THE LAST FIGHT
It so happened that on the first night
the German Emperor saw the comet without the aid of
a telescope he was attacked by one of those fits of
hysteria which, according to ancient legend, are the
hereditary curse of the House of Brandenburg.
He had made possible that which had been impossible
for over a thousand years he had invaded
England in force, and he had established himself and
his Allies in all the greatest fortress-camps of south-eastern
England. After all, the story of the comet might
be a freak of the scientific imagination; there might
be some undetected error in the calculations.
One great mistake had been made already, either by
the comet or its discoverer why not another?
“No,” he said to himself,
as he stood in front of the headquarters at Aldershot
looking up at the comet, “we’ve heard about
you before, my friend. Astronomers and other
people have prophesied a dozen times that you or something
like you were going to bring about the end of the
world, but somehow it never came off; whereas it is
pretty certain that the capture of London will come
off if it is only properly managed. At anyrate,
I am inclined to back my chances of taking London against
yours of destroying it.”
And so he made his decision.
He sent a telegram to Dover ordering an aerogram to
be sent to John Castellan, whose address was now, of
course, anywhere in the air or sea; the message was
to be repeated from all the Continental stations until
he was found. It contained the first capitulation
that the War Lord of Germany had ever made. He
accepted the terms of his Admiral of the Air and asked
him to bring his fleet the following day to assist
in a general assault on London London once
taken, John Castellan could have the free hand that
he had asked for.
In twelve hours a reply came back
from the Jotunheim in Norway. Meanwhile, the
Kaiser, as Generalissimo of the Allied Forces, telegraphed
orders to all the commanders of army corps in England
to prepare for a final assault on the positions commanding
London within twenty-four hours. At the same
time he sent telegraphic orders to all the centres
of mobilisation in Europe, ordering the advance of
all possible reinforcements with the least delay.
It was his will that four million men should march
on London that week, and, in spite of the protests
of the Emperor of Austria and the Tsar, his will was
obeyed.
So the truce was broken and the millions
advanced, as it were over the brink of Eternity, towards
London. But the reinforcements never came.
Every transport that steamed out of Bremen, Hamburg,
Kiel, Antwerp, Brest or Calais, vanished into the
waters; for now the whole squadron of twelve Ithuriels
had been launched and had got to work, and the British
fleets from the Mediterranean, the China Seas and the
North Atlantic, had once more asserted Britain’s
supremacy on the seas. In addition to these,
ten first-class battleships, twelve first and fifteen
second-class cruisers and fifty destroyers had been
turned out by the Home yards, and so the British Islands
were once more ringed with an unbreakable wall of
steel. One invasion had been accomplished, but
now no other was possible. The French Government
absolutely refused to send any more men. The
Italian armies had crossed the Alps at three points,
and every soldier left in France was wanted to defend
her own fortresses and cities from the attack of the
invader.
But, despite all this, the War Lord
held to his purpose; and that night the last battle
ever fought between civilised nations began, and when
the sun rose on the sixteenth of April, its rays lit
up what was probably the most awful scene of carnage
that human eyes had ever looked upon. The battle-line
of the invaders had extended from Sheerness to Reading
in a sort of irregular semicircle, and it was estimated
afterwards that not less than a million and a half
of killed and wounded men, fifty thousand horses and
hundreds of disabled batteries of light and heavy
artillery strewed the long line of defeat and conquest.
The British aerial fleet of twenty
ships had made victory for the defenders a practical
certainty. As Admiral Hingeston had told the Tsar,
they could both out-fly and out-shoot the Flying
Fishes. This they did and more. The
moment that a battery got into position half a dozen
searchlights were concentrated on it. Then came
a hail of shells, and a series of explosions which
smashed the guns to fragments and killed every living
thing within a radius of a hundred yards. Infantry
and cavalry shared the same fate the moment that any
formation was made for an attack on the British positions;
the storm of fire was made ten-fold more terrible
by the unceasing bombardment from the air; and the
brilliant glow of the searchlights thrown down from
a height of a thousand feet or so along the lines
of the attacking forces made the work of the defenders
comparatively easy, for the man in a fight who can
see and is not seen is worth several who are seen and
yet fight in the dark.
But the assailants were exposed to
an even more deadly danger than artillery or rifle
fire. The catastrophe which had overwhelmed the
British Fleet in Dover Harbour was repeated with ten-fold
effect; but this time the tables were turned.
The British aerial fleet hunted the Flying Fishes
as hawks hunt partridges, and whenever one of them
was found over a hostile position a shell from the
silent, flameless guns hit her, and down she went
to explode like a volcano amongst masses of cavalry,
infantry and artillery, and of this utter panic was
the only natural result.
