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Chapter Twenty-Two. The Guns of the North

Greenmantle





But no more shells fell.

The night grew dark and showed a field of glittering stars, for
the air was sharpening again towards frost. We waited for an hour,
crouching just behind the far parapets, but never came that ominous
familiar whistle.

Then Sandy rose and stretched himself. 'I'm hungry,' he said.
'Let's have out the food, Hussin. We've eaten nothing since before
daybreak. I wonder what is the meaning of this respite?'

I fancied I knew.

'It's Stumm's way,' I said. 'He wants to torture us. He'll
keep us hours on tenterhooks, while he sits over yonder exulting in
what he thinks we're enduring. He has just enough imagination for
that ... He would rush us if he had the men. As it is, he's going to
blow us to pieces, but do it slowly and smack his lips over it.'

Sandy yawned. 'We'll disappoint him, for we won't be worried,
old man. We three are beyond that kind of fear.'

'Meanwhile we're going to do the best we can,' I said. 'He's
got the exact range for his whizz-bangs. We've got to find a hole
somewhere just outside the castrol, and some sort of head-cover.
We're bound to get damaged whatever happens, but we'll stick it out
to the end. When they think they have finished with us and rush the
place, there may be one of us alive to put a bullet through old
Stumm. What do you say?'

They agreed, and after our meal Sandy and I crawled out to
prospect, leaving the others on guard in case there should be an
attack. We found a hollow in the glacis a little south of the
castrol, and, working very quietly, managed to enlarge it and cut a
kind of shallow cave in the hill. It would be no use against a
direct hit, but it would give some cover from flying fragments. As I
read the situation, Stumm could land as many shells as he pleased in
the castrol and wouldn't bother to attend to the flanks. When the
bad shelling began there would be shelter for one or two in the
cave.

Our enemies were watchful. The riflemen on the east burnt Very
flares at intervals, and Stumm's lot sent up a great star-rocket. I
remember that just before midnight hell broke loose round Fort
Palantuken. No more Russian shells came into our hollow, but all the
road to the east was under fire, and at the Fort itself there was a
shattering explosion and a queer scarlet glow which looked as if a
magazine had been hit. For about two hours the firing was intense,
and then it died down. But it was towards the north that I kept
turning my head. There seemed to be something different in the sound
there, something sharper in the report of the guns, as if shells were
dropping in a narrow valley whose rock walls doubled the echo. Had
the Russians by any blessed chance worked round that flank?

I got Sandy to listen, but he shook his head. 'Those guns are a
dozen miles off,' he said. 'They're no nearer than three days ago.
But it looks as if the sportsmen on the south might have a chance.
When they break through and stream down the valley, they'll be
puzzled to account for what remains of us ... We're no longer three
adventurers in the enemy's country. We're the advance guard of the
Allies. Our pals don't know about us, and we're going to be cut off,
which has happened to advance guards before now. But all the same,
we're in our own battle-line again. Doesn't that cheer you,
Dick?'

It cheered me wonderfully, for I knew now what had been the
weight on my heart ever since I accepted Sir Walter's mission. It
was the loneliness of it. I was fighting far away from my friends,
far away from the true fronts of battle. It was a side-show which,
whatever its importance, had none of the exhilaration of the main
effort. But now we had come back to familiar ground. We were like
the Highlanders cut off at Cite St Auguste on the first day of Loos,
or those Scots Guards at Festubert of whom I had heard. Only, the
others did not know of it, would never hear of it. If Peter
succeeded he might tell the tale, but most likely he was lying dead
somewhere in the no-man's-land between the lines. We should never be
heard of again any more, but our work remained. Sir Walter would
know that, and he would tell our few belongings that we had gone out
in our country's service.

We were in the castrol again, sitting under the parapets. The
same thoughts must have been in Sandy's mind, for he suddenly
laughed.

'It's a queer ending, Dick. We simply vanish into the infinite.
If the Russians get through they will never recognize what is left
of us among so much of the wreckage of battle. The snow will soon
cover us, and when the spring comes there will only be a few bleached
bones. Upon my soul it is the kind of death I always wanted.' And
he quoted softly to himself a verse of an old Scots ballad:

'Mony's the ane for him maks mane, But nane sall ken
whar he is gane. Ower his white banes, when they are bare,
The wind sall blaw for evermair.' 'But our work lives,' I cried,
with a sudden great gasp of happiness. 'It's the job that matters,
not the men that do it. And our job's done. We have won, old chap -
won hands down - and there is no going back on that. We have won
anyway; and if Peter has had a slice of luck, we've scooped the pool
... After all, we never expected to come out of this thing with our
lives.'

