Albert’s uncle was out on his
bicycle as usual. After the day when we became
Canterbury Pilgrims and were brought home in the dog-cart
with red wheels by the lady he told us was his long-lost
grandmother he had known years ago in India, he spent
not nearly so much of his time in writing, and he
used to shave every morning instead of only when requisite,
as in earlier days. And he was always going out
on his bicycle in his new Norfolk suit. We are
not so unobserving as grown-up people make out.
We knew well enough he was looking for the long-lost.
And we jolly well wished he might find her. Oswald,
always full of sympathy with misfortune, however undeserved,
had himself tried several times to find the lady.
So had the others. But all this is what they
call a digression; it has nothing to do with the dragon’s
teeth I am now narrating.
It began with the pig dying it
was the one we had for the circus, but it having behaved
so badly that day had nothing to do with its illness
and death, though the girls said they felt remorse,
and perhaps if we hadn’t made it run so that
day it might have been spared to us. But Oswald
cannot pretend that people were right just because
they happen to be dead, and as long as that pig was
alive we all knew well enough that it was it that
made us run and not us it.
The pig was buried in the kitchen
garden. Bill, that we made the tombstone for,
dug the grave, and while he was away at his dinner
we took a turn at digging, because we like to be useful,
and besides, when you dig you never know what you
may turn up. I knew a man once that found a gold
ring on the point of his fork when he was digging potatoes,
and you know how we found two half-crowns ourselves
once when we were digging for treasure.
Oswald was taking his turn with the
spade, and the others were sitting on the gravel and
telling him how to do it.
‘Work with a will,’ Dicky said, yawning.
Alice said, ’I wish we were
in a book. People in books never dig without
finding something. I think I’d rather it
was a secret passage than anything.’
Oswald stopped to wipe his honest brow ere replying.
’A secret’s nothing when
you’ve found it out. Look at the secret
staircase. It’s no good, not even for hide-and-seek,
because of its squeaking. I’d rather have
the pot of gold we used to dig for when we were little.’
It was really only last year, but you seem to grow
old very quickly after you have once passed the prime
of your youth, which is at ten, I believe.
’How would you like to find
the mouldering bones of Royalist soldiers foully done
to death by nasty Ironsides?’Noel asked, with
his mouth full of plum.
‘If they were really dead it
wouldn’t matter,’ Dora said. ’What
I’m afraid of is a skeleton that can walk about
and catch at your legs when you’re going upstairs
to bed.’ ‘Skeletons can’t walk,’
Alice said in a hurry; ‘you know they can’t,
Dora.’
And she glared at Dora till she made
her sorry she had said what she had. The things
you are frightened of, or even those you would rather
not meet in the dark, should never be mentioned before
the little ones, or else they cry when it comes to
bed-time, and say it was because of what you said.
‘We shan’t find anything. No jolly
fear,’ said Dicky.
And just then my spade I was digging
with struck on something hard, and it felt hollow.
I did really think for one joyful space that we had
found that pot of gold. But the thing, whatever
it was, seemed to be longish; longer, that is, than
a pot of gold would naturally be. And as I uncovered
it I saw that it was not at all pot-of-gold-colour,
but like a bone Pincher has buried. So Oswald
said
‘It is the skeleton.’
The girls all drew back, and Alice said, ‘Oswald,
I wish you wouldn’t.’
A moment later the discovery was unearthed,
and Oswald lifted it up, with both hands.
‘It’s a dragon’s head,’ Noel
said, and it certainly looked like it.
It was long and narrowish and bony,
and with great yellow teeth sticking in the jaw.
Bill came back just then and said
it was a horse’s head, but H. O. and Noel would
not believe it, and Oswald owns that no horse he has
ever seen had a head at all that shape.
But Oswald did not stop to argue,
because he saw a keeper who showed me how to set snares
going by, and he wanted to talk to him about ferrets,
so he went off and Dicky and Denny and Alice with him.
Also Daisy and Dora went off to finish reading Ministering
Children. So H. O. and Noel were left with the
bony head. They took it away.
The incident had quite faded from
the mind of Oswald next day. But just before
breakfast Noel and H. O. came in, looking hot and anxious.
They had got up early and had not washed at all not
even their hands and faces. Noel made Oswald
a secret signal. All the others saw it, and with
proper delicate feeling pretended not to have.
When Oswald had gone out with Noel
and H. O. in obedience to the secret signal, Noel
said
‘You know that dragon’s head yesterday?’
