Bretherton
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Bretherton
W. F. Morris
TO
S. D. Y.
HOW ELSE TO THANK HIM
FOR SO MUCH KINDNESS?
CONTENTS
Preface
Part I. The Château
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Part II. The Old Company
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Part III. “G. B.”
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
Chapter XXIII
About the Author
PREFACE
Among the many strange events of the Great War, the case of Gerard Bretherton must, I think, be unique. I happened to know personally some of the men who were connected with those events; and although each man had only a limited, and therefore distorted, view of them, I was able to piece together the scraps of information I received and build up the whole story. I have decided, however, to sacrifice strict chronological order in favour of presenting these events where possible in the form and order in which I had them from the lips of eye-witnesses.
Part One therefore, which covers the Armistice and the few days preceding it, I have left as Captain Gurney wrote it. Part Two, which goes back to Christmas 1915, is taken from Captain Baron’s diary. And Part Three, which begins in the middle of 1916 and ends at the Armistice, thus overlapping Parts One and Two, is a composite account compiled from information supplied by Bretherton himself, the American Doctor Harding, Helen Gurney, Colonel Liddel, and Lieutenant von Arnberg, whom I discovered driving a taxi-cab in post-war Vienna.
In strict chronological order, then, Part One really comes last, with the end of Part Three; and Part Two comes first, overlapping the beginning of Part Three. But I hope that the parts will be read in the order in which I have placed them.
H. E.
PART I
THE CHTEAU
CHAPTER I
I
My dear Hugo,
Here is the story at last; and I have neither added anything nor subtracted anything, though I must confess that since that day last December when we ran across each other in Piccadilly and sat far into the night talking of old times, I have had serious doubts of the wisdom of doing as you suggested. You know the cause of my reluctance. G. B. was my company officer in the old days, and a better soldier no man could wish to serve under. And there is my sister Helen to be considered. Therefore, now that the story is written, I must remind you of your promise to keep it to yourself, at any rate until a full explanation of it may be forthcoming.
A writer of popular thrillers, I suppose, would have called it “The Mystery of the Shelled Château,” or by some such name, and having led the reader through three hundred pages in breathless suspense, have solved the mystery in one crisp, illuminating paragraph at the end. The whole series of mysterious events would run through the tale like a train of gunpowder to be ignited by the literary match on the last page. But the narration of actual events allows no scope for the display of imaginative genius; so that even if I had the skill to construct such an ending, I should be debarred from using it. Therefore there will be no final illuminating paragraph. The gunpowder is there, but I am unable to supply the match. I wish I could. But that is the provoking thing about real life: it always stops short at the interesting point.
Picture us then, two days before the signing of the Armistice, on the fringes of the wooded Ardennes, in the green, undevastated country beyond the Hindenburg Line; the enemy in full retreat, and the battalion concentrated with the cavalry to form the vanguard of the pursuit—open warfare at last. We had been held up for a day, and I had gone back to Corps Headquarters to get maps of the country ahead.
It was after midday when I left Headquarters and started back on my cycle through the silent, brick-littered streets of the little town. Above me the naked rafters of roofs that had shed their tiles on to the street below, gleamed in the sunlight like the whitened ribs of camels that border the desert tracks. On either side, houses, like dolls’ houses with the fronts removed, exposed to the deserted street staircases, rooms, and attics; and open wardrobes, rumpled beds, and other furniture hung on the sagging floors and threatened an avalanche at each reverberating shell-clap.
I left this broken, cardboard town behind me and pedalled up the slope eastwards. On all sides lay signs of our advance and of the enemy’s retreat. By the railway viaduct some sappers were digging into the high embankment in search of delay-action mines; and a field on the right was chock-a-block with captured German guns, bearing on their shields the units of the captors rudely scrawled in chalk.
I dismounted and walked the steepest bit of hill, and, as I neared the top, a car flashed over the crest towards me. I noticed that one of the occupants wore the red hat of the staff, but I was trudging along with my head down and did not notice them more particularly till I heard a voice calling my name. Then, when I turned back, I discovered that the staff fellow’s companion was Gerard Bretherton.
I had not seen G. B. for more than a year, and we made the usual remarks and asked the usual questions. He was very interested to hear that the battalion was doing its proper job at last and he produced a map in order to see what ground we were covering. He wanted to know if it was anything like the training schemes we used to do on Salisbury Plain and in back areas. I told him it was exactly like a scheme, though vastly more entertaining.
“And you have got a company now, Gurney, I suppose,” he said. “Which?” I told him it was ‘A,’ his old company. “Gad, I wish I were with you!” he exclaimed, rather wistfully I thought. And then the staff fellow, who had been fidgeting and looking at his watch, butted in. We said “Cheerio,” and the car glided on down the slope.
I pedalled on, thinking of old G. B. After the rough time he had on the Somme in ’16 they gave him a soft job at G.H.Q.; but he did not look as though it had agreed with him. We were all of us a little war-weary, I suppose; but in him the look was deeper than in most of us.
