Read Love and the Loveless Online

Authors: Henry Williamson

Love and the Loveless (43 page)

BOOK: Love and the Loveless
6.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

In the wood were many tanks under canvas covers, over which string-netting tied with bits of black and green cloth was spread. Pinnegar explained to his officers what was to happen. A Raid on a wide front, to penetrate the Hindenberg Line, led by tanks each of which had a special function. There were supply tanks,
to tow sleds in line; tanks with chain grapnels, for pulling up belts of barbed wire. First to go over were the Advance Guard tanks. Each one had two Infantry tanks working with it. Leaving its tracks through pressed-down wire, it was to turn left at the enemy trench and shoot up any opposition, thus protecting its pair of tanks following with the infantry.

The pair of Infantry tanks was to make for a special place in the German main trench. There the left-hand tank was to drop its fascine. This was done by dipping its nose while release-gear was pulled. Having crossed the wide main trench, it was to work left-handed down the trench parados, to get any “late sleepers” coming up from dug-outs. While they were “put finally to sleep”, the right-hand tank of the Infantry Pair would be making for the second line. There, in a similar main trench, it would drop its fascine, cross over, and work down left-handed as before.

Meanwhile the Advance Guard tank would have gone over the two main trenches and, keeping its own fascine on its neb, make for the third line and “bonk the bloody thing in. Then we come up, and emplace our guns for barrage fire for the second phase of the advance”.

Phillip made notes in his diary.

 
 
19 Mon
  
Heard that G.O.C. Tanks is to lead them flying his flag. Looks like rain. Usual battle weather. Two yellow and red flags to be thrown out by fascine-dropping tanks; infantry will stick them in to mark borders of bonked faggot for others following.
  
  
 
 
    Infantry in three groups. Trench Clearers, who carry small red flags to mark tank-paths through wire, then mop up dug-outs, etc.; Trench Stops, who catch what bolts from tanks (a la ferret); Trench Garrisons, who stay in captured trenches (and meet any counter-attack, tho this ‘eventuality is not to be discussed’). Pinn. said nearly 400 tanks, and 96 infantry batts. going over. Plus all cavalry. Some raid!
 
 
 
 
    Special parties to lift wounded out of the track of tanks.
 
 
 
 
    10.45 a.m. Pinn said Z hour 6.20 a.m. (Sun rises 7.27 a.m.)
 
 
 
 
    German prisoners, who said a raid was expected, called this sector ‘the Flanders Sanatorium’. They also said they heard our ‘caterpillar tractors hauling heavy guns into wood’ last night. As Westy once said,
‘The staff knows damn-all, unless you or I tell them’. Still, RFC says no tank tracks visible anywhere.
 
 
 
 
    Returning with limbers tonight, passed scores of tanks going to their forming-up lines. They went like snails, in bottom gear, engines almost idling. Two hundred yards away I couldn’t hear them, so had a shock, finding myself suddenly among the dark shapes.
 
 
 
 
    Tank wallah told me earlier spoof orders had been hung in Secret No Admittance office of 1st Tank Bde at Arras, and spoof maps, plus bogus plans. But nobody pinched them!
 
 
20
Tue
 
Alleyman barrage opened up at 4.30 a.m. Feared worst in this shelter, where stove burns cheerily. Wrote last letters, just in case.
 
 
 
 
    5.15 a.m. Gunfire stopped. False alarm.

After the sergeant and five men captured in the German raid on the Sunday night had been interrogated, as a precautionary measure reserve machine-gun batteries had been moved to behind the third line of the Siegfried Stellung.

Two hours before dawn of 20 November, after examination by senior German officers of the British prisoners taken forty-eight hours previously, an urgent warning was sent down to all units to fit armour-piercing bullets into every third place in all machine-gun belts. But time was getting on; and it was not long before some of these messages, half copied out, were to be found lying in abandoned battalion headquarter dug-outs.

While the German warning was going over their telephones, 350 tanks, having rolled and bundled their camouflage nets, started to move forward, while many aeroplanes flew low over the lines. Roaring of engines filled the dank darkness. Ten minutes later, in the murk of first light, infantry followed behind the leading tanks; and as they walked into no-man’s-land a thousand hidden guns opened up. The reverberation of this
tempest of light was riveted by the combined noises of as many Vickers machine-guns streaming their nickel jets into and over the Siegfried Stellung.

