Read Beyond the Horizon Online
Authors: Peter Watt
âBetter than damper,' Tom said, biting into the butter rich pastry and swilling down a mouthful of hot coffee.
âWhat is damper?' Chason asked, halfway through his pastry.
âIt's bread we make in the campfire back home,' Tom replied and surprised himself with a flash of a memory of another place and time. âThis is pretty bloody good.'
They ordered a second round of breakfast and Tom glanced out the glass window onto the street. âBloody hell!' he gasped, startling Chason.
Tom scraped back the chair as he leapt to his feet and pushed past the American officer leaving the café. âJuliet!' he yelled, running towards her down the narrow street. But she was not alone and the burly man with her was vaguely familiar. When Tom reached Juliet she was standing frozen in surprise. She was carrying a basket just as Tom remembered from their first meeting, and it was obvious that she was pregnant. For a moment Tom struggled for words.
âJuliet.' Tom reached out and touched her arm. âI have been looking for you.'
âGet back, you black bastard,' said the burly man accompanying Juliet, shoving Tom in the chest. âThis woman is my property.'
âSmithers,' Tom said, putting a name to the man. âNow I remember you.'
âTom,' Juliet said and he could see that all colour had drained from her face. âI . . . I am not free . . .'
âIf yer know what is good for you, Sergeant Duffy, you will piss off real quick before I call a copper. From the way yer dressed I doubt that the army knows yer here. Me now, I have a good workin' relationship with the local gendarmes.'
âGet out of the way, Smithers,' Tom growled, preparing himself to strike with all his force, but he hesitated when Smithers produced a long dagger in his hand. Damn! Tom cursed himself. Chason had not returned the knife to him and he was virtually defenceless against the blade.
âHere
, mon ami
,' a voice said close to Tom's shoulder and he felt the knife slipped into his hand.
âYer mate ain't goin' to be much help,' Smithers snarled, seeing the Frenchman approach and provide Tom with his defence. âI'm goin' to gut yer.'
Smithers lunged and Juliet screamed.
Tom stepped back, avoiding the wicked blade, but he was also aware of shouting and a whistle blowing. Before he could counter Smithers, Tom felt his arms pinned and a voice shouting at him in French. Two nearby French police had been alerted to the confrontation and were on Tom before he could react. He was slammed into the ground and hit the stone road so hard that he saw a red haze of stars. The last thing he remembered was the terrified expression on Juliet's face as she was dragged away by Smithers.
âYou should bloody well be court-martialled and the key thrown away,' the commanding officer roared as Tom stood hatless and to attention before him. It had been over a fortnight since Tom had been arrested by the French authorities and handed over to his battalion on the insistence of the brigade commander. âI have had to stretch a lot of favours with our French allies to have you released to us when you should be facing criminal charges in Paris,' he continued and Tom winced. âIf it were not for the sworn statement by Sergeant Bourke that you had not set out to desert but to look for your fiancée, I would have left it in the hands of the French. Sergeant Bourke's statement and your sterling record as an NCO has got you back to us, but I cannot dismiss the affair without our own charges of you being absent without leave. What have you to say, Sergeant Duffy?'
Absent without leave was not as serious as the crime of desertion. Tom might be stripped of rank and face a short period confined to barracks, but he would not face a hefty prison sentence.
âSir, I know that I acted outside regulations but I had to find my fiancée. I accept any punishment I have coming.' Tom saw that the stormy expression on his commanding officer's face had dissipated a little at this answer.
âI am not sure if you have heard the rumours going around that the Hun is on the verge of capitulating, Sergeant Duffy, but it seems that I have the power to deal with your offence at my level,' the CO said. âAs it is, I am busy and may not have the time to deal with you, so in the meantime you are to return to your duties as platoon sergeant as we have not had a replacement officer sent to us. If it were not for the fact we need you to lead the platoon, I would hand the charges to the adjutant, who would no doubt deal severely with the matter.' Tom was not sure but he thought he saw just the slightest flicker of a smile on the CO's stern face. âAs it is, if the rumours prove to be true, no doubt your indiscretion will be forgotten in the administration of the battalion preparing to go home. In fact, you would not have a black mark in your service record. That is all, Sergeant Duffy, you are dismissed to resume your duties with the company.'