I rode through a deserted village on the fringes of a small wood in which there had been a little fracas a few days previously. Shutters hung lamely from the windows of the cottages, and several flattened bags of field-grey sprawled on the roadside. One figure had a rifle and rusty fixed bayonet still clasped in his wax-like hands, and beside him a civilian peasant lolled against the wall with his soiled trouser-legs stiff before him like a drunk on a doorstep. One of our own fellows lay stiffly on a mattress that had been dragged into the street for his comfort, though he would never worry again about a soft bed, poor chap. It was all rather theatrical out there in the November sunshine. Like a waxwork show.
At every cross-roads Fritz had left huge craters that one could have buried a lorry in. And he was still busy at the game; the dull boom of distant explosions sounded periodically ahead and on either hand. I met the skipper of an anti-aircraft battery sitting disconsolately on his lorry. He had been ordered to join our advance guard; but though he had covered, he declared, thousands of kilometres since morning and tried every road and track in northern France, sooner or later he had always come to one of those enormous holes. But the grateful civilians, newly delivered from the H
un, were working like galley-slaves to fill them in, carrying on far into the night with lanterns bobbing and women laughing and crying for joy.
It was dusk when I got back to the battalion. We were billeted in a château of sorts, standing a little distance from the road in a small park. It was a quiet place, a mile or two from any village, and we had chosen it on that account. We liked to get away from Generals, who are often a wet blanket on the proper enjoyment of a war. At nightfall, when the infantry took over the outposts, we retired to some comfy spot; for having cycles, we were able to choose a quiet billet out of range of the more persistent annoyances of war, and yet be ready on the mark for our vanguard at dawn.
We had a great time that night. The Comtesse something-or-other owned the place. It was practically untouched, having been until now well behind the fighting zone, and seemed a palace to us who had been sleeping in holes and ditches. Brother Bosche had behaved pretty decently there—he had even kept the Comtesse posted as to the position of her husband’s unit of French seventy-fives—but she had taken the precaution of burying most of her linen and wine in the garden. She showed us where the wine was buried, and we soon had it up.
Patriotic and entente-cordialish sentiments were fired across the dinner table that night by Madame the Comtesse in her queer but prettily accented English, and were suitably responded to by us in our sledge-hammer French. After dinner we had the carpet up and the gramophone was put on. Our dancing partners consisted of the Comtesse, her maid, a gaunt old housekeeper, and a couple of tired-looking women from the cottages near by—hardly enough to go round; but it was a great success.
We sang the Marseillaise and God Save the King, the emotional Frenchwomen in high-pitched voices and with tears streaming down their faces, and Madame the Comtesse with her glass of Clicquot raised aloft and a Union Jack round her breast; whilst we stood to attention like graven images. And then early to bed; for at dawn we had to be out beyond the outpost line.
II
Dawn found us pushing eastward according to plan. On the last trip my company had been in reserve, and it was now our turn to lead the way. We advanced in our usual formation: point, advance section, and support. Cavalry patrols combed the country on either side, and to left and right among the folds and copses one caught glimpses of a trooper in full war-paint; steel helmet, drawn sword, spare bandolier round the horse’s neck, and forage-net hanging from the saddle. Away on the left, C Company was moving in the same formation.
Thus we moved out that morning of the last full day of the Great War. For a short distance I rode just behind the point, and having had a good breakfast, I was in a contemplative mood. All around me sparrows were twittering in the quiet of the early morning; and I looked at the five steel-hatted figures ahead with the cold dawn-light gleaming on their bayonets, and reflected that this was the tapering spear-point of one of the British Armies in France thrusting forward to the Rhine. Unseen behind me came my support and the remainder of the vanguard, and farther back the mainguard would now be falling in; and many miles back behind the morning mist was the main body. With my mind’s eye I could see them fall in and go swinging off along the many roads eastward, infantry, artillery, ammunition column, and baggage train—the batteries, battalions, brigades, divisions, and army corps that made up the hundred-and-fifty odd thousand men of the army behind us.
One of our planes droned overhead, the pilot sounding his klaxon horn to let us know that he had spotted us and was ready to start work; presently he would come droning back and drop us hastily scribbled stories of Hun machine-gun nests in unexpected places.
The sun was well above the tree-tops when we had our first serious hold-up. The machine-gun fire was particularly heavy, and there was a good deal of whiz-bang shelling, which seemed to indicate that we had run up against something bigger than usual. Away on the left C Company also were having trouble, and my supporting troop of cavalry had disappeared silently among the trees in an attempt to work round the enemy’s flank.
The map showed a château in the woods, and near by two or three cottages marked ‘La Péronnelle.’ One of my platoons had worked its way up to the château grounds and was lining a ditch that commanded part of the garden. Dodd, the platoon commander, had his Lewis gun out on the right covering a track in rear of the house—to catch the blighters retreating, as he put it.