General Sir Julian Byng’s Third Army was about to occupy the Flanders Sanatorium.

*

“It looks as though Haig has done it at last, sir,” said Sergeant Nolan, at 7.30 a.m.

From the Brigade Observation post had come news that tanks and infantry had reached the first Hindenburg position. Smoke and mist had obscured early telescopic vision: now the morning was clearing. German prisoners came past, under escort. They were middle-aged men, some with beards, and very young soldiers of the 384th Landwehr regiment—the equivalent of second-line territorials. They said that the attack had been a complete surprise. Walking wounded followed.

After an early breakfast Phillip led his pack mules down through the wood. Sergeant Nolan was to lead them, to his disappointment. But Pinnegar had been firm. No more Cook’s tours. The donks were loaded with ammunition, water, oil, rations; unladen donks were to carry the guns and tripods. The Brigade was timed to leave the wood at 9 a.m. The young Brigadier had been given a distant objective, beyond Graincourt, a village about 8,000 yards behind the German front line. The Brigade was to advance beyond the village, take the wooded crest of Bourlon Wood, and hold the approaches into Cambrai until the cavalry arrived.

There was half an hour to go. News came in that the Germans themselves had been preparing to make an attack from Havrincourt the following morning. Villages behind the first line had been full of storm troops. Now they were either dead, prisoners, or had run away. While the company stood by, field batteries passed at the gallop, one following another, to take up positions beyond the German front line.

A message came through that the Brown Line—the second Siegfried position—had been taken.

“I can’t believe it, Phil! There’s a catch in it, somewhere. You’d better get back, and get ready to follow on. Our brigade’s going through now. Cheerio! See you later.”

“Good luck,
mein
prächtig
kerl!

On the way back, he saw from higher ground an entire division on the move, three brigades in line, each battalion in column
of route. It was a tremendous sight. He felt really keen about the war for the first time. It was the strangest feeling: he really had passed the shadow line.

“It only wants the bandsmen in front of each battalion,” said Morris. The drivers cheered when Phillip told them the news. “We’ll soon be back in Blighty now, sir!”

As the day grew brighter, he could see tanks crawling up and down the chalky lines of trenches, dragging wire behind them, and rolling it up. Long strings of pack mules passed, dozens of them. Shortly after 10.30 a.m. he could see, through his field-glasses, tanks and infantry about Marcoing. Then, farther on, as weak sunlight spread over the grey-green landscape, he could see tanks moving up to the crest of the Flesquières ridge, the equivalent of the Passchendaele-Broodseinde ridge in Flanders. Four hours to take—not fourteen weeks!

It meant the attack had got through the whole of the Siegfried Stellung, into open country beyond. The Intelligence Officer said, “I doubt if Division and Corps will believe it!”

Apparently confirmation of this staggering fact was required; for no cavalry appeared.

In the meantime, something had happened on the Flesquières ridge. Shells spouted like waves breaking on a distant coral reef; thin black columns of smoke drifted from burning tanks. Three—four—five on fire were counted. Obviously a German battery had been missed, and was firing over open sights as the tanks appeared on the sky-line.

In the foreground, clusters of men could be seen at work making roads. Other groups were laying a light railway; and carrying forward armoured cables to advanced brigade-headquarters—all as planned.

*

In the early afternoon the cavalry appeared, squadron after squadron trotting over the grass to the south. They went down out of sight, then reappeared moving in files over the cleared German trenches. Soon they dismounted, and the horses were led back, under cover. Was it as at Monchy-le-Preux, in the April attack, he wondered.

After them came cyclists and motorcycles with sidecars in each one of which sat a gunner facing to the rear with a Vickers gun—the first troops of the Motor Machine Gun Corps he had seen. They bumped away down into the lower valley.

When would the order to advance come? Drivers were sitting
on horse-rugs on the ground, happily playing nap and solo whist for sous and centimes. French civilians, driving cows and pigs, and carrying bundles of clothing, appeared stoically in the British lines. A message arrived from Pinnegar, saying he was going forward to his new battle H.Q., and would send a message later where to take further ammunition, water, and oil, which were to be brought up by limber.

