Saxham, shouldering out of Julius’s
hotel upon his way to Staff Bombproof South, is made
aware that the hundred-foot-high dust-storm that has
raged and swirled throughout the morning is in process
of being beaten down into a porridge of red mud by
a downpour of February rain.
Straight as Matabele spears it comes
down, sending pedestrians who have grown indifferent
to shell-fire to huddle under cover, adding to the
wretchedness of life in trench or bombproof as nothing
else can. And the Doctor, biting hard upon the
worn stem of the old briar-root, as he goes swinging
along through the hissing deluge with his chin upon
his breast and his fierce eyes sullenly fixed upon
the goal ahead, recalls, even more vividly than upon
Sunday, the angry buffalo of Lady Hannah’s apt
analogy.
He is drenched to the skin, it goes
without saying, in a minute or two. So is the
Railway Volunteer, who challenges him at the bridge
that carries the single-gauge railway southward over
the Olopo, in spite of his ragged waterproof and an
additional piece of tarpaulin. So is a mounted
officer of the Staff, in whom Saxham mechanically
recognises Captain Bingo Wrynche, as he goes by at
a furious gallop, spurring, and jagging savagely at
the mouth of the handsome if attenuated brown charger,
who sends stones and mud and water flying from his
furious iron-shod hoofs. So is the Barala on
guard by the wattled palisade of the native village a
muddy-legged and goose-fleshy warrior, in a plumed,
brimless bowler and leopard-skin kaross, whose teeth
can be heard chattering as he stands to attention
and brings his gaspipe rifle to the slope. The
Chinamen working in the patches of market-garden,
where the scant supply of vegetables that command
such famine-prices are raised, are certainly sheltered
from the wet by their colossal umbrella-hats, but
the splashed-up red gruel has imbrued them to the
eyes. Yet they continue to labour cheerfully,
hoeing scattered shell-fragments out of their potato-drills
and removing incrusted masses of bullets that incommode
the young kidney-beans, and arranging this ironmongery
and metal-ware in tidy piles, possibly with a view
to future commerce. And so, with another challenge
from a picket, posted between the Barala village and
the south trenches, where many of the loyal natives
are doing duty, Saxham finds himself on the perilous
tongue of land that lies behind Maxim Kopje South,
and where the Staff Bombproof is situated.
As the long, low mound comes into
view, a dazzling white flash leaps from a fold of
the misty grey hills beyond, and one of Meisje’s
great shells goes screaming and winnowing westwards.
Then a sentry of the Irregulars, a battered, shaggy,
berry-brown trooper, standing knee-deep in a hole,
burrowed in the lee of a segment of stone-dyke that
is his shelter, challenges for the last time.
“’Alt! I know you
well enough, Doctor.” It is a man whose
wounded arm was dressed, one blazing day last January,
outside the Convent bombproof. “But you’ll
’ave to give the countersign. Pass
Honour and all’s well. But” the
sentry’s nostrils twitch as the savour of Saxham’s
pipe reaches them, and his whisper of appeal is as
piercing as a yell “if you left a
pipeful be’ind you, it wouldn’t do no
’arm. Don’t pull your pouch out, sir;
the lookout officer ’as ‘is eye on you.
Open it by the feel, an’ drop a pinch by the
stone near your toe. I’ll get it when they
relieve me.”
Saxham complies, leaving the sentry
to gloat distantly over the little brown lump of loose
tangled fibres rapidly reducing to sponginess under
the downpour from the skies. The long mound of
raw red earth, crusted with greenish-yellow streaks
of lyddite from the bursting-charges, rises now immediately
before him. At its eastern end is a flagstaff
displaying the Union Jack. Under the roof of
the little penthouse from which the flagstaff rises
are sheltered the vari-coloured acetylene lamps
that are used for signalling at night.
Midway of the raw mound rises the
rear elevation of an officer in dripping waterproofs,
who is looking steadily through a telescope out between
the long driving lances of the rain, beyond Maxim
Kopje South to those mysterious hills, swathed in
grey-black folds of storm-cloud, that look so desolate,
and whose folds are yet as full of swarming, active,
malignant life as the blanket of an unwashed Kaffir.