Blenkiron, with his leg stuck out stiffly before him, was
humming quietly to himself, as he often did when he felt cheerful.
He had only one song, 'John Brown's Body'; usually only a line at a
time, but now he got as far as the whole verse:

'He captured Harper's Ferry, with his nineteen men so
true, And he frightened old Virginny till she trembled through
and through. They hung him for a traitor, themselves the traitor
crew, But his soul goes marching along.' 'Feeling good?' I
asked.

'Fine. I'm about the luckiest man on God's earth, Major. I've
always wanted to get into a big show, but I didn't see how it would
come the way of a homely citizen like me, living in a steam-warmed
house and going down town to my office every morning. I used to envy
my old dad that fought at Chattanooga, and never forgot to tell you
about it. But I guess Chattanooga was like a scrap in a Bowery bar
compared to this. When I meet the old man in Glory he'll have to
listen some to me.'

It was just after Blenkiron spoke that we got a reminder of
Stumm's presence. The gun was well laid, for a shell plumped on the
near edge of the castro. It made an end of one of the Companions who
was on guard there, badly wounded another, and a fragment gashed my
thigh. We took refuge in the shallow cave, but some wild shooting
from the east side brought us back to the parapets, for we feared an
attack. None came, nor any more shells, and once again the night was
quiet.

I asked Blenkiron if he had any near relatives.

'Why, no, except a sister's son, a college-boy who has no need
of his uncle. It's fortunate that we three have no wives. I haven't
any regrets, neither, for I've had a mighty deal out of life. I was
thinking this morning that it was a pity I was going out when I had
just got my duo-denum to listen to reason. But I reckon that's
another of my mercies. The good God took away the pain in my stomach
so that I might go to Him with a clear head and a thankful heart.'

'We're lucky fellows,' said Sandy; 'we've all had our whack.
When I remember the good times I've had I could sing a hymn of
praise. We've lived long enough to know ourselves, and to shape
ourselves into some kind of decency. But think of those boys who
have given their lives freely when they scarcely knew what life
meant. They were just at the beginning of the road, and they didn't
know what dreary bits lay before them. It was all sunshiny and
bright-coloured, and yet they gave it up without a moment's doubt.
And think of the men with wives and children and homes that were the
biggest things in life to them. For fellows like us to shirk would
be black cowardice. It's small credit for us to stick it out. But
when those others shut their teeth and went forward, they were
blessed heroes. ...'

After that we fell silent. A man's thoughts at a time like that
seem to be double-powered, and the memory becomes very sharp and
clear. I don't know what was in the others' minds, but I know what
filled my own ...

I fancy it isn't the men who get most out of the world and are
always buoyant and cheerful that most fear to die. Rather it is the
weak-engined souls who go about with dull eyes, that cling most
fiercely to life. They have not the joy of being alive which is a
kind of earnest of immortality ... I know that my thoughts were
chiefly about the jolly things that I had seen and done; not regret,
but gratitude. The panorama of blue noons on the veld unrolled
itself before me, and hunter's nights in the bush, the taste of food
and sleep, the bitter stimulus of dawn, the joy of wild adventure,
the voices of old staunch friends. Hitherto the war had seemed to
make a break with all that had gone before, but now the war was only
part of the picture. I thought of my battalion, and the good fellows
there, many of whom had fallen on the Loos parapets. I had never
looked to come out of that myself. But I had been spared, and given
the chance of a greater business, and I had succeeded. That was the
tremendous fact, and my mood was humble gratitude to God and exultant
pride. Death was a small price to pay for it. As Blenkiron would
have said, I had got good value in the deal.

The night was getting bitter cold, as happens before dawn. It
was frost again, and the sharpness of it woke our hunger. I got out
the remnants of the food and wine and we had a last meal. I remember
we pledged each other as we drank.

'We have eaten our Passover Feast,' said Sandy. 'When do you
look for the end?'

'After dawn,' I said. 'Stumm wants daylight to get the full
savour of his revenge.'

Slowly the sky passed from ebony to grey, and black shapes of
hill outlined themselves against it. A wind blew down the valley,
bringing the acrid smell of burning, but something too of the
freshness of morn. It stirred strange thoughts in me, and woke the
old morning vigour of the blood which was never to be mine again.
For the first time in that long vigil I was torn with a sudden
regret.

