Heart of War (5 page)

Read Heart of War Online

Authors: John Masters

BOOK: Heart of War
5.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘All right, sir,' Boy said. ‘He'll never be a patch on Frank Stratton, though.'

Quentin said, ‘Sergeant Stratton could make a dugout look and feel like a palace … and make anything mechanical work …' He moved on. Khaki wool gloves, knitted by devoted women back in England, covered all their hands. The officers wore the short greatcoats called British Warms – short, so that there were no skirts to be soiled and weighed down with the mud of the trenches. All four wore khaki wool scarves round their necks, half covering their ears. The cold was the damp, raw cold, a degree or two below freezing, of the ice-sodden flatlands of Flanders. In a month or two spring would come, and release the ground from the iron grip of frost, turning all this, now hard and dry, to heavy clinging mud, and wetter mud would slosh over everyone's boots and into the dugouts where they sought shelter from the sniper's bullet, the stray shell, the sudden grenade.

The little procession passed from A Company to B. Captain McDonald fell back, Captain Kellaway stood forward, a tall thin figure with worried eyes, a little stoop, and waving, long-fingered feathery hands. Quentin acknowledged
Kellaway's salute with a glare. Why did he glare? Kellaway was a millionaire dilettante, about thirty-six; he was quiet, almost shy, but a good, brave officer. So why did he always make Quentin feel uncomfortable? He wished he knew, and to hide his own embarrassment, snapped, ‘Everything all right, Kellaway?'

‘Y-yes, sir,' Kellaway stammered. ‘I think we got a German sniper a few moments ago.'

‘Are you sure?'

‘No, sir. But the pile of rubbish where we think he was has altered shape a little – as though something slipped or fell in it.'

Quentin nodded and peered down into a cave dug into the front wall of the trench. From behind him the Regimental bellowed ‘Room – 'shun!'

The six figures crowded into the dugout stiffened like marionettes and Boy, peering over his uncle's shoulder, thought as he often had before that the scene was like some weird painting, or an image that comes livid before you in a nightmare.

‘Breughel,' Kellaway muttered from behind him, and Quentin turned – ‘What? What's that? Broogle? None of these men is called Broogle. We don't have a Broogle in the battalion.'

‘I was clearing my throat, sir,' Kellaway said, blushing. Boy thought he was right not to try to explain. The only art his uncle liked was fox hunting prints. And he himself would never have heard of the Breughels if Kellaway had not talked of them, in long evenings they'd spent together in billets. Before the water, he'd have been debagged in Mess, at the least, for talking about anything except horse racing or fox hunting.

The five officers and the Regimental stared at the six motionless soldiers. In one corner three candles guttered on the lid of a wooden box full of hand grenades, casting men's shadows on the corrugated iron roof of the dugout. Two dirty planks, stretched across more ammunition boxes, these for .303 small arms, were covered with khaki tunics, shirts, and vests. The men were all naked from the waist up, and beginning to shiver in the raw air. Their bodies were covered with the pink spots and stains of louse bites and louse defecations. Two of the men, totally naked, held
lighted candles rigidly in one hand, like reform school altar boys, as they stared straight ahead at the hard mud walls; in their other hand they held their khaki serge uniform trousers, turned inside out.

‘They were chatting, sir,' Kellaway said.

‘I can see that,' Quentin snapped. ‘Is your whole company doing it?'

‘No, sir, only six men per platoon at a time … They didn't want to waste any time in the rest area delousing, so they're doing it now.'

‘Carry on,' Quentin said, and the frieze broke up. The men holding candles lowered them and ran them slowly along the seam of the trousers, thus killing not only the lice but also their eggs.

Quentin and the others stepped back up into the trench. ‘I'll have an equipment check at the next dugout,' he said.

‘Very g-good, sir,' Kellaway stammered. ‘Here, sir.' He stood aside at the entrance to another dugout. ‘Room – 'shun!' the Regimental bellowed again.

Quentin looked round in the gloom. ‘Private Sandilands, show your equipment.' Boy took a notebook from a pocket of his British Warm and began to read aloud. At each item the soldier showed the piece of equipment, either hung on pegs stuck into the wall, or in his pack, or on his person – 'Greatcoat … mess-tin … steel helmet … forage cap … shirt … spare shirt … socks … spare socks, two pairs … soap … comb … knife, fork, and spoon … toothbrush … housewife … holdall … razor and case … shaving brush … cardigan … cap comforter … paybook … ammunition, one hundred and fifty rounds … rifle cover … oil bottle … '

‘Check that it's full, Kellaway.'