‘Well?’ Oswald said quickly,
but not crossly the two things are quite
different.
’Well, you know what happened
in Greek history when some chap sowed dragon’s
teeth?’
‘They came up armed men,’
said H. O., but Noel sternly bade him shut up, and
Oswald said ‘Well,’ again. If he spoke
impatiently it was because he smelt the bacon being
taken in to breakfast.
‘Well,’ Noel went on,
’what do you suppose would have come up if we’d
sowed those dragon’s teeth we found yesterday?’
‘Why, nothing, you young duffer,’
said Oswald, who could now smell the coffee.
‘All that isn’t History it’s Humbug.
Come on in to brekker.’
‘It’s not humbug,’
H. O. cried, ‘it is history. We did
sow ’
‘Shut up,’ said Noel again.
’Look here, Oswald. We did sow those dragon’s
teeth in Randall’s ten-acre meadow, and what
do you think has come up?’
‘Toadstools I should think,’
was Oswald’s contemptible rejoinder.
‘They have come up a camp of
soldiers,’ said Noel armed men.
So you see it was history. We have sowed
army-seed, just like Cadmus, and it has come up.
It was a very wet night. I daresay that helped
it along.’
Oswald could not decide which to disbelieve his
brother or his ears. So, disguising his doubtful
emotions without a word, he led the way to the bacon
and the banqueting hall.
He said nothing about the army-seed
then, neither did Noel and H. O. But after the bacon
we went into the garden, and then the good elder brother
said
‘Why don’t you tell the others your cock-and-bull
story?’
So they did, and their story was received
with warm expressions of doubt. It was Dicky
who observed
’Let’s go and have a squint
at Randall’s ten-acre, anyhow. I saw a hare
there the other day.’
We went. It is some little way,
and as we went, disbelief reigned superb in every
breast except Noel’s and H. O.’s, so you
will see that even the ready pen of the present author
cannot be expected to describe to you his variable
sensations when he got to the top of the hill and suddenly
saw that his little brothers had spoken the truth.
I do not mean that they generally tell lies, but people
make mistakes sometimes, and the effect is the same
as lies if you believe them.
There was a camp there with real
tents and soldiers in grey and red tunics. I
daresay the girls would have said coats. We stood
in ambush, too astonished even to think of lying in
it, though of course we know that this is customary.
The ambush was the wood on top of the little hill,
between Randall’s ten-acre meadow and Sugden’s
Waste Wake pasture.
‘There would be cover here for
a couple of regiments,’ whispered Oswald, who
was, I think, gifted by Fate with the far-seeingness
of a born general.
Alice merely said ‘Hist’,
and we went down to mingle with the troops as though
by accident, and seek for information.
The first man we came to at the edge
of the camp was cleaning a sort of cauldron thing
like witches brew bats in.
We went up to him and said, ’Who
are you? Are you English, or are you the enemy?’
‘We’re the enemy,’
he said, and he did not seem ashamed of being what
he was. And he spoke English with quite a good
accent for a foreigner.
‘The enemy!’ Oswald echoed
in shocked tones. It is a terrible thing to a
loyal and patriotic youth to see an enemy cleaning
a pot in an English field, with English sand, and
looking as much at home as if he was in his foreign
fastnesses.
The enemy seemed to read Oswald’s
thoughts with deadly unerringness. He said
’The English are somewhere over
on the other side of the hill. They are trying
to keep us out of Maidstone.’
After this our plan of mingling with
the troops did not seem worth going on with.
This soldier, in spite of his unerringness in reading
Oswald’s innermost heart, seemed not so very
sharp in other things, or he would never have given
away his secret plans like this, for he must have
known from our accents that we were Britons to the
backbone. Or perhaps (Oswald thought this, and
it made his blood at once boil and freeze, which our
uncle had told us was possible, but only in India),
perhaps he thought that Maidstone was already as good
as taken and it didn’t matter what he said.
While Oswald was debating within his intellect what
to say next, and how to say it so as to discover as
many as possible of the enemy’s dark secrets,
Noel said
‘How did you get here?
You weren’t here yesterday at tea-time.’
The soldier gave the pot another sandy rub, and said
’I daresay it does seem quick
work the camp seems as if it had sprung
up in the night, doesn’t it? like
a mushroom.’
Alice and Oswald looked at each other,
and then at the rest of us. The words ‘sprung
up in the night’ seemed to touch a string in
every heart.
