Part 12 (2/2)
It's rather an anti-climax, after saying good-bye and receiving everyone's blessing, to turn up suddenly once more!
Heasy and I duly met at Charing Cross next morning, to hear that once more the leave boat had been cancelled owing to loosened mines floating about. Again I returned to my friends who by this time seemed to think I had ”come to stay.” On the Wednesday (we were now getting to know all the porters quite well by sight) we really did get off; but when we arrived at Folkestone it was to find the platform crammed with returning leave-men and officers, and to hear the same tale--the boat had _again_ been cancelled. None of the officers were being allowed to return to town, but by dint of good luck and a little palm oil, we dashed into a cab and reached the other station just in time to catch the up-going train. ”We stay at an hotel to-night,” I said to Heasy, ”I positively won't turn up at the D's _again_.” We got to town in time for lunch, and then went to see the _Happy Day_, at Daly's (very well named we thought), where Heasy's brother was entertaining a party. He had seen us off, ”positively for the last time,” at 7.30 that morning. We saw him in the distance, and in the interval we instructed the programme girl to take round a slip of paper on which we printed:--”If you will come round to Stalls 21 and 22 you will hear of something to your advantage.”
George Heasman came round utterly mystified, and when he saw us once more, words quite failed him!
On the Thursday down we went again, and this time we actually _did_ get on board, though they kept us hanging about on the Folkestone platform for hours before they decided, and the rain dripped down our necks from that inadequate wooden roofing that had obviously been put up by some war profiteer on the cheap. The congestion was something frightful, and there were twelve hundred on board instead of the usual seven or eight.
”We can't blow _over_ at any rate,” I said cheerfully to Heasy, in a momentary lull in the gale. There were so many people on board that there was just standing room and that was all. We hastily swallowed some more Mother-sill and hoped for the best (we had consumed almost a whole boxful owing to our many false starts). We were in the highest spirits.
The only other woman on board was an army sister, who came and stood near us. Lifebelts were ordered to be put on, and as I tied Heasy's the aforementioned Sister turned to me and said: ”You ought to tie that tighter; it will come undone very easily in the waves!” Heasy and I were convulsed, and