The C.O., Killick of the Lancers, Pagan, and myself had a brief pow-wow sitting on a fallen tree-trunk; and when a few minutes later I returned to my sector, I found things were much quieter. Dodd’s Lewis gun had bagged some Bosches in rear of the house, and although a desultory fire still came from the woods on our right, the château itself was silent.
It was a gloomy building in nondescript style, with a number of blistered green wooden shutters spaced in rows on a dull brick façade. A balustraded terrace with steps at either end ran two-thirds of the length of the front, and four long French doors opened on to it. One of our shells had knocked a hole in the wall just below the second tier of windows, exposing the lathes and plaster of the ceiling within; and the shutter above hung outwards on one lower hinge, looking absurdly like a large ear cocked forward to catch what we were saying. Below the terrace was a wide stretch of grass that could hardly be crossed without the loss of several casualties, but away to the left a path leading off between high hedges promised cover from view right up to the château itself.
Bidding my servant follow, I moved along the path, and at the end of it, dodged across some flower-beds to a small courtyard that adjoined the château on that side. Our guns were lengthening range and were putting a few rounds into the woods behind the house; on my right Dodd’s Lewis gun was stuttering away in short bursts, and one of our planes was droning about overhead. I was on the point of making a dash across the courtyard; but I drew back suddenly in astonishment.
Inside the château someone was playing a piano. The sound came out clearly; every note was distinct, played with a firm masculine touch, as though a man that loved music had sat down to amuse himself. And every moment I expected to hear a voice raised in song; but no voice came. My servant and I stood motionless, listening.
It really was rather startling, with the gunning still going on all around one, to be greeted by a tune on a piano when one had expected a sudden burst of machine-gun fire. The air was “Just a song at twilight,” and in the middle of it I distinctly heard a round go off inside the château. The piano faltered but did not pause, and presently the tune changed to that ribald war-song, “Après la guerre finie.”
We had been standing against a stable wall on the far side of the courtyard, my servant and I, he with his rifle and fixed bayonet handy, and I with my service revolver loose in the holster, both of us motionless; but at the sound of that old familiar tune I woke up. To this day I do not know why I did it, but I told my servant to stay where he was. It was wrong, of course; a company officer should never wander about alone under fire.
The tune changed to “Tipperary” as I dodged across the courtyard, and often as I have heard that hackneyed air, it seemed to sum up all that was best in the war as I heard it that sunny morning coming from a bombarded château with old Fritz sniping from the woods all around us. It occurred to me that one of my fellows had got into the house from the other side. Sergeant Pepper had the platoon over there, and this was just the absurd sort of thing he would do. Only two days previously, when a pair of Huns had come out of a wood on to the road a few yards from where he was standing and set off running at the sight of him, he had ejaculated “Gawd!” with fervour, taken off his tin hat, and thrown it after them in the manner of an urchin chasing butterflies.
I determined to give him a good cursing.
III
I got into the château by a broken window that faced the courtyard. A mattress propped against the sill and an empty belt-box showed that a German machine gun had occupied the window recently. Now, however, except for some muddy boot-marks on the carpet, the room was deserted. There was a d
oor in the wall facing the window, and the muffled strains of “Farewell, Leicester Square” came from that direction.
I opened the door cautiously and found myself in one of those long, low, narrow passages that the builders of old French châteaux were so fond of making. Halfway along the passage I came upon the body of a German officer, a handsome young fellow with a messy wound in the shoulder. He had an automatic pistol in his right hand, and it looked to me as though he had shot himself; but he appeared to be dead, and I stepped over him and continued my exploration.
The sound of the piano had tailed off and ceased altogether by the time I reached the main entrance-hall into which the passage led. I was going carefully now with my service .45 in my hand; for I had not forgotten the round I had heard fired, although I thought that the fellow in the passage was the explanation of it. Several half-closed doors opened off to right and left, and the first two rooms I tried were unoccupied, although they had been used recently by a German staff, as the trestle tables, screwed-up balls of paper, and abandoned message-pads showed.
The hall was a large and gloomy place, and its silence depressed me. It was as though I had side-stepped from bustling life into the fourth dimension and was now a lonely looker-on. I have had the same feeling looking down the long dim nave of some Norman cathedral at the busy sunlit street framed in the west door, infinitely remote as though seen through the wrong end of a telescope. Involuntarily I crossed the paved hall on tiptoe and pushed open another door.
The first thing I saw was a man seated at a grand piano at the far end of a long room. I had made no noise in opening the door, and he neither turned nor moved. I crept cautiously across the threshold, but I had advanced no farther than a couple of paces across the thick carpet towards him before I stopped dead. The musician had his back to me, and was leaning forward in his chair over the piano; and I had seen at a glance that he was no sergeant of mine, but a German officer. It was not the sight of him, however, that had pulled me up with a jerk. I had my revolver in my hand, and apprehension was not the cause of my hesitation; the cause was sheer astonishment. Upon a sofa on my left lay a girl in evening dress, asleep