An N.C.O. is posted a little below the officer, whose
narrow shoulders and dark hair, showing above the
edge of the turned-up collar and below the brim of
the Field-Service cap, prove him to be not Beauvayse.
And the usual blizzard of rifle-fire, varied by brisk
bursts of cannonading, goes on, and the Red Scythe
of the Destroyer sweeps over these two figures and
about them in the customary way. But even women
and children have grown indifferent to these things,
and the men have long ceased to be aware of them.
A bullet sings past Saxham’s
ear, as the acrid exhalations of a stable rise gratefully
to his nostrils, recently saluted by the fierce and
clamorous smells of the native village. The ground
slopes under his feet. He goes down the inclined
way that ends in the horses’ quarters, and the
orderly, who is sitting on an empty ammunition-box
outside the tarpaulin that screens off the interior
of the officer’s shelter, stiffens to the salute,
receives a brief message, and disappears within.
Before Saxham rise the bony brown
and bay and chestnut hindquarters of half a dozen
lean horses, that are drowsing or fidgeting before
their emptied mangers. Against the division of
a loose-box that holds a fine brown charger, still
saddled and steaming, and heavily splashed with mud,
there leans a stretcher, which, by the ominous red
stains and splashes upon it, has been recently in
use.
Upon Saxham’s left hand is the
shelter for the rank and file. Here several gaunt,
hollow-eyed, and hairy troopers are sitting on rough
benches at a trestle-table, playing dominoes and draughts,
or poring over tattered books by the light of the
flickering oil-lamps, with tin reflectors, that hang
against the earth walls. None of them are smoking,
though several are sucking vigorously at empty pipes;
and the rapacious light that glares in every eye as
Saxham mechanically knocks out the ashes from his smoked-out
briar-root against the side-post of the entrance is
sufficient witness to the pangs that they endure.
Perhaps it is characteristic of the
Doctor that, with a hell of revengeful fury seething
in his heart, and a legion of devils unloosed and shrieking,
prompting him to murder, he should have paused to relieve
the tobacco-famine of the sentry, and be moved to
a further sacrifice of his sole luxury by the sight
of those empty pipes. The old rubber pouch, pitched
by a cricketer’s hand, flies in among the domino-players,
and rebounds from a pondering head, as the orderly
comes back, and lifts one corner of the tarpaulin
for the Doctor to pass in. A pack of ravening
wolves tussling over an unusually small baby might
distantly reproduce the scene Saxham leaves behind
him. The trestle-table and benches are upset,
and men and benches, draughts and dominoes, welter
in horrible confusion over the earthen floor, when
the scandalised orderly-corporal rushes in to quell
the riot, and thenceforward joins the rioters.
They fight like wolves, but the man
who rises up from among the rest, clutching the prize,
and grinning a three-cornered grin because his upper
lip is split, divides the tobacco fairly to the last
thread. They even share out the indiarubber pouch,
and chew the pieces as long as the flavour lasts.
When the thick, fragrant smoke curls up from the lighted
pipes, it steals round the edges of the tarpaulin that
has dropped behind Saxham, passing in to the wreaking
of vengeance upon the thief whose profane and covetous
hand has plucked the white lily of the Convent garden.
Now, with that deadly hate surging
in his veins, with the lust to kill tingling in every
nerve and muscle, he will soon stand in the presence
of his enemy, and hers. As he thinks of this,
suddenly a bell rings. The sound comes from the
north, so it cannot be the bell of the Catholic Church,
or that of the Protestant Church, or the bell of the
Wesleyan meeting-house, or of the Dutch Kerk.
“Clang-clang! clang-clang! Clang ”
The last clang is broken off suddenly,
as though the rope has been jerked from the ringer’s
hands, but Saxham is not diverted by it from his occupation.
With that curious fatuity to which the most logical
of us are prone, he has been conning over the brief,
scorching sentences with which he means to strip the
other man’s deception bare to the light, and
make known his own self-appointed mission to avenge
her.