'We must get into the cave before it is full light,' I said.
'We had better draw lots for the two to go.'

The choice fell on one of the Companions and Blenkiron. 'You can
count me out,' said the latter. 'If it's your wish to find a man to
be alive when our friends come up to count their spoil, I guess I'm
the worst of the lot. I'd prefer, if you don't mind, to stay here.
I've made my peace with my Maker, and I'd like to wait quietly on His
call. I'll play a game of Patience to pass the time.'

He would take no denial, so we drew again, and the lot fell to
Sandy.

'If I'm the last to go,' he said, 'I promise I don't miss.
Stumm won't be long in following me.'

He shook hands with his cheery smile, and he and the Companion
slipped over the parapet in the final shadows before dawn.

Blenkiron spread his Patience cards on a flat rock, and dealt
out the Double Napoleon. He was perfectly calm, and hummed to
himself his only tune. For myself I was drinking in my last draught
of the hill air. My contentment was going. I suddenly felt bitterly
loath to die.

Something of the same kind must have passed through Blenkiron's
head. He suddenly looked up and asked, 'Sister Anne, Sister Anne, do
you see anybody coming?'

I stood close to the parapet, watching every detail of the
landscape as shown by the revealing daybreak. Up on the shoulders of
the Palantuken, snowdrifts lipped over the edges of the cliffs. I
wondered when they would come down as avalanches. There was a kind
of croft on one hillside, and from a hut the smoke of breakfast was
beginning to curl. Stumm's gunners were awake and apparently holding
council. Far down on the main road a convoy was moving - I heard the
creak of the wheels two miles away, for the air was deathly still.

Then, as if a spring had been loosed, the world suddenly leaped
to a hideous life. With a growl the guns opened round all the
horizon. They were especially fierce to the south, where a rafale
beat as I had never heard it before. The one glance I cast behind me
showed the gap in the hills choked with fumes and dust.

But my eyes were on the north. From Erzerum city tall tongues
of flame leaped from a dozen quarters. Beyond, towards the opening
of the Euphrates glen, there was the sharp crack of field-guns. I
strained eyes and ears, mad with impatience, and I read the
riddle.

' Sandy,' I yelled, 'Peter has got through. The Russians are
round the flank. The town is burning. Glory to God, we've won,
we've won!'

And as I spoke the earth seemed to split beside me, and I was
flung forward on the gravel which covered Hilda von Einem's grave.

As I picked myself up, and to my amazement found myself
uninjured, I saw Blenkiron rubbing the dust out of his eyes and
arranging a disordered card. He had stopped humming, and was singing
aloud:

'He captured Harper's Ferry, with his nineteen men so true
And he frightened old Virginny ...' 'Say, Major,' he cried, 'I
believe this game of mine is coming out.'

I was now pretty well mad. The thought that old Peter had won,
that we had won beyond our wildest dreams, that if we died there were
those coming who would exact the uttermost vengeance, rode my brain
like a fever. I sprang on the parapet and waved my hand to Stumm,
shouting defiance. Rifle shots cracked out from behind, and I leaped
back just in time for the next shell.

The charge must have been short, for it was a bad miss, landing
somewhere on the glacis. The next was better and crashed on the near
parapet, carving a great hole in the rocky kranz. This time my arm
hung limp, broken by a fragment of stone, but I felt no pain.

Blenkiron seemed to bear a charmed life, for he was smothered in
dust, but unhurt. He blew the dust away from his cards very gingerly
and went on playing.

'Sister Anne,' he asked, 'do you see anybody coming?'

Then came a dud which dropped neatly inside on the soft
ground.

I was determined to break for the open and chance the rifle
fire, for if Stumm went on shooting the castrol was certain death. I
caught Blenkiron round the middle, scattering his cards to the winds,
and jumped over the parapet.

'Don't apologize, Sister Anne,' said he. 'The game was as good
as won. But for God's sake drop me, for if you wave me like the
banner of freedom I'll get plugged sure and good.'

My one thought was to get cover for the next minutes, for I had
an instinct that our vigil was near its end. The defences of Erzerum
were crumbling like sand-castles, and it was a proof of the tenseness
of my nerves that I seemed to be deaf to the sound. Stumm had seen
us cross the parapet, and he started to sprinkle all the surroundings
of the castrol. Blenkiron and I lay like a working-party between
the lines caught by machine-guns, taking a pull on ourselves as best
we could. Sandy had some kind of cover, but we were on the bare
farther slope, and the riflemen on that side might have had us at
their mercy.