‘It is, sir.'

‘Water bottle, full … first field dressing … tin of boot grease … bootbrush … gas mask …'

‘Put it on, Sandilands. Shut off the tube, Boy … . All right.'

‘Spine protector … equipment, complete with frog, belt, and pouches … spare bootlaces … rifle … bayonet … pull through … entrenching tool.'

‘Let's have a look at that rifle barrel,' Quentin said.

‘For inspection … port, arms!' the Regimental snapped. ‘Examine – arms!'

Quentin peered down the barrel of the presented rifle, where the soldier's thumb was reflecting the sparse light up the barrel towards his eye.

‘Corroded,' Quentin said, ‘two patches. And cordworn muzzle.'

‘They've been reported, sir, and another rifle indented for.'

Quentin grunted and stepped back up into the trench. The soldier's equipment he had just been inspecting weighed about sixty pounds dry. In mud or rain that would go up to near eighty. The greatcoat weighed seven pounds dry, but he himself had weighed one after hours of continuous cold rain, and it was then nineteen pounds. The average weight of his men at recruitment was 132 pounds … nine stone six. It was a damned shame, but what could be done about it?

In the next bay he stopped where a private soldier was greasing his boots on the firestep, his back to the enemy, the feet of a Lewis gun sentry close to his buttocks.

‘Everything all right?' Quentin said. ‘It's Brace, isn't it?'

‘Yes, sir. I was houseman at Laburnum Lodge, sir, under Mr Parrish.'

‘I remember … Well?'

Brace was on his feet, the tin of grease in his left hand and brush in his right, just as they had been when he leaped to his feet on seeing the C.O. come round the traverse; he did not salute, for as he was bareheaded that would have been a fearful military crime. He now said, ‘The jam doesn't taste of anything, sir … and the meat's bad.'

‘All of it?'

‘No, sir. But nearly all Hoggin's is. The meat smells rotten, sir, when you open the tin, and … '

‘I know,' Quentin said. ‘We get it, too.'

Brace put down his brush and tin and held out a folded newspaper, on which he had been sitting. He said, ‘It's the same everywhere, sir. Here's a letter to “Tommy & Jack,” in
John Bull
, about the rotten food. He specially mentions Hoggin's.'

‘You didn't write that letter, did you?' Quentin asked suspiciously. Horatio Bottomley was a charlatan and probably a criminal; but his newspaper,
John Bull
, was widely read by the men in France, and the “Tommy &
Jack” section, where soldiers and sailors could air their grievances, wielded more influence than all the efforts of the commanding officers in the field. Writing letters to “Tommy & Jack' was against regulations, but the soldiers did it, and the authorities at home who could have stopped it by arresting Bottomley, did nothing. Quentin was outraged that a man like Bottomley could get more done for his men than he could, but now, as many times before, he would have to swallow his anger; it was the results that mattered.

‘Oh, no, sir!' Brace said; and Quentin said, ‘Let's hope
John Bull
can get some improvement. But I'll make a complaint, too.'

‘Thank you, sir.'

Quentin nodded and moved on. Over his shoulder he said to Kellaway – ‘Next time you get some really bad smelling meat, or plum and apple that's all fibres – send it to me at once … at once, understand? … so that I can take it to brigade.'

‘Yes, sir.'

‘And see that your men shave again before the Royal Scots Fusiliers relieve us tonight. Some of them look like out-of-work dago waiters.'

‘Yes, sir.'

Quentin led off down a communication trench towards the rear. Following him, Boy thought, the Fusiliers weren't going to be able to notice much stubble on the men's cheeks in the middle of a dark night, but that wouldn't make any difference to his uncle. In the Weald Light Infantry you shaved properly, whatever the circumstances, and that was that; as also, you died with your boots clean – unless they were under a foot of mud. His uncle really resented the mud, not because it made the going difficult, but because it dirtied the men's boots.

The Regimental appeared in the opening of A Company Headquarters dugout, where Quentin waited with Boy and Captain McDonald, the company commander. ‘Scots Fusilier party approaching, sir,' the Regimental said in a conspiratorial hiss. The three officers stood up, put on their steel helmets – their gas masks were already hung on their chests – climbed up the two small steps to the trench level, and stepped over the plank sill.

They waited, not looking at each other. A lisping voice floated to them over the traverse from the next bay, ‘But this war's a very dangerous business, I told him,' the voice lisped, ‘so perhaps the cavalry should be excused from it.'

Someone gave a servile chuckle, then the speaker appeared, saying, ‘And here we are, facing Plugstreet Wood …
and
Lieutenant Colonel Quentin Rowland, if I do not mistake. It is an honour, sir.' He saluted slowly, with a civilian half-bow thrown in. Quentin saluted back. Boy, his hand at the rim of his steel helmet, searched his mind … the colonel of the 6th Battalion the Royal Scots Fusiliers was quite plump, and not very tall … his nose was turned up, his eyes snapping blue. He really looked quite like his Uncle Quentin, except that his uncle was taller and more heavily built, and his eyes popped more out of his head. The newcomer was wearing a French Army greatcoat, the skirts buttoned back as the poilus wore them; and on his head a flanged French Army steel helmet. In his left hand he carried a lighted cigar.

Boy and his uncle recognized him at the same moment, though only Quentin spoke the name aloud, ‘Winston Churchill!' he gasped.

‘The same,' Churchill said, ‘and I trust you will permit me to smoke in your trenches. It is a vice I cannot tame.'

Winston Churchill, Boy thought. One didn't often see ex-Cabinet Ministers in the front line, especially not in uniform.

‘You look astounded, Rowland,' Churchill said, pulling out a cigar case and offering Quentin one. ‘Perhaps you think I have been conscripted?'

‘No, no!' Quentin exclaimed, ‘only I didn't know … No, thanks.'

‘The air is cleaner here than it is in the Palace of Westminster,' Churchill said. ‘I can think of a good many gentlemen in England now abed who would much benefit from being caught in the net of conscription … but those who would benfit the most are also the most adept at slipping through the meshes. It is a law of nature. Preservation of the slipperiest.'

Quentin laughed suddenly, and his constraint melted. ‘Come into the dugout and I'll show you the trench map of our sector, and then we'll go round … and later fix details of
the relief. My Adjutant and R.S.M. are here … '

‘Mine, too. I would not dream of venturing into the zone of battle without such competent dragomen … What time is it?'

Quentin looked at his watch. ‘Ten past ten.'

‘Ah. Time to toast our acquaintanceship.' He produced a silver flask from the back pocket of his greatcoat. ‘In the dugout? And perhaps you can supply us with a modicum of water … a very small modicum, sir.'

He preceded them down the steps into the dugout, drawing comfortably on his cigar.

The five private soldiers sat in the back room of the
estaminet
, singing softly, bottles of
vin blanc
on the bare table beside them, glasses in hand. The top brass buttons of all their tunics were undone, and they were not carrying gas masks, and their heads were bare; but the bowl-like steel helmets were slung over the backs of the chairs, or hung on the coat rack with their greatcoats.

She was poor but she was honest
,

Victim of a rich man's whim:

For he wooed and he seduced her
,

And she had a child by him
.

Private Stan Quick sang the verse in a pleasant tenor, exaggerating the cockney accent, as was customary whenever this song was sung. All five joined in the chorus:

It's the syme the whole world over
,

It's the poor what gets the blyme
,

While the rich gets all the pleasure
,

Ain't it all a bleeding shyme!

Quick began the second verse, while the others drank, hummed or sang,
sotto voce:

Then she cyme to London city

To recover her fair nyme
,

But another man seduced her

And she lost her nyme agyne!

Oh, it's the syme the whole world over
,

It's the poor what gets the blyme
,

While the rich gets all the pleasure
,

Ain't it all a bleeding shyme!

One of the soldiers pushed back his chair with a loud scrape and yelled, ‘Madame Frog, more van blong!' He tried to get up, staggered, and nearly fell. Quick broke off his singing to say amiably, ‘You've had enough, Harry!'

Other books

The Legacy of Eden by Nelle Davy
Revival House by S. S. Michaels
B007RT1UH4 EBOK by Gaddis, William
Envy by Sandra Brown
Marrying the Marquis by Patricia Grasso
JOHNNY GONE DOWN by Bajaj, Karan