Fear comes and goes, but a man’s
love lives with him. Eastern proverb.
Stamboul was disillusionment a
city of rain and plagues and stinks! The food
in barracks was maggoty. We breathed foul air
and yearned for the streets; yet, once in the streets,
we yearned to be back in barracks. Aye, sahib,
we saw more in one day of the streets than we thought
good for us, none yet understanding the breadth of
Ranjoor Singh’s wakefulness. He seemed
to us like a man asleep in good opinion of himself that
being doubtless the opinion he wished the German officers
to have of him.
Part of the German plan became evident
at once, for, noticing our great enthusiasm at the
prospect of being sent to Gallipoli, Tugendheim, in
the hope of winning praise, told a German officer we
ought to be paraded through the streets as evidence
that Indian troops really were fighting with the Central
Powers. The German officer agreed instantly,
Tugendheim making faces thus and brushing his mustache
more fiercely upward.
So the very first morning after our
arrival we were paraded early and sent out with a
negro band, to tramp back and forth through the streets
until nearly too weary to desire life. Ranjoor
Singh marched at our head looking perfectly contented,
for which the men all hated him, and beside him went
a Turk who knew English and who told him the names
of streets and places.
It did not escape my observation that
Ranjoor Singh was interested more than a little in
the waterfront. But we all tramped like dumb
men, splashed to the waist with street dirt, aware
we were being used to make a mental impression on
the Turks, but afraid to refuse obedience lest we
be not sent to Gallipoli after all. One thought
obsessed every single man but me: To get to Gallipoli,
and escape to the British trenches during some dark
night, or perish in the effort.
As for me, I kept open mind and watched.
It is the non-commissioned officer’s affair
to herd the men for his officer to lead. To have
argued with them or have suggested alternative possibilities
would have been only to enrage them and make them
deaf to wise counsels when the proper time should
come. And, besides, I knew no more what Ranjoor
Singh had in mind than a dead man knows of the weather.
We marched through the streets, and marched, stared
at silently, neither cheered nor mocked by the inhabitants;
and Ranjoor Singh arrived at his own conclusions.
Five several times during that one day he halted us
in the mud at a certain place along the water-front,
although there was a better place near by; and while
we rested he asked peculiar questions, and the Turk
boasted to him, explaining many things.
We were exhausted when it fell dark
and we climbed up the hill again to barracks.
Yet as we entered the barrack gate I heard Ranjoor
Singh tell a German officer in English that we had
all greatly enjoyed our view of the city and the exercise.
I repeated what I had heard while the men were at
supper, and they began to wonder greatly.
“Such a lie!” said they.
“That surely was a lie?”
I asked, and they answered that the man who truly
had enjoyed such tramping to and fro was no soldier
but a mud-fish.
“Then, if he lies to them,”
I said, “perhaps he tells us the truth after
all.”
They howled at me, calling me a man
without understanding. Yet when I went away I
left them thinking, each man for himself, and that
was good. I went to change the guard, for some
of our men were put on sentry-go that night outside
the officers’ quarters, in spite of our utter
weariness. We were smarter than the Kurds, and
German officers like smartness.
Weary though Ranjoor Singh must have
been, he sat late with the German officers, for the
most part keeping silence while they talked.
I made excuse to go and speak with him half a dozen
times, and the last time I could hardly find him among
the wreaths of cigarette smoke.
“Sahib, must we really stay
a week in this hole?” I asked. “So
say the Germans,” said he.
“Are we to be paraded through
the streets each day?” I asked.
“I understand that to be the plan,” he
answered.
“Then the men will mutiny!” said I.
“Nay!” said he, “let them seek better
cause than that!”
“Shall I tell them so?”
said I, and he looked into my eyes through the smoke
as if he would read down into my very heart.
“Aye!” said he at last. “You
may tell them so!”
So I went and shook some of the men
awake and told them, and when they had done being
angry they laughed at me. Then those awoke the
others, and soon they all had the message. On
the whole, it bewildered them, even as it did me,
so that few dared offer an opinion and each began
thinking for himself again. By morning they were
in a mood to await developments. They were even
willing to tramp the streets; but Ranjoor Singh procured
us a day’s rest. He himself spent most
of the day with the German officers, poring over maps
and talking. I went to speak with him as often
as I could invent excuse, and I became familiar with
the word Wassmuss that they used very frequently.
I heard the word so many times that I could not forget
it if I tried.
The next day Ranjoor Singh had a surprise
for us. At ten in the morning we were all lined
up in the rain and given a full month’s pay.
It was almost midday when the last man had received
his money, and when we were dismissed and the men
filed in to dinner Ranjoor Singh bade me go among
them and ask whether they did not wish opportunity
to spend their money.
So I went and asked the question.
Only a few said yes. Many preferred to keep their
money against contingencies, and some thought the
question was a trick and refused to answer it at all.
I returned to Ranjoor Singh and told him what they
answered.
“Go and ask them again!” said he.
So I went among them again as they
lay on the cots after dinner, and most of them jeered
at me for my pains. I went and found Ranjoor
Singh in the officers’ mess and told him.
“Ask them once more!” said he.
This third time, being in no mood
to endure mockery, I put the question with an air
of mystery. They asked what the hidden meaning
might be, but I shook my head and repeated the question
with a smile, as if I knew indeed but would not tell.
“Says Ranjoor Singh,”
said I, “would the men like opportunity to spend
their money?”
“No!” said most of them,
and Gooja Singh asked how long it well might be before
we should see money again.
“Shall I bear him, a third time,
such an answer?” I asked, looking more mysterious
than ever. And just then it happened that Gooja
Singh remembered the advice to seek better cause for
mutiny. He drummed on his teeth with his fingernails.
“Very well!” said he.
“Tell him we will either spend our money or
let blood! Let us see what he says to that!”
“Shall I say,” said I, “that Gooja
Singh says so?”
“Nay, nay!” said he, growing
anxious. “Let that be the regiment’s
answer. Name no names!”
I thought it a foolish answer, given
by a fool, but the men were in the mood to relish
it and began to laugh exceedingly.
“Shall I take that answer?”
said I, and they answered “Yes!” redoubling
their emphasis when I objected. “The Germans
do Ranjoor Singh’s thinking for him these days,”
said one man; “take that answer and let us see
what the Germans have to say to it through his mouth!”
So I went and told Ranjoor Singh,
whispering to him in a corner of the officers’
mess. Some Turks had joined the Germans and most
of them were bending over maps that a German officer
had spread upon a table in their midst; he was lecturing
while the others listened. Ranjoor Singh had
been listening, too, but he backed into a corner as
I entered, and all the while I was whispering to him
I kept hearing the word Wassmuss Wassmuss Wassmuss.
The German who was lecturing explained something about
this Wassmuss.
“What is Wassmuss?” I
asked, when I had given Ranjoor Singh the men’s
answer. He smiled into my eyes.
“Wassmuss is the key to the door,” said
he.
“To which door?” I asked him.
“There is only one,” he answered.
“Shall I tell that to the men?” said I.
At that he began scowling at me, stroking
his beard with one hand. Then he stepped back
and forth a time or two. And when he saw with
the corner of his eye that he had the senior German
officer’s attention he turned on me and glared
again. There was sudden silence in the room,
and I stood at attention, striving to look like a man
of wood.
“It is as I said,” said
he in English. “It was most unwise to pay
them. Now the ruffians demand liberty to go and
spend and that means license! They
have been prisoners of war in close confinement too
long. You should have sent them to Gallipoli before
they tasted money or anything else but work!
Who shall control such men now!”
The German officer stroked his chin,
eying Ranjoor Singh sternly, yet I thought irresolutely.
“If they would be safer on board
a steamer, that can be managed. A steamer came
in to-day, that would do,” said he, speaking
in English, perhaps lest the Turks understand.
“And there is Tugendheim, of course. Tugendheim
could keep watch on board.”
I think he had more to say, but at
that minute Ranjoor Singh chose to turn on me fiercely
and order me out of the room.
“Tell them what you have heard!”
he said in Punjabi, as if he were biting my head off,
and I expect the German officer believed he had cursed
me. I saluted and ran, and one of the Turkish
officers aimed a kick at me as I passed. It was
by the favor of God that the kick missed, for had
he touched me I would have torn his throat out, and
then doubtless I should not have been here to tell
what Ranjoor Singh did. To this day I do not
know whether he had every move planned out in his
mind, or whether part was thinking and part good fortune.
When a good man sets himself to thinking, God puts
thoughts into his heart that others can not overcome,
and it may be that he simply prayed. I know not although
I know he prayed often, as a true Sikh should.
I told the men exactly what had passed,
except that I did not say Ranjoor Singh had bidden
me do so. I gave them to understand that I was
revealing a secret, and that gave them greater confidence
in my loyalty to them. It was important they
should not suspect me of allegiance to Ranjoor Singh.
“It is good!” said they
all, after a lot of talking and very little thought.
“To be sent on board a steamer could only mean
Gallipoli. There we will make great show of ferocity
and bravery, so that they will send us to the foremost
trenches. It should be easy to steal across by
night to the British trenches, dragging Ranjoor Singh
with us, and when we are among friends again let him
give what account of himself he may! What new
shame is this, to tell the Germans we will make trouble
because we have a little money at last! Let the
shame return to roost on him!”
They began to make ready there and
then, and while they packed the knapsacks I urged
them to shout and laugh as if growing mutinous.
Soldiers, unless prevented, load themselves like pack
animals with a hundred unnecessary things, but none
of us had more than the full kit for each man that
the Germans had served out, so that packing took no
time at all. An hour after we were ready came
Ranjoor Singh, standing in the door of our quarters
with that senior German officer beside him, both of
them scowling at us, and the German making more than
a little show of possessing a repeating pistol.
So that Gooja Singh made great to-do about military
compliments, rebuking several troopers in loud tones
for not standing quickly to attention, and shouting
to me to be more strict. I let him have his say.
Angrily as a gathering thunder-storm
Ranjoor Singh ordered us to fall in, and we scrambled
out through the doorway like a pack of hunting hounds
released. No word was spoken to us by way of
explanation, Ranjoor Singh continuing to scowl with
folded arms while the German officer went back to
look the quarters over, perhaps to see whether we
had done damage, or perhaps to make certain nothing
had been left. He came out in a minute or two
and then we were marched out of the barrack in the
dimming light, with Tugendheim in full marching order
falling into step behind us and the senior German
officer smoking a cigar beside Ranjoor Singh.
A Kurdish soldier carried Tugendheim’s bag of
belongings, and Tugendheim kicked him savagely when
he dropped it in a pool of mud. I thought the
Kurd would knife him, but he refrained.
I think I have said, sahib, that the
weather was vile. We were glad of our overcoats.
As we marched along the winding road downhill we kept
catching glimpses of the water-front through driving
rain, light after light appearing as the twilight
gathered. Nobody noticed us. There seemed
to be no one in the streets, and small wonder!
Before we were half-way down toward
the water there began to be a very great noise of
firing, of big and little cannon and rifles.
There began to be shouting, and men ran back and forth
below us. I asked Tugendheim what it all might
mean, and he said probably a British submarine had
shown itself. I whispered that to the nearest
men and they passed the word along. Great contentment
grew among us, none caring after that for rain and
mud. That was the nearest we had been to friends
in oh how many months if it truly were a
British submarine!
We reached the water-front presently
and were brought to a halt in exactly the place where
Ranjoor Singh had halted us those five times on the
day we tramped the streets. We faced a dock that
had been vacant two days ago, but where now a little
steamer lay moored with ropes, smoke coming from its
funnel. There was no other sign of life, but
when the German officer shouted about a dozen times
the Turkish captain came ashore, wrapped in a great
shawl, and spoke to him.
While they two spoke I asked Ranjoor
Singh whether that truly had been a British submarine,
and he nodded; but he was not able to tell me whether
or not it had been hit by gun-fire. Some of the
men overheard, and although we all knew that our course
to Gallipoli would be the more hazardous in that event
we all prayed that the artillery might have missed.
Fear comes and goes, but a man’s love lives
in him.
When the Turkish captain and the German
officer finished speaking, the Turk went back to his
steamer without any apparent pleasure, and we were
marched up the gangway after him. It was pitch-dark
by that time and the only light was that of a lantern
by which the German officer stood, eying us one by
one as we passed. Tugendheim came last, and he
talked with Tugendheim for several minutes. Then
he went away, but presently returned with, I should
say, half a company of Kurdish soldiers, whom he posted
all about the dock. Then he departed finally,
with a wave of his cigar, as much as to say that sheet
of the ledger had been balanced.
It was a miserable steamer, sahib.
We stood about on iron decks and grew hungry.
There were no awnings nothing but the superstructure
of the bridge, and, although there were but two-hundred-and-thirty-four
of us, including Tugendheim, we could not stow ourselves
so that all could be sheltered from the rain and let
the mud cake dry on our legs and feet. There
was a little cabin that Tugendheim took for himself,
but Ranjoor Singh remained with us on deck. He
stood in the rain by the gangway, looking first at
one thing, then at another. I watched him.
Presently he went to the door of the
engine-room, opened it, and looked through. I
was about to look, too, but he shut it in my face.
“It is enough that they make
steam?” said he; and I looked up at the funnel
and saw steam mingled with the smoke. In a little
wheel-house on the bridge the Turkish captain sat
on a shelf, wrapped in his shawl, smoking a great
pipe, and his mate, who was also a Turk, sat beside
him staring at the sky. I asked Ranjoor Singh
whether we might expect to have the whole ship to
ourselves. Said I, “It would not be difficult
to overpower those two Turks and their small crew
and make them do our bidding!” But he answered
that a regiment of Kurds was expected to keep us company
at dawn. Then he went up to the bridge to have
word with the Turkish captain, and I went to the ship’s
side to stare about. Over my shoulder I told the
men about the Kurds who were coming, and they were
not pleased.
Peering into the dark and wondering
that so great a city as Stamboul should show so few
lights, I observed the Kurdish sentinels posted about
the dock.
“Those are to prevent us from
going ashore until their friends come!” said
I, and they snarled at me like angry wolves.
“We could easily rush ashore
and bayonet every one of them!” said Gooja Singh.
But not a man would have gone ashore
again for a commission in the German army. Gallipoli
was written in their hearts. Yet I could think
of a hundred thousand chances still that might prevent
our joining our friends the British in Gallipoli.
Nor was I sure in my own mind that Ranjoor Singh intended
we should try. I was sure only of his good faith,
and content to wait developments.
Though the lights of the city were
few and very far between, so many search-lights played
back and forth above the water that there seemed a
hundred of them. I judged it impossible for the
smallest boat to pass unseen and I wondered whether
it was difficult or easy to shoot with great guns
by aid of search-lights, remembering what strange
tricks light can play with a gunner’s eyes.
Mist, too, kept rising off the water to add confusion.
While I reflected in that manner,
thinking that the shadow of every wave and the side
of every boat might be a submarine, Ranjoor Singh
came down from the bridge and stood beside me.
“I have seen what I have seen!”
said he. “Listen! Obey! And give
me no back answers!”
“Sahib,” said I, “I
am thy man!” But he answered nothing to that.
“Pick the four most dependable
men,” he said, “and bid them enter that
cabin and gag and bind Tugendheim. Bid them make
no noise and see to it that he makes none, but let
them do him no injury, for we shall need him presently!
When that is done, come back to me here!”
So I left him at once, he standing
as I had done, staring at the water, although I thought
perhaps there was more purpose in his gaze than there
had been in mine.
I chose four men and led them aside,
they greatly wondering.
“There is work to be done,”
said I, “that calls for true ones!”
“Such men be we!” said all four together.
“That is why I picked you from
among the rest!” said I, and they were well
pleased at that. Then I gave them their orders.
“Who bids us do this?” they demanded.
“I!” said I. “Bind
and gag Tugendheim, and we have Ranjoor Singh committed.
He gave the order, and I bid you obey it! How
can he be false to us and true to the Germans, with
a gagged German prisoner on his hands?”
They saw the point of that. “But
what if we are discovered too soon?” said they.
“What if we are sunk before
dawn by a British submarine!” said I. “We
will swim when we find ourselves in water! For
the present, bind and gag Tugendheim!”
So they went and stalked Tugendheim,
the German, who had been drinking from a little pocket
flask. He was drowsing in a chair in the cabin,
with his hands deep down in his overcoat pockets and
his helmet over his eyes. Within three minutes
I was back at Ranjoor Singh’s side.
“The four stand guard over him!” said
I.
“Very good!” said he. “That
was well done! Now do a greater thing.”
My heart burned, sahib, for I had
once dared doubt him, yet all he had to say to me
was, “Well done! Now do a greater thing!”
If he had cursed me a little for my earlier unbelief
I might have felt less ashamed!
“Go to the men,” said
he, “and bid those who wish the British well
to put all the money they received this morning into
a cloth. Bid those who are no longer true to
the British to keep their money. When the money
is all in the cloth, bring it here to me.”
“But what if they refuse?” said I.
“Do you refuse?” he asked.
“Nay!” said I. “Nay, sahib!”
“Then why judge them?” said he. So
I went.
Can the sahib imagine it? Two-hundred-and-three-and-thirty
men, including non-commissioned officers, wet and
muddy in the dark, beginning to be hungry, all asked
at once to hand over all their pay if they be true
men, but told to keep it if they be traitors!
No man answered a word, although their
eyes burned up the darkness. I called for a lantern,
and a man brought one from the engine-room door.
By its light I spread out a cloth, and laid all my
money on it on the deck. The sergeant nearest
me followed my example. Gooja Singh laid down
only half his money.
“Nay!” said I. “All
or none! This is a test for true men! Half-true
and false be one and the same to-night!” So Gooja
Singh made a wry face and laid down the rest of his
money, and the others all followed him, not at all
understanding, as indeed I myself did not understand,
but coming one at a time to me and laying all their
money on the cloth. When the last man had done
I tied the four corners of the cloth together (it
was all wet with the rain and slush on deck, and heavy
with the weight of coin) and carried it to Ranjoor
Singh. (I forgot the four who stood guard over Tugendheim;
they kept their money.)
“We are all true men!” said I, dumping
it beside him.
“Good!” said he.
“Come!” And he took the bundle of money
and ascended the bridge ladder, bidding me wait at
the foot of it for further orders. I stood there
two hours without another sign of him, although I
heard voices in the wheel-house.
Now the men grew restless. Reflection
without action made them begin to doubt the wisdom
of surrendering all their money at a word. They
began to want to know the why and wherefore of the
business, and I was unable to tell them.
“Wait and see!” said I,
but that only exasperated them, and some began to
raise their voices in anger. So I felt urged to
invent a reason, hoping to explain it away afterward
should I be wrong. But as it turned out I guessed
at least a little part of Ranjoor Singh’s great
plan and so achieved great credit that was useful later,
although at the time I felt myself losing favor with
them.
“Ranjoor Singh will bribe the
captain of the ship to steam away before that regiment
of Kurds can come on board,” said I. “So
we shall have the ship at our mercy, provided we make
no mistakes.”
That did not satisfy them, but it
gave them something new to think about, and they settled
down to wait in silence, as many as could crowding
their backs against the deck-house and the rest suffering
in the rain. I would rather have heard them whispering,
because I judged the silence to be due to low spirits.
I knew of nothing more to say to encourage them, and
after a time their depression began to affect me also.
Rather than watch them, I watched the water, and more
than once I saw something I did not recognize, that
nevertheless caused my skin to tingle and my breath
to come in jerks. Sikh eyes are keen.
It was perhaps two hours before midnight
when the long spell of firing along the water-front
began and I knew that my eyes and the dark had not
deceived me. All the search-lights suddenly swept
together to one point and shone on the top-side of
a submarine or at least on the water thrown
up by its top-side. Only two masts and a thing
like a tower were visible, and the plunging shells
threw water over those obscuring them every second.
There was a great explosion, whether before or after
the beginning of the gun-fire I do not remember, and
a ship anchored out on the water no great distance
from us heeled over and began to sink. One search-light
was turned on the sinking ship, so that I could see
hundreds of men on her running to and fro and jumping;
but all the rest of the water was now left in darkness.
The guards who had been set to prevent
our landing all ran to another wharf to watch the
gun-fire and the sinking ship, and it was at the moment
when their backs were turned that two Turkish seamen
came down from the bridge and loosed the ropes that
held us to the shore. Then our ship began to
move out slowly into the darkness without showing
lights or sounding whistle. There was still no
sign of Ranjoor Singh, nor had I time to look for
him; I was busy making the men be still, urging, coaxing,
cursing even striking them.
“Are we off to Gallipoli?” they asked.
“We are off to where a true
man may remember the salt!” said I, knowing
no more than they.
I know of nothing more confusing to
a landsman, sahib, than a crowded harbor at night.
The many search-lights all quivering and shifting
in the one direction only made confusion worse and
we had not been moving two minutes when I no longer
knew north from south or east from west. I looked
up, to try to judge by the stars. I had actually
forgotten it was raining. The rain came down in
sheets and overhead the sky began at little more than
arm’s length! Judge, then, my excitement.
We passed very close to several small
steamers that may have been war-ships, but I think
they were merchant ships converted into gunboats to
hunt submarines. I think, too, that in the darkness
they mistook us for another of the same sort, for,
although we almost collided with two of them, they
neither fired on us nor challenged. We steamed
straight past them, beginning to gain speed as the
last one fell away behind.
Does the sahib remember whether the
passage from Stamboul into the Sea of Marmora runs
south or east or west? Neither could I remember,
although at another time I could have drawn a map of
it, having studied such things. But memory plays
us strange tricks, and cavalrymen were never intended
to maneuver in a ship! Ranjoor Singh, up in the
wheel-house, had a map a good map, that
he had stolen from the German officers but
I did not know that until later. I stood with
both hands holding the rails of the bridge ladder
wondering whether gunfire or submarine would sink us
and urging the men to keep their heads below the bulwark
lest a search-light find us and the number of heads
cause suspicion.
I have often tried to remember just
how many hours we steamed from Stamboul, yet I have
no idea to this day beyond that the voyage was ended
before dawn. It was all unexpected we
were too excited, and too fearful for our skins to
recall the passage of hours. It was darker than
I have ever known night to be, and the short waves
that made our ship pitch unevenly were growing steeper
every minute, when Ranjoor Singh came at last to the
head of the ladder and shouted for me. I went
to him up the steps, holding to each rail for dear
life.
“Take twenty men,” he
ordered, “and uncover the forward hatch.
Throw the hatch coverings overboard. The hold
is full of cartridges. Bring up some boxes and
break them open. Distribute two hundred rounds
to every man, and throw the empty boxes overboard.
Then get up twenty more boxes and place them close
together, in readiness to take with us when we leave
the ship. Let me know when that is all done.”
So I took twenty men and we obeyed
him. Two hundred rounds of cartridges a man made
a heavy extra load and the troopers grumbled.
“Can we swim with these?” they demanded.
“Who knows until he has tried?” said I.
“How far may we have to march with such an extra
weight?” said they.
“Who knows!” said I, counting
out two hundred more to another man. “But
the man,” I said, “who lacks one cartridge
of the full count when I come to inspect shall be
put to the test whether he can swim at all!”
Some of them had begun to throw half
of their two hundred into the water, but after I said
that they discontinued, and I noticed that those who
had so done came back for more cartridges, pretending
that my count had been short. So I served them
out more and said nothing. There were hundreds
of thousands of rounds in the hold of the ship, and
I judged we could afford to overlook the waste.
At last we set the extra twenty boxes
in one place together, slipping and falling in the
process because the deck was wet and the ship unsteady;
and then I went and reported to Ranjoor Singh.
“Very good,” said he.
“Make the men fall in along the deck, and bid
them be ready for whatever may befall!”
“Are we near land, sahib?” said I.
“Very near!” said he.
I ran to obey him, peering into the
blackness to discover land, but I could see nothing
more than the white tops of waves, and clouds that
seemed to meet the sea within a rope’s length
of us. Once or twice I thought I heard surf,
but the noise of the rain and of the engines and of
the waves pounding against the ship confused my ears,
so that I could not be certain.
When the men were all fallen in I
went and leaned over the bulwark to try to see better;
and as I did that we ran in under a cliff, for the
darkness grew suddenly much darker. Then I surely
heard surf. Then another sound startled me, and
a shock nearly threw me off my feet. I faced
about, to find twenty or thirty men sprawling their
length upon the deck, and when I had urged and helped
them up the engines had stopped turning, and steam
was roaring savagely through the funnel. The
motion of the ship was different now; the front part
seemed almost still, but the behind part rose and fell
jerkily.
I busied myself with the men, bullying
them into silence, for I judged it most important
to be able to hear the first order that Ranjoor Singh
might give; but he gave none just yet, although I
heard a lot of talking on the bridge.
“Is this Gallipoli?” the
men kept asking me in whispers.
“If it were,” said I,
“we should have been blown to little pieces by
the guns of both sides before now!” If I had
been offered all the world for a reward I could not
have guessed our whereabouts, nor what we were likely
to do next, but I was very sure we had not reached
Gallipoli.
Presently the Turkish seamen began
lowering the boats. There were but four boats,
and they made clumsy work of it, but at last all four
boats were in the water; and then Ranjoor Singh began
at last to give his orders, in a voice and with an
air that brought reassurance. No man could command,
as he did who had the least little doubt in his heart
of eventual success. There is even more conviction
in a true man’s voice than in his eye.
He ordered us overside eight at a
time, and me in the first boat with the first eight.
“Fall them in along the first
flat place you find on shore, and wait there for me!”
said he. And I said, “Ha, sahib!”
wondering as I swung myself down a swaying rope whether
my feet could ever find the boat. But the sailors
pulled the rope’s lower end, and I found myself
in a moment wedged into a space into which not one
more man could have been crowded.
The waves broke over us, and there
was a very evil surf, but the distance to the shore
was short and the sailors proved skilful. We
landed safely on a gravelly beach, not so very much
wetter than we had been, except for our legs (for
we waded the last few yards), and I hunted at once
for a piece of level ground. Just thereabouts
it was all nearly level, so I fell my eight men in
within twenty yards of the surf, and waited.
I felt tempted to throw out pickets yet afraid not
to obey implicitly. Ranjoor Singh given no order
about pickets.
I judge it took more than an hour,
and it may have been two hours, to bring all the men
and the twenty boxes of cartridges ashore. At
last in three boats came the captain of the ship, and
the mate, and the engineer, and nearly all the crew.
Then I grew suddenly afraid and hot sweat burst out
all over me, for by the one lantern that had been
hung from the ship’s bridge rail to guide the
rowers I could see that the ship was moving!
The ship’s captain had climbed out of the last
boat and was standing close to it. I went up to
him and seized his shoulder.
“What dog’s work is this?”
said I. “Speak!” I said, shaking him,
although he could not talk any tongue that I knew but
I shook him none-the-less until his teeth chattered,
and, his arms being wrapped in that great shawl of
his, there was little he could do to prevent me.
As I live, sahib, on the word of a
Sikh I swear that not even in that instant did I doubt
Ranjoor Singh. I believed that the Turkish captain
might have stabbed him, or that Tugendheim might have
played some trick. But not so the men. They
saw the lantern receding and receding, dancing with
the motion of the ship, and they believed themselves
deserted.
“Quick! Fire on him!”
shouted some one. “Let him not escape!
Kill him before he is out of range!”
I never knew which trooper it was
who raised that cry, although I went to some trouble
to discover afterward. But I heard Gooja Singh
laugh like a hyena; and I heard the click of cartridges
being thrust into magazines. I was half minded
to let them shoot, hoping they might hit Tugendheim.
But the Turk freed his arms at last, and began struggling.
“Look!” he said to me
in English. “Voila!” said he
in French. “REGARDEZ! Look see!”
I did look, and I saw enough to make
me make swift decision. The light was nearer
to the water quite a lot nearer. I
flung myself on the nearest trooper, whose rifle was
already raised, and taken by surprise he loosed his
weapon. With it I beat the next ten men’s
rifles down, and they clattered on the beach.
That made the others pause and look at me.
“The man who fires the first
shot dies!” said I, striving to make the breath
come evenly between my teeth for sake of dignity, yet
with none too great success. But in the principal
matter I was successful, for they left their alignment
and clustered round to argue with me. At that
I refused to have speech with them until they should
have fallen in again, as befitted soldiers. Falling
in took time, especially as they did it sulkily; and
when the noise of shifting feet was finished I heard
oars thumping in the oar-locks.
A boat grounded amid the surf, and
Ranjoor Singh jumped out of it, followed by Tugendheim
and his four guards. The boat’s crew leaped
into the water and hauled the boat high and dry, and
as they did that I saw the ship’s lantern disappear
altogether.
Ranjoor Singh went straight to the
Turkish captain. “Your money,” said
he, speaking in English slowly I wonder,
sahib, oh, I have wondered a thousand times in what
medley of tongues strange to all of them they had
done their bargaining! “Your money,”
said he, “is in the boat in which I came.
Take it, and take your men, and go!”
The captain and his crew said nothing,
but got into the boats and pushed away. One of
the boats was overturned in the surf, and there they
left it, the sailors scrambling into the other boats.
They were out of sight and sound in two minutes.
Then Ranjoor Singh turned to me.
“Send and gather fire-wood!” he ordered.
“Where shall dry wood be in all this rain?”
said I.
“Search!” said he.
“Sahib,” said I, “a fire would only
betray our whereabouts.”
“Are you deaf?” said he.
“Nay!” I said.
“Then obey!” said he.
So I took twenty men, and we went stumbling through
rain and darkness, hunting for what none of us believed
was anywhere. Yet within fifteen minutes we found
a hut whose roof was intact, and therefore whose floor
and inner parts were dry enough. It was a little
hut, of the length of perhaps the height of four men,
and the breadth of the height of three a
man and a half high from floor to roof-beam.
It was unoccupied, but there was straw at one end dry
straw, on which doubtless guards had slept. I
left the men standing there and went and told Ranjoor
Singh.
I found him talking to the lined up
men in no gentle manner. As I drew nearer I heard
him say the word “Wassmuss.” Then
I heard a trooper ask him, “Where are we?”
And he answered, “Ye stand on Asia!” That
was the first intimation I received that we were in
Asia, and I felt suddenly lonely, for Asia is wondrously
big, sahib.
Whatever Ranjoor Singh had been saying
to the men he had them back under his thumb for the
time being; for when I told him of my discovery of
the hut he called them to attention, turned them to
the right, and marched them off as obedient as a machine,
Tugendheim following like a man in a dream between
his four guards and struggling now and then to loose
the wet thongs that were beginning to cut into his
wrists. He had not been trussed over-tenderly,
but I noticed that Ranjoor Singh had ordered the gag
removed.
The hut stood alone, clear on all
four sides, and after he had looked at it, Ranjoor
Singh made the men line up facing the door, with himself
and me and Tugendheim between them and the hut.
Presently he pushed Tugendheim into the hut, and he
bade me stand in the door to watch him.
“Now the man who wishes to ask
questions may,” he said then, and there was
a long silence, for I suppose none wished to be accused
of impudence and perhaps made an example for the rest.
Besides, they were too curious to know what his next
intention might be to care to offend him. So
I, seeing that he wished them to speak, and conceiving
that to be part of his plan for establishing good
feeling, asked the first question the first
that came into my head.
“What shall we do with this Tugendheim?”
said I.
“That I will show you presently,”
said he. “Who else has a question to ask?”
And again there was silence, save for the rain and
the grinding and pounding on the beach.
Then Gooja Singh made bold, as he
usually did when he judged the risk not too great.
He was behind the men, which gave him greater courage;
and it suited him well to have to raise his voice,
because the men might suppose that to be due to insolence,
whereas Ranjoor Singh must ascribe it to necessity.
Well I knew the method of Gooja Singh’s reasoning,
and I knitted my fists in a frenzy of fear lest he
say the wrong word and start trouble. Yet I need
not have worried. I observed that Ranjoor Singh
seemed not disturbed at all, and he knew Gooja Singh
as well as I.
“It seems for the time being
that we have given the slip to both Turks and Germans,”
said Gooja Singh; and Ranjoor Singh said, “Aye!
For the time being!”
“And we truly stand on Asia?” he asked.
“Aye!” said Ranjoor Singh,
“Then why did we not put those
Turks ashore, and steam away in their ship toward
Gallipoli to join our friends?” said he.
“Partly because of submarines,”
said Ranjoor Singh, “and partly because of gun-fire.
Partly because of mines floating in the water, and
partly again from lack of coal. The bunkers were
about empty. It was because there was so little
coal that the Germans trusted us alone on board.”
“Yet, why let the Turks have
the steamer?” asked Gooja Singh, bound, now
that he was started, to prove himself in the right.
“They will float about until daylight and then
send signals. Then will come Turks and Germans!”
“Nay!” said Ranjoor Singh.
“No so, for I sank the steamer! I myself
let the sea into her hold!”
Gooja Singh was silent for about a
minute, and although it was dark and I could not see
him. I knew exactly the expression of his face wrinkled
thus, and with the lower lip thrust out, so!
“Any more questions?”
asked Ranjoor Singh, and by that time Gooja Singh
had thought again. This time he seemed to think
he had an unanswerable one, for his voice was full
of insolence.
“Then how comes it,” said
he, “that you turned those Turks loose in their
small boats when we might have kept them with us for
hostages? Now they will row to the land and set
their masters on our tracks! Within an hour or
two we shall all be prisoners again! Tell us why!”
“For one thing,” said
Ranjoor Singh, without any resentment in his voice
that I could detect (although that was no sign!),
“I had to make some sort of bargain with them,
and having made it I must keep it. The money
with which I bribed the captain and his mate would
have been of little use to them unless I allowed them
life and liberty as well.”
“But they will give the alarm
and cause us to be followed!” shouted Gooja
Singh, his voice rising louder with each word.
“Nay, I think not!” said
Ranjoor Singh, as calmly as ever. “In the
first place, I have a written receipt from captain
and mate for our money, stating the reason for which
it was paid; if we were made prisoners again, that
paper would be found in my possession and it might
go ill with those Turks. In the second place,
they will wish to save their faces. In the third
place, they must explain the loss of their steamer.
So they will say the steamer was sunk by a submarine,
and that they got away in the boats and watched us
drown. The crew will bear out what the captain
and the mate say, partly from fear, partly because
that is the custom of the country, but chiefly because
they will receive a small share of the bribe.
Let us hope they get back safely for their
story will prevent pursuit!”
For about two minutes again there
was silence, and then Gooja Singh called out:
“Why did you not make them take us to Gallipoli?”
“There was not enough coal!”
said I, but Ranjoor Singh made a gesture to me of
impatience.
“The Germans wished us to go
to Gallipoli,” said he, “and I have noticed
that whatever they may desire is expressly intended
for their advantage and not ours. In Gallipoli
they would have kept us out of range at the rear,
and presently they would have caused a picture of
us to be taken serving among the Turkish army.
That they would have published broadcast. After
that I have no idea what would have happened to us,
except that I am sure we should never have got near
enough to the British lines to make good our escape.
We must find another way than that!”
“We might have made the attempt!”
said Gooja Singh, and a dozen men murmured approval.
“Simpletons!” came the
answer. “The Germans laid their plans for
the first for photographs to lend color to lies about
the Sikh troops fighting for them! Ye would have
played into their hands!”
“What then?” said I, after
a minute, for at that answer they had all grown dumb.
“What then?” said he.
“Why, this: We are in Asia, but still on
Turkish soil. We need food. We shall need
shelter before many hours. And we need discipline,
to aid our will to overcome! Therefore there
never was a regiment more fiercely disciplined than
this shall be! From now until we bring up in
a British camp and God knows when or where
that may happen! the man who as much as
thinks of disobedience plays with death! Death ye
be as good as dead men now!” said he.
He shook himself. A sense of
loneliness had come on me since he told us we were
in Asia, and I think the men felt as I did. There
had been nothing to eat on the steamer, and there
was nothing now. Hunger and cold and rain were
doing their work. But Ranjoor Singh stood and
shook himself, and moved slowly along the line to look
in each man’s face, and I took new courage from
his bearing. If I could have known what he had
in store for us, I would have leaped and shouted.
Yet, no, sahib; that is not true. If he had told
me what was coming, I would never have believed.
Can the sahib imagine, for instance, what was to happen
next?
“Ye are as good as dead men!”
he said, coming back to the center and facing all
the men. “Consider!” said he.
“Our ship is sunk and the Turks, to save their
own skins, will swear they saw us drown. Who,
then, will come and hunt for dead men?”
I could see the eyes of the nearest
men opening wider as new possibilities began to dawn.
As for me my two hands shook.
“And we have with us,”
said he, “a hostage who might prove useful a
hostage who might prove amenable to reason. Bring
out the prisoner!” said he.
So I bade Tugendheim come forth.
He was sitting on the straw where the guards had pushed
him, still working sullenly to free his hands.
He came and peered through the doorway into darkness,
and Ranjoor Singh stood aside to let the men see him.
They can not have seen much, for it was now that utter
gloom that precedes dawn. Nor can Tugendheim
have seen much.
“Do you wish to live or die?”
asked Ranjoor Singh, and the German gaped at him.
“That is a strange question!” he said.
“Is it strange,” asked
Ranjoor Singh, “that a prisoner should be asked
for information?”
“I am not afraid to die,” said Tugendheim.
“You mean by rifle-fire?”
asked Ranjoor Singh, and Tugendheim nodded.
“But there are other kinds of
fire,” said Ranjoor Singh.
“What do you mean?” asked Tugendheim.
“Why,” said Ranjoor Singh,
“if we were to fire this hut to warm ourselves,
and you should happen to be inside it what
then?”
“If you intend to kill me,”
said Tugendheim, “why not be merciful and shoot
me?” His voice was brave enough, but it seemed
to me I detected a strain of terror in it.
“Few Germans are afraid to be
shot to death,” said Ranjoor Singh.
“But what have I done to any
of you that you should want to burn me alive?”
asked Tugendheim; and that time I was positive his
voice was forced.
“Haven’t you been told
by your officers,” said Ranjoor Singh, “that
the custom of us Sikhs is to burn all our prisoners
alive?”
“Yes,” said Tugendheim.
“They told us that. But that was only a
tale to encourage the first-year men. Having
lived in India, I knew better.”
“Did you trouble yourself to
tell anybody better?” asked Ranjoor Singh, but
Tugendheim did not answer.
“Then can you give me any reason
why you should not be burned alive here, now?”
asked Ranjoor Singh.
“Yes!” said Tugendheim.
“It would be cruel. It would be devil’s
work!” He was growing very uneasy, although trying
hard not to show it.
“Then give me a name for the
tales you have been party to against us Sikhs!”
said Ranjoor Singh; but once more the German refrained
from answering. The men were growing very attentive,
breathing all in unison and careful to make no sound
to disturb the talking. At that instant a great
burst of firing broke out over the water, so far away
that I could only see one or two flashes, and, although
that was none too reassuring to us, it seemed to Tugendheim
like his death knell. He set his lips and drew
back half a step.
“Can you wish to live with the
shame of all those lies against us on your heart you,
who have lived in India and know so much better?”
asked Ranjoor Singh.
“Of course I wish to live!” said Tugendheim.
“Have you any price to offer
for your life?” asked Ranjoor Singh, and stepping
back two paces he ordered a havildar with a loud voice
to take six men and hunt for dry kindling. “For
there is not enough here,” said he.
“Price?” said Tugendheim.
“I have a handful of coins, and my uniform,
and a sword. You left my baggage on the steamer ”
“Nay!” said Ranjoor Singh.
“Your baggage came ashore in one of the boats.
Where is it? Who has it?”
A man stepped forward and pointed
to it, lying in the shadow of the hut with the rain
from the roof dripping down on it.
“Who brought it ashore?” asked Ranjoor
Singh.
“I,” said the trooper.
“Then, for leaving it there
in the rain, you shall carry it three days without
assistance or relief!” said Ranjoor Singh.
“Get back to your place in the ranks!”
And the man got back, saying nothing. Ranjoor
Singh picked up the baggage and tossed it past Tugendheim
into the hut.
“That is all I have!” said Tugendheim.
“If you decide to burn, it shall
burn with you,” said Ranjoor Singh, “and
that trooper shall carry a good big stone instead to
teach him manners!”
“Gott in Himmel!”
exclaimed Tugendheim, losing his self-control at last.
“Can I offer what I have not got?”
“Is there nothing you can do?” asked Ranjoor
Singh.
“In what way? How?” asked the German.
“In the way of making amends
to us Sikhs for all those lies you have been party
to,” said Ranjoor Singh. “If you were
willing to offer to make amends, I would listen to
you.”
“I will do anything in reason,”
said Tugendheim, looking him full in the eye and growing
more at ease.
“I am a reasonable man,” said Ranjoor
Singh.
“Then, speak!” said Tugendheim.
“Nay, nay!” said Ranjoor
Singh, “it is for you to make proposals, and
not for me. It is not I who stand waiting to be
burned alive! Let me make you a suggestion, however.
What had we Sikhs to offer when we were prisoners
in Germany?”
“Oh, I see!” said Tugendheim.
“You mean you wish me to join you to
be one of you?”
“I mean,” said Ranjoor
Singh, “that if you were to apply to be allowed
to join this regiment for a while, and to be allowed
to serve us in a certain manner, we would consider
the proposal. Otherwise is my meaning
clear?”
“Yes!” said Tugendheim.
“Then ?’ said Ranjoor Singh.
“I apply!” said Tugendheim;
and at that moment the havildar and his men returned
with some straw they had found in another tumble-down
hut. They had it stuffed under their overcoats
to keep it dry. “Too late!” said
Tugendheim with a grimace, but Ranjoor Singh bade them
throw the straw inside for all that.
“In Germany we were required
to set our names to paper,” he said, and Tugendheim
looked him in the eyes again for a full half minute.
“Do you expect better conditions than were offered
us?” asked Ranjoor Singh.
“I will sign!” said Tugendheim.
“What will you sign?” asked Ranjoor Singh.
“Anything in reason,” answered Tugendheim.
“Let me tell you what I have
here, then,” said Ranjoor Singh, and he groped
in his inner pocket for a paper, that he brought out
very neatly folded, sheltering it from the rain under
his cape. “This,” said he, “is
signed by the Turkish captain and mate of that sunken
steamer. It is a receipt for all our money, to
be taken and divided equally between you mentioned
by name and them mentioned also
by name, on condition that the ship be sunk and we
be let go. If you will sign the paper here above
their signatures it will entitle you to
one-third of all that money. They would neither
of them dare to refuse to share with you!”
“What if I refuse to sign?”
asked Tugendheim, making a great savage wrench to
free his wrists, but failing.
“The suggestion is yours,”
said Ranjoor Singh. “You have only your
own judgment for a guide.”
“If I sign it, will you let me go?” he
asked.
“No,” said Ranjoor Singh,
“but we will not burn you alive if you sign.
Here is a fountain-pen. Your hands shall be loosed
when you are ready.”
Tugendheim nodded, so I went and cut
his hands loose; and when I had chafed his wrists
for a minute or two he was able to write on my shoulder,
I bending forward and Ranjoor Singh watching like a
hawk lest he tear the paper. But he made no effort
to play tricks.
When Ranjoor Singh had folded the
paper again he said: “Those two Turks quite
understood that you were to be asked to sign as well.
In fact, if there is any mishap they intend to lay
all the blame on you. But it is to their interest
as much as yours to keep us from being captured.”
“You mean I’m to help you escape?”
asked Tugendheim.
“Exactly!” said Ranjoor
Singh. “Now that you have signed that, I
am willing to bargain with you. We intend to
find Wassmuss.”
Tugendheim pricked up his ears and
began to look almost willing.
“We have heard of this Wassmuss,
and have taken quite a fancy to him. Your friends
proposed to send us to the trenches, but we have already
had too much of that work and we intend to find Wassmuss
and take part with him. Let your business be
to obey me implicitly and to help us reach Wassmuss,
and on the day we reach our goal you shall go free
with this paper given back to you. Disobey me,
and you shall sample unheard-of methods of repentance!
Do we understand each other?”
“I understand you!” said Tugendheim.
“I, too, wish to understand,” said Ranjoor
Singh.
“It is a bargain,” said
Tugendheim. But I noticed they did not shake
hands after European fashion, although I think Tugendheim
would have been willing. He was a hearty man
in his way, given to bullying, but also to quick forgetfulness;
and I will say this much for him, that although he
was ever on the lookout for some way of breaking his
agreement, he kept it loyally enough while a way was
lacking. I have met men I liked less.
It was growing by that time to be
very nearly dawn, and the weather did not improve.
The rain came down in squalls and sheets and the wind
screamed through, it, and we were famished as well
as wet to the skin all, that is to say,
except Tugendheim, who had enjoyed the shelter of
the hut. The teeth of many of the men were chattering.
Yet we stood about for an hour more, because it was
too dark and too dangerous to march over unknown ground.
I suspect Ranjoor Singh did not dare squander what
little spirit the men had left; if they had suspected
him of losing them in the dark they might have lost
heart altogether.
But at last there grew a little cold
color in the sky and the sea took on a shade of gray.
Then Ranjoor Singh told off the same four men who
had first arrested him to guard our prisoner by day
and night, taking turns to pretend to be his servant,
with orders to give instant alarm should his movements
seem suspicious. After that Tugendheim was searched,
but, nothing of interest being found on him, his money
and various little things were given back.
“Had he no pistol?” asked Ranjoor Singh.
“Yes,” said I, “but
I took it when we bound and gagged him on the steamer.”
And I drew it out and showed it, feeling proud, never
having had such a weapon for the law of
British India is strict.
“Why did you not tell me?”
he asked, and I was silent. “Give it here!”
said he, and I gave it up. He examined it, drew
out the cartridges, and passed it to Tugendheim, who
pocketed it with a laugh. It was three days before
he spoke to Tugendheim and caused him to give me the
pistol back. I think the men were impressed, and
I was glad of it, although at the time I felt ashamed.
Presently Ranjoor Singh himself chose
an advance guard of twenty men and put me in command
of it.
“March eastward,” he ordered
me. “According to my map, you should find
a road within a mile or two running about northeast
and southwest; turn to the left along it. Halt
if you see armed men, and send back word. Keep
a lookout for food, for the men are starving, but
loot nothing without my order! March!” said
he.
“May I ask a question, sahib,”
said I, still lingering.
“Ask,” said he.
“Would you truly have burned
the German alive?” said I, and he laughed.
“That would have been a big
fire,” said he. “Do you think none
would have come to investigate?”
“That is what I was thinking,” said I.
“Do such thoughts burn your
brain?” said he. “A threat to a bully to
a fool, folly to a drunkard, drink to
each, his own! Be going now!”
So I saluted him and led away, wondering
in my heart, the weather growing worse, if that were
possible, but my spirits rising. I knew now that
my back was toward Gallipoli, where the nearest British
were, yet my heart felt bold with love for Ranjoor
Singh and I did not doubt we would strike a good blow
yet for our friends, although I had no least idea
who Wassmuss was, nor whither we were marching.
If I had known eh, but listen, sahib this
is a tale of tales!