But no shots came from them. As I looked east, the hillside,
which a little before had been held by our enemies, was as empty as
the desert. And then I saw on the main road a sight which for a
second time made me yell like a maniac. Down that glen came a throng
of men and galloping limbers - a crazy, jostling crowd, spreading
away beyond the road to the steep slopes, and leaving behind it many
black dots to darken the snows. The gates of the South had yielded,
and our friends were through them.

At that sight I forgot all about our danger. I didn't give a
cent for Stumm's shells. I didn't believe he could hit me. The fate
which had mercifully preserved us for the first taste of victory
would see us through to the end.

I remember bundling Blenkiron along the hill to find Sandy. But
our news was anticipated. For down our own side-glen came the same
broken tumult of men. More; for at their backs, far up at the throat
of the pass, I saw horsemen - the horsemen of the pursuit. Old
Nicholas had flung his cavalry in.

Sandy was on his feet, with his lips set and his eye abstracted.
If his face hadn't been burned black by weather it would have been
pale as a dish-clout. A man like him doesn't make up his mind for
death and then be given his life again without being wrenched out of
his bearings. I thought he didn't understand what had happened, so I
beat him on the shoulders.

'Man, d'you see?' I cried. 'The Cossacks! The Cossacks! God!
How they're taking that slope! They're into them now. By heaven,
we'll ride with them! We'll get the gun horses!'

A little knoll prevented Stumm and his men from seeing what was
happening farther up the glen, till the first wave of the rout was on
them. He had gone on bombarding the castrol and its environs while
the world was cracking over his head. The gun team was in the hollow
below the road, and down the hill among the boulders we crawled,
Blenkiron as lame as a duck, and me with a limp left arm.

The poor beasts were straining at their pickets and sniffing the
morning wind, which brought down the thick fumes of the great
bombardment and the indescribable babbling cries of a beaten army.
Before we reached them that maddened horde had swept down on them,
men panting and gasping in their flight, many of them bloody from
wounds, many tottering in the first stages of collapse and death. I
saw the horses seized by a dozen hands, and a desperate fight for
their possession. But as we halted there our eyes were fixed on the
battery on the road above us, for round it was now sweeping the van
of the retreat.

I had never seen a rout before, when strong men come to the end
of their tether and only their broken shadows stumble towards the
refuge they never find. No more had Stumm, poor devil. I had no
ill-will left for him, though coming down that hill I was rather
hoping that the two of us might have a final scrap. He was a brute
and a bully, but, by God! he was a man. I heard his great roar when
he saw the tumult, and the next I saw was his monstrous figure
working at the gun. He swung it south and turned it on the
fugitives. But he never fired it. The press was on him, and the gun
was swept sideways. He stood up, a foot higher than any of them, and
he seemed to be trying to check the rush with his pistol. There is
power in numbers, even though every unit is broken and fleeing. For a
second to that wild crowd Stumm was the enemy, and they had strength
enough to crush him. The wave flowed round and then across him. I
saw the butt-ends of rifles crash on his head and shoulders, and the
next second the stream had passed over his body.

That was God's judgement on the man who had set himself above
his kind.

Sandy gripped my shoulder and was shouting in my ear:

'They're coming, Dick. Look at the grey devils ... Oh, God be
thanked, it's our friends!'

The next minute we were tumbling down the hillside, Blenkiron
hopping on one leg between us. I heard dimly Sandy crying, 'Oh, well
done our side!' and Blenkiron declaiming about Harper's Ferry, but I
had no voice at all and no wish to shout. I know the tears were in
my eyes, and that if I had been left alone I would have sat down and
cried with pure thankfulness. For sweeping down the glen came a
cloud of grey cavalry on little wiry horses, a cloud which stayed not
for the rear of the fugitives, but swept on like a flight of
rainbows, with the steel of their lance-heads glittering in the
winter sun. They were riding for Erzerum.

Remember that for three months we had been with the enemy and
had never seen the face of an Ally in arms. We had been cut off from
the fellowship of a great cause, like a fort surrounded by an army.
And now we were delivered, and there fell around us the warm joy of
comradeship as well as the exultation of victory.

