ROLLO, THE APOLLO
Mrs. Bracher was just starting on
one of her excursions from Pervyse into Furnes.
Her tiny first-aid hospital, hidden in the battered
house, needed food, clothing, and dressings for the
wounded. One morning when the three nurses were
up in the trenches, a shell had dug down into their
cellar and spilled ruin. Now, it is not well to
live in a place which a gun has located, because modern
artillery is fine in its workings to a hair’s-breadth,
and can repeat its performance to a fractional inch.
So the little household had removed themselves from
the famous cellar to a half-shattered house, which
had one whole living-room on the ground floor, good
for wounded and for the serving of meals; and one
unbroken bedroom on the first floor, large enough for
three tired women.
“Any errands, girls?”
she called to her two assistants as she mounted to
her seat on the motor ambulance.
“Bring me a man,” begged
Hilda. “Bring back some one to stir things
up.”
Indeed, it had been slow for the nurses
during the last fortnight. They were “at
the front,” but the front was peaceful.
After the hot toil of the autumn attack and counter-attack,
there had come a deadlock to the wearied troops.
They were eaten up with the chill of the moist earth,
and the perpetual drizzle. So they laid by their
machine guns, and silently wore through the grey days.
Victor, the orderly, cranked the engine
for Mrs. Bracher, and she hummed merrily away.
She drove the car. She was not going to have any
fumbling male hand spoil that sweetly running motor.
She had chosen the battle-front in Flanders as the
perfect place for vindicating woman’s courage,
coolness, and capacity for roughing it. She was
determined to leave not one quality of initiative
and daring to man’s monopoly. If he had
worn a decoration for some “nervy” hazardous
trait, she came prepared to pluck it from his swelling
pride, cut it in two pieces and wear her half of it.
Her only delay was a mile in from
Pervyse. The engine choked, and the car grunted
to a standstill. She was in front of a deserted
farm-house. She had a half hope that there might
be soldiers billeted there. In that case, she
could ask one of them to step out and start up the
engine for her. Cranking a motor is severe on
even a sturdy woman. She climbed out over the
dashboard from the wheel side, and entered the door-yard.
The barn had been demolished by shells. The ground
around the house was pitted with shell-holes, a foot
deep, three feet deep, one hole six feet deep.
The chimney of the house had collapsed from a well-aimed
obus. Mrs. Bracher knocked at the door, and
shook it. But there was no answer. The house
carried that silent horror of a deserted and dangerous
place. It seemed good to her to come away from
it, and return to the motor. She bent her back
to the crank, and set the engine chugging. It
was good to travel along to the sight of a human face.
“No one stationed there?” she asked of
the next sentinel.
“It is impossible, Madame,”
he replied; “the enemy have located it exactly
with a couple of their guns. Not one day passes
but they throw their shells around it.”
As Mrs. Bracher completed the seven-mile
run, and tore into the Grand Place of Furnes, she
was greeted by cheers from the populace. And,
indeed, she was a striking figure in her yellow leather
jerkin, her knee-breeches and puttees, and her shining
yellow “doggy” boots. She carried
all the air of an officer planning a desperate coup.
As she cut her famous half-moon curve from the north-east
corner of the Place by the Gendarmerie over to the
Hotel at the south-west, she saluted General de Wette
standing on the steps of the Municipal Building.
He, of course, knew her. Who of the Belgian army
did not know those three unquenchable women living
up by the trenches on the Yser? He gravely saluted
the streak of yellow as it flashed by. Just when
she was due to bend the curb or telescope her front
wheel, she threw in the clutch, and, with a shriek
of metal and a shiver of parts, the car came to a stop.
She jumped out from it and strode away from it, as
if it were a cast-off ware which she was never to
see again. She entered the restaurant. At
three of the tables sat officers of the Belgian regiments lieutenants,
two commandants, one captain. At the fourth table,
in the window, was dear little Doctor Neil McDonnell,
beaming at the velocity and sensation of her advent.
“You come like a yellow peril,”
said he. “If you are not careful, you will
make more wounded than you heal.”
“Never,” returned Mrs.
Bracher, firmly; “it is always in control.”
The Doctor, who was a considerate
as well as a brave leader, well knew how restricted
was the diet under which those loyal women lived in
the chilly house, caring for “les blesses”
among the entrenched soldiers. So he extended
himself in ordering an ample and various meal, which
would enable Mrs. Bracher to return to her bombarded
dug-out with renewed vigor.