“They telephoned for me, and
I have come, but not in the interests of your sick
or wounded man. Because it was imperative that
I should say this to you: Your engagement to
Miss Mildare and your approaching marriage to her
were announced in to-day’s Siege Gazette.
You have received many congratulations. Now take
mine liar, and coward, and cheat!”
And with each epithet, delivered with
all the force of Saxham’s muscular arm, shall
fall a stinging blow of the heavy old hunting-crop.
There will be a shout, an angry oath from Beauvayse,
staggering back under the unexpected, savage chastisement,
red bars marring the insolent, high-bred beauty of
the face that has bewitched her. Saxham will continue:
“You approached this innocent,
inexperienced girl as a lover. You represented
yourself to her and to her mother-guardian as a single
man. All this when you had already a wife at
home in England a gaudy stage butterfly sleek with carrion-juices, whose wings
are jewelled by the vices of men; and who is worthy of you, as you are of her.
I speak as I can prove. Here is the written testimony of a reliable
witness to your marriage with Miss Lavigne. And now you will go to her and
show yourself to her in your true colours. You will undeceive her, or
There is a foggy uncertainty about
what is to follow after that “or.”
But the livid flames of the burning hell that is in
Saxham throw upon the greyness a leaping reflection
that is red like blood. A fight to the death,
either with weapons, or, best of all, with the bare
hands, is what Saxham secretly lusts for, and savours
in anticipation as he goes.
Let the humanitarian say what he pleases.
Man is a manslayer by instinct and by will.
And within the little area of this
beleaguered town do not men kill, and are not men
killed, every day? The conditions are mediaeval,
fast relapsing into the primeval. The modern
sanctity and inviolability attending and surrounding
human life are at a discount. Even for children,
the grim King of Terrors had become a bugaboo to laugh
at; red wounds and ghastly sights are things of everyday
experience; there is a slump in mortality.
In those old, far-distant Chilworth
Street days, two men who engaged in a battle to the
death about a woman desired might have seemed merely
savages to Saxham. Here things are different.
The elemental bed-rock of human nature has been laid
bare, and the grim, naked scars upon it, testifying
to the combat of Ice and Fire for the round world’s
supremacy, will never be quite hidden under Civilisation’s
green mantle of vegetation, or her toadstool-growths
of bricks and mortar, any more.
And the men are well matched.
Saxham knows himself the more muscular, but Beauvayse
has the advantage of him in years, and is lithe, and
strong, and supple as the Greek wrestler who served
the sculptor Polycleitos as a model for the Athlete
with the Diadem.
It will be a fight worth having.
No quarter. And Saxham’s breath comes heavily,
and his blue eyes have in them a steely glitter, and,
as the tarpaulin falls behind him, he shifts to a
better grip on the strong old hunting-crop.
Overhead the rain drums deafeningly
on the tarpaulins. The long bombproof is heterogeneously
furnished with full and empty ammunition-boxes marked
A.O.S., a leathern sofa-divan, tattered by spurs and
marked by muddy boots, several cane or canvas deck-chairs,
and others of the Windsor pattern common to the barrack-room.
Arms and accoutrements are in rude racks against the
corrugated-iron-panelled walls; a trestle-table covered
with oilcloth runs down the middle. It is lighted
by a couple of acetylene lamps hanging by their chains
from iron bars that cross the trench above, and there
is another lamp, green-shaded, upon a bare deal table
that stands, strewn with papers, against the farther
wall.
A man in shirt-sleeves sits there
writing. Another man is busy at a telephone that
is fixed against the wall beyond the writing-table.
There is something fateful and ominous about the heavy
silence in which they do their work. It is broken
only by a strange sound that comes almost continuously
from where Saxham does not trouble to ask.
It is the groaning, undoubtedly, of the wounded man
to whose aid he has been summoned, with the added
injunction, “Bring morphia,” showing that
little further can be done for him, whoever he may
be, than to smooth his passage into the Beyond by
the aid of the Pain Slayer.
Let him wait, however sore his need,
until Saxham has dealt with his enemy. He is
resentfully impatient in the knowledge that neither
of the men present is Beauvayse.
