The next day we started for Rechamp,
not sure if we could get through, but bound to, anyhow!
It was the coldest day we’d had, the sky steel,
the earth iron, and a snow-wind howling down on us
from the north. The Vosges are splendid in winter.
In summer they are just plump puddingy hills; when
the wind strips them they turn to mountains. And
we seemed to have the whole country to ourselves the
black firs, the blue shadows, the beech-woods cracking
and groaning like rigging, the bursts of snowy sunlight
from cold clouds. Not a soul in sight except the
sentinels guarding the railways, muffled to the eyes,
or peering out of their huts of pine-boughs at the
cross-roads. Every now and then we passed a long
string of seventy-fives, or a train of supply waggons
or army ambulances, and at intervals a cavalryman
cantered by, his cloak bellied out by the gale; but
of ordinary people about the common jobs of life,
not a sign.
The sense of loneliness and remoteness
that the absence of the civil population produces
everywhere in eastern France is increased by the fact
that all the names and distances on the mile-stones
have been scratched out and the sign-posts at the
cross-roads thrown down. It was done, presumably,
to throw the enemy off the track in September:
and the signs have never been put back. The result
is that one is forever losing one’s way, for
the soldiers quartered in the district know only the
names of their particular villages, and those on the
march can tell you nothing about the places they are
passing through. We had got badly off our road
several times during the trip, but on the last day’s
run Rechamp was in his own country, and knew every
yard of the way or thought he did.
We had turned off the main road, and were running along
between rather featureless fields and woods, crossed
by a good many wood-roads with nothing to distinguish
them; but he continued to push ahead, saying:
“We don’t turn till we
get to a manor-house on a stream, with a big paper-mill
across the road.” He went on to tell me
that the mill-owners lived in the manor, and were
old friends of his people: good old local stock,
who had lived there for generations and done a lot
for the neighbourhood.
“It’s queer I don’t
see their village-steeple from this rise. The
village is just beyond the house. How the devil
could I have missed the turn?” We ran on a little
farther, and suddenly he stopped the motor with a
jerk. We were at a cross-road, with a stream running
under the bank on our right. The place looked
like an abandoned stoneyard. I never saw completer
ruin. To the left, a fortified gate gaped on emptiness;
to the right, a mill-wheel hung in the stream.
Everything else was as flat as your dinner-table.
“Was this what you were trying
to see from that rise?” I asked; and I saw a
tear or two running down his face.
“They were the kindest people:
their only son got himself shot the first month in
Champagne ”
He had jumped out of the car and was
standing staring at the level waste. “The
house was there there was a splendid lime
in the court. I used to sit under it and have
a glass of vin cris de Lorraine with the old
people.... Over there, where that cinder-heap
is, all their children are buried.” He
walked across to the grave-yard under a blackened
wall a bit of the apse of the vanished church and
sat down on a grave-stone. “If the devils
have done this here so close to us,”
he burst out, and covered his face.
An old woman walked toward us down
the road. Rechamp jumped up and ran to meet her.
“Why, Marie Jeanne, what are you doing in these
ruins?” The old woman looked at him with unastonished
eyes. She seemed incapable of any surprise.
“They left my house standing. I’m
glad to see Monsieur,” she simply said.
We followed her to the one house left in the waste
of stones. It was a two-roomed cottage, propped
against a cow-stable, but fairly decent, with a curtain
in the window and a cat on the sill. Rechamp
caught me by the arm and pointed to the door-panel.
“Oberst von Scharlach” was scrawled on
it. He turned as white as your table-cloth, and
hung on to me a minute; then he spoke to the old woman.
“The officers were quartered here: that
was the reason they spared your house?”
She nodded. “Yes:
I was lucky. But the gentlemen must come in and
have a mouthful.”
Rechamp’s finger was on the
name. “And this one this was
their commanding officer?”
“I suppose so. Is it somebody’s
name?” She had evidently never speculated on
the meaning of the scrawl that had saved her.
“You remember him their
captain? Was his name Scharlach?” Rechamp
persisted.
Under its rich weathering the old
woman’s face grew as pale as his. “Yes,
that was his name I heard it often enough.”
“Describe him, then. What
was he like? Tall and fair? They’re
all that but what else? What in particular?”
She hesitated, and then said:
“This one wasn’t fair. He was dark,
and had a scar that drew up the left corner of his
mouth.”
Rechamp turned to me. “It’s
the same. I heard the men describing him at Moulins.”
We followed the old woman into the
house, and while she gave us some bread and wine she
told us about the wrecking of the village and the
factory. It was one of the most damnable stories
I’ve heard yet. Put together the worst
of the typical horrors and you’ll have a fair
idea of it. Murder, outrage, torture: Scharlach’s
programme seemed to be fairly comprehensive.
She ended off by saying: “His orderly showed
me a silver-mounted flute he always travelled with,
and a beautiful paint-box mounted in silver too.
Before he left he sat down on my door-step and made
a painting of the ruins....”
Soon after leaving this place of death
we got to the second lines and our troubles began.
We had to do a lot of talking to get through the lines,
but what Rechamp had just seen had made him eloquent.
Luckily, too, the ambulance doctor, a charming fellow,
was short of tetanus-serum, and I had some left; and
while I went over with him to the pine-branch hut
where he hid his wounded I explained Rechamp’s
case, and implored him to get us through. Finally
it was settled that we should leave the ambulance
there for in the lines the ban against
motors is absolute and drive the remaining
twelve miles. A sergeant fished out of a farmhouse
a toothless old woman with a furry horse harnessed
to a two-wheeled trap, and we started off by round-about
wood-tracks. The horse was in no hurry, nor the
old lady either; for there were bits of road that
were pretty steadily currycombed by shell, and it
was to everybody’s interest not to cross them
before twilight. Jean de Rechamp’s excitement
seemed to have dropped: he sat beside me dumb
as a fish, staring straight ahead of him. I didn’t
feel talkative either, for a word the doctor had let
drop had left me thinking. “That poor old
granny mind the shells? Not she!” he had
said when our crazy chariot drove up. “She
doesn’t know them from snow-flakes any more.
Nothing matters to her now, except trying to outwit
a German. They’re all like that where Scharlach’s
been you’ve heard of him? She
had only one boy half-witted: he cocked
a broomhandle at them, and they burnt him. Oh,
she’ll take you to Rechamp safe enough.”
“Where Scharlach’s been” so
he had been as close as this to Rechamp! I was
wondering if Jean knew it, and if that had sealed his
lips and given him that flinty profile. The old
horse’s woolly flanks jogged on under the bare
branches and the old woman’s bent back jogged
in time with it She never once spoke or looked around
at us. “It isn’t the noise we make
that’ll give us away,” I said at last;
and just then the old woman turned her head and pointed
silently with the osier-twig she used as a whip.
Just ahead of us lay a heap of ruins: the wreck,
apparently, of a great chateau and its dependencies.
“Lermont!” Rechamp exclaimed, turning
white. He made a motion to jump out and then dropped
back into the seat. “What’s the use?”
he muttered. He leaned forward and touched the
old woman’s shoulder.
“I hadn’t heard of this when
did it happen?”
“In September.”
“They did it?”
“Yes. Our wounded were there. It’s
like this everywhere in our country.”
I saw Jean stiffening himself for the next question.
“At Rechamp, too?”
She relapsed into indifference. “I haven’t
been as far as Rechamp.”
“But you must have seen people who’d been
there you must have heard.”
“I’ve heard the masters
were still there so there must be something
standing. Maybe though,” she reflected,
“they’re in the cellars....”
We continued to jog on through the dusk.