“What’s the news?”
she asked, after she had broken the back of her hunger.
“We are expecting a new member
for our corps,” replied the Doctor, “a
young cyclist of the Belgian army. He fought bravely
at Liege and Namur, and later at Alost. But since
Antwerp, his division has been disbanded, and he has
been wandering about. We met him at Dunkirk.
We saw at once how valuable he would be to us, with
his knowledge of French and Flemish, and his bravery.”
“Which ambulance will he go
out with?” asked Mrs. Bracher.
“He will have a touring-car
of his own,” replied Dr. McDonnell.
“I thought you said he was a
cyclist,” objected Mrs. Bracher.
“I gave him an order on Calais,”
explained the Doctor. “He went down there
and selected a speed-car. I’m expecting
him any minute,” he added.
The short afternoon had waned away
into brief twilight, and then, with a suddenness,
into the blackness of the winter night. As they
two faced out into the Grand Place, there was depth
on depth of black space, from which came the throb
of a motor, the whistle of a soldier, the clatter
of hooves on cobbles. Only out from their window
there fell a short-reaching radiance that spread over
the sidewalk and conquered a few feet of the darkness
beyond.
Into this thin patch of brightness,
there rode a grey car, two-seated, long, slim, pointed
for speed. The same rays of the window lamp sufficed
to light up the features of the sole occupant of the
car: high cheek-bones, thin cheeks, and
pale face, tall form.
“There he is,” said Dr.
McDonnell, enthusiastically; “there’s our
new member.”
With a stride of power, the green-clad
warrior entered the cafe, and saluted Dr. McDonnell.
“Ready for work,” he said.
“I see you are,” answered
Dr. McDonnell. “Will you sit down and join
us?”
“Gladly in a moment.
But I must first go across the square and see a Gendarme.”
“Your car is built for speed,” put in
Mrs. Bracher.
“One hundred and twenty kilometres,
the hour,” answered the new-comer. “Let
me see, in your language that will be seventy miles
an hour. Swift, is it not?”
“Why the double tires?” she asked.
“You have a quick eye,”
he answered. “I like always the extra tires,
you never know in war where the break-down will come.
It is well to be ready.”
He flashed a smile at her, saluted
the Doctor and left the cafe.
“What a man!” exclaimed Dr. McDonnell.
“That’s what I say,” agreed Mrs.
Bracher. “What a man!”
“Look at him,” continued the Doctor.
“I did, hard,” answered Mrs. Bracher.
Mrs. Bracher, Hilda, and Scotch, were
the extreme advance guard of Doctor McDonnell’s
Motor Ambulance Corps. The rest of the Corps lived
in the Convent hospital in Furnes. It was here
that the newcomer and his speed-car were made welcome.
He was a success from the moment of his arrival.
He was easily the leading member of the Corps.
He had a careless way with him. Being tall and
handsome, he could be indifferent and yet hold the
interest. To women that arrogance even added to
his interest. His costume was very splendid a
dark green cloth which set off his straight form;
the leather jacket, which made him look like some
craftsman; the jaunty cap, which emphasized the high
cheek-bones in the lean face. Both his face and
his figure being spare, he promised energy. He
had the knack of making a sensation whenever he appeared.
Only a few among mortals are gifted that way.
Most of us have to get our own slippers and light
our own cigars. But he was able to convey the
idea that it was a privilege to serve him. The
busy superintendent of the hospital, a charming Italian
woman, cooked special meals for him, and served them
in his room, so that he would not be contaminated by
contact with the Ambulance Corps, a noisy, breezy
group. A boy scout pulled his boots off and on
for him, oiled his machine, and cranked his motor.
The lean cheeks filled out, the restless, audacious,
roving eyes tamed down. A sleekness settled over
his whole person. It was like discovering a hungry,
prowling night cat, homeless and winning its meat by
combat, and bringing that cat to the fireside and
supplying it with copious cream, and watching it fill
out and stretch itself in comfort.
There was a song just then that had
a lilting chorus. It told of ’Rollo, the
Apollo, the King of the Swells.’ So the
Corps named their new member Rollo. How wonderful
he was with his pride of bearing, and the insolent
way of him. He moved like an Olympian through
the herd of shabby little scrambling folk.