We flung caution to the winds, and went stark mad. Sandy, still
in his emerald coat and turban, was scrambling up the farther slope
of the hollow, yelling greetings in every language known to man. The
leader saw him, with a word checked his men for a moment - it was
marvellous to see the horses reined in in such a break-neck ride -
and from the squadron half a dozen troopers swung loose and wheeled
towards us. Then a man in a grey overcoat and a sheepskin cap was on
the ground beside us wringing our hands.

'You are safe, my old friends' - it was Peter's voice that spoke
- 'I will take you back to our army, and get you breakfast.'

'No, by the Lord, you won't,' cried Sandy. 'We've had the rough
end of the job and now we'll have the fun. Look after Blenkiron and
these fellows of mine. I'm going to ride knee by knee with your
sportsmen for the city.'

Peter spoke a word, and two of the Cossacks dismounted. The
next I knew I was mixed up in the cloud of greycoats, galloping down
the road up which the morning before we had strained to the
castrol.

That was the great hour of my life, and to live through it was
worth a dozen years of slavery. With a broken left arm I had little
hold on my beast, so I trusted my neck to him and let him have his
will. Black with dirt and smoke, hatless, with no kind of uniform, I
was a wilder figure than any Cossack. I soon was separated from
Sandy, who had two hands and a better horse, and seemed resolute to
press forward to the very van. That would have been suicide for me,
and I had all I could do to keep my place in the bunch I rode
with.

But, Great God! what an hour it was! There was loose shooting
on our flank, but nothing to trouble us, though the gun team of some
Austrian howitzer, struggling madly at a bridge, gave us a bit of a
tussle. Everything flitted past me like smoke, or like the mad
finale of a dream just before waking. I knew the living movement
under me, and the companionship of men, but all dimly, for at heart I
was alone, grappling with the realization of a new world. I felt the
shadows of the Palantuken glen fading, and the great burst of light
as we emerged on the wider valley. Somewhere before us was a pall of
smoke seamed with red flames, and beyond the darkness of still higher
hills. All that time I was dreaming, crooning daft catches of song
to myself, so happy, so deliriously happy that I dared not try to
think. I kept muttering a kind of prayer made up of Bible words to
Him who had shown me His goodness in the land of the living.

But as we drew out from the skirts of the hills and began the
long slope to the city, I woke to clear consciousness. I felt the
smell of sheepskin and lathered horses, and above all the bitter
smell of fire. Down in the trough lay Erzerum, now burning in many
places, and from the east, past the silent forts, horsemen were
closing in on it. I yelled to my comrades that we were nearest, that
we would be first in the city, and they nodded happily and shouted
their strange war-cries. As we topped the last ridge I saw below me
the van of our charge - a dark mass on the snow - while the broken
enemy on both sides were flinging away their arms and scattering in
the fields.

In the very front, now nearing the city ramparts, was one man.
He was like the point of the steel spear soon to be driven home. In
the clear morning air I could see that he did not wear the uniform of
the invaders. He was turbaned and rode like one possessed, and
against the snow I caught the dark sheen of emerald. As he rode it
seemed that the fleeing Turks were stricken still, and sank by the
roadside with eyes strained after his unheeding figure ...

Then I knew that the prophecy had been true, and that their
prophet had not failed them. The long-looked for revelation had
come. Greenmantle had appeared at last to an awaiting people.







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Buchan page for related resources.

Greenmantle

Foreword
Chapter One. A Mission is Proposed
Chapter Two. The Gathering of the Missionaries
Chapter Three. Peter Pienaar
Chapter Four. Adventures of Two Dutchmen on the Loose
Chapter Five. Further Adventures of the Same
Chapter Six. The Indiscretions of the Same
Chapter Seven. Christmastide
Chapter Eight. The Essen Barges
Chapter Nine. The Return of the Straggler
Chapter Ten. The Garden-House of Suliman the Red
Chapter Eleven. The Companions of the Rosy Hours
Chapter Twelve. Four Missionaries See Light in their Mission
Chapter Thirteen. I Move in Good Society
Chapter Fourteen. The Lady of the Mantilla
Chapter Fifteen. An Embarrassed Toilet
Chapter Sixteen. The Battered Caravanserai
Chapter Seventeen. Trouble by The Waters of Babylon
Chapter Eighteen. Sparrows on the Housetops
Chapter Nineteen. Greenmantle
Chapter Twenty. Peter Pienaar Goes to the Wars
Chapter Twenty-One. The Little Hill
Chapter Twenty-Two. The Guns of the North

 


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