Part 70 (1/2)
”I was not asking advice!” interrupted Westerling.
”But, I repeat, the leak is not necessary to disclose this new movement that you plan. Their air craft will disclose it,” Bellini concluded. He had done his duty and had nothing more to say.
”Dirigibles do not win battles!” Westerling announced. ”They are won by getting infantry in possession of positions and holding them. No matter if we don't surprise the enemy. Haven't the Browns held their line with inferior numbers? If they have, we can hold the rest of ours. That gives us overwhelming forces at Engadir.”
”You take all responsibility?” asked Turcas.
”I do!” said Westerling firmly. ”And we will waste no more time. The premier supports me. I have decided. We will set the troops in motion.”
With fierce energy he set to work detaching units of artillery and infantry from every part of the line and starting them toward Engadir.
”This means an improvised organization; it breaks up the machine,” said the tactical expert to Turcas when they were alone.
”Yes,” replied Turcas. ”He wanted no advice from us when he was taking counsel of desperation. If he succeeds, success will retrieve all the rest of his errors. We may have a stroke of luck in our favor.”
In the headquarters of the Browns, junior officers and clerks reported the words of each bulletin with the relief of men who breathed freely again. The chiefs of divisions who were with Lanstron alternately sat down and paced the floor, their restlessness now that of a happiness too deeply thrilling to be expressed by hilarity. Each fresh detail only confirmed the completeness of the repulse as that memorable night in the affairs of the two nations slowly wore on. Shortly before three, when the firing had died down after the Brown pursuit had stopped, a wireless from a dirigible flying over the frontier came, telling of bodies of Gray troops and guns on the march. Soon planes and other dirigibles flying over other positions were sending in word of the same tenor. The chiefs drew around the table and looked into one another's eyes in the significance of a common thought.
”It cannot be a retreat!” said the vice-chief.
”Hardly. That is inconceivable of Westerling at this time,” Lanstron replied. ”The bull charges when wounded. It is clear that he means to make another attack. These troops on the march across country are isolated from any immediate service.”
It was Lanstron's way to be suggestive; to let ideas develop in council and orders follow as out of council.
”The chance!” exclaimed some one.
”The chance!” others said in the same breath. ”The G.o.d-given chance for a quick blow! The chance! We attack! We attack!”
It was the most natural conception to a military tactician, though any man who made it his own might have builded a reputation on it if he knew how to get the ear of the press. Their faces were close to Lanstron as they leaned toward him eagerly. He seemed not to see them but to be looking at Partow's chair. In imagination Partow was there in the life--Partow with the dome forehead, the pendulous cheeks, the shrewd, kindly eyes. A daring risk, this! What would Partow say? Lanstron always asked himself this in a crisis: What would Partow say?
”Well, my boy, why are you hesitating?” Partow demanded. ”I don't know that I'd have taken my long holiday and left you in charge if I'd thought you'd be losing your nerve as you are this minute. Wasn't it part of my plan--my dream--that plan I gave you to read in the vaults, to strike if a chance, this very chance, were to come? Hurry up! Seconds count!”
”Yes, a chance to end the killing for good and all!” said Lanstron, coming abruptly out of his silence. ”We'll take it and strike hard.”
The staff bent over the map, Lanstron's finger flying from point to point, while ready expert answers to his questions were at his elbow and the wires sang out directions that made a drenched and s.h.i.+vering soldiery Who had been yielding and holding and never advancing grow warm with the thought of springing from the mire of trenches to charge the enemy. And one, Gustave Feller, in command of a brigade of field-guns--the mobile guns that could go forward rumbling to the horses' trot--saw his dearly beloved batteries swing into a road in the moonlight.
”La, la, la! The worm will turn!” he clucked. ”It's a merry, gambling old world and I'm right fond of it--so full of the unexpected for the Grays! That lead horse is a little lame, but he'll last the night through. Lots of lame things will! Who knows? Maybe we'll be cleaning the mud off our boots on the white posts of the frontier to-morrow! A whole brigade mine! I live! You old brick, Lanny! This time we are going to spank the enemy on the part of his anatomy where spanks are conventionally given. La, la, la!”
If not his own pain, the moans, the gasps, the appeals for water, the convulsive s.h.i.+vers from cold, and the demoniacal giggles from a soldier gone insane in medley around him would have kept the judge's son awake.
After he had fallen, struck by he knew not what, and consciousness had returned, came the surging charge of the Browns in the counter-attack, with throaty cries and thres.h.i.+ng tread. He was able to turn over on his face and cover the back of his head with his hands, as a slight protection from steps that found footing on his body instead of on the earth. After that he had understood vaguely that a newcomer on the field of the fallen needed help with a first aid, and he had found his knife and slit a sleeve and applied a bandage to check the bleeding of an artery. Before dawn broke the sky was all alight again with a far-reaching gun-fire--that of the Brown advance--throwing the scene of slaughter into spectral relief, which became more real and terrible in the undramatic light of day.
Thick, ghastly thick, the dead and wounded; and the faces--faces half buried, faces black with congealed blood, faces staring straight up at the sky, faces with eyes popping where necks had been twisted! Near by was the distorted metal work of a dirigible, with the bodies of its crew burned beyond recognition, and farther away were other dirigible wrecks. A wounded Gray, who had not the strength to do it himself, begged some one to lift a corpse off his body. A Gray and a Brown were locked in a wrestling embrace in which a shrapnel burst had surprised them. Piles of dead and wounded had been scattered and torn by a sh.e.l.l which found only dead and wounded for destruction at the point of its explosion. The living were crawling out from under the s.h.i.+elds they had made of corpses in sh.e.l.l craters, and searching for water in the canteens and biscuits in the haversacks of the dead. One Gray who was completely entombed except his head remarked that he was all right if some one would dig him out. At his side showed the legs of a man who had been buried face downward. Ribs of the wounded broken in; features of the dead mashed by the heels of the Brown countercharge! With every turn of his glance his surroundings grew more intimate in details of horror to the judge's son. On the earth, saturated with rivulets and little lakes of blood, gleamed the lead shrapnel bullets and the brighter, nickelled rifle-bullets and the barrels of rifles dropped from the hands of the fallen.
”I'd have bled to death if you hadn't put on that bandage. You saved my life!” whispered the man next to the judge's son, who was Tom Fragini.
”Did I? Did I?” exclaimed the judge's son. ”Well, that's something.”