Part 4 (1/2)

Monsieur le Prefet held counsel and deliberated in a room against whose outside wall one could hear the constant patter of machine gun bullets raining thick from the opposite bank of the river. Monsieur Muzart, the Mayor, seemed to be everywhere at once, and was always the first on the spot when anything really serious occurred.

Add to these the little dairy maids, who each morning fearlessly delivered the city's milk; or the old fellow on whom had devolved the entire responsibility of the street-cleaning department and who went about, helmet clad, attending to his ch.o.r.es, now and then shouting a hearty ”_Whoa Bijou_” to a faithful quadruped who patiently dragged his dump cart, and over whose left ear during the entire Summer, was tied a bunch of tri-colour field flowers.

I had almost forgotten to mention two extraordinary old women, whom I came upon seated out in a deserted street, making over a mattress, while gently discussing their private affairs. It was the end of a warm July afternoon. A refres.h.i.+ng coolness had begun to rise from the adjacent river, and in the declining sunlight I could see great swarms of honey bees hovering about a climbing rose bush whose fragrant blossoms hung in huge cl.u.s.ters over the top of a convent wall near by.

I could not resist the temptation. Pressed by the desire to possess I stepped forward and was about to reach upward when a masculine voice, whose owner was hidden somewhere near my elbow called forth:

”Back, I say! Back! you're in sight!”

I quickly dived into the shadow for cover just in time to hear the bullets from a German machine gun whizz past my ear!

”You can trust them to see everything,” murmured one of the old women, not otherwise disturbed. ”But if you really want some roses just go around the block and in by the back gate, Madame.”

How in the presence of such calm can we believe in war?

Ah, France! elsewhere perhaps there may be just as brave--but surely none more sweetly!

III

The little village was just behind the lines. The long stretch of roadway, that following the Aisne finally pa.s.sed through its main street, had been so thoroughly swept by German fire that it was as though pockmarked by ruts and sh.e.l.l holes, always half full of muddy water.

A sign to the left said--

_Chemin, defile de V._--

There could be no choice; there was but to follow the direction indicated, branch out onto a new highway which, over a distance of two or three miles, wound in and out with many strategic contortions; a truly military route whose topography was the most curious thing imaginable. If by accident there happened to be a house in its way it didn't take the trouble to go _around_, but _through_ the edifice.

One arrived thus in the very midst of the village, having involuntarily traversed not only the notary's flower garden, but also his drawing-room, if one were to judge by the quality of the now much faded wall paper, and the empty spots where portraits used to hang.

The towns.h.i.+p had served as target to the German guns for many a long month, and was seriously _amoche_, as the saying goes. ”Coal scuttles”

by the hundred had ripped the tiles from almost every roof. Huge breaches gaped in other buildings, while some of them were completely levelled to the ground. Yet, in spite of all, moss, weeds and vines had sprung up mid the ruins, adding, if possible, the picturesque to this scene of desolation. One robust morning glory I noted had climbed along a wall right into the soot of a tumble-down chimney, and its fairylike blossoms lovingly entwined the iron bars whereon had hung and been smoked many a succulent ham.

The territorials (men belonging to the older army cla.s.ses), had installed their mess kitchens in every convenient corner: some in the open court-yards and others beneath rickety stables and sheds, where the sunlight piercing the gloom caught the dust in its rays and made it seem like streams of golden powder, whose brightness enveloped even the most sordid nooks and spread cheer throughout the dingy atmosphere.

Fatigue squads moved up and down the road, seeking or returning with supplies, while those who were on duty, pick and shovel in hand, moved off to their work in a casual, leisurely manner one would hardly term military.

Of civilians there remained but few. Yet civilians there were, and of the most determined nature: ”hangers-on” who when met in this vicinity seemed almost like last specimens of an extinct race, sole survivors of the world s.h.i.+pwreck.

At the moment of our arrival an old peasant woman was in the very act of scolding the soldiers, who to the number of two hundred and fifty (a whole company) filled to overflowing her modest lodgings, where it seemed to me half as many would have been a tight squeeze. It was naturally impossible for her to have an eye on all of them. In her distress she took me as witness to her trials.

”Just see,” she vociferated, ”they trot through my house with their muddy boots, they burn my wood, they're drying up my well, and on top of it all they persist in smoking in my hay-loft, and the hay for next Winter is in! Shouldn't you think their Officers would look after them? Why, I have to be a regular watch-dog, I do!”

”That's all very well, mother,” volunteered a little dried up Corporal.

”But how about _their_ incendiary sh.e.l.ls? You'll get one of them sooner or later. See if you don't!”

”If it comes, we'll take it; we've seen lots worse than that! Humph!

That's no reason why you should mess up a house that belongs to your own people, is it? I'd like to know what your wife would say if she caught you smoking a pipe in her hay loft?”