Soldier of the Horse (27 page)

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Authors: Robert W. Mackay

BOOK: Soldier of the Horse
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Flowerdew ripped his sword from its scabbard and waved it overhead. “It's a charge, boys, it's a charge!”

More horses and men tore up the embankment and into the open. Riders shouted and cursed, struggling to control their excited mounts and get into parallel lines, stirrup to stirrup. Horses spread out, some flinging their heads, nostrils flaring. The mass of men and horses plunged ahead.

Tom reached across his body for his sword and jerked it from its scabbard behind his left thigh, pain stabbing at his left arm. Over the pounding of hoofs he heard the scrape of swords as the three troops of cavalry drew their weapons, their horses' eyes rolling as they thundered on.

A hail of bullets came at the Canadians, and some went down. The men roared as they leaned low over their horses' necks, bolting toward the Germans. From the corner of his eye Tom saw the youthful trumpeter, Reg Longley, pull up his trumpet to sound the charge, then disappear, his horse cut from under him.

It's not a charge, it's a stampede, and Tom bent forward, reins in his left hand, sword reaching, Toby pounding close behind Flowerdew's horse.

Rifle bullets buzzed all around, like a thousand hornets streaming from a hive, and Tom heard the sickening thud of lead hitting living flesh. To his right another man went down, shot out of his saddle. Toby had his bit in his teeth, stretched out in a full gallop. The Germans were now only a hundred yards away. A machine gun opened up ahead, another from the right. Grey-clad figures were bent over their automatic weapons as they spat out five hundred rounds a minute, riflemen adding to the fusillade.

Flowerdew rocketed out of his saddle, falling backward off his horse, which stumbled and collapsed. Tom was now lead rider, fifty yards from the Germans. Christ, there's a second line of them behind the first. Toby missed a step and kept going. Tom felt a hammer-like blow and flinched as a shocking pain seared his right leg. I'm hit, by God, and so is Toby. He glanced down. More bullets thudded into Toby's chest, Tom's saddlebags, and both his legs. Blood spattered, flecked with flying shreds of uniform and leather. He screamed in pain and fury as he levelled his sword. Sergeant Quartermain's instructions flashed through his mind. “Sword horizontal. Arm straight. Let your shoulder take the shock . . .”

Toby was grunting in pain as the bullets took their toll. Ten yards to go, and a grey-coated figure, rifle at his shoulder, fired, lifting his eyes to Tom's at the last instant. Tom's sword-thrust took the man high in the chest and he fell over as Toby swept by. Tom kept his grip on his sword and let his arm swing back, Toby's forward motion dragging the weapon from the slumping body.

Tom knew they'd never make it to the second line of Germans. Toby barely responded as Tom reined him hard to the right to get back to the first line. The horse stumbled and crashed to the earth amid the German soldiers and, as Tom went down, he reversed his sword and drove it two-handed through a prone gunner, like a man driving a crowbar into hard ground. What was left of the squadron pounded past Tom, men yelling, stabbing, dying as the German barrage continued.

Tom's right leg was pinned under Toby, the big horse thrashing and screaming as he tried to get up. Tom grabbed tufts of grass, slippery with blood, and pulled himself clear. More bullets thudded into Toby's body, even after he lay motionless.

Horses, some to Tom's amazement still with riders up, milled around. Withering fire poured from the second line of Germans. Tom was desperate to get clear of the ongoing hail of lead and trampling horses but he couldn't get up. His legs were in agony, felt as though they had been hit with sledgehammers. He tried to crawl on his belly closer to Toby's body, but his holster and ammunition pouches caught in the grass. Undoing his webbing, he let the Webley and other gear fall away as he pulled himself in close behind Toby's mercifully still form and hunkered down, tin helmet pulled low. Peering from under the brim, he saw a few surviving Straths ride or run on foot into the woods to escape the hammering German guns.

Gradually the volume of fire eased and the surviving Germans withdrew to their second line. The sounds of battle gave way to the moans and shouts of men calling for help, the halting hoofbeats and pitiful neighing of horses wounded and bleeding and falling. Tom felt rather than heard the moan deep in his own chest as the pain in his legs intensified. His left arm throbbed with the grinding quality of a toothache. Blood oozed from his shredded trouser legs and puttees.