‘You see,’ whispered Noel,
’he won’t tell us how he came here.
Now, is it humbug or history?’
Oswald, after whisperedly requesting
his young brother to dry up and not bother, remarked,
‘Then you’re an invading army?’
‘Well,’ said the soldier,
’we’re a skeleton battalion, as a matter
of fact, but we’re invading all right enough.’
And now indeed the blood of the stupidest
of us froze, just as the quick-witted Oswald’s
had done earlier in the interview. Even H. O.
opened his mouth and went the colour of mottled soap;
he is so fat that this is the nearest he can go to
turning pale. Denny said, ’But you don’t
look like skeletons.’
The soldier stared, then he laughed
and said, ’Ah, that’s the padding in our
tunics. You should see us in the grey dawn taking
our morning bath in a bucket.’ It was a
dreadful picture for the imagination. A skeleton,
with its bones all loose most likely, bathing anyhow
in a pail. There was a silence while we thought
it over.
Now, ever since the cleaning-cauldron
soldier had said that about taking Maidstone, Alice
had kept on pulling at Oswald’s jacket behind,
and he had kept on not taking any notice. But
now he could not stand it any longer, so he said
‘Well, what is it?’
Alice drew him aside, or rather, she
pulled at his jacket so that he nearly fell over backwards,
and then she whispered, ’Come along, don’t
stay parlaying with the foe. He’s only talking
to you to gain time.’
‘What for?’ said Oswald.
‘Why, so that we shouldn’t
warn the other army, you silly,’ Alice said,
and Oswald was so upset by what she said, that he forgot
to be properly angry with her for the wrong word she
used.
‘But we ought to warn them at
home,’ she said ’ suppose the
Moat House was burned down, and all the supplies commandeered
for the foe?’
Alice turned boldly to the soldier.
‘Do you burn down farms?’ she asked.
‘Well, not as a rule,’
he said, and he had the cheek to wink at Oswald, but
Oswald would not look at him. ’We’ve
not burned a farm since oh, not for years.’
‘A farm in Greek history it
was, I expect,’ Denny murmured. ’Civilized
warriors do not burn farms nowadays,’ Alice said
sternly, ’whatever they did in Greek times.
You ought to know that.’
The soldier said things had changed
a good deal since Greek times.
So we said good morning as quickly
as we could: it is proper to be polite even to
your enemy, except just at the moments when it has
really come to rifles and bayonets or other weapons.
The soldier said ‘So long!’
in quite a modern voice, and we retraced our footsteps
in silence to the ambush I mean the wood.
Oswald did think of lying in the ambush then, but
it was rather wet, because of the rain the night before,
that H. O. said had brought the army-seed up.
And Alice walked very fast, saying nothing but ‘Hurry
up, can’t you!’ and dragging H. O. by
one hand and Noel by the other. So we got into
the road.
Then Alice faced round and said, ’This
is all our fault. If we hadn’t sowed those
dragon’s teeth there wouldn’t have been
any invading army.’
I am sorry to say Daisy said, ’Never
mind, Alice, dear. We didn’t sow the
nasty things, did we, Dora?’
But Denny told her it was just the
same. It was we had done it, so long as
it was any of us, especially if it got any of us into
trouble. Oswald was very pleased to see that
the Dentist was beginning to understand the meaning
of true manliness, and about the honour of the house
of Bastable, though of course he is only a Foulkes.
Yet it is something to know he does his best to learn.
If you are very grown-up, or very
clever, I daresay you will now have thought of a great
many things. If you have you need not say anything,
especially if you’re reading this aloud to anybody.
It’s no good putting in what you think in this
part, because none of us thought anything of the kind
at the time.
We simply stood in the road without
any of your clever thoughts, filled with shame and
distress to think of what might happen owing to the
dragon’s teeth being sown. It was a lesson
to us never to sow seed without being quite sure what
sort it is. This is particularly true of the
penny packets, which sometimes do not come up at all,
quite unlike dragon’s teeth.
Of course H. O. and Noel were more
unhappy than the rest of us. This was only fair.
‘How can we possibly prevent
their getting to Maidstone?’ Dickie said.
’Did you notice the red cuffs on their uniforms?
Taken from the bodies of dead English soldiers, I
shouldn’t wonder.’
’If they’re the old Greek
kind of dragon’s-teeth soldiers, they ought to
fight each other to death,’ Noel said; ’at
least, if we had a helmet to throw among them.’
