Authors: Stewart Binns
âWhere are you staying?'
âHere; they have a small apartment upstairs. Very cosy, very private.'
Margaret is tempted. She can feel the beginnings of a sexual frisson â perhaps this time? She takes his hand.
âHamish, if I stay with you, will you be gentle with me?'
âOf course, like a butterfly on gossamer.'
The
first snow of winter has been falling on the fields of Flanders. For a fleeting moment the endless soft white blanket makes the flat landscape look almost appealing, rather like looking down from above and seeing a vast expanse of pure white clouds. But only for a moment; the hideous reality of what the pristine snow temporarily disguises soon returns as drizzle replaces snowflakes.
As if everyone has not suffered enough already â soldiers and civilians alike â winter's true viciousness has arrived. Temperatures have dropped significantly and those in the open are not only wet, hungry and miserable but are now also shivering from cold. The last thing anyone wants, especially the beleaguered Allies who have steadfastly held their ground against repeated German attacks, is another battle. But that is exactly what Erich von Falkenhayn has planned; one last throw of the dice before the depths of winter change the game.
He has been carefully husbanding men and materiel: shells, rifle and machine-gun ammunition, winter boots, gloves and greatcoats. He has also been looking at the skies. He thinks that, although cold weather is a nightmare for any soldier, it is less arduous for his elite Bavarians and Prussians, who are more used to the icy temperatures of the heart of Europe, than for his French and British enemies, who come from more maritime climes. So, for him, the first snow of winter provides the ideal moment to attack.
Von Falkenhayn has created yet another army group to
add to Army Group Fabeck, which he created at the end of October. He chooses a 64-year-old Prussian warhorse, General Alexander von Linsingen, to lead the attack and gives him the cream of the German Army. Pomeranians, West Prussians, the pick of the Kaiser's beloved Guards: the 1st and 3rd Foot Guards, and the 2nd and 3rd Guards Grenadiers. Each is formidable, but together they represent a fearsome challenge.
On the other hand, facing them are three all-but-spent Allies.
The remnants of the Belgian Army in the north are fighting valiantly for the last western fringes of their homeland. Thankfully for them, German attention is now focused further south.
The French, proud and brave, are exhausted. They still go to war as Napoleon did, with pomp and bravado, but there is a limit to how many men in splendid uniforms they can sacrifice to protect their Republic. The generals still have the resolve, and their men the stomach, but for how much longer without stockpiles of shells and ammunition?
The British are in an even worse position. The British Expeditionary Force, which was the major part of the British Army, is almost destroyed. Inexperienced reservists, few with serious combat experience, are just about keeping it alive, but its death knell may sound within days.
There have been a few days of relative calm, only interrupted by two unpleasant instances. Two days ago, a Belgian farmer was discovered illicitly supplying the Germans with meat, even though he had a contract with the British Army. He was tried and found guilty by a military court. When he was executed by firing squad, Brigade HQ insisted that every resident of the man's village over the age of fifteen stand in the village square to witness the event, ensuring that he died in front of all his relatives and friends. The incident did little for Anglo-Belgian relations.
The following evening, during a night-time skirmish with
what was probably a German reconnaissance patrol, three members of the 4th Battalion Fusiliers' Number 3 Platoon heard voices behind their trench. Suspecting that the Germans might have outflanked them, they called, âHalt! Identify yourselves!'
No response was forthcoming, so the fusiliers opened fire. Then came an impassioned cry.
âFuck! You've shot my officer.'
âWhy didn't you answer?'
âI'm the platoon serjeant. We were three yards apart in the dark. I couldn't see him. He thought I was going to respond, and I thought he was. Then you opened fire.'
âServes you right, then, don't it?'
The two men were Royal Engineers, running a telephone line to the 4th Fusiliers' trench. The officer had been shot through the jaw and his side. The stretcher-bearers took him back to Battalion HQ, but his prospects did not look good. No one mentioned the incident again and no disciplinary action was taken, nor was it even considered, the consensus being that the two sappers had been bloody fools.
With the snow turning to rain in the middle of the night, and the temperature rising slightly, dawn beckons with a dank, cold mist to add to the misery of the scene.