Tom heard a groan and a muffled curse. Gus Dunnett, pale and sweating, hitched his way through the churned-up earth to join him. “Hope those bastards don't come back,” he mumbled, jaw clenched. “How bad are you hit?”

“My legs,” said Tom.

Dunnett was holding a hand to his belly, blood coursing between his fingers.

Above the racket of shooting still going on in the wood, Tom heard shouted commands from the direction of the second German line. He peered over Toby's withers and saw a detachment formed up with fixed bayonets, marching toward him, close enough that he could make out the rank insignia on their grey uniforms.

He dropped down. “Buggers want to finish us off.”

Wishing he had held onto his Webley, he turned to see Dunnett crawling away. Tom wondered where he was going, then saw what Gus was up to. A German Mauser lay on the ground ten feet away. Dunnett stayed flat, propelling himself with his legs and one arm. Finally he stretched and managed to reach the rifle, pushing it stock first toward Tom who leaned out to grasp it.

Tom quickly checked the weapon over, sliding back the bolt and inspecting the chamber. Empty. But the magazine had at least two rounds in it, maybe more. Muddy but serviceable. Hoping for the best, he looked over Toby's body.

The German detachment had covered much of the intervening ground and was no more than fifty yards away. Tom tried but failed to get his left arm up on Toby's body to form a rest and grasp the forestock of the rifle. Dropping the weapon to the ground, he lifted his left arm with his right, placing it on Toby's rib cage. Everything went black for a second or two as pain shot into his shoulder and neck.

Picking up the rifle with his right hand, he lodged it in his left and pulled the stock to his shoulder. Open sights. He cycled a round into the chamber, focussed on the first enemy soldier that came into his line of sight, and fired. The man dropped. Tom pulled back the bolt to eject the empty shell and cycle in another round. He fired again. He missed. Slow down, he said to himself. Slow down, or you'll soon be dead.

God, get us through this, he thought, working the bolt one more time. Was this the end? He saw one of the Germans pointing at him, waving a pistol. An officer, or a noncom. Got you, he thought, and fired. The man went down, spun backward by the force of the bullet.

The German patrol wavered as another soldier fell. Someone besides Tom was firing at them, someone to his right, maybe from the wood. So at least some of the boys in there were still alive. The Germans turned and hurried back to their second line. Tom watched as they formed up and withdrew to the southeast, away from the forest, away from the scene of the battle. He shot once more, fearful that the enemy would yet return to finish off the wounded Canadians, and hit a man in the back. His companions left him where he fell as they marched away.

Left arm and shoulder on fire, legs numb and blood pounding in his brain, Tom let the Mauser drop and turned to lie with his back against his dead horse, his left arm cradled to his belly. Horses and men—his comrades—lay dead or dying, scattered across the grassy field. The battle in the wood continued, and stray rifle bullets still whined through the air.

How many dead? Not many survivors. He felt light-headed, but then the pain flared up through his legs again, pulling him back to his own terrible reality. Maybe he'd die right here, bleed to death in a Picardy field beside poor Toby.

His mind wandered to thoughts of home, Winnipeg, his family. Images of Ellen flared and faded, along with thoughts of jail and the Kravenko jailbreak. For some reason the young face of the blond German boy he had killed outside the listening post flashed in front of him.

It's over for a lot of the boys. And for me. I wasn't happy with one wound—now I've got more than enough. Dazed, he looked around for Dunnett. Gus was right beside him, turned on his side, facing Tom. His hand was no longer on his belly, and the blood no longer flowed. He was dead.

Poor bastard. He looked down at his own legs, splayed out in front of him, at Toby, lying still, at the other huddled shapes on the ground, men and horses. Poor bastards.

BLIGHTY

♦   ♦   ♦

“This one's gone,” said a laconic voice.

“Leg wounds here. Give me a hand,” said another.

Not sure if he was dreaming or conscious, Tom felt hands push him onto his side and roll him onto his back. Everything went black and silent; then he felt dizzy, as if he were in a bunk at sea, swaying and lurching—was he back aboard the
Cape Wrath
? Sudden agony in his legs made him try to move them, to sit up.

“Hold still, Sergeant,” barked one of the voices.

Tom was on a stretcher, four men carrying him. He lay face up, fully booted and spurred. Spurred for sure—whenever the men at his feet let the sides of the stretcher sag together, the canvas bulged down with his weight, his legs dropped and his spurs dug into the ground, sending pain shooting through his calves.