But none of us had, and it was decided
that it would be of no use for H. O. to go back and
throw his straw hat at them, though he wanted to.
Denny said suddenly
’Couldn’t we alter the
sign-posts, so that they wouldn’t know the way
to Maidstone?’
Oswald saw that this was the time
for true generalship to be shown.
He said
’Fetch all the tools out of
your chest Dicky go too, there’s a
good chap, and don’t let him cut his legs with
the saw.’ He did once, tumbling over it.
’Meet us at the cross-roads, you know, where
we had the Benevolent Bar. Courage and dispatch,
and look sharp about it.’
When they had gone we hastened to
the crossroads, and there a great idea occurred to
Oswald. He used the forces at his command so ably
that in a very short time the board in the field which
says ’No thoroughfare. Trespassers will
be prosecuted’ was set up in the middle of the
road to Maidstone. We put stones, from a heap
by the road, behind it to make it stand up.
Then Dicky and Denny came back, and
Dicky shinned up the sign-post and sawed off the two
arms, and we nailed them up wrong, so that it said
’To Maidstone’ on the Dover Road, and
‘To Dover’ on the road to Maidstone.
We decided to leave the Trespassers board on the real
Maidstone road, as an extra guard.
Then we settled to start at once to warn Maidstone.
Some of us did not want the girls
to go, but it would have been unkind to say so.
However, there was at least one breast that felt a
pang of joy when Dora and Daisy gave out that they
would rather stay where they were and tell anybody
who came by which was the real road.
’Because it would be so dreadful
if someone was going to buy pigs or fetch a doctor
or anything in a hurry and then found they had got
to Dover instead of where they wanted to go to,’
Dora said. But when it came to dinner-time they
went home, so that they were entirely out of it.
This often happens to them by some strange fatalism.
We left Martha to take care of the
two girls, and Lady and Pincher went with us.
It was getting late in the day, but I am bound to remember
no one said anything about their dinners, whatever
they may have thought. We cannot always help
our thoughts. We happened to know it was roast
rabbits and currant jelly that day.
We walked two and two, and sang the
‘British Grenadiers’ and ’Soldiers
of the queen’ so as to be as much part of the
British Army as possible. The Cauldron-Man had
said the English were the other side of the hill.
But we could not see any scarlet anywhere, though we
looked for it as carefully as if we had been fierce
bulls.
But suddenly we went round a turn
in the road and came plump into a lot of soldiers.
Only they were not red-coats. They were dressed
in grey and silver. And it was a sort of furzy-common
place, and three roads branching out. The men
were lying about, with some of their belts undone,
smoking pipes and cigarettes.
‘It’s not British soldiers,’
Alice said. ’Oh dear, oh dear, I’m
afraid it’s more enemy. You didn’t
sow the army-seed anywhere else, did you, H. O. dear?’
H. O. was positive he hadn’t.
’But perhaps lots more came up where we did
sow them,’ he said; ’they’re all
over England by now very likely. I don’t
know how many men can grow out of one dragon’s
tooth.’
Then Noel said, ‘It was my doing
anyhow, and I’m not afraid,’ and he walked
straight up to the nearest soldier, who was cleaning
his pipe with a piece of grass, and said
‘Please, are you the enemy?’ The man said
‘No, young Commander-in-Chief, we’re the
English.’
Then Oswald took command. ‘Where is the
General?’ he said.
‘We’re out of generals
just now, Field-Marshal,’ the man said, and his
voice was a gentleman’s voice. ’Not
a single one in stock. We might suit you in majors
now and captains are quite cheap. Competent
corporals going for a song. And we have a very
nice colonel, too quiet to ride or drive.’
Oswald does not mind chaff at proper times. But
this was not one.
‘You seem to be taking it very
easy,’ he said with disdainful expression.
‘This is an easy,’
said the grey soldier, sucking at his pipe to see if
it would draw.
‘I suppose you don’t
care if the enemy gets into Maidstone or not!’
exclaimed Oswald bitterly. ’If I were a
soldier I’d rather die than be beaten.’
The soldier saluted. ‘Good
old patriotic sentiment’ he said, smiling at
the heart-felt boy.
But Oswald could bear no more.
‘Which is the Colonel?’ he asked.
‘Over there near the grey horse.’
‘The one lighting a cigarette?’ H. O.
asked.
’Yes but I say, kiddie,
he won’t stand any jaw. There’s not
an ounce of vice about him, but he’s peppery.
