War Story (12 page)

Read War Story Online

Authors: Derek Robinson

BOOK: War Story
4.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

They sat on the edge of a fountain in the middle of the square and watched
Le Trictrac
being emptied by the military police. There were several bloody heads and a few men being carried by their friends. The police whacked and kicked indiscriminately to keep the crowd on the run.

“Just like Piccadilly Circus on Boat Race night,” said Piggott.

“Did we win?” Jimmy Duncan asked. “I lost count.”

“He must have gone somewhere,” the adjutant said. “Who else would have taken it?”

O'Neill said: “Big question is, where's he gone?”

“I'll ask a policeman,” Mayo said, and made off. “I say, constable!” he shouted. Piggott chased him and dragged him back. “Sit down and shut up,” he said.

Mayo shook himself free. “Russian policemen finest in the world,” he said loftily. “Russian police know all the answers.” He found himself looking at Jimmy Duncan. “What's the question?” he asked.

“Did we win?” said Duncan. “I lost count.”

For a long while, nobody spoke. Kellaway was asleep, propped up against O'Neill. Appleyard was wondering how long they should wait. Goss was rubbing the ankle he said he had broken. The others were staring at the moon, or combing their hair, or just standing with their hands in their pockets, rattling their small change. A mule trotted into the square. By now the troops had gone.
Le Trictrac
was shuttered and dark. The mule stopped and looked around. It heard the tinkle of falling water, walked to the fountain, eyed the airmen and found them unthreatening, and began to drink.

“That's a mule,” Duncan said.

The animal flapped its ears. Water dripped from its nose. A clatter of hooves made it look over its shoulder. Another mule cantered into the square.

“There's another,” Duncan asked.

“How many does that make?” Piggott asked.

“Two.”

“You're not as stupid as you look, Jimmy.”

“Wrong,” O'Neill said. “It makes four.” Two more mules had arrived. He pointed, and the gesture disturbed Kellaway, who toppled backwards into the fountain. The first mule tossed its head and backed away. “And six makes ten,” O'Neill said. “And ten makes twenty. After that it's bloody ridiculous.”

Kellaway stood up in the fountain. His eyes were open but he was seeing double. He was utterly bewildered. He had no idea where he was or how he got there. Everywhere he looked he saw moonlit mules: double images of moonlit mules, dozens and dozens of them, all running, but the more they ran the more there were of them until the square was crammed with mules. It was a nightmare. He dropped to his hands and knees and shut his eyes and crawled away from it.

“I don't like the look of this,” the adjutant said to Piggott They were standing on the fountain wall, for safety. It was not a big square and mules were still pouring in. “There's got to be a reason for this sort of nonsense.”

“Here he comes,” said Piggott.

Rufus Milne cantered into the square on a mule with reins and a halter but no saddle. He saw the airmen and forced his way towards them. “Hullo, you lot!” he cried. “Where on earth have you been?”

The square was dense with braying and stamping. Still more mules were arriving. Faintly, from a corner, the whistles of the military police could be heard. “What's the game, Rufus?” Piggott shouted.

“These are all mine,” Milne announced. “Aren't they jolly? This one's called Alice. She's a wise old bird. Aren't you, Alice?”

“Mules are neuter,” said Goss,”and yours looks stupid.”

“Does she really? Trick of the light, I expect. The sergeant said she has the brains of an archbishop.”

“What sergeant?” the adjutant asked.

“Chap I met in the
Trictrac.
Awfully nice fellow. I said to him, you look a bit fed-up, and he said so would you look fed
up if you had to look after five hundred bloody mules, so I said that's an awful lot of bloody mules, and he said you bet it's an awful lot of bloody mules, and to cut a long story short we went to see them and he swapped them for the tender.”

“He must have been drunk.”

“Soused as a herring.”

“We need the tender,” Piggott said,”to get home.”

“Take a mule. Take any mule.” Milne waved at the moonlit mass of animals. “Shop around. Find one that fits. Take two, and give the other to your mother.”

“I'll go and get the tender,” Piggott said to the adjutant.

“You'll have to run,” Milne said. “He told me he was going to drive to Paris.”

Mayo gave a little scream of pain. “That beast
bit
me!” he said.

“He's got a girlfriend in Paris, you see.”

“Bugger the girlfriend,” the adjutant said bleakly.