“Where are our donks?” he asked the senior driver, a lance-corporal.

“They should be back by now.”

It was 3 p.m. Not much light remained.

“I don’t like the look of all this,” he said to Morris. “It’s been too cushy. What’s behind us, to carry on? They called it a raid, didn’t they? That’s what it’ll turn out to be, in my opinion.”

At 3.30 p.m. he left L/Cpl. O’Flynn in charge, and rode forward with Morris to the company headquarters which had been marked on his map the day before. It was in the second German line.

Remembering the congestion and muddle of the transport during the first night of Loos, he must reconnoitre the way before darkness fell. Followed by Morris, he cantered through the wood and down the clearing to the old front line.

It was a strange feeling to be riding upon a new battlefield, hardly damaged by shell-fire, passing German dead strewn everywhere, the wounded still among them, some sitting up, others lying back, in patient silence awaiting their turns for stretchers. Everywhere rusty tangles of wire had been lugged about, and left in untidy heaps. The firing trench was hardly blown in anywhere. Hares ran about, stopping to peer with ears taller than the grasses. A few shells droned down and spouted blackly, “just to show there’s a war on, sir”, said Morris.

They crossed the deep and wide main trench of the first line, upon a wooden bridge just completed. Ahead lay the ruinous red village of Havrincourt. The pre-war road to it, crossed by the lines, had been cleared of fallen trees by hundreds of pioneer troops and was now being filled in and levelled. A concrete shelter sunken into the road, with splays a foot above ground level, was about to be blown up.

An extension of the Canal du Nord, with tunnels running under hills, was being built at the outbreak of war. Part of the works, abandoned in August 1914, was the
Grand
Ravin.
This was marked on the maps as possibly a formidable obstacle.
Running from south to north, it crossed the Havrincourt road. The tanks had feared it, as the unknown. But all had gone well: six fascines, enough to fill the
Grand
Ravin,
and covered by chalk, gave enough stability for a staff motorcar to wobble its way over, pushed by half-a-dozen cheerful pioneers.

Phillip dismounted, and leaving Black Prince on the road with Morris, went to look for Pinnegar. A Vickers mounted forward of the trench parados drew him: yes, it was 286 M. The new H.Q. were in a deep dug-out, which had flowers painted on the wooden walls below. By candle-light and flash-lamp book-cases and pictures were visible on the panelling. The officers’ rooms leading off from the corridor connecting the main assembly rooms—lined with tier upon tier of bunks—were furnished with carpets, tables, brass-and-iron bedsteads with sheets, pillows, and woollen rugs. No wonder the Alleyman called it a Sanatorium!

A gunner led him along a corridor, past a canteen. Broken bottles lay on the floor, and spilled liquids. There was a bar, with looking-glasses behind shelves on which bottles and cigar boxes still stood. A battle-policeman was on guard, beside a row of candles. It looked as though some of the moppers-up had mopped up more than prisoners. No doubt there would be a celebration party, too, among the red caps later on.

“In there, sir!”

“Thank God!” said Pinnegar. “I thought you were never coming! Have you got the limbers?”

“Not with me, Teddy. I came to——”

“Why the hell not? We’re waiting to go up to Bourlon Wood, and we can’t very well carry our bloody guns and belt boxes, can we? Didn’t you get my order?”

“Only to stand by with limbers, skipper.”

“That was Z 9. Didn’t you get Z 12?”

“No, sir.”

“But I sent it half an hour after Z 9, telling you to come at once, with all transport! Didn’t you get it?”

“No, I didn’t.”

“But you’ve come here!”

“I came because I’d had no orders, and it will soon be dark. What’s happened?”

“The usual balls-up. Division ordered the Boy General to stop getting forward from Graincourt, until our flanks were secured, but the Boy was right up with the foremost infantry, and went on with some tanks he’d got hold of, and bloody
well took Bourlon Wood! Now he wants all our guns at once. My God, I thought you’d have the sense to know something like that would happen!”

“I wanted to do it, but thought for once I’d obey orders! However, I’ll go back at once, and bring up the pack mules,
and
the limbers! It will take—let me see—I can get back in half an hour. Then the return—nearly five miles—if there isn’t any hold-up, it will take us at least another hour to get here. I’ll be on the Havrincourt road between half-past five and six pip emma.”