He might kick out. You’d better bunk.’
‘Better what?’ asked H. O.
‘Bunk, bottle, scoot, skip, vanish, exit,’
said the soldier.
‘That’s what you’d
do when the fighting begins,’ said H. O. He is
often rude like that but it was what we
all thought, all the same.
The soldier only laughed.
A spirited but hasty altercation among
ourselves in whispers ended in our allowing Alice
to be the one to speak to the Colonel. It was
she who wanted to. ‘However peppery he
is he won’t kick a girl,’ she said, and
perhaps this was true.
But of course we all went with her.
So there were six of us to stand in front of the Colonel.
And as we went along we agreed that we would salute
him on the word three. So when we got near, Dick
said, ’One, two, three’, and we all saluted
very well except H. O., who chose that
minute to trip over a rifle a soldier had left lying
about, and was only saved from falling by a man in
a cocked hat who caught him deftly by the back of
his jacket and stood him on his legs.
‘Let go, can’t you,’ said H. O.
‘Are you the General?’
Before the Cocked Hat had time to
frame a reply, Alice spoke to the Colonel. I
knew what she meant to say, because she had told me
as we threaded our way among the resting soldiery.
What she really said was
‘Oh, how can you!’
‘How can I what?’ said the Colonel,
rather crossly.
‘Why, smoke?’ said Alice.
’My good children, if you’re
an infant Band of Hope, let me recommend you to play
in some other backyard,’ said the Cock-Hatted
Man.
H. O. said, ’Band of Hope yourself’ but
no one noticed it.
‘We’re not a Band
of Hope,’ said Noel. ’We’re
British, and the man over there told us you are.
And Maidstone’s in danger, and the enemy not
a mile off, and you stand smoking.’
Noel was standing crying, himself, or something very
like it.
‘It’s quite true,’ Alice said.
The Colonel said, ‘Fiddle-de-dee.’
But the Cocked-Hatted Man said, ‘What
was the enemy like?’ We told him exactly.
And even the Colonel then owned there might be something
in it.
‘Can you show me the place where they are on
the map?’ he asked.
‘Not on the map, we can’t,’
said Dicky ’at least, I don’t
think so, but on the ground we could. We could
take you there in a quarter of an hour.’
The Cocked-Hatted One looked at the
Colonel, who returned his scrutiny, then he shrugged
his shoulders.
‘Well, we’ve got to do
something,’ he said, as if to himself. ’Lead
on, Macduff.’
The Colonel roused his soldiery from
their stupor of pipes by words of command which the
present author is sorry he can’t remember.
Then he bade us boys lead the way.
I tell you it felt fine, marching at the head of a
regiment. Alice got a lift on the Cocked-Hatted
One’s horse. It was a red-roan steed of
might, exactly as if it had been in a ballad.
They call a grey-roan a ‘blue’ in South
Africa, the Cocked-Hatted One said.
We led the British Army by unfrequented
lanes till we got to the gate of Sugden’s Waste
Wake pasture. Then the Colonel called a whispered
halt, and choosing two of us to guide him, the dauntless
and discerning commander went on, on foot, with an
orderly. He chose Dicky and Oswald as guides.
So we led him to the ambush, and we went through it
as quietly as we could. But twigs do crackle
and snap so when you are reconnoitring, or anxious
to escape detection for whatever reason.
Our Colonel’s orderly crackled
most. If you’re not near enough to tell
a colonel by the crown and stars on his shoulder-strap,
you can tell him by the orderly behind him, like ‘follow
my leader’.
‘Look out!’ said Oswald
in a low but commanding whisper, ’the camp’s
down in that field. You can see if you take a
squint through this gap.’
The speaker took a squint himself
as he spoke, and drew back, baffled beyond the power
of speech. While he was struggling with his baffledness
the British Colonel had his squint. He also drew
back, and said a word that he must have known was
not right at least when he was a boy.
‘I don’t care,’
said Oswald, ’they were there this morning.
White tents like mushrooms, and an enemy cleaning
a cauldron.’
‘With sand,’ said Dicky.
‘That’s most convincing,’
said the Colonel, and I did not like the way he said
it.
‘I say,’ Oswald said,
’let’s get to the top corner of the ambush the
wood, I mean. You can see the crossroads from
there.’
We did, and quickly, for the crackling
of branches no longer dismayed our almost despairing
spirits.
We came to the edge of the wood, and
Oswald’s patriotic heart really did give a jump,
and he cried, ‘There they are, on the Dover Road.’
Our miscellaneous signboard had done its work.
’By Jove, young un, you’re
right! And in quarter column, too! We’ve
got em on toast on toast egad!’
I never heard anyone not in a book say ‘egad’
before, so I saw something really out of the way was
indeed up.
The Colonel was a man of prompt and
decisive action. He sent the orderly to tell
the Major to advance two companies on the left flank
and take cover. Then we led him back through
the wood the nearest way, because he said he must
rejoin the main body at once. We found the main
body very friendly with Noel and H. O. and the others,
and Alice was talking to the Cocked-Hatted One as
if she had known him all her life.
‘I think he’s a general
in disguise,’ Noel said. ’He’s
been giving us chocolate out of a pocket in his saddle.’
Oswald thought about the roast rabbit
then and he is not ashamed to own it yet
he did not say a word. But Alice is really not
a bad sort. She had saved two bars of chocolate
for him and Dicky. Even in war girls can sometimes
be useful in their humble way.
The Colonel fussed about and said,
‘Take cover there!’ and everybody hid
in the ditch, and the horses and the Cocked Hat, with
Alice, retreated down the road out of sight.
We were in the ditch too. It was muddy but
nobody thought of their boots in that perilous moment.
It seemed a long time we were crouching there.
Oswald began to feel the water squelching in his boots,
so we held our breath and listened. Oswald laid
his ear to the road like a Red Indian. You would
not do this in time of peace, but when your country
is in danger you care but little about keeping your
ears clean. His backwoods’ strategy was
successful. He rose and dusted himself and said ’They’re
coming!’
It was true. The footsteps of
the approaching foe were now to be heard quite audibly,
even by ears in their natural position. The wicked
enemy approached. They were marching with a careless
swaggeringness that showed how little they suspected
the horrible doom which was about to teach them England’s
might and supremeness.
Just as the enemy turned the corner
so that we could see them, the Colonel shouted ’Right
section, fire!’ and there was a deafening banging.
The enemy’s officer said something,
and then the enemy got confused and tried to get into
the fields through the hedges. But all was vain.
There was firing now from our men, on the left as
well as the right. And then our Colonel strode
nobly up to the enemy’s Colonel and demanded
surrender. He told me so afterwards. His
exact words are only known to himself and the other
Colonel. But the enemy’s Colonel said, ’I
would rather die than surrender,’ or words to
that effect.
Our Colonel returned to his men and
gave the order to fix bayonets, and even Oswald felt
his manly cheek turn pale at the thought of the amount
of blood to be shed. What would have happened
can never now be revealed. For at this moment
a man on a piebald horse came clattering over a hedge as
carelessly as if the air was not full of lead and steel
at all. Another man rode behind him with a lance
and a red pennon on it. I think he must have
been the enemy’s General coming to tell his men
not to throw away their lives on a forlorn hope, for
directly he said they were captured the enemy gave
in and owned that they were. The enemy’s
Colonel saluted and ordered his men to form quarter
column again. I should have thought he would
have had about enough of that myself.
He had now given up all thought of
sullen resistance to the bitter end. He rolled
a cigarette for himself, and had the foreign cheek
to say to our Colonel
’By Jove, old man, you got me
clean that time! Your scouts seem to have marked
us down uncommonly neatly.’
It was a proud moment when our Colonel
laid his military hand on Oswald’s shoulder
and said
‘This is my chief scout’
which were high words, but not undeserved, and Oswald
owns he felt red with gratifying pride when he heard
them.
‘So you are the traitor, young
man,’ said the wicked Colonel, going on with
his cheek.
Oswald bore it because our Colonel
had, and you should be generous to a fallen foe, but
it is hard to be called a traitor when you haven’t.
He did not treat the wicked Colonel
with silent scorn as he might have done, but he said
’We aren’t traitors.
We are the Bastables and one of us is a Foulkes.
We only mingled unsuspected with the enemy’s
soldiery and learned the secrets of their acts, which
is what Baden-Powell always does when the natives
rebel in South Africa; and Denis Foulkes thought of
altering the sign-posts to lead the foe astray.
And if we did cause all this fighting, and get Maidstone
threatened with capture and all that, it was only
because we didn’t believe Greek things could
happen in Great Britain and Ireland, even if you sow
dragon’s teeth, and besides, some of us were
not as e a out sowing them.’
