasn't room for
fear.'</p>
<p>As I went out of the convent door I felt that once again I had been
given my orders.</p>
<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
<p>It did not surprise me that, when I sought out my room on an upper
floor of the Hotel de France, I found Blenkiron in the corridor. He was
in the best of spirits.</p>
<p>'You can't keep me out of the show, Dick,' he said, 'so you needn't
start arguing. Why, this is the one original chance of a lifetime for
John S. Blenkiron. Our little fight at Erzerum was only a side-show,
but this is a real high-class Armageddon. I guess I'll find a way to
make myself useful.'</p>
<p>I had no doubt he would, and I was glad he had stayed behind. But I
felt it was hard on Peter to have the job of returning to England alone
at such a time, like useless flotsam washed up by a flood.</p>
<p>'You needn't worry,' said Blenkiron. 'Peter's not making England this
trip. To the best of my knowledge he has beat it out of this township
by the eastern postern. He had some talk with Sir Archibald Roylance,
and presently other gentlemen of the Royal Flying Corps appeared, and
the upshot was that Sir Archibald hitched on to Peter's grip and
departed without saying farewell. My notion is that he's gone to have a
few words with his old friends at some flying station. Or he might have
the idea of going back to England by aeroplane, and so having one last
flutter before he folds his wings. Anyhow, Peter looked a mighty happy
man. The last I saw he was smoking his pipe with a batch of young lads
in a Flying Corps waggon and heading straight for Germany.'</p>
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