âThank you, sir,' Tom said, replacing his slouch hat and saluting smartly. âMarch out, Sergeant Duffy,' the RSM roared behind Tom. Both men marched out with a crash of boots and in the hallway the RSM brought Tom to a halt.
âYou can count yourself bloody lucky . . . again, Tom,' he said quietly. âIt just shows the high regard the army has for you. The CO would normally have any other soldier in the clink faster than you can say Jack Robinson, but you have done your duty more than any NCO I know. Let us hope that the rumours are right and not just furphies.'
Tom returned to his company and his platoon. He was visited by the company commander, Major Cooper, and nothing was said about his absence without leave. All went on as if it had never happened â except that the pale face of Juliet haunted Tom. It had brought back all the memories of the only true love he had ever known.
23
T
he Ottoman Empire had surrendered to the Allied advance on 31 October 1918, and now Matthew's war in the skies of Palestine was over. He did not know whether his squadron would be transferred to the fighting on the Western Front, which continued with its usual ferocity. He was sitting on his camp bed in his tent, staring out at the rugged arid hills on the horizon, when the leading ground-crew NCO popped his head around the entrance.
âGot some mail for you, boss,' he said.
âThanks, Archie,' Matthew replied, accepting two envelopes from the soldier. He could see that one of the letters was from his mother, writing from Townsville, but the other letter bore the embossment of an American legal firm. Matthew immediately opened the American letter and read the contents. It was a demand on behalf of a Mr James Barrington Snr that Captain Matthew Duffy AFC provide all assistance to a team being sent to Palestine to search for and recover the remains of one Miss Joanne Barrington so that she could be returned to her home in the USA for a Christian burial.
Matthew stared at the letter and his first impulse was to screw it up and toss it to the desert winds. Joanne had loved this land and probably would have wanted to be buried in its soil, he thought. Then he remembered they had two children growing up in America and that it would be better for them to have a gravesite they could visit when they were older. And maybe by conceding to Barrington's wishes might help Matthew gain access to his son and daughter.
The letter went on to mention certain high-ranking names in the British forces in Palestine, and the Australian flyer could see the extent of Barrington's influence on international politics. Matthew would arrange to speak with his commanding officer and explain the situation, producing the letter as evidence. Now the fighting had ceased in the Holy Land the CO would more than likely release him from his duties to assist the American search and recovery team.
According to the letter, the team would arrive in Jerusalem within a month, and a contact had been left for Matthew there. When Matthew looked at the date on the letter he saw that a month was actually within a week.
A fellow officer appeared at Matthew's tent and poked his head in. âThe bar has been opened, old chap,' he said. âWe're celebrating the victory, and young Goddard's promotion to captain. It came out in the gazette yesterday, and the PMC has said Captain Goddard will be shouting the mess.'
Matthew glanced up and acknowledged the invitation as he well knew that when the president of the mess committee made an invitation it was virtually an order. He read the letter from his mother before changing out of his flying suit into his dress uniform. Joanne, and the guilt and grief that came with her memory, was never far from his thoughts. Maybe this was a way to start to lay the past to rest and look to the future with hope.
A week later, Captain Matthew Duffy sat in the foyer of British military headquarters in Jerusalem. The building had cool marble floors and overhead fans that clacked and rattled. High-ranking officers wearing red flashes on their collars passed without noticing Matthew, although he was careful to stand and salute if one of them did catch his eye.
Eventually three men dressed in expensive suits entered the foyer, chatting with a British Army brigadier armed with the traditional swagger stick tucked under his arm. Matthew rose to his feet, sensing that the men might be those he was to meet. The brigadier strolled over to Matthew with the three civilians in tow. Two were in their mid-thirties, but the third man was in his late forties. Immediately Matthew knew that the older, aristocratic man was Joanne's father; he had her eyes.
âAh, Captain Duffy,' the brigadier said when Matthew saluted him. âI have the honour of introducing Mr James Barrington from America.'
Slowly, Matthew extended his hand to Barrington who looked at him with open contempt and hate.
âI don't think we need introducing, Brigadier,' Barrington said, ignoring Matthew's conciliatory gesture. âCaptain Duffy and I have an understanding.'
âGood show, then,' the brigadier said, flushed by the chill he could hear in the prominent American's tone. âI will leave you chaps to discuss the matter in hand.'
He departed, leaving Matthew in the company of what were obviously three very hostile men. It was Barrington who opened the conversation. âI am led to believe that you were with my daughter when she was killed, and you had her buried somewhere out in the wilderness,' he said in a cold tone. âThat must mean you know where I can find my Joanne.'
âYes, sir,' Matthew answered, his eyes flicking to the men standing either side of Barrington. They were tough-looking men with eyes as icy as Barrington's, and Matthew sensed that they were not the usual run-of-the-mill clerks employed in banking. They had the look of soldiers â or thugs. Neither attempted to introduce themselves but remained silent, allowing their employer to do all the talking.
âMy daughter died because she was foolishly attempting to rescue you,' Barrington said bitterly. âShe would still be alive if you had not come into her life.'
Matthew did not respond to the accusation. War made no discrimination in those it took from the earth. âIf I am to lead you to where Joanne is buried I will need the services of her guide at the time, Mr Saul Rosenblum,' Matthew said, returning Barrington's hard gaze with his own defiant expression.
âThat is a Jewish name,' Barrington said. âFrom my experience you can't trust Jews.'
âSaul was one of your daughter's best friends in this part of the world, Mr Barrington, and Joanne trusted him with her life,' Matthew retorted.
âI would rather you not use my daughter's name with such familiarity, Captain,' Barrington said. âI am sure you know that if I had my way your kind would be wiped from the earth.'
âMy kind, Mr Barrington?' Matthew asked coldly.
âJews, Negros and Papist Irishmen are destroying the American way of life, Captain Duffy, and now your blood has contaminated my line,' Barrington said. âOur Anglo-Saxon heritage is under threat from the insidious cancer your kind bring upon America. But this is neither the place nor the time to discuss such matters. I have arranged to put you up in this hotel until we leave to find my daughter. If you think the Jew you mentioned can help, I will pay for his services. My men will check upon your progress here each day. I have already cleared your secondment to me through our ambassador in London â and your military staff in Jerusalem. You are for the moment â how you would say it in your military protocol? â under my command. Good day, Captain.'
Matthew watched as the three Americans turned and walked away. He was shocked to hear that he had been seconded to Barrington without having had any say in the matter. Then he remembered something he had seen tattooed on the right hand of one of Barrington's men. It was three letters â
KKK â
Klu Klux Klan. Matthew also remembered a trip to the USA before the war, and how he had heard of the infamous organisation while travelling in America's south. It was hardly believable, he mused. That the rich and powerful Barrington patriarch was a supremacist bigot, when his daughter had believed that all humans were equals.
It was time to seek out his old friend and comrade in arms, Saul Rosenblum. Matthew had the feeling that he would need someone to watch his back. He had survived a war and was not ready to be quietly murdered in the lonely and isolated holy lands of the Bible.
*
An hour or so later, armed with a bottle of good Scotch, Matthew found a nearby airfield occupied by British airmen. He introduced himself to the commanding officer and explained that he needed to borrow an aircraft for a few hours. The CO made some enquiries to clarify that Matthew was a man to be trusted and, after he'd been cleared, accepted the bottle of Scotch across his desk.
Before long Matthew was in the air in a Bristol with a British officer as his observer to ensure that the aircraft was returned. After a couple of hours of flying Matthew circled Saul's village and set down on an airstrip he knew had been constructed the year before. He was met by a crowd of curious Jewish settlers, who directed Matthew to the village where he found Saul with his family. The British officer remained with the aircraft and soon found himself the centre of attention from many little boys who crawled over his aircraft asking questions in a language the airman did not understand.
âAh, it is good to see you,' Saul said, embracing Matthew in a giant bear hug.
Matthew disengaged himself and stepped back. The two men stood outside Saul's modest stone house watched by passing villagers. Many remembered Matthew as the brave airman who had helped save their village.
âCome inside,' Saul said. âI will make us real coffee. My family are away so you will have to trust my skills in the kitchen.'
Matthew went inside the house and the familiar, homely scents assailed him with memories of a time when he and Joanne had clung to each other in his tiny bed before a dangerous mission. He sat down at a wooden table while Saul fumbled around in the kitchen, preparing the thick, black coffee he had acquired a taste for, although Matthew found it overpowering in the small cup it was served in.