Then the Cocked-Hatted One led his
horse and walked with us and made us tell him all
about it, and so did the Colonel. The wicked Colonel
listened too, which was only another proof of his cheek.
And Oswald told the tale in the modest
yet manly way that some people think he has, and gave
the others all the credit they deserved. His
narration was interrupted no less than four times by
shouts of ‘Bravo!’ in which the enemy’s
Colonel once more showed his cheek by joining.
By the time the story was told we were in sight of
another camp. It was the British one this time.
The Colonel asked us to have tea in his tent, and
it only shows the magnanimosity of English chivalry
in the field of battle that he asked the enemy’s
Colonel too. With his usual cheek he accepted.
We were jolly hungry.
When everyone had had as much tea
as they possibly could, the Colonel shook hands with
us all, and to Oswald he said
’Well, good-bye, my brave scout.
I must mention your name in my dispatches to the War
Office.’
H. O. interrupted him to say, ’His
name’s Oswald Cecil Bastable, and mine is Horace
Octavius.’ I wish H. O. would learn to hold
his tongue. No one ever knows Oswald was christened
Cecil as well, if he can possibly help it. You
didn’t know it till now.
‘Mr Oswald Bastable,’
the Colonel went on he had the decency not
to take any notice of the ’Cecil’ ’you
would be a credit to any regiment. No doubt the
War Office will reward you properly for what you have
done for your country. But meantime, perhaps,
you’ll accept five shillings from a grateful
comrade-in-arms.’ Oswald felt heart-felt
sorry to wound the good Colonel’s feelings,
but he had to remark that he had only done his duty,
and he was sure no British scout would take five bob
for doing that. ‘And besides,’ he
said, with that feeling of justice which is part of
his young character, ‘it was the others just
as much as me.’
‘Your sentiments, Sir,’
said the Colonel who was one of the politest and most
discerning colonels I ever saw, ’your sentiments
do you honour. But, Bastables all, and and
non-Bastables’ (he couldn’t remember Foulkes;
it’s not such an interesting name as Bastable,
of course) ’at least you’ll
accept a soldier’s pay?’
‘Lucky to touch it, a shilling
a day!’ Alice and Denny said together.
And the Cocked-Hatted Man said something about knowing
your own mind and knowing your own Kipling.
‘A soldier,’ said the
Colonel, ’would certainly be lucky to touch it.
You see there are deductions for rations. Five
shillings is exactly right, deducting twopence each
for six teas.’
This seemed cheap for the three cups
of tea and the three eggs and all the strawberry jam
and bread-and-butter Oswald had had, as well as what
the others ate, and Lady’s and Pincher’s
teas, but I suppose soldiers get things cheaper than
civilians, which is only right.
Oswald took the five shillings then,
there being no longer any scruples why he should not.
Just as we had parted from the brave
Colonel and the rest we saw a bicycle coming.
It was Albert’s uncle. He got off and said
’What on earth have you been
up to? What were you doing with those volunteers?’
We told him the wild adventures of
the day, and he listened, and then he said he would
withdraw the word volunteers if we liked.
But the seeds of doubt were sown in
the breast of Oswald. He was now almost sure
that we had made jolly fools of ourselves without a
moment’s pause throughout the whole of this
eventful day. He said nothing at the time, but
after supper he had it out with Albert’s uncle
about the word which had been withdrawn.
Albert’s uncle said, of course,
no one could be sure that the dragon’s teeth
hadn’t come up in the good old-fashioned way,
but that, on the other hand, it was barely possible
that both the British and the enemy were only volunteers
having a field-day or sham fight, and he rather thought
the Cocked-Hatted Man was not a general, but a doctor.
And the man with a red pennon carried behind him might
have been the umpire.
Oswald never told the others a word
of this. Their young breasts were all panting
with joy because they had saved their country; and
it would have been but heartless unkindness to show
them how silly they had been. Besides, Oswald
felt he was much too old to have been so taken in if
he had been. Besides, Albert’s uncle
did say that no one could be sure about the dragon’s
teeth.
The thing that makes Oswald feel most
that, perhaps, the whole thing was a beastly sell,
was that we didn’t see any wounded. But
he tries not to think of this. And if he goes
into the army when he grows up, he will not go quite
green. He has had experience of the arts of war
and the tented field. And a real colonel has
called him ‘Comrade-in-Arms’, which is
exactly what Lord Roberts called his own soldiers when
he wrote home about them.