“Is it ever hot out your way?”
queried Rollo during one of Mrs. Bracher’s flying
visits to Furnes.
“I could hardly call it hot,”
replied the nurse. “The walls of our house,
that is, the fragments of them left standing, are full
of shrapnel. The road outside our door is dented
with shell holes. Every house in the village
is shot full of metal. There’s a battery
of seven Belgian guns spitting away in our back-yard.
But we don’t call it hot, because we hate to
exaggerate.”
“I’ll have to come out
and see you,” he said, with a smile.
He became a frequent visitor at Pervyse.
“Rollo is wonderful,” exclaimed Hilda.
“How wonderful?” asked Mrs. Bracher.
“Only to-day,” explained
Hilda, “he showed me his field-glasses, which
he had taken from the body of a German officer whom
he killed at Alost.”
“That’s true,” corroborated
Scotch, “and once in his room at the hospital
he showed me a sable helmet. Scarlet cloth and
gold braid, and the hussar fur all over it. It’s
a beauty. I wish he’d give it to me.”
“How did he get it?” asked Mrs. Bracher.
“He shot an officer in the skirmish at Zele.”
“He must have been a busy man with his rifle,”
commented Mrs. Bracher.
“He was. He was,”
said Hilda. “Why, he’s shot fifty-one
men, since the war began.”
“Does he keep notches on his rifle?” queried
Mrs. Bracher.
“I think it’s a privilege
to have a man as brave as he is going out with us,”
replied Hilda. “We must bore him frightfully.”
“He’s peaceful enough
now, isn’t he,” observed Mrs. Bracher,
“trotting around with a Red Cross Ambulance
Corps. I should think he’d miss the old
days.”
Hilda and Mrs. Bracher were having
an early morning stroll.
“It’s a little too hot
up by the trenches,” said the nurse; “we’ll
take the Furnes road.”
“It was a wet night, last night,”
commented she, after they had trudged along for a
few minutes.
“Are you going to walk me to Furnes?”
asked Hilda.
“You’re losing your prairie
zip,” retorted Mrs. Bracher. “You
ought to be glad of the air, after that smelly straw.”
“The air is better than the
mud,” returned Hilda, holding up a boot, which
had gathered part of the roadway to itself.
“We’ll be there in a minute,” said
the nurse.
“Where’s there?” asked Hilda.
“Right here,” answered Mrs. Bracher.
They had come to the deserted farm-house
where she had once met with her delay and where she
had knocked in vain.
“See here,” she exclaimed.
“Wheel marks,” said Hilda.
“Motor-car tracks,” corrected Mrs. Bracher.
The soggy turf that led from the road
into the door-yard of the farm-house was deeply and
freshly indented.
“Perhaps some one’s here now,” suggested
Hilda.
“Never fear,” answered the nurse.
“It’s night work.”
“Up to two weeks ago,”
she went on, “this farm was shot at, every day,
from over the Yser. Since then, it hasn’t
been shelled at all.”
“What of it?” asked Hilda.
“We’ll see,” said
Mrs. Bracher. “It always pays to get up
early, doesn’t it, my dear?”
“I don’t know,”
returned the girl, dubiously. She was footsore
with Mrs. Bracher’s speed.
“Well, that’s enough for
one morning,” concluded the nurse, with one
last look about the farm.
“I should think it was,” agreed Hilda.
They returned to their dressing-station.
It was early evening, and the nurses
had finished their frugal supper. With the dishes
cleared away, they were sitting for a cosy chat about
the table. Overhead hung a lamp, with a base so
broad that it cast a heavy shadow on the table under
it. There was a fire of coals in the little corner
stove, and through the open door of the stove a friendly
glow spread out into the room. As they sat there
resting and talking, a tap-tap came at the window.
“Ah, the Commandant is back,”
said Hilda. The women brightened up. The
door opened and their good friend, Commandant Jost,
entered. He was a man tall and slender and closely-knit,
with a rich vein of sentiment, like all good soldiers.
He was perhaps fifty-two or three years of age.
His eyebrows slanted down and his moustache slanted
up. His eyes were level and keen in their beam
of light, and they puckered into genial lines when
he smiled. His nose was bent in just at the bridge,
where a bullet once ploughed past. This mishap
had turned up the end of a large and formerly straight
feature. It was good to have him back again after
his fortnight away. The evening broke pleasantly
with talk of common friends in the trenches.