The German assault is presaged by the most intense artillery bombardment since the beginning of the war. It begins at 6.30 a.m on Wednesday 11 November. It does not stop for two and a half hours and is targeted at a small area between Zonnebeke in the north and St Eloi in the south, an area just seven miles wide, barely four miles east of Ypres. The ground shakes beneath every building in the town, an indication of how awesome the impact is on the front line.
The 4th Battalion Royal Fusiliers is dug in at Hooge, at the epicentre of the bombardment. For newly decorated and promoted Colour Serjeants Tait and Woodruff and the men of their Number 2 Platoon around them, it is an assault that
even the most seasoned veterans of the British Army find hard to bear. At times, the ground beneath them rises like a wave crashing on to a beach, before it drops them back down with a shudder. Sometimes, they are covered in showers of earth from an impact nearby. Inevitably, many men are injured, shredded or totally obliterated. That is horror enough, especially if the remains of friends and comrades fall on you like gory rain. But then there is the even greater horror of contemplating death by an unseen missile which is going to do to you what has just happened to your neighbour.
The deafening noise is relentless. A few minutes are just about bearable; but for two and a half hours, it is a hell on earth.
In order to say anything, even to the man next to you, you have to shout in his ear. Beyond that distance, hand signals are the only option. Maurice and Harry are curled up together in a foetal position on a dry platform at the bottom of the trench, hoping and praying that they are not about to receive a direct hit. Like others who have experienced heavy shelling before, they are using cotton-wool earplugs to deaden some of the unrelenting din.
Harry signals to Maurice to pull out one of his plugs for a moment.
âFuck me, Mo, this is beyond a joke!'
âI know, this is the worst one ever. You all right?'
âNot really, Mo. I'm gettin' the willies. I'd rather have a
fourpenny one
than put up wiv this much longer.'
Maurice looks at Harry and points to tell him to put his earplug back in. Harry is sweating profusely and his hands are trembling. He has never liked being under a barrage of shells and this one is far worse than anything they have experienced before. As Harry closes his eyes to try to obscure what is happening to him, Maurice puts his arms around his friend and holds him tightly.
Some
of the young reservists nearby notice what is happening. Maurice smiles and nods at them to reassure them. They smile back. Strangely, they do not seem to sense weakness in their colour serjeant by witnessing Harry's predicament. Every man there, young or old, novice or veteran, is feeling the same thing â utter terror. Each is fighting his overwhelming instinct to flee and is praying for his deliverance from the ordeal.
A direct hit into a trench kills most men in the vicinity; it is a quick death. Two things are worse: to be some distance away and be hit by shrapnel, which takes off a limb or disembowels you; or to be cowering in a trench when a shell explodes just in front or behind it, so you are then buried alive. With more shells falling and the ever-present sniper fire, it takes a huge amount of courage for your comrades to dig you out before you choke to death. Most do not try.
The 4th Fusiliers' Number 2 Platoon has taken one direct hit, obliterating the trench and replacing it with a deep crater. It leaves no trace of the three men who stood there. It also suffers one near miss, about twenty yards from Harry and Maurice. Three men have shrapnel wounds, one serious, and are withdrawn.
Respite from the bombardment arrives at 9 a.m. when the trajectory of the shells rises towards the rear, where it is intended to soften up the reserves. Everyone knows that the infantry assault is imminent. Maurice looks at Harry. His face is contorted, as if in great pain. He is holding his rifle close to him, his knuckles white with tension. Maurice taps him on the shoulder and helps him take out his earplugs.
âIt's all right, Harry; it's over. Fritz will be here soon. Come on, eyes front.'
Harry opens his eyes. As he does so, he notices that many of the men are looking at him.
âWhat the fuckin' Ada, what are you lot starin' at? I just
don't like loud noises. Any of you tossers got a problem wiv that? Look to your fronts, you bunch of arseholes!'
The men of Number 2 Platoon are relieved. Good old 'Arry, the âLeyton Lash' â which they call him when he is not listening â is back to his old self, the toughest NCO in the regiment. They regard Maurice differently. Calmer than Harry, he listens more; you can go to him with your problems. But do not get on the wrong side of him; he can be just as hard as Harry, if he needs to be.