Why hadn’t he followed his hunch? Orders anyway took hours to arrive during a schemozzle. It was Loos all over again. The German line open, the wave spent.

*

Timeless rainy darkness upon congested track lit by gun flash and glare of bursting shell. Wire tripping and entangling, tearing at hand, puttee, and tunic, mules in chalky mud fetlock deep often kicking against barbing pain. Had the guide lost direction? Questions about the way to Havrincourt caused one explosion, a screaming flow of curses out of the darkness in front when a driver replied to “Who the hell are you?” with an innocent, “94673 Driver Gordon, sir.”

Apparently some harassed colonel was under the delusion that the transport belonged to the Gordon Highlanders of the 51st division, “who hadn’t the guts to attack the Hun holding out all day at Flesquières, although there was no bloody wire and no f—— trenches or supports behind them! And for f—— miles on either flank and f—— miles behind Flesquières there was not a f—— Hun to be seen!! Call yourselves soldiers, and Highlanders at that? You’re the scum of Glasgow, you haven’t the guts to attack even from the rear, and now you have the bloody impertinence to tread my men into the mud with your b—— f—— mules, God damn you to hell!!!”

Phillip had listened to this exhausted-man tirade while pushing Black Prince forward. He said, “I am sorry to disappoint you, sir, but this is the Two Eight Six Machine Gun Company of the East Pennine division.”

“Then why the hell didn’t you say so at first? This driver said he was the Gordons!”

“His surname is Gordon, sir. I wonder if you could tell me if this is the way to Havrincourt?”

“It was when I was there half an hour ago, but whether or not it’s there now don’t ask me! Where d’you come from?”

“Where you’re obviously going, sir.”

“Where the hell’s that?”

“Stellenbosch,
mein
prächtig
kerl
!”

He moved away into safe darkness, laughing with an imaginary Mrs. Neville as words floated after him, “You’re a bloody fool, whoever you are!” Another of the many chance acquaintanceships of the Great War was ended.

*

The infantry was exhausted. The cavalry had come up late. The headquarters of the Cavalry Corps were still thirty-six miles away. The initiative was lost. So were many of the communications. Tanks had crushed the main cables; iron hoops of wheels of field-guns and limbers, entangled mules and horses, had broken the slighter wires of buzzer and telephone. Mounted orderlies and runners had been too slow. Carrier pigeons were half-trained, bemused by noise, subdued by the cold weather; wireless was not used properly because it was not understood. A steel spring had been transmuted to lead.

All day the German garrison at Flesquières, near the five tanks knocked out by a wounded German gunner officer serving the gun himself when all his crew were killed, had held to their re-entrant while knowing that British troops had gone miles past them on both flanks. They were in the air; they stayed because it would be useless loss of life to go back over open ground, enfiladed from two sides.

Because of the gap in the British advance, older Generals advised caution. The G.O.C. the Highland Division did not comply with a suggestion from the G.O.C. East Pennines that he should attack across the East Pennine front, but
behind
the Germans at Flesquières. He required the help of tanks, he said. So the lead weight dropped. The East Pennine General ordered his foremost Brigadier to remain where he was, at Graincourt on the left flank, far ahead and almost to the Cambrai road. This Brigadier, who was the Boy General, “saw no reason why the order should deflect him from the attack of his immediate objectives”. Two dismounted squadrons of King Edward’s Horse, inspired by the V.C. commander who had gone up to be with his foremost troops, joined the advance, and reached the long straight cobbled road which led to Cambrai.

Darkness had fallen when reinforcements were heard coming up. A platoon of the Duke of Wellington’s was resting beside the road. The step was crisp and uniform; could these be the Guards?
But as the column came near, coal-scuttle helmets were seen against the stars, instead of the more usual pudding basins. Some of the patients of the Sanatorium, from Flesquières, were escaping.

BOOK: Love and the Loveless
6.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Brave by Robert Lipsyte
Buffalo Before Breakfast by Mary Pope Osborne
The Colonel's Daughter by Rose Tremain
Reset by Jacqueline Druga
Perdida en un buen libro by Jasper Fforde
Refusing Excalibur by Zachary Jones