âWe have a mission,' Saul asked, making it a statement, and Matthew related the story of James Barrington Senior and his cronies back in Jerusalem.
âThey plan to kill you when you show them where Joanne is buried,' Saul said, sipping his coffee and stroking his long beard. âWe will have to prepare for that situation when it comes.'
âThank you, my old friend,' Matthew said. âYou are truly my brother.'
âWe have been through a lot,' Saul smiled. âI remember a boy shaking with fright at Elands River, but he left a man and with his head high.'
âYou were not there when we were relieved,' Matthew reminded him. âIf I remember rightly, you were off with the Boers, and I was still shaking with fright when the British relief force arrived.'
Saul shrugged, as if the details did not matter. âI will meet with you in three days at your hotel, and by then you should have been able to secure all the supplies we will need. Trust me, Matthew my brother, I will not allow anyone to kill you.'
Matthew made his farewells and returned to the airstrip to rescue the British observer from the admiring young ladies who had joined the children to examine the curious flying machine.
Matthew took off and returned to the British airstrip early in the afternoon, bringing both observer and Bristol fighter intact. Back in the hotel he ran into Barrington himself in the foyer.
âI was informed that you flew south this morning,' Barrington said from the cane chair he was occupying.
Bloody man had eyes everywhere, Matthew thought. He had obviously been waiting for him to return.
âI went to meet the man who will accompany us in our search,' Matthew replied. âHe will join us in three days and has left the organisation of the supplies to me. We will need to go armed. The territory we will be in is home to several groups of Bedouin bandits.'
âYou will not be required to carry arms. The two men I have with me are more than capable of defending us.'
âI am an officer in the Australian Flying Corp and we carry a sidearm as a matter of protocol,' Matthew countered.
âVery well,' Barrington conceded. âYou are permitted to arm yourself with a pistol â but no other arms. If that is all, I expect that we will leave from here at 6am sharp, three days from now.'
The imperious American rose from his chair and left Matthew alone in the foyer pondering Saul's plan to keep them both alive. âI hope you have a bloody good plan, old son,' he muttered. âOr we will end up as bleaching bones out there.'
On the Western Front the war dragged on, although rumours of an imminent armistice filtered down to the trenches, where men huddled in the safety of bunkers and the gashes in the earth, waiting for another winter of barbed wire, bombs, bullets and bandages.
For Sergeant Tom Duffy time in the rear of the trenches training the newcomers to the platoon meant another day away from the death he knew stalked him. His students formed a semicircle around him as he went through the drills of fusing and preparing the Mills hand grenade, while in the background the steady
crump crump
of exploding artillery shells drifted to him from the direction of the front line.
âThe preferred method of throwing the bomb is the overhand toss as if you were back home bowling for the pub team,' Tom said, adopting the stance of a cricket bowler. He paused. There was something different in the air and he lowered the unfused practice grenade to his side. He could hear a lark singing when at this time of year they should not be heard, and there was a steady growl of men's voices shouting and hollering from the cluster of tents nearby.
âSergeant Duffy, Tom!' a voice called and Tom turned to see Sergeant Paddy Bourke running and stumbling towards him across the grassy field, waving his arms. The frantic approach by the platoon sergeant caught all in Tom's class attention. When Paddy reached Tom he was out of breath but his face was lit with a broad smile.
âIt's all over,' he gasped. âThe war is over. The Huns signed the armistice and in half an hour,' Paddy said checking his fob watch, âat 1100 hours today, the fighting stops.'
Tom stared at his cobber, trying to register that all he had to do was live another half-hour and it would be all over; then, as if all the demons of hell were mocking them, the silence was interrupted by a steady series of explosive crumps of artillery shells exploding.
âThe bastards!' Tom swore. âThey're using up as many of their shells as they can before the war ends.'
Paddy looked at Tom and his smile disappeared. Both men knew that the Allied gunners were pouring in every round they had as fast as possible, and German soldiers would be dying as the earth shook under them and the red-hot fragments of steel tore away flesh and limbs. Even with only minutes to the cessation of hostilities the Allies were wreaking a terrible revenge on their foe. There would be mothers, wives and sisters in Germany who would lose their beloved with only minutes left to the end.