“Very unlikely,” Milne said. “Not according to what he told me.”

Lord Trafford fell asleep, in mid-sentence, in an armchair. His cousin Rupert, the general, played poker with the hard core of the Old Etonians, including the four from Hornet Squadron. After an hour or so they stopped to eat sandwiches of beef tongue and chicken.

“Has it ever occurred to you,” said the general,”that this would be a much better war if all the Russians were in France, and we and the French were in Russia? Our men rot in trenches until they get blown to glory. Any bloody fool can do that. The Russian army is perfectly qualified for trench warfare. They've got an endless supply of bloody fools. But there's no trench warfare to speak of on the Eastern Front. It's all war-of-movement. Professional fighting. That's what we're good at.
We
should be
there
, having the time of our lives in the wide open spaces.
They
should be
here
, doing what they're good at, which is dying for Holy Mother Russia. This is a very badly arranged war.”

“What about Salonika and Gallipoli?” someone asked.

“Not a funny joke,” the general said. “Your deal.”
Kellaway kept falling off his mule.

He was unused to wine. His father kept a bottle of sherry in the house and it always lasted a year. The pungent
ordinaire
of
Le Trictrac
had gone down Kellaway's throat like water. The faster he drank it, the less he noticed its coarse taste. His speed amused other people, and they kept refilling his glass. He was flattered by their attention, so he kept entertaining them. He was, inevitably, sick; but once his stomach was empty he found it easier still to pour more wine into it. He had been standing, singing, when the room lurched. He had tried to grab a table. The table had turned into two tables. He missed them both. His legs were as slack as string. The roaring noise faded like a big wave receding. He collapsed and knew nothing of it.

Now, every time he fell off his mule he banged and bruised his arms and shoulders, which made it all the harder for him to remount and cling to the animal's skimpy mane. “Grip him with your knees, for God's sake,” the adjutant kept telling him. “Use your thighs, man. That's what they're for.” Kellaway did his best, but from time to time his mind wandered off and left him; and then everyone had to stop again until Kellaway had been found and picked up.

Only Milne remained cheerful. “This is wonderful exercise,” he said. “The night, and the countryside, and the fresh air – it brings you closer to nature. Don't you agree, Tim?”

“As long as it brings me closer to my bed I'll agree to anything,” Piggott said.

Mayo said: “Keep your bloody mule away from me, Douglas. The brute keeps trying to bite me in the leg.”

“I'm nowhere near you, damn it,” Goss snapped.

“Well, who's
that
, then?” Mayo kicked at the mule alongside.

“You do that again and I personally will bite you in the arse,” O'Neill said.

“Jesus …” Piggott tried to ease his aching backside. “At this rate it'll be dawn before we get home, and I'm flying after breakfast”.

“Are you absolutely sure this is the right road, Rufus?” the adjutant asked.

“Well, it may not be the quickest route,” Milne said,”but it's by far the prettiest.” A bank of cloud slid over the moon. Now there were two sorts of blackness to look at: earth and sky. Kellaway swayed and tried to make his knees do something other than tremble. Despair filled him like a fever. He had joined the RFC quite willing to die, but not like this. This was not just rotten, it was endlessly rotten.

The cloud thickened. A wind came in from the west, ruffling the poplars that lined the road, and a light rain drifted over the plodding mules. The night and the journey seemed endless, shapeless, hopeless. Kellaway slept, and awoke feeling utterly lost. “Here we are, home again,” said Milne.

The adjutant grunted. He recognised the Pepriac crossroads. Now for a hot toddy and bed, a great deal of both.

“Haiti”
The challenge was so loud that the leading mules checked.
“Who goes there?”

Milne peered at the figure standing in the entrance to the aerodrome, and saw the dull gleam of a bayonet. “Good heavens,” he said. “Friend, of course. Several friends, in fact.”

“Advance, friend, and be recognised”.
The order was crisp.

Milne got off his mule. He could see a roll of barbed wire in front of the sentry, blocking the entrance. “I'm Major Milne, commanding officer,” he said. “Who are you?”

“Corporal Lee, sir. I shall have to ask you for the password, sir.”

“Password? What password?”

There was a pause. “That's for you to tell me, sir.”

“Look here …” Milne walked forward and Lee operated the bolt of his rifle. Milne stopped. “You wouldn't actually fire that thing, would you, Lee?”