Eleven out of the twelve Flying
Fishes were thus accounted for. What had
become of the twelfth no one knew. It might have
been partially crippled and fallen far away from the
great battlefield; or it might have turned tail and
escaped, and in this case it was a practical certainty,
at least in Lennard’s mind, that it was John
Castellan’s own vessel and that he, seeing that
the battle was lost, had taken her away to some unknown
spot in order to fulfil the threat contained in his
letter, and for this reason five of the British airships
were at once despatched to mount guard over the great
cannon at Bolton.
The defeat of the Allies both by land
and sea, though accomplished at the eleventh hour
of the world’s threatened fate, had been so complete
and crushing, and the death-total had reached such
a ghastly figure, that Austria, Russia and France
flatly refused to continue the Alliance. After
all the tremendous sacrifice that had been made in
men, money and material they had not even reached
London. From their outposts on the Surrey hills
they could see the vast city, silent and apparently
sleeping under its canopy of hazy clouds, but that
was all. It was still as distant from them as
the poles; and so the Allies looked upon it and then
upon their dead, and admitted, by their silence if
not by their words, that Britain the Unconquered was
unconquerable still.
The German Emperor’s fit had
passed. Even he was appalled when upon that memorable
morning he received the joint note of his three Allies
and learnt the awful cost of that one night’s
fighting.
Just as he was countersigning the
Note of Capitulation in the headquarters at Aldershot,
the Auriole swung round from the northward
and descended on to the turf flying the flag of truce.
He saw it through the window, got up, put his right
hand on the butt of the revolver in his hip-pocket,
thought hard for one fateful moment, then took it
away and went out.
At the gate he met Lord Kitchener;
they exchanged salutes and shook hands, and the Kaiser
said:
“Well, my lord, what are the terms?”
K. of K. laughed, simply because he
couldn’t help it. The absolute hard business
of the question went straight to the heart of the best
business man in the British Army.
“I am not here to make or accept
terms, your Majesty,” he said. “I
am only the bearer of a message, and here it is.”
Then he handed the Kaiser an envelope
bearing the Royal Arms.
“I am instructed to take your
reply back as soon as possible,” he continued.
Then he saluted again and walked away towards the Auriole.
The Kaiser opened the envelope and
read an invitation to lunch from his uncle,
Edward of England, and a request to bring his august
colleagues with him to talk matters over. There
was no hint of battle, victory or defeat. It
was a quite commonplace letter, but all the same it
was one of those triumphs of diplomacy which only
the first diplomatist in Europe knew how to achieve.
Then he too laughed as he folded up the letter and
went to Lord Kitchener and said:
“This is only an invitation
to lunch, and you have told me you are not here to
propose or take terms. That, of course, was official,
but personally
K. of K. stiffened up, and a harder
glint came into his eyes.
“I can say nothing personally,
your Majesty, except to ask you to remember my reply
to Cronje.”
The Kaiser remembered that reply of
three words, “Surrender, or fight,” and
he knew that he could not fight, save under a penalty
of utter destruction. He went back into his room,
brought back the joint note which he had just received,
and gave it to Lord Kitchener, just as it was, without
even putting it into an envelope, saying:
“That is our answer. We
are beaten, and those who lose must pay.”
Lord Kitchener looked over the note
and said, in a somewhat dry tone:
“This, your Majesty, I read as absolute surrender.”
“It is,” said William
the Second, his hand instinctively going to the hilt
of his sword. Lord Kitchener shook his head, and
said very quietly and pleasantly:
“No, your Majesty, not that.
But,” he said, looking up at the four flags
which were still flying above the headquarters, “I
should be obliged if you would give orders to haul
those down and hoist the Jack instead.”
There was no help for it, and no one
knew better than the Kaiser the strength there was
behind those quietly-spoken words. The awful lesson
of the night before had taught him that this beautiful
cruiser of the air which lay within a few yards of
him could in a few moments rise into the air and scatter
indiscriminate death and destruction around her, and
so the flags came down, the old Jack once more went
up, and Aldershot was English ground again.
Wherefore, not to enter into unnecessary
details, the Auriole, instead of making the
place a wilderness as Lord Kitchener had quite determined
to do, became an aerial pleasure yacht. Orderlies
were sent to the Russian, Austrian and French headquarters,
and an hour later the chiefs of the Allies were sitting
in the deck saloon of the airship, flying at about
sixty miles an hour towards London.
The lunch at Buckingham Palace was
an entirely friendly affair. King Edward had
intended it to be a sort of international shake-hands
all round. The King of Italy was present, as
the Columbia had been despatched early in the
morning to bring him from Rome, and had picked up
the French President on the way back at Paris.
The King gave the first and only toast, and that was:
“Your Majesties and Monsieur
lé President, in the name of Humanity, I ask
you to drink to Peace.”
They drank, and so ended the last
war that was ever fought on British soil.