There came a ring at the door.
A knob at the outer door pulled a string that ran
to their room and released a tiny tinkle. Victor,
the orderly, answered the ring. He had a message
for the Commandant. Jost held it high up to read
it by the lamp. Hilda brought a lighted candle,
and placed it on the table. He sat down, wrote
his answer, and gave it to the waiting soldier.
He returned, closed the door, and looked straight
into the face of each of his friends.
“You have to go?” asked Hilda.
“We expect an attack,” he answered.
It was then 9:30.
“What time?” asked Hilda.
“The Dixmude and Ramskappele
attacks were just before dawn. When the mists
begin to rise, and the enemy can see even dimly, then
they attack. I think they will attack to-night,
just so.”
“How does that concern you?” asked Hilda.
“What do you have to do?”
“I have just asked my Colonel
that I take thirty of my men and guard the section
in front of the railroad tracks. That is where
they will come through.”
“What is the situation in the trenches, to-night?”
asked Hilda.
“We have only a handful. Not more than
fifty men.”
“Not more than fifty!”
cried Mrs. Bracher. “How many mitrailleuse
have you at the railroad?”
“Six, two in the second story
of the house, and four in the station opposite.”
“Six ought to be enough to rake the road.”
“Yes, but they won’t come
down the road,” explained Jost; “they will
come across the flooded field on rafts, with machine
guns on the rafts. They can come down on both
sides of the trench, and rake the trench. What
can fifty men do against four or five machine guns?
They will have to run like hares, or else be shot
down to a man. They can rake the trenches for
two miles on each side.”
“What will happen if the Germans
get on top of the trenches?” asked Mrs. Bracher.
“The very first thing they will
do they will place a gun on top of the
trench, and rake this whole town. They can rake
the road that leads to Furnes. It would cut off
your retreat to Furnes.”
That meant the only escape for the
women would be through the back-yard, and over fields
knee-deep in mud, where dead horses lie loosely buried
in hummock graves.
“What do you think we had better
do?” asked Hilda. “To leave now seems
like shirking our job.”
“There’ll be no job for
you, if the enemy come through to-night,” returned
the Commandant; “they’ll do the job.
But listen, you’ll have a little time.
If you hear rifle fire or mitrailleuse fire on the
trenches, then go, as fast as you can run. If
you hear as few as only four soldiers running down
this road, take to your heels after them. That
will be your last chance.”
The bell tinkled again. The orderly
called the Commandant into the hall. Jost returned
with a message. He read it, and pulled out a note-book
from his pocket. He consulted it with care.
He sat down at the table, wrote his reply, and gave
it to the messenger. He returned, shrugged his
shoulders, and went silent. All waited for him
to speak. Finally he roused himself.
“The mitrailleuse have only
3500 rounds left to each gun,” he said, “and
there are no cartridges in the trenches.”
“That means,” prompted Hilda.
“Four hundred cartridges a minute,
those guns fire,” he said, “that means
eight or nine minutes, and then the Germans.”
A pounding came at the front door.
A captain entered, throwing his long cape over his
shoulder.
“We have no ammunition,”
he said “the men have nothing.
I’ve just come from the Colonel.”
The Captain was excited, the Commandant silent.
“Shall we evacuate?” Hilda pressed her
question with him.
“I cannot answer for you,”
the Captain said. “If the enemy attack,
there’s nothing to hold them. They’ll
come through. If they come, they’ll take
you women prisoners or kill you. You’ll
have to make your choice now. There will be no
choice then.”
“Furnes isn’t so prosperous,
you know,” said Hilda, “even if we did
run back there.”
Only the day before, Furnes had received
a long-distance bombardment that had killed thirty
persons and wounded one hundred.
At a word from the Commandant, the
orderly left the room. The women heard him drive
their ambulance out from shelter, crank up the engine,
and run it for five minutes to get it thoroughly heated.
Then he turned the engine off, and put a blanket over
the radiator, tucking it well in to preserve the heat.
“Let’s put what we need
into the car,” suggested Mrs. Bracher.
They picked up their bags, and went toward the ambulance.
It was pleasant to do something active
under that tension. They stepped out into a night
of chill and blackness. They could not see ten
feet in front of them. It was moon-time but no
moon. Heavy clouds were in possession of the
sky, weaving a thick texture of darkness.