“Not unless I have to, sir.”

“Sensible fellow.”

Behind him, Tim Piggott lost patience and dismounted. “Look, this is bloody ridiculous,” he barked, striding towards the sentry. “We're all—”

The bang made everyone jump, and the puff of flame from Lee's rifle was imprinted on their vision. He had fired high. Now they heard him re-load. “Jesus Christ,” Piggott breathed.

They went back to the others. “Does anybody know anything about a password?” Milne asked. At first nobody spoke. Then Kellaway, sitting in the middle of the road, swallowed something that he should have spat out “Shit,” he muttered.

“That's not it,” O'Neill said.

“I remember brigade gave out passwords,” Milne said,”in case we got shot down in No-Man's-Land, or something. Trouble is, the password gets changed every day. But I think they were names of flowers.”

“Geraniums,” Goss called to Lee. No response. “Roses. Tulips. Daisies, marigolds, daffodils, pinks, carnations, dahlias, winter-flowering jasmine. “Lee was silent

“Jasmine isn't a flower,” Jimmy Duncan said.

“Yes, it is.”

“No, no. Jasmine's a bush.”

“Balls! It's a flower, ask anyone. Ask Lee. Corporal Lee, is jasmine a flower or a bush?”

It had begun to rain again. Lee's voice came out of the wet, black night: “I couldn't say, sir.”

“Well, you're a fat lot of good.”

“But I can tell you one thing, sir. It's not the password.” Lee sounded as if he might possibly be enjoying himself.

“This is absurd,” Milne said. “Who put you here?”

“Orderly Officer, sir. Mr. Paxton.”

“Bloody Paxton,” the adjutant said in a voice like rust

“Go and get him,” Milne ordered.

“Not possible, sir. Not allowed to leave my post, sir. Courtmartial offence, sir. Could be shot, sir.”

“Forget all that. I'm CO and I'm giving you fresh orders.”

“That's as may be, sir. But you still haven't given me the password, sir, so how can I take your orders? You lot could be anyone, sir. You could be the Boches.”

“All right, just suppose we
were
the Boches. What would you do about it?”

“I'd telephone Mr. Paxton, sir.”

“Then for God's sake go and telephone the silly bugger before we all drown.”

In fact Lee had to telephone the duty NCO, who had to go and wake Paxton. “Why tell me?” Paxton said. “I'm not
Orderly Officer any more. That was yesterday. You do as you like. Goodnight.”

The duty NCO, cursing, bicycled out to the gate and took over from Corporal Lee. “Very sorry about all this, sir,” he said to Milne across the wire. “Mr. Paxton said—”

“Forget Mr. Paxton,” Milne said. “I'll strangle Mr. Paxton at breakfast. Just shift this wire.” But the ends of the coil had become tangled in the fence and were unwilling to be released in the darkness. Goss got his hands scratched and gave up. The rain suddenly intensified. Mayo was proposing that they get some rope and use the mules to drag the wire away when headlights appeared. A large staff car arrived, turned towards the entrance and stopped.

The rear window was opened a few inches. Foster said: “Are these your mules? Awfully Biblical. Jolly wet, too.”

“Was it a good dinner?” Milne asked.

“Dull. But we had some good poker afterwards. I won this car. Until tomorrow, anyway, then it goes back. How was your evening?”

“Oh … quite amusing, until we got home and found this wire everywhere.”

“Nasty stuff, wire. Bad for the skin.”

In the glare of the headlights the wire was soon unhooked and dragged clear. “Most kind,” Foster said, as he was driven through. “That will be all, thank you.”

Chapter 5

Dawn came too soon. Breakfast came too soon. Drymouthed brainthrobbing foultasting hangovers came too soon. Batmen with cups of hot, sweet, undrinkable tea came too soon. And of course the weather was unspeakably bad: nothing but sunshine wherever you looked. The treacherous rain belt had passed over in the night. ‘C' Flight's morning escort duties would not be cancelled.

Other books

Adios Angel by Mark Reps
Ruled By Fear by C. Cervi
Murder Under the Palms by Stefanie Matteson
The Genie of Sutton Place by George Selden
Christmas Three by Rose, Dahlia
Bloodline by Sidney Sheldon
Goodnight Kisses by Wilhelmina Stolen
Mana by John A. Broussard