Then, as he stands sullen and lowering,
the man who has been writing gets up and comes to
him. Saxham recognises the keen-featured face
with the rusty-brown moustache, and the grip of the
lean, hard hand that hauled a Dop Doctor out of the
Slough of Despair is familiar. The pleasant voice
he likes says something about somebody being very
wet. It is Saxham, from whose soaked garments
the water is running in streams, and whose boots squelch
as he crosses the carpet that has been spread above
the floor-tarpaulin. The friendly hand pours
out and offers him a sparing measure of that rare
stimulant, whisky.
“As preventive medicine.
We can’t have our Medical Staff men on the sick-list.”
Some such commonplace words accompany
the proffered hospitality.
“I shall not suffer, thanks.
You have a shell-casualty, you have ’phoned
us, but before I see your man it is imperative that
I should speak to Lord Beauvayse. Where is he?”
“He is here.”
“My business with him is urgent, sir.”
The man at the telephone makes a sound
indicative that a message is coming through.
The Chief is beside him instantly, with the receiver
at his ear. He looks round for an instant at
Saxham as he waits for the intelligence, and the muscles
of his face twitch as if under the influence of some
strong, repressed emotion, and the Doctor’s practised
glance notes the unsteadiness of the uplifted hand.
Then he is saying to the officer in charge at Maxim
Kopje South:
“The ammunition comes up to-night.
Tell Gaylord that we are short-handed here, and shall
want him to help on night duty.... Practically
as soon as he can join us. No, no better.
All for the present ... thanks! Saxham, please
come this way.”
There is a sleeping-place at the end
of the long, narrow, lamp-lit perspective, curtained
off from the rude bareness of the outer place.
Light shows between the curtains, and they are of plush,
in hue a rich, deep red. As that strong colour
sinks into his brain, through his intent and glittering
eyes, Saxham the man has a sudden furious impulse to
tear the deep folds back, with a clash of brazen rings
on iron rods, and call to the betrayer who lurks behind
them to come out and be dealt with. But that
hollow, feeble moaning sounds continuously from the
other side, and Saxham the surgeon stays his hand
and follows the Colonel in. There are two camp-beds
in the small sleeping-place, and a washstand and a
folding-chair. A lamp hangs above, and its light
falls full upon the face of the man whom he is seeking.
Ah! where are they? His furious
anger and his deadly hate, where are they now?
Like snow upon the desert they vanish away. How
can one rage against this shattered thing, stretched
on the pallet of the low cot-bed from which the blankets
have been stripped away? First Aid bandages have
been not ineffectually applied. Fragments of
packing-case have been employed as splints for the
broken arm and shattered hand, but, in spite of all
that has been done, the beautiful young life is sinking,
waning, flowing out with that ruddy tide that will
not be stayed.
The greenish pallor and the sweat
of mortal agony are upon the face of Beauvayse, thrown
back upon the pillow, and looking upwards to where
the deluging rain makes thunder on the tarpaulined
roof. The atmosphere is heavy with the sour-sickly
smell of blood, and lamp-fumes; he draws each breath
laboriously, and exhales it with a whistling sound.
Through his clenched teeth, revealed by the lips that
are dragged back in the semi-grin of desperate agony,
that dumb, ceaseless moaning makes its way despite
the gallant effort to restrain it. The one uninjured
arm hangs downwards, its restless fingers picking
at the bloodstained matting that covers the loose
boards of the floor. A sheet has been lightly
laid over him. It is dabbled with the prevailing
hue, and sinks in an ominous hollow below the breast.
And beyond the bottom of it splashed leggings and muddy
boots with spurs on them stick out with helpless stiffness.
A flask of brandy a precious
restorative treasured for use in such desperate need
as this stands with a tumbler and a jug
of water on the camp washstand that is between the
two cot-beds. Upon the second bed sits a big
and stoutish man, whose large face, not pink just now,
is hidden in his thick, quivering hands. It is
Captain Bingo Wrynche, heavy Dragoon, and honest,
single-hearted gentleman, to whom belongs the blown
and muddy charger drooping in the loose-box outside.
The telephone has summoned him in haste from Hotchkiss
Outpost North, to see the last of a friend.