Part 36 (1/2)
”There is no mystery about the water at all. It is very simple.” Standing there with her head held high and the fine, free, graceful lines of her tall figure outlined by the heavy folds of the now worn and darned black habit, and her hands, still beautiful, though roughened by toil, calmly folded upon her scapular, she was as remarkable and n.o.ble a figure, it seemed to Saxham, as the golden sunlight could fall upon anywhere in the world. And besides, she was his right hand at the Hospital. A capable, watchful, untiring nurse--and beauty would have decked her in his surgeon's eyes if she had been physically ugly or deformed.
”There is no mystery whatever, only when the bombardment first began I thought of the waterworks, and that one of my first cares, supposing I had been General Brounckers”--she smiled slightly--”would have been to operate there. So I set the Sisters to work at filling every empty barrel and bucket and tub in the Convent with water from the taps. And as we happened to have plenty of empty barrels and tubs, why, there is water to be had there now, and will be for some time to come. Go now, my children.”
The smiling Sisters waved their hands. The orderly saluted with his whip and drove on in obedience to Saxham's nod.
”Of course, the Sisters are aware,” he said, meeting the Mother's grave glance, ”that if it is quicker to drive, it is safer to walk?”
She nodded with the gay, sweet smile that had belonged to Lady Biddy.
”They know, of course. But danger is in the day's work. We do not seek it.
We are prepared for it, and it comes and pa.s.ses. If one day it does not pa.s.s without the cost of life, we are prepared for that, and G.o.d's Will is done always.”
”You are very brave,” he said. It was the first time in his life that he had used the phrase to any woman, and the words came out almost grudgingly.
”Oh no, not brave,” she told him; ”only obedient.” Her veil fluttered in the hot November breeze that bore with it the heavy fetid taint from the overcrowded trenches that ringed Gueldersdorp, and the acrid fumes of the cordite; though the air up here on the veld was sweet compared with the befouled atmosphere of the Women's Laager and the crowded wards at the Hospital, in spite of all that disinfectants could do. She went on:
”And we are very grateful to you for the lift. Sister Ruperta was on duty last night, and Sister Hilda Antony--the rosy Sister--is not as well as she would have us believe. Ah----”
With her grave eyes screened by her lifted hand, she had been watching the progress of the spider westward over the dun-yellow veld. Now the long wailing notes of the headquarter bugle sounded, in slow time, the a.s.sembly, and in the same instant, from the Staff over the Colonel's hotel, where the red lamp signalled danger by night and the Red Flag gave its warning by day, the scarlet danger-signal fluttered in the breeze.
Once, twice, again, the deep bell of the Catholic Church tolled. A dozen other bells echoed the warning, signifying danger by the number of their iron-tongue strokes to the threatened quarter of the town.
”'Ware big gun!” called the sentries. ”West quarter, 'ware!”
The Mother-Superior grew pale, for the Women's Laager, towards which the little Boer mare was steadily trotting with the laden spider, lay in the menaced quarter, with a bare stretch of veld between it and the Camp of the Irregular Horse, whose white tents and dug-out shelters were pleasantly shaded by ancient blue gums, picturesque and stately in spite of broken boughs and foliage torn by shrapnel and seared by the chemical fumes of bursting charges innumerable.
”Will you not go down?” Saxham asked her.
She shook her head in reply, and stood with a waiting face in prayerful silence, not stirring save to make the Sign of the Cross. And as the long white fingers fluttered over the bosom of the black habit, the faint cry that Saxham's quick ear had heard before floated up from the populous depths below.
”What is that?”
Before the question had left Saxham's lips, the monster gun spoke out in deafening thunder from the enemy's position at East Point, nearly two miles away. The heavy grey smoke-pillar of the driving-charge towered against the sunbright distance, and simultaneously with the crack of the discharge, sounding as though all the pent-up forces of h.e.l.l had burst the brazen gates of Terror, and rushed forth to annihilate and destroy, the ninety-four pound projectile pa.s.sed overhead, sweeping half the corrugated-iron roof from the railway-official's late dwelling with a fiendish clatter and din, as it pa.s.sed harmlessly over the Women's Laager, and, wrecking a sentry's shelter on the western line of defences, burst harmlessly upon the veld beyond, blotting out the low hills behind a curtain of acrid green vapour.
”Get under cover, quick!” Saxham had shouted to his companion, as deafened by the tremendous concussion, and dazed and half-asphyxiated by the poisonous fumes, he strove for mastery with his maddened horse. This regained, he looked for the figure in the black habit and white coif, and knew a shock of horror in seeing it p.r.o.ne upon the ground.
”No, no, I am not hurt!” she cried, lightly rising as he hurried towards her. The tremendous air-concussion had thrown her down, and beyond a scratch upon her hand and some red dust on the black garments she was in nothing the worse.
”I don't know how I kept my own legs,” Saxham said, laughing.
”It went by like twenty avalanches,” she agreed. ”And blessed be our Lord, excepting for the damage to the roof, no more seems to have been done. I can see the spider stopping near the Women's Laager.” She peered out earnestly over the s.h.i.+mmering waste of dusty yellow-brown, and cried out joyfully: ”Ah, Sister Hilda Antony and Sister Ruperta are getting out.
All is well with them; all is well.”
”But not with the was.h.i.+ng.”
Saxham had swung round his binoculars, and brought them to bear upon the vehicle and its late occupants. A grim smile played about his mouth as he handed her the gla.s.ses, and heard her cry of womanly distress as she beheld the fruit of late labour scattered on the veld and the Sisters'
agonised activity displayed in the gathering up of sheets, pillow-slips, handkerchiefs, babies' s.h.i.+rts and petticoats, with other garments of a strictly feminine and private character. Her grave, discreet eyes avoided his as she handed back the binoculars, but a dimple showed near the edge of the white coif.
”And now,” Saxham said, glancing at his watch, ”may I know in what I can be of service?” It had seemed to him that the Mother-Superior hesitated to broach the subject. Nor had he been mistaken. The dimple vanished. Her calm eyes became troubled, and she asked, with a slight catching of the breath: