If a man stole my dinner, I might let him run; but if he stole my
horse, he and I and death would play hide-and-seek! RANJOOR SINGH
That dawn, sahib, instead of lessening,
the rainstorm grew into a deluge that saved us from
being seen. As I led my twenty men forward I
looked back a time or two, and once I could dimly see
steamers and some smaller boats tossing on the sea.
Then the fiercest gust of rain of all swept by like
a curtain, and it was as if Europe had been shut off
forever so that I recalled Gooja Singh’s
saying on the transport in the Red Sea, about a curtain
being drawn and our not returning that way. My
twenty men marched numbly, some seeming half-asleep.
By and by, with heels sucking in the
mud, we came to the road of which Ranjoor Singh had
spoken and I turned along it. It had been worn
into ruts and holes by heavy traffic and now the rain
made matters worse, so we made slow progress.
But before long I was able to make out dimly through
the storm what looked like a railway station.
There was a line of telegraph poles, and where it crossed
our road there were buildings enough to have contained
two regiments. I could see no sign of men, but
in that light, with rain swirling hither and thither,
it was difficult to judge. I halted, and sent
a man back to warn Ranjoor Singh.
We blew on our fingers and stamped
to keep life in ourselves, until at the end of ten
minutes he came striding out of the rain like a king
on his way to be crowned. My twenty were already
speechless with unhappiness and hunger, but he had
instilled some of his own spirit into the rest of
the regiment, for they marched with a swing in good
order. He had Tugendheim close beside him and
had inspired him, too. It may be the man was
grinning in hope of our capture within an hour, and
in that case he was doomed to disappointment.
He was destined also to see the day when he should
hope for our escape. But from subsequent acquaintance
with him I think he was appreciating the risk we ran
and Ranjoor Singh’s great daring. I say
this for Tugendheim, that he knew and respected resolution
when he saw it.
When I had pointed out what I could
see of the lay of the land, Ranjoor Singh left me
in charge and marched away with Tugendheim and Tugendheim’s
four guards. I looked about for shelter, but there
was none. We stood shivering, the rain making
pools at our feet that spread and became one.
So I made the men mark time and abused them roundly
for being slack about it, they grumbling greatly because
our prisoner was marched away to shelter, whereas
we must stand without. I bullied them as much
as I dared, and we stamped the road into a veritable
quagmire, as builders tread mud for making sun-dried
bricks, so that when three-quarters of an hour had
passed and a man came running back with a message
from Ranjoor Singh there was a little warmth in us.
I did not need to use force to get the column started.
“Come!” said the trooper.
“There is food, and shelter, and who knows what
else!”
So we went best foot first along the
road, feeling less than half as hungry and not weak
at all, now that we knew food was almost within reach.
Truly a man’s desires are the vainest part of
him. Less hungry we were at once, less weary,
and vastly less afraid; yet, too much in a hurry to
ask questions of the messenger!
Ranjoor Singh came out of a building
to meet us, holding up his hand, so I made the men
halt and began to look about. It was certainly
a railway station, with a long platform, and part of
the platform was covered by a roof. Parallel
to that was a great shed with closed sides, and through
its half-open door I could smell hay a
very good smell, sahib, warming to the heart.
To our right, across what might be called a yard thus were
many low sheds, and in one there were horses feeding;
in others I could see Turkish soldiers sprawling on
the straw, but they took no notice of us. Three
of the low sheds were empty, and Ranjoor Singh pointed
to them.
“Let all except twenty men,”
said he, “go and rest in those sheds. If
any one asks questions, say only ‘Allah!’
So they will think you are Muhammadans. If that
should not seem sufficient, say ‘Wassmuss!’
But unless questioned many times, say nothing!
As you value your lives, say nothing more than those
two words to any one at all! Rather be thought
fools than be hanged before breakfast!”
So all but twenty of the men went
and lay down on straw in the three empty sheds, and
I took the twenty and followed him into the great
shed with closed sides. Therein, besides many
other things, we beheld great baskets filled with
loaves of bread, not very good bread, nor
at all fresh, but staff of life itself to hungry men.
He bade the men count out four loaves for each and
every one of us, and then at last, he gave me a little
information.
“The Germans in Stamboul,”
he said, “talked too loud of this place in my
hearing.” I stood gnawing a loaf already,
and I urged him to take one, but he would eat nothing
until all the men should have been fed. “They
detrain Dervish troops at this point,” said he,
“and march them to the shore to be shipped to
Gallipoli, because they riot and make trouble if kept
in barracks in Skutari or Stamboul. This bread
was intended for two train-loads of them.”
“Then the Dervishes will riot
after all!” said I, and he laughed a
thing he does seldom.
“The sooner the better!”
said he. “A riot might cover up our tracks
even better than this rain.”
“Is there no officer in charge here?”
I asked him,
“Aye, a Turkish officer,”
said he. “I heard the Germans complain
about his inefficiency. A day or two later and
we might have found a German in his place. He
mistakes us for friends. What else could we be?”
And he laughed again.
“But the telegraph wire?” said I.
“Is down,” he said, “both
between here and Skutari, and between here and Inismid.
God sent this storm to favor us, and we will praise
God by making use of it.”
“Where is Tugendheim?”
said I, but it was some minutes before he answered
me, for, since the loaves were counted he went to see
them distributed, and I followed him.
“Tugendheim,” he said
at last, “has driven the Turkish officer to
seek refuge in seclusion! I used the word ‘Wassmuss,’
and that had effect; but Tugendheim’s insolence
was our real passport. Nobody here doubts that
we are in full favor at Stamboul. Wassmuss can
keep for later on.”
“Sahib,” said I, seeing
he was in good humor now, “tell me of this Wassmuss.”
“All in good time!” he
answered. And when he has decided it is not yet
time to answer, it is wisest to be still. After
fifteen or twenty minutes with the men, I followed
him across the yard and entered the station waiting-room a
pretentious place, with fancy bronze handles on the
doors and windows.
Lo, there sat Tugendheim, with his
hands deep in his pockets and a great cigar between
his teeth. His four guards stood with bayonets
fixed, making believe to wait on him, but in truth
watching him as caged wolves eye their dinner.
Ranjoor Singh was behaving almost respectfully toward
him, which filled me with disgust; but presently I
saw and understood. There was a little window
through which to sell tickets, and down in one corner
of it the frosting had been rubbed from off the glass.
“There is an eye,” said
I in an undertone, “that I could send a bullet
through without difficulty!” But Ranjoor Singh
called me a person without judgment and turned his
back.
“When do we start?” asked Tugendheim.
“When the men have finished
eating,” he answered, and at that I stared again,
for I knew the men’s mood and did not believe
it possible to get them away without a long rest,
nor even in that case without argument.
“What if they refuse?”
said I, and Ranjoor Singh faced about to look at me.
“Do you refuse?” he asked.
“Go and warn them to finish eating and be ready
to march in twenty minutes!”
So I went, and delivered the message,
and it was as I had expected, only worse.
“So those are his words?
What are words!” said they. “Ask him
whither he would lead us!” shouted Gooja Singh.
He had been talking in whispers with a dozen men at
the rear of the middle hut.
“If I take him such dogs’
answers,” said I, “he will dismiss me and
there will be no more a go-between.”
“Go, take him this message,”
shouted Gooja Singh. “But for his sinking
of our ship we should now be among friends in Gallipoli!
Could we not have seized another ship and plundered
coal? Tell him, therefore, if he wishes to lead
us he must use good judgment. Are we leaves blown
hither and thither for his amusement? Nay!
We belong to the British Army! Tell him we will
march toward Gallipoli or nowhither! We will
march until opposite Gallipoli, and search for some
means of crossing.”
“I will take that as Gooja Singh’s
message, then,” said I.
“Nay, nay!” said he.
“That is the regiment’s message!”
And the dozen men with whom he had been whispering
nodded acquiescence. “Is Gooja Singh the
regiment?” I asked.
“No,” said he, “but
I am of the regiment. I am not a man running
back and forth, false to both sides!”
I was not taken by surprise.
Something of that sort sooner or later I knew must
come, but I would have preferred another time and place.
“Be thou go-between then, Gooja
Singh!” said I. “I accepted only
under strong persuasion. Gladly I relinquish!
Go thou, and carry thy message to Ranjoor Singh!”
And I sat down in the entrance of the middle hut,
as if greatly relieved of heavy burdens. “I
have finished!” I said. “I am not
even havildar! I will request reduction to the
ranks!”
For about a minute I sat while the
men stared in astonishment. Then they began to
rail at me, but I shook my head. They coaxed me,
but I refused. Presently they begged me, but
I took no notice.
“Let Gooja Singh be your messenger!”
said I. And at that they turned on Gooja Singh, and
some of them went and dragged him forward, he resisting
with arms and feet. They set him down before me.
“Say the word,” said they, “and
he shall be beaten!”
So I got on my feet again and asked
whether they were soldiers or monkey-folk, to fall
thus suddenly on one of their number, and he a superior.
I bade them loose Gooja Singh, and I laid my hand on
his shoulder, helping him to his feet.
“Are we many men with many troubles,
or one regiment?” said I.
At that most of them grew ashamed,
and those who had assaulted Gooja Singh began to make
excuses, but he went back to the rear to the men who
had whispered with him. They drew away, and he
sat in silence apart, I rejoicing secretly at his
discomfiture but fearful nevertheless.
“Now!” said I. “Appoint
another man to wait on Ranjoor Singh!”
But they cried out, “Nay!
We will have none but you. You have done well we
trust you we are content!”
I made much play of unwillingness,
but allowed them to persuade me in the end, yielding
a little at a time and gaining from them ever new
protestations of their loyalty until at last I let
them think they had convinced me.
“Nevertheless,” said they,
“tell Ranjoor Singh he must lead us toward Gallipoli!”
They were firm on that point.
So I went back to the waiting-room
and told Ranjoor Singh all that had happened, omitting
nothing, and he stood breaking pieces from a loaf
of bread, with his fingers, not burying his teeth into
the loaf as most of us had done. He asked me
the names of the men who had so spoken and I told
him, he repeating them and considering each name for
a moment or two.
“Have they finished eating?”
he asked at last, and I told him they had as good
as finished. So he ate his own bread faster.
“Come,” he ordered presently,
beckoning to Tugendheim and the four guards to follow.
It was raining as hard as ever as
we crossed the station yard, and the men had excuse
enough for disliking to turn out. Yet they scented
development, I think, and none refused, although they
fell in just not sullenly enough to call for reprimand.
Ranjoor Singh drew the roll from his inner pocket
and they all answered to their names. Then, without
referring to the list again, he named those who I
had told him used high words to me, beginning at Gooja
Singh and omitting none.
“Fall out!” he ordered.
And when they had obeyed, “Fall in again over
there on the left!”
There were three-and-twenty of them,
Gooja Singh included, and they glared at me.
So did others, and I wondered grimly how many enemies
I had made. But then Ranjoor Singh cleared his
throat and we recognized again the old manner that
had made a squadron love him to the death at home
in India the manner of a man with good legs
under him and no fear in his heart. All but the
three-and-twenty forgot forthwith my part in the matter.
“Am I to be herdsman, then?”
said he, pitching his voice against wind and rain.
“Are ye men or animals? Hunted
animals would have known enough to eat and hurry on.
Hunted animals would be wise enough to run in the
direction least expected. Hunted animals would
take advantage of ill weather to put distance between
them and their foe. Some of you, then, must be
less than animals! Men I can lead. Animals
I can drive. But what shall be done with such
less-than-animals as can neither be led nor driven?”
Then he turned about half-left to
face the three-and-twenty, and stood as it were waiting
for their answer, with one hand holding the other
wrist behind his back. And they stood shifting
feet and looking back at him, extremely ill-at-ease.
“What is the specific charge
against us?” asked Gooja Singh, for the men
began to thrust him forward. But Ranjoor Singh
let no man draw him from the main point to a lesser
one.
“You have leave,” said
he, “to take one box of cartridges and go!
Gallipoli lies that way!” And he pointed through
the rain.
Then the two-and-twenty forgot me
and began at once abusing Gooja Singh, he trying to
refute them, and Ranjoor Singh watching them all with
a feeling, I thought, of pity. Tugendheim, trying
to make the ends of his mustaches stand upright in
the rain, laughed as if he thought it a very great
joke; but the rest of the men looked doubtful.
I knew they were unwilling to turn their backs on any
of our number, yet afraid to force an issue, for Ranjoor
Singh had them in a quandary. I thought perhaps
I might mediate.
“Sahib,” said I.
“Silence!” he ordered.
So I stepped back to my place, and a dozen men laughed
at me, for which I vowed vengeance. Later when
my wrath had cooled I knew the reprimand and laughter
wiped out suspicion of me, and when my chance came
to take vengeance on them I refrained, although careful
to reassert my dignity.
After much argument, Gooja Singh turned
his back at last on the two-and-twenty and saluted
Ranjoor Singh with great abasement.
“Sahib,” said he, “we
have no wish to go one way and you another. We
be of the regiment.”
“Ye have set yourselves up to
be dictators. Ye have used wild words. Ye
have tried to seduce the rest. Ye have my leave
to go!” said Ranjoor Singh.
“Nay!” said Gooja Singh.
“We will not go! We follow the regiment!”
“Will ye follow like dogs that
pick up offal, then?” he asked, and Gooja Singh
said, “Nay! We be no dogs, but true men!
We be faithful to the salt, sahib,” said he.
“We be sorry we offended. We be true men true
to the salt.”
Now, that was the truth. Their
fault had lain in not believing their officer at least
as faithful as they and ten times wiser. Every
man in the regiment knew it was truth, and for all
that the rain poured down in torrents, obscuring vision,
I could see that the general feeling was swinging
all one way. If I had dared, I would have touched
Ranjoor Singh’s elbow, and have whispered to
him. But I did not dare. Nor was there need.
The instant he spoke again I knew he saw clearer than
I.
“Ye speak of the salt,” said he.
“Aye!” said Gooja Singh.
“Aye, sahib! In the name of God be good
to us! Whom else shall we follow?”
“Aye, sahib!” said the others. “Put
us to the test!”
The lined-up regiment, that had been
standing rigid, not at attention, but with muscles
tense, now stood easier, and it might have been a
sigh that passed among them.
“Then, until I release you for
good behavior, you three-and-twenty shall be ammunition
bearers,” said Ranjoor Singh. “Give
over your rifles for other men to carry. Each
two men take a box of cartridges. Swiftly now!”
said he.
So they gave up their rifles, which
in itself was proof enough that they never intended
harm, but were only misled by Gooja Singh and the
foolishness of their own words. And they picked
up the cartridge boxes, leaving Gooja Singh standing
alone by the last one. He made a wry face.
“Who shall carry this?” said he, and Ranjoor
Singh laughed.
“My rank is havildar!” said Gooja Singh.
Ranjoor Singh laughed again.
“I will hold court-martial and reduce you to
the ranks whenever I see the need!” said he.
“For the present, you shall teach a new kind
of lesson to the men you have misled. They toil
with ammunition boxes. You shall stride free!”
Gooja Singh had handed his rifle to
me, and I passed it to a trooper. He stepped
forward now to regain it with something of a smirk
on his fat lips.
“Nay, nay!” said Ranjoor
Singh, with another laugh. “No rifle, Gooja
Singh! Be herdsman without honor! If one
man is lost on the road you shall be sent back alone
to look for him! Herd them, then; drive them,
as you value peace!”
There being then one box to be provided
for, he chose eight strong men to take turns with
it, each two to carry for half an hour; and that these
might know there was no disgrace attached to their
task, they were placed in front, to march as if they
were the band. Nor was Gooja Singh allowed to
march last, as I expect he had hoped; he and his twenty-two
were set in the midst, where they could eat shame,
always under the eyes of half of us. Then Ranjoor
Singh raised his voice again.
“To try to reach Gallipoli,”
he said, “would be as wise as to try to reach
Berlin! Both shores are held by Turkish troops
under German officers. We found the one spot
where it was possible to slip through undetected.
We must make the most of that. Moreover, if they
refuse to believe we were drownd last night, they will
look for us in the direction of Gallipoli, for all
the German officers in Stamboul knew how your hearts
burned to go thither. It was a joke among them!
Let it be our business to turn the joke on them!
There will be forced marches now long hungry
ones Form fours!” he ordered.
“By the right Quick march!”
And we wheeled away into the rain, he marching on
the flank. I ran and overtook him.
“Take a horse, sahib!”
I urged. “See them in that shed! Take
one and ride, for it is more fitting!”
“Better plunder and burn!”
said he. “If a man stole my dinner I might
let him run; but if he stole my horse, he and I and
death would play hide-and-seek! We need forgetfulness,
not angry memories, behind us! Keep thou a good
eye on Tugendheim!”
So I fell to the rear, where I could
see all the men, Tugendheim included! In a very
few minutes we had lost the station buildings in the
rain behind us and then Ranjoor Singh began to lead
in a wide semicircle, so that before long I judged
we were marching about southeastward. At the
end of an hour or so he changed direction to due east,
and presently we saw another telegraph line. I
overtook him again and suggested that we cut it.
“Nay!” said he. “If
that line works and we are not believed drowned, too
many telegrams will have been sent already! To
cut it would give them our exact position! Otherwise why
make trouble and perhaps cause pursuit?”
So we marched under the telegraph
wire and took a course about parallel to it.
At noon it ceased raining and we rested, eating the
bread, of which every man had brought away three loaves.
After that, what with marching and the wind and sun
our clothes began to dry and we became more cheerful all,
that is to say, except the ammunition bearers, who
abused Gooja Singh with growing fervency. Yet
he was compelled to drive them lest he himself be
court martialed and reduced to the ranks.
Cheerfulness and selfishness are often
one, sahib, for it was not what we could see that
raised our spirits. We marched by village after
village that had been combed by the foragers for Turkish
armies, and saw only destitution to right
and left, behind and before. The only animals
we saw were dead ones except the dogs hunting for
bones that might have marrow in them still.
We saw no men of military age.
Only very old men were left, and but few of those;
they and the women and children ran away at sight of
us, except a very few who seemed careless from too
much misery. One such man had a horse, covered
from head to foot with sores, that he offered to sell
to Ranjoor Singh. I did not overhear what price
he asked, but I heard the men scoffing at such avarice
as would rob the vultures. He went away saying
nothing, like a man in stupor, leaving the horse to
die. Nay, sahib, he had not understood the words.
We slept that first night in a village
whose one street was a quagmire and a cesspool.
There was no difficulty in finding shelter because
so many of the houses were deserted; but the few inhabitants
of the other houses could not be persuaded to produce
food. Ranjoor Singh took their money away from,
the four men whom I had overlooked when we all gave
up our money on the steamer, and with that, and Tugendheim
for extra argument, he went from house to house.
Tugendheim used no tenderness, such being not his manner
of approach, but nothing came of it. They may
have had food hidden, but we ate stale bread and gave
them some of it, although Ranjoor Singh forbade us
when he saw what we were doing. He thought I had
not been looking when he gave some of his own to a
little one.
We were up and away at dawn, with
all the dogs in Asia at our heels. They smelled
our stale bread and yearned for it. It was more
than an hour before the last one gave up hope and
fell behind. They are hard times, sahib, when
the street dogs are as hungry as those were.
Hunger! We met hunger day after
day for eight days hunger and nothing else,
although it was good enough land better
than any I have seen in the Punjab. There was
water everywhere. The air, too, was good to breathe,
tempting us to fill our lungs and march like new men,
yet causing appetite we could not assuage. We
avoided towns, and all large villages, Ranjoor Singh
consulting his map whenever we halted and marching
by the little compass the Germans had given him.
We should have seen sheep or goats or cattle had there
been any; but there was none. Utterly not one!
And we Sikhs are farmers, not easily deceived on such
matters; we knew that to be grazing land we crossed.
It was a land of fruit, too, in the proper season.
There had been cattle by the thousand, but they were
all gone plundered by the Turks to feed
their armies.
Ranjoor Singh did his best to make
us husband our stale loaves, but we ate the last of
them and became like famished wolves. Some of
us grew footsore, for we had German boots, to which
our feet were not yet thoroughly accustomed, but he
gave us no more rest than he needed for his own refreshment and
that was wonderfully little. We had to nurse
and bandage our feet as best we could, and march march march!
He had a definite plan, for he led unhesitatingly,
but he would not tell us the plan. He was stern
when we begged for longer rests, merciless toward
the ammunition bearers, silent at all times unless
compelled to give orders or correct us. Most of
the time he kept Tugendheim marching beside him, and
Tugendheim, I think, began to regard him with quite
peculiar respect; for he admired resolution.
Most of us felt that our last day
of marching was upon us, for we were ready to drop
when we skirted a village at about noon on the eighth
day and saw in the distance a citadel perched on a
rocky hill above the sky-line. We were on flat
land, but there was a knoll near, and to that Ranjoor
Singh led us, and there he let us lie. He, weary
as we but better able to overcome, drew out his map
and spread it, weighting the four corners with stones;
and he studied it chin on hand for about five minutes,
we watching him in silence.
“That,” said he, standing
at last and pointing toward the distant citadel, “is
Angora. Yonder” (he made a sweeping motion)
“runs the railway whose terminus is at Angora.
There are many long roads hereabouts, so that the
place has become a depot for food and stores that
the Turks plunder and the Germans despatch over the
railway to the coast. The railway has been taken
over by the Germans.”
“Are we to storm the town?”
asked a trooper, and fifty men mocked him. But
Ranjoor Singh looked down kindly at him and gave him
a word of praise.
“No, my son,” he said.
“Yet if all had been stout enough to ask that,
I would have dared attempt it. No, we are perhaps
a little desperate, but not yet so desperate as that.”
He began sweeping the horizon with
his eyes, quartering the countryside mile by mile,
overlooking nothing. I saw him watch the wheeling
kites and look below them, and twice I saw him fix
his gaze for minutes at a time on one place.
“We will eat to-night!”
he said at last. “Sleep,” he ordered.
“Lie down and sleep until I summon you!”
But he called me to his side and kept me wakeful for
a while yet.
“Look yonder,” said he,
and when I had gazed for about two minutes I was aware
of a column of men and animals moving toward the city.
A little enough column.
“How fast are they moving?”
he asked me, and I gazed for several minutes, reaching
no decision. I said they were too far away, and
coming too much toward us for their speed to be accurately
judged. Yet I thought they moved slowly.
Said he, “Do you see that hollow one,
two, three miles this side of them?” And I answered
yes. “That is a bend of the river that flows
by the city,” said he. “There is water
there, and fire-wood. They have come far and
are heading toward it. They are too far spent
to reach Angora before night. They will not try.
That is where they will camp.”
“Sahib,” I said, considering
his words as a cook tastes curry, “our men be
overweary to have fight in them.”
“Who spoke of fighting?”
said he. So I went and lay down, and fell asleep
wondering. When he came and roused me it was already
growing late. By the time I had roused the men
and they were all lined up we could no longer see
Angora for the darkness; which worked both ways those
in Angora could not see us.
“If any catch sight of us,”
said Ranjoor Singh, speaking in a loud voice to us
all, “let us hope they mistake us for friends.
What Turk or German looks for an enemy hereabouts?
The chances are all ours, but beware! Be silent
as ye know how! Forward!”
It was a pitiable effort, for our
bellies yearned and our feet were sore and stiff.
We stumbled from weariness, and men fell and were
helped up again. Gooja Singh and his ammunition
bearers made more noise than a squadron of mounted
cavalry, and the way proved twice as long as the most
hopeless had expected. Yet we made the circuit
unseen and, as far as we knew, unheard certainly
unchallenged. Doubtless, as Ranjoor Singh said
afterward, the Turks were too overriden by Germans
and the Germans too overconfident to suspect the presence
of an enemy.
At any rate, although we made more
noise than was expedient, we halted at last among
low bushes and beheld nine or ten Turkish sentries
posted along the rim of a rise, all unaware of us.
Two were fast asleep. Some sat. The others
drowsed, leaning on their rifles. Ranjoor Singh
gave us whispered orders and we rushed them, only one
catching sight of us in time to raise an alarm.
He fired his rifle, but hit nobody, and in another
second they were all surrounded and disarmed.
Then, down in the hollow we saw many
little campfires, each one reflected in the water.
Some Turks and about fifty men of another nation sat
up and rubbed their eyes, and a Turkish captain an
upstanding flabby man, came out from the only tent
to learn what the trouble might be. Ranjoor Singh
strode down into the hollow and enlightened him, we
standing around the rim of the rise with our bayonets
fixed and rifles at the “ready.” I
did not hear what Ranjoor Singh said to the Turkish
captain because he left me to prevent the men from
stampeding toward the smell of food no easy
task.
After five minutes he shouted for
Tugendheim, and the German went down the slope visibly
annoyed by the four guards who kept their bayonets
within a yard of his back. It was a fortunate
circumstance for us, not only then but very many times,
that Tugendheim would have thought himself disgraced
by appealing to a Turk. Seeing there was no German
officer in the hollow, he adopted his arrogant manner,
and the Turkish officer drew back from him like a man
stung. After that the Turkish captain appeared
to resign himself to impotence, for he ordered his
men to pile arms and retired into his tent.
Then Ranjoor Singh came up the slope
and picked the twenty men who seemed least ready to
drop with weariness, of whom I regretted to be one.
He set us on guard where the Turkish sentries had been,
and the Turks were sent below, where presently they
fell asleep among their brethren, as weary, no doubt,
from plundering as we were from marching on empty
bellies. None of them seemed annoyed to be disarmed.
Strange people! Fierce, yet strangely tolerant!
Then all the rest of the men, havildars
no whit behind the rest, swooped down on the camp-fires,
and presently the smell of toasting corn began to
rise, until my mouth watered and my belly yearned.
Fifteen or twenty minutes later (it seemed like twenty
hours, sahib!) hot corn was brought to us and we on
guard began to be new men. Nevertheless, food
made the guard more sleepy, and I was hard put to
it walking from one to another keeping them awake.
All that night I knew nothing of what
passed in the camp below, but I learned later on that
Ranjoor Singh found among the Syrians whose business
was to load and drive carts a man named Abraham.
All in the camp who were not Turks were Syrians, and
these Syrians had been dragged away from their homes
scores of leagues away and made to labor without remuneration.
This Abraham was a gifted man, who had been in America,
and knew English, as well as several dialects of Kurdish,
and Turkish and Arabic and German. He knew better
German than English, and had frequently been made
to act interpreter. Later, when we marched together,
he and I became good friends, and he told me many
things.
Well, sahib, after he had eaten a
little corn, Ranjoor Singh questioned this man Abraham,
and then went with him through the camp, examining
the plunder the Turks had seen fit to requisition.
It was plain that this particular Turkish officer was
no paragon of all the virtues, and Ranjoor Singh finally
entered his tent unannounced, taking Abraham with
him. So it was that I learned the details later,
for Abraham told me all I asked.
On a box beside the bed Ranjoor Singh
found writing-paper, envelopes, and requisition forms
not yet filled out, but already signed with a seal
and a Turkish signature. There was a map, and
a list of routes and villages. But best of all
was a letter of instructions signed by a German officer.
There were also other priceless things, of some of
which I may chance to speak later.
I was told by Abraham that during
the conversation following Ranjoor Singh’s seizure
of the papers the word Wassmuss was bandied back and
forth a thousand times, the Turk growing rather more
amenable each time the word was used. Finally
the Turk resigned himself with a shrug of the shoulders,
and was left in his tent with a guard of our men at
each corner.
Then, for all that the night was black
dark and there were very few lanterns, the camp began
to be turned upside down, Ranjoor Singh ordering everything
thrown aside that could not be immediately useful
to us. There were forty carts, burdened to the
breaking point, and twenty of them Ranjoor Singh abandoned
as too heavy for our purpose. Most of the carts
had been drawn by teams of six mules each, but ten
of them had been drawn by horses, and besides the
Turkish captain’s horse there were four other
spare ones. There were also about a hundred sheep
and some goats.
Ranjoor Singh ordered all the corn
repacked into fourteen of the carts, sheep and goats
into four carts, and ammunition into the remaining
two, leaving room in each cart for two men so that
the guard who had stood awake all night might ride
and sleep. That left him with sixty-four spare
horses. Leaving the Turkish officer his own horse,
but taking the saddle for himself, he gave Tugendheim
one, me another, the third to Gooja Singh he
being next non-commissioned officer to me in order
of seniority, and having had punishment enough and
the fourth horse, that was much the best one, he himself
took. Then he chose sixty men to cease from being
infantry and become a sort of cavalry again cavalry
without saddles as yet, or stirrups cavalry
with rifles cavalry with aching feet but
cavalry none the less. He picked the sixty with
great wisdom, choosing for the most part men who had
given no trouble, but he included ten or twelve grumblers,
although for a day or two I did not understand why.
There was forethought in everything he did.
The sheep that could not be crowded
into the carts he ordered butchered there and then,
and the meat distributed among the men; and all the
plunder that he decided not to take he ordered heaped
in one place where it would not be visible unless
deliberately looked for. The plundered money
that he found in the Turk’s tent he hid under
the corn in the foremost cart, and we found it very
useful later on. The few of our men who had not
fallen asleep were for burning the piled-up plunder,
but he threatened to shoot whoever dared set match
to it.
“Shall we light a beacon to
warn the countryside?” said he.
A little after midnight there began
to be attempts by Turkish soldiers to break through
and run for Angora. But I had kept my twenty
guards awake with threats of being made to carry ammunition even
letting the butt of my rifle do work not set down in
the regulations. So it came about that we captured
every single fugitive. They were five all told,
and I sent them, tied together, down to Ranjoor Singh.
Thereupon he went to the Turk, and promised him personal
violence if another of his men should attempt to break
away. So the Turk gave orders that were obeyed.
Then, when all the plunder in the
camp had been rearranged, and the mules and horses
reapportioned, four hours yet before dawn, Ranjoor
Singh took out his fountain-pen and executed the stroke
of genius that made what followed possible. Without
Abraham I do not know what he would have done.
I can not imagine. Yet I feel sure he would have
contrived something. He made use of Abraham as
the best tool available, and that is no proof he could
not have done as well by other means. I have
learned this: that Ranjoor Singh, with that faith
of his in God, can do anything. Anything.
He is a true man, and God puts thoughts into his heart.
Among the Turk’s documents were
big sheets of paper for official correspondence, similar
to that on which his orders were written. Ranjoor
Singh ascertained from Abraham that he who had signed
those orders was the German officer highest in command
in all that region, who had left Angora a month previously
to superintend the requisitioning.
So Ranjoor Singh sent for Tugendheim,
whose writing would have the proper clerical appearance,
and by a lantern in the tent dictated to him a letter
in German to the effect that this Turkish officer,
by name Nazim, with all his men and carts and animals,
had been diverted to the aid of Wassmuss. The
letter went on to say that on his way back to Angora
this same high German officer would himself cover
the territory thus left uncared for, so that nothing
need be done about it in the meanwhile. (He wrote
that to prevent investigation and perhaps pursuit
by the men in Angora who waited Nazim and his plunder.)
At the foot of the letter Abraham
cleverly copied the signature of the very high German
officer, after making many experiments first on another
sheet of paper.
Tugendheim of course protested vehemently
that he would do no such thing, when ordered to write.
But Ranjoor Singh ordered the barrel of a Turkish
soldier’s rifle thrust in the fire, and the German
did not protest to the point of permitting his feet
to be singed. He wrote a very careful letter,
even suggesting better phraseology his
reason for that being that, since he was thus far committed,
our total escape would be the best thing possible
for him. The Germans, who are so fond of terrifying
others, are merciless to their own who happen to be
guilty of weak conduct, and to have said he was compelled
to write that letter would have been no excuse if we
were caught. Henceforward it was strictly to
his interest to help us.
Finally, when the letter had been
sealed in its envelope, there came the problem of
addressing it, and the Turk seemed ignorant on that
point, or else stupid. Perhaps he was wilfully
ignorant, hoping that the peculiar form of the address
might cause suspicion and investigation. But
what with Tugendheim’s familiarity with German
military custom, and Ranjoor Singh’s swift thought,
an address was devised that served the purpose, judging
by results.
Then came the problem of delivering
the letter. To have sent one of the Turkish soldiers
with it would have been the same thing as marching
to Angora and surrendering; for of course the Turk
would have told of what happened in the night, and
where it happened, and all about it. To have
sent one of the half-starved Syrians would probably
have amounted to the same thing; for the sake of a
bellyful, or from fear of ill-treatment the wretched
man would very likely tell too much. But Abraham
was different. Abraham was an educated man, who
well understood the value to us of silence, and who
seemed to hate both Turks and Germans equally.
So Ranjoor Singh took Abraham aside
and talked with him five minutes. And the end
of that was that a Turkish soldier was compelled to
strip himself and change clothes with Abraham, the
Turk taking no pleasure at all in the exchange.
Then Abraham was given a horse, and on the outside
of the envelope in one corner was written in German,
“Bearer should be supplied with saddle for his
horse and sent back at once with acknowledgment of
receipt of this.”
There and then Ranjoor Singh gave
Abraham the letter, shook hands with him, helped him
on the horse, and sent him on his way three
hours before dawn. Then promptly he gave orders
to all the other Syrians to strike camp and resume
their regular occupation of driving mules.
The Turkish officer, although not
deprived of his horse, was not permitted to ride until
after daybreak, because of the difficulty otherwise
of guarding him in the dark. The same with Tugendheim;
although there was little reason for suspecting him
of wanting to escape, with that letter fresh in his
memory, he was nevertheless compelled to walk until
daylight should make escape impossible.
The Turkish officer was made to march
in front with his four-and-forty soldiers, who were
given back their rifles but no bayonets or ammunition.
Gooja Singh, whose two-and-twenty were ready by that
time to pull his beard out hair by hair, was given
fifty men who hated him less fiercely and set to march
next behind the Turks. Then came the carts in
single column, and after them Tugendheim and the remainder
of our infantry. Behind the infantry rode the
cavalry, and very last of all rode Ranjoor Singh,
since that was for the present the post of chiefest
danger.
As for me, I tumbled into a cart and
fell asleep at once, scarcely hearing the order shouted
to the Turk to go forward. The men who had been
on guard with me all did the same, falling asleep like
I almost before their bodies touched the corn.
When I awoke it was already midday.
We had halted near some trees and food was being served
out. I got under the cart to keep the sun off
me, and lay there musing until a trooper had brought
my meal. The meal was good, and my thoughts were
good excellent! For had we not been
a little troop of lean ghosts, looking for graves to
lie in? The talk along the way had been of who
should bury us, or who should bury the last man, supposing
we all died one by one! Had we not been famished
until the very wind was a wall too heavy to prevail
against? And were we not now what the drill-book
calls a composite force, with full bellies, carts,
horses and equipment? Who thought about graves
any longer? I lay and laughed, sahib, until a
trooper brought me dinner laughed for contempt
of the Germans we had left behind, and for the Turks
whose plunder we had stolen, laughed like
a fool, like a man without brain or experience or judgment.
Not until I had eaten my fill did
I bethink me of Ranjoor Singh. Then I rose lazily,
and was astonished at the stiffness in my ankles.
Nevertheless I contrived to stride with military manner,
in order that any Turk or Syrian beholding me might
know me for a man to be reckoned with, the added pain
and effort being well worth while.
Nor did I have far to look for Ranjoor
Singh. The instant I raised my eyes I saw him
sitting on a great rock beneath the shadow of a tree,
with his horse tied below him eating corn from a cloth
spread on the ground. In order to reach him with
least inconvenience, I made a circuit and approached
from the rear, because in that direction the rock
sloped away gradually and I was in no mood to climb,
nor in condition to climb with dignity.
So it happened that I came on him
unaware. Nevertheless, I was surprised that his
ears should not detect my footfall. The horse,
six feet below us, was aware of me first and snorted,
yet Ranjoor Singh did not turn his head.
“Sahib!” said I; but he did not move.
“Sahib!” I said, going
a step nearer and speaking louder. But he neither
moved nor answered. Now I knew there was no laughing
matter, and my hand trembled as I held it out to touch
his shoulder. His arms were folded above his
knees and his chin rested on them. I shook him
slightly, and his chin fell down between his knees;
but he did not answer. Now I knew beyond doubt
he was not asleep, for however weary he would ever
awake at a touch or the lightest whisper. I began
to fear he was dead, and a feeling of sickness swept
over me as that grim fear took hold.
“Sahib!” I said again,
taking his shoulders with both hands. And he
toppled over toward me, thus, like a dead man.
Yet he breathed. I made certain he was breathing.
I shook him twice or thrice, with
no result. Then I took him in my arms, thus,
one arm under the knees and one under his armpits,
and lifted him. He is a heavy man, all bone and
sinew, and my stiff ankles caused me agony; but I
contrived to lay him gently full length in the shadow
of the tree-trunk, and then I covered him with his
overcoat, to keep away flies. I had scarcely finished
that when Gooja Singh came, and I cursed under my
breath; but openly I appeared pleased to see him.
“It is well you came!”
said I. “Thus I am saved the necessity of
sending one to bring you. Our sahib is asleep,”
I said, “and has made over the command to me
until he shall awake again.”
“He sleeps very suddenly!”
said Gooja Singh, and he stood eying me with suspicion.
“Well he may!” said I,
thinking furiously as a man in a burning
house yet outwardly all calm. “He
has done all our thinking for us all these days; he
has borne alone the burden of responsibility.
He has enforced the discipline,” said I with
a deliberate stare that made Gooja Singh look sullen,
“and God knows how necessary that has been!
He has let no littlest detail of the march escape him.
He has eaten no more than we; he has marched as far
and as fast as we; he has slept less than any of us.
And now,” said I, “he is weary. He
kept awake until I came, and fell asleep in my arms
when he had given me his orders.”
Gooja Singh looked as if he did not
believe me. But my words had been but a mask
behind which I was thinking. As I spoke I stepped
sidewise, as if to prevent our voices from disturbing
the sleeper, for it seemed wise to draw Gooja Singh
to safer distance. Now I sat down at last on
the summit of the rock exactly where Ranjoor Singh
was sitting when I spied him first, hoping that perhaps
in his place his thoughts would come to me. And
whether the place had anything to do with it or not
I do not know, but certainly wise thoughts did come.
I reached a decision in that instant that was the saving
of us, and for which Ranjoor Singh greatly commended
me later on. Because of it, in the days to come,
he placed greater confidence in my ability and faithfulness
and judgment.
“What were his orders?”
asked Gooja Singh. “Or were they secret
orders known only to him and thee?”
“If you had not come,”
said I, “I would have sent for you to hear the
orders. When he wakes,” I added, “I
shall tell him who obeyed the swiftest.”
I was thinking still. Thinking
furiously. I knew nothing at all yet about Abraham,
and that was good, for otherwise I might have decided
to wait there for him to overtake us.
“Have the men finished eating?”
I asked, and he answered he was come because they
had finished eating.
“Then the order is to proceed
at once!” said I. “Send a cart here
under the rock and eight good men, that we may lower
our sahib into it. With the exception of that
one cart let the column proceed in the same order
as before, the Turk and his men leading.”
“Leading whither?” asked Gooja Singh.
“Let us hope,” said I,
“to a place where orders are obeyed in military
manner without question! Have you heard the order?”
I asked, and I made as if to go and wake our officer.
Without another word Gooja Singh climbed
down from the rock and went about shouting his commands
as if he himself were their originator. Meanwhile
I thought busily, with an eye for the wide horizon,
wondering whether we were being pursued, or whether
telegrams had not perhaps been sent to places far
ahead, ordering Turkish regiments to form a cordon
and cut us off. I wondered more than ever who
Wassmuss might be, and whether Ranjoor Singh had had
at any time the least idea of our eventual destination.
I had no idea which direction to take. There
was no track I could see, except that made by our
own cart-wheels. On what did I base my decision,
then? I will tell you, sahib.
I saw that not only Ranjoor Singh’s
horse, but all the cattle had been given liberal amounts
of corn. It seemed to me that unless he intended
to continue by forced marches Ranjoor Singh would have
begun by economizing food. Moreover, I judged
that if he had intended resting many hours in that
spot he would have had me summoned and have gone to
sleep himself. The very fact that he had let
me sleep on seemed to me proof that he intended going
forward. Doubtless, he would depend on me to
stand guard during the night. So I reasoned it.
And I also thought it probable he had told the Turk
in which direction to lead, seeing that the Turk doubtless
knew more of that countryside than any. Ahead
of us was all Asia and behind us was the sea.
Who was I that I should know the way? But by telling
the Turk to lead on, I could impose on him responsibility
for possible error, and myself gain more time to think.
And for that decision, too, Ranjoor Singh saw fit
to praise me later.
They brought the cart, and with the
help of eight men, I laid Ranjoor Singh very comfortably
on the corn, and covered him. Then I bade those
eight be bodyguard, letting none approach too close
on pain of violence, saying that Ranjoor Singh needed
a long deep sleep to restore his energy. Also,
I bade them keep that cart at the rear of the column,
and I myself chose the rear place of all so as to
keep control, prevent straggling, and watch against
pursuit.
Pursued? Nay, sahib. Not
at that time. Nevertheless, that thought of mine,
to choose the last place, was the very gift of God.
We had been traveling about three parts of an hour
when I perceived a very long way off the head of a
camel caravan advancing at swift pace toward us or
almost toward us. It seemed to me to be coming
from Angora. And it so happened that at the moment
when I saw it first the front half of our column had
already dipped beyond a rise and was descending a
rather gentle slope.
I hurried the tail of the column over
the rise by twisting it, as a man twists bullocks’
tails. And then I bade the whole line halt and
lie down, except those in charge of horses; them I
ordered into the shelter of some trees, and the carts
I hurried behind a low ridge all except
Ranjoor Singh’s cart; that I ordered backed into
a hollow near me. So we were invisible unless
the camels should approach too close.
The Turks and Tugendheim I saw placed
in the midst of all the other unmounted men, and ordered
them guarded like felons; and I bade those in charge
of mules and horses stand by, ready to muzzle their
beasts with coats or what-not, to prevent neighing
and braying. Then I returned to the top of the
rise and lay down, praying to God, with a trooper
beside me who might run and try to shake Ranjoor Singh
back to life in case of direst need.
I lay and heard my heart beat like
a drum against the ground, praying one moment, and
with the next breath cursing some hoof-beat from behind
me and the muffled reprimand that was certain to follow
it. The men were as afraid as I, and the thing
I feared most of all was panic. Yet what more
could I do than I had done? I lay and watched
the camels, and every step that brought them nearer
felt like a link in a chain that bound us all.
One thing became perfectly evident
before long. There were not more than two hundred
camels, therefore in a fight we should be able to
beat them off easily. But unless we could ambuscade
them (and there was no time to prepare that now) it
would be impossible to kill or capture them all.
Some would get away and those would carry the alarm
to the nearest military post. Then gone would
be all hope for us of evading capture or destruction.
But it was also obvious to me that no such caravan
would come straight on toward us at such speed if
it knew of our existence or our whereabouts. They
expected us as little as we expected them.
So I lay still, trembling, wondering
what Ranjoor Singh would say to me, supposing he did
not die in the cart there wondering what
the matter might be with Ranjoor Singh wondering
what I should do supposing he did die and we escaped
from this present predicament. I knew there was
little hope of my maintaining discipline without Ranjoor
Singh’s aid. And I had not the least notion
whither to lead, unless toward Russia.
Such thoughts made me physically sick,
so that it was relief to turn away from them and watch
the oncoming caravan, especially as I began to suspect
it would not come within a mile of us. Presently
I began to be certain that it would cross our track
rather less than a mile away. I began to whisper
to myself excitedly. Then at last “Yes!”
said I, aloud.
“Yes!” said a voice beside
me, and I nearly jumped out of my skin, “unless
they suspect the track of our cart-wheels and follow
it up, we are all right!”
I looked round into the eyes of Ranjoor
Singh, and felt my whole skin creep like a snake’s
at sloughing time!
“Sahib!” said I.