The stretcher-bearers bent double as bullets still whipped through the air. As they passed a tree with a cluster of men around it, Tom could make out Lieutenant Harrower, back from his patrol, bent over Gordon Flowerdew who was slumped, back against the tree. He was waving off the men, who seemed to be urging him to get onto a stretcher.

“Wait,” called Flowerdew. He lifted a hand. “Macrae—you'll be all right? You finished the charge?”

“Yes, sir. I finished the charge.”

“A lot of the men didn't make it, did they?”

“No, a lot of them didn't,” Tom almost sobbed to himself. He couldn't summon the strength to reply or to hold his head up to look around anymore, but as the bearers pushed on he saw tears streaking the battlefield grime on Flowerdew's face.

They took him to a horse-drawn wagon, pressed into service as an ambulance. The iron wheels and wooden spokes had no give to them, causing the other wounded stretched out beside him to groan with every bump. Two hours later he was in an aid station on yet another stretcher, a doctor in a blood-stained gown bending over him.

“Get the trousers and puttees off him. I'll be right back.” A soldier cut away the field dressings that had been applied right over his clothing by the bearers. Next came puttees and trouser legs, followed by bootlaces, and then he eased off Tom's boots. They joined the heap of bloody clothing on the ground.

“You'd better look at my left arm, too.” The sleeve of his tunic was added to the pile.

Tom shivered, his torso and right arm still in full uniform as it were, his other limbs exposed to the elements.

“Couldn't stay out of it, eh, Sergeant?” the orderly remarked.

“Guess not. How do my legs look?”

“Bad. Lots of wounds. What did you run into, a buzz saw?”

“Kaiser Bill's buzz saw.”

The doctor returned and, after a quick look, called for disinfectant and bandages. A grimace flashed across his drawn face. Tom could see that his legs were masses of raw, torn flesh, the bandage on his arm blood-soaked. He lay back while the doctor cleaned his wounds, the pain worse by the minute. He gritted his teeth, but a moan escaped his lips.

The doctor looked at him sharply. “Morphine,” he ordered.

As the drug took hold, Tom knew the pain was still there but felt less concern. In fact, there was really nothing to worry about. He drifted off, picturing himself paddling down the Red River in a glowing sunset.

“Strange thing, Sergeant. Lucky,” said the doctor, snapping Tom back to Picardy. “Large number of wounds. Didn't actually count them. But they're all in the flesh, the outside of your thighs and calves. No bony injury.”

“Bully beef,” said Tom, smiling to himself. He never wanted to eat the stuff again as long as he lived, but those cans of beef in his saddlebags had saved his legs.

The calm river scene slowly changed. The night grew darker. Tom was still in his canoe. Ellen was in the bow, facing away from him. He called her name, but she did not turn. Looking down, he saw stumps of legs. He muttered, fighting the oncoming darkness in his mind, forcing his eyes open, to face the darkness of the night in northern France. The morphine was wearing off, and Tom lay sweating under a canvas roof.

Tom remembered Ellen's words about the war-shattered, armless sergeant, spoken so long ago in Winnipeg: “I don't have to spend my life with Sergeant Grey. A few hours a day is one thing—a lifetime is another.”

He was conscious when they moved him to an ambulance forwarding station, and later loaded him on a train. Hope they stopped the bleeding. Don't want to bleed out. In spite of himself he dozed whenever he was left alone, dreaming of advancing Germans. He had the Mauser in his hands, but it was empty.

♦  ♦  ♦

Within days he was in England, at Number Four Canadian Hospital, Basingstoke. They had sedated him again on arrival and when he came out of it he was feverish, with nerve-shattering pain in his legs. A uniformed nurse with a clipboard and pencil waited while a white-coated figure inspected his wounds and sniffed.

“Gas gangrene,” said the doctor. “Surgery this afternoon.”

Tom struggled to sit up. “No surgery.”

“I'll be the judge of that, Sergeant. Your left arm will be all right for now—don't know what the final condition will be but it's not infected. Lucky there. But,” he went on, “your calves have numerous wounds, and the flesh is virtually stripped from the outside of your thighs. Your right leg is particularly bad. It may have to come off if we're to save your life.”

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