Number 2 Platoon is in the centre of the 4th Battalion Fusiliers' position. Its new officer, Captain Reginald Harold Routley, has recently arrived from India, all his fighting having been done on the North-West Frontier. It is hard to imagine what he makes of the shelling and the rain and mud of Flanders.
Now that the worst is over for Harry, Maurice goes to the far left of his platoon's trench to stiffen the boys. Captain Routley is at the other end, with Harry in the middle.
When the elite German Guards attack, it is as if they have forgotten the lessons of Mons. Perhaps the elan of these old regiments demands that they attack as they always have done. They come on in tight formations, their officers with swords drawn. They could be Napoleon's legendary Old Guard making its final, futile attack in the fading light at Waterloo a hundred years earlier. They too were cut down in droves by lethal British musketry.
The Germans emerge out of the heavy mist at 9.45 a.m. precisely; there are 17,500 of them along a line just seven miles wide. That is equivalent to a man and a half for every yard. Facing them in their trenches are just 7,800 defenders.
Advancing directly in front of the Fusiliers' centre is the 4th Battalion, Queen Augusta's Guards Grenadiers, men from Berlin, one of the elite regiments of the old Prussian Army. Even over the din of gunfire, the Fusiliers can hear
the Guards Grenadiers singing their regimental song â
Die Wacht am Rhein
' as they approach. They look very impressive, tall men, immaculately turned out, their field-grey uniforms looking distinctive, even at a distance and even in the gull-grey murk of a November morning.
Although Royal Field Artillery is rationing shells, the fusiliers have good stocks of small-arms ammunition. With clear orders to keep the men supplied, Maurice and Harry have put the two youngest reservists in charge of boxes of ammunition. The company's quartermaster serjeant has also been able to find a supply of rifle oil and cleaning rags, so their rifles are in pristine condition â about the only things they possess that are.
When the Germans come within range, Captain Routley issues the order to fire, a command repeated by Maurice and Harry. It is target practice again, just like Mons, and the Guards Grenadiers fall like tin soldiers in a fairground shooting stall. But they keep coming on; there seems to be an endless supply of them. By now, there is firing all along the seven-mile front, and the great battle is fully engaged; the noise is almost as deafening as the early morning artillery bombardment.
Return fire begins to wreak havoc among the Fusiliers. The Germans have brought snipers with them across the open ground and they are picking targets from concealed positions.
To the defenders' amazement, and despite appalling losses, some of the Germans make it all the way to within twenty yards of the trench. Harry looks to his right. Routley should have given the order to fix bayonets by now, but he has not. Harry sees why; he has been wounded in the head and one of the medics is dressing it. He seems to be conscious, but blood is pouring down his face. Harry gives the order as loudly as he can.
â
Fix bayonets!
'
Within
moments there are Germans jumping into the trench. Harry swings round to see that there is a Guards Grenadier on either side of him. As they both lunge at the same time, one screams something incomprehensible in German; the other shouts, âTake this, Tommy!' in perfect English. But Harry is too good for even these elite Berliners. He deflects one bayonet with the butt of his rifle and the other with his own blade. He then grabs one of the Mauser's barrels and pulls the man holding it towards him. As the man tumbles forward, Harry crashes his elbow into his face, smashing his nose and making him reel backwards into the bottom of the trench.
The second man tries to fire his Mauser, but Harry flicks its muzzle upwards, directing the bullet harmlessly into the air. Harry pulls his trigger in the same moment, the impact of the bullet at close range throwing the man backwards like a rag doll.
Harry then turns to the other grenadier, who, despite being almost submerged in the muddy water at the bottom of the trench, is trying to get a shot away.
Harry is soon on top of him with his boot on his chest. He raises his bayonet to strike.
âTake this, Fritz!'
Harry plunges his bayonet deep into the man's chest and uses his boot to lever it out again. As he does so, a fountain of blood rises a foot into the air.
There are hand-to-hand battles all along the trench. Worryingly, there seem to be more men in field grey than khaki. Fighting with an extraordinary ferocity, Harry decides to move towards Captain Routley. All the tension created by the morning's bombardment is leaving him like steam from a pressure valve. He kills several of the enemy in quick succession, encourages his men as he passes them and picks some up from the bottom of the trench and gets them fighting again.