“There they start,” said the Commandant.
Shell fire was beginning from the north, from the
direction of the sea.
“They are covering their advance,” he
went on.
“Those are 21 or 28 Point shells.
They are falling short about 1800 yards, but they
are coming straight in our direction.”
They walked past their car and down
the road. They looked across the fields into
the black night. Straight down the road a lamp
suddenly shone in the gloom. It moved to and
fro, and up and down. There was regularity in
its motion. A great shaft of answering white light
shot up into the night from the north.
“They are signalling from inside
our line here,” said the Commandant, “over
there to the enemy guns beyond Ramskappele. Some
spy down here with a flash-lamp is telling them that
we’re out of ammunition.”
“But can’t we catch the
spy?” urged Hilda. “That light doesn’t
look to be more than a few hundred yards away.”
“That is further away than it
looks,” answered Jost; “that’s all
of a mile away. He’s hidden somewhere in
a field.”
Mrs. Bracher seized Victor by the
arm, and faced the Commandant.
“I know where he’s hidden,” she
cried. “Let me show you.”
The Commandant nodded assent.
“Messieurs, les Belges,”
she commanded in a sharp, high voice, “come
with me and move quickly!”
She brought them back to the car.
“Send for four of your men,” she said
to Jost. They came.
“Wait in the house,” she said to Hilda.
“Now we start,” Mrs. Bracher
ordered. “Victor, you take the wheel.
Drive down the Furnes road.”
They drove in silence for five minutes,
till her quick eye picked a landmark out of the dimness.
“Drive the car slowly past,
and on down the road,” she ordered, “don’t
stop it. We six must dismount while it is moving.
Surround the house quietly. The Commandant and
I will enter by the front door.”
They had come to the deserted farm-house.
It loomed dimly out of the vacant fields and against
the background of travelling clouds. Victor stayed
at the wheel. Mrs. Bracher, the Commandant, and
the four soldiers, jumped off into the road.
The six silently filed into the door-yard. The
four soldiers melted into the night. Mrs. Bracher
caught the handle of the door firmly and shoved.
The door gave way. She and Jost stepped inside.
The Commandant drew his pistol. He flashed his
pocket light down the hall and up the stairs.
There was nothing but vacancy. They passed into
the room at their right hand. Jost’s light
searched its way around the room. In the corner,
stood a tall soldier, dressed in green.
“Let me introduce Monsieur Rollo,
the spy,” said Mrs. Bracher. There was
triumph in her voice. The Commandant put a whistle
to his lips and blew. His four men came stamping
in, pistols in hand.
“Clever device, this,”
said Mrs. Bracher. She had stooped and lifted
out a large electric flash lamp from under a sweater.
“Clever woman, this,”
said the Commandant, saluting Mrs. Bracher. “How
did you come to know the place?”
“Monsieur Rollo uses double
tires on a wet soil,” she explained.
“Monsieur Rollo will now bring
his signal lamp outside the house,” the Commandant
said curtly. “He will signal the enemy that
our reinforcements and ammunition have arrived, and
that an attack to-night will be hopeless. He
may choose to signal wrongly. In that case, you
men will shoot him on the instant that firing begins
at Pervyse.”
The soldiers nodded. They marched
Rollo to the field, and thrust his signal lamp into
his hands.
“One moment,” he said. He turned
to Mrs. Bracher.
“Where is the American girl to-night?”
he asked.
“At Pervyse, of course,”
replied the nurse, “where she always is.
The very place where you wanted to bring your men
through and kill us all.”
“I had forgotten,” he
said. “If Mademoiselle Hilda is at Pervyse,
then I signal, as you suggest” he
turned to the Commandant “but not
because you order it you and your little
pop-guns.”
Mrs. Bracher sniffed scornfully.
“One last bluff of a bluffer, as Hilda would
say,” she muttered.
The soldiers stood in circle in the
mud of the field, the tall green-clad figure in their
midst.
Rollo turned on the blinding flash
that stabbed through the night. He held it high
above his head, and at that level moved it three times
from left to right. Then he swung the light in
full circles, till it became a pinwheel of flame.
Four miles away by the sea to the north, a white light
shot up into the sky, rose twice like a fountain, and
was followed by a starlight that fed out a green radiance.
“The attack is postponed,” he said.