“You have done well enough,”
said he, “except that if attacked you would
have hard work to gather your forces and control them.
But never mind, you did quite well enough for this
first time!” said Ranjoor Singh.
“Sahib!” I said.
“But I thought you were in a cart, dying!”
“In a cart, yes!” he said.
“Dying, no although that was no fault
of somebody’s!”
I begged him to explain, and while
we watched the camels cross our track (God
knows, sahib, why they did not grow suspicious and
follow along it) he told me how he had sat
on the great rock, not very sleepy, but thinking,
chin on knee, when suddenly some man crawled up from
behind and struck him a heavy blow.
“Feel my head,” said he,
and I felt under his turban. There was a bruise
the size of my folded fist. I swore as
who would not? “Is it deep?” I said,
still watching the camels, and before he answered me
he sent the trooper to go and find his horse.
“Superficial,” he said
then. “By the favor of God but a water
bruise. My head must have yielded beneath the
blow.”
“Who struck it?” said
I, scarcely thinking what I said, for my mind was
full of the camels, now flank toward us, that would
have served our purpose like the gift of God could
we only have contrived to capture them.
“How should I know?” he
answered. “See they pass within
a half-mile of where I sat. Is not that the rock?”
And I said yes.
“Had you lingered there,”
he said, “word about us would have gone back
to Angora at top camel speed. What possessed you
to come away?”
“God!” said I, and he
nodded, so that I began to preen myself. He noticed
my gathering self-esteem.
“Nevertheless,” he said,
aloud, but as if talking to himself, yet careful that
I should hear, “had this not happened to me I
should have seen those camels on the sky-line.
Did you count the camels?”
“Two hundred and eight,” said I.
“How many armed men with them?”
he asked. “My eyes are yet dim from the
blow.”
“One hundred and four,”
said I, “and an officer or two.”
He nodded. “The prisoners
would have been a nuisance,” he said, “yet
we might have used them later. What with camels
and what with horses and there is a good
spot for an ambuscade through which they must pass
presently I went and surveyed it while they
cooked my dinner never mind, never mind!”
said he. “If you had made a mistake it
would have been disastrous. Yet two
hundred and eight camels would have been an acquisition a
great acquisition!”
So my self-esteem departed like
water from a leaky goatskin, and I lay beside him
watching the last dozen camels cross our trail, the
nose of one tied to the tail of another, one man to
every two. I lay conjecturing what might have
been our fate had I had cunning enough to capture
that whole caravan, and not another word was spoken
between us until the last two camels disappeared beyond
a ridge. Then:
“Was there any man close by,
when you found me?” asked Ranjoor Singh.
“Nay, sahib,” said I.
“Was there any man whose actions,
or whose words, gave ground for suspicion?”
he asked.
“Nay, sahib,” I began;
but I checked myself, and he noticed it.
“Except ?” said he.
“Except that when Gooja Singh
came,” I said, “he seemed unwilling to
believe you were asleep.”
“How long was it before Gooja Singh came?”
he asked.
“He came almost before I had
laid you under the tree and covered you,” said
I.
“And you told him I was asleep?” he said.
“Yes,” said I; and at
that he laughed silently, although I could tell well
enough that his head ached, and merriment must have
been a long way from him.
“Has Gooja Singh any very firm
friend with us?” he asked, and I answered I
did not know of one. “The ammunition bearers
who were his friends now curse him to his face,”
I said.
“Then he would have to do his
own dirty work?” said he.
“He has to clean his own rifle,”
I answered. And Ranjoor Singh nodded.
Then suddenly his meaning dawned on
me. “You think it was Gooja Singh who struck
the blow?” I asked. We were sitting up by
that time. The camels were out of sight.
He rose to his feet and beckoned for his horse before
he answered.
“I wished to know who else might
properly be suspected,” he said, taking his
horse’s bridle. So I beckoned for my horse,
and ordering the cart in which he had lain to be brought
along after us, I rode at a walk beside him to where
our infantry were left in hiding.
“Sahib,” I said, “it
is better after all to shoot this Gooja Singh.
Shoot him on suspicion!” I urged. “He
makes only trouble and ill-will. He puts false
construction on every word you or I utter. He
misleads the men. And now you suspect him of having
tried to kill you! Bid me shoot him, sahib, and
I obey!”
“Who says I suspect him?”
he answered. “Nay, nay, nay! I will
have no murder done no drumhead tyranny,
fathered by the lees of fear! Let Gooja Singh
alone!”
“Does your head not ache?” I asked him.
“More than you guess!”
said he. “But my heart does not ache.
Two aches would be worse than one. Come silently!”
So I rode beside him silently, and
making a circuit and signaling to the watchers not
to betray our presence, we came on our hiding infantry
unsuspected by them. We dismounted, and going
close on foot were almost among them before they knew.
Gooja Singh was on his feet in their midst, giving
them information and advice.
“I tell you Ranjoor Singh is
dead!” said he. “Hira Singh swears
he is only asleep, but Hira Singh lies! Ranjoor
Singh lies dead on top of the corn in the cart in
yonder gully, and Hira Singh ”
I know not what more he would have
said, but Ranjoor Singh stopped him. He stepped
forward, smiling.
“Ranjoor Singh, as you see,
is alive,” he said, “and if I am dead,
then I must be the ghost of Ranjoor Singh come among
you to enforce his orders! Rise!” he ordered.
“Rise and fall in! Havildars, make all
ready to resume the march!”
“Shoot him, sahib!” I
urged, taking out my pistol, that had once been Tugendheim’s.
“Shoot him, or let me do it!”
“Nay, nay!” he said, laughing
in my face, though not unkindly. “I am
not afraid of him.”
“But I, sahib,” I said. “I
fear him greatly!”
“Yet thou and I be two men,
and I command,” he answered gently. “Let
Gooja Singh alone.”
So I went and grew very busy ordering
the column. In twenty minutes we were under way,
with a screen of horsemen several hundred yards ahead
and another little mounted rear-guard. But when
the order had been given to resume the march and the
carts were squeaking along in single file, I rode
to his side again with a question. I had been
thinking deeply, and it seemed to me I had the only
answer to my thoughts.
“Tell me, sahib,” I said,
“our nearest friends must be the Russians.
How many hundred miles is it to Russia?”
But he shook his head and laughed
again. “Between us and Russia lies the
strongest of all the Turkish armies,” he said.
“We could never get through.”
“I am a true man!” I said.
“Tell me the plan!” But he only nodded,
and rode on.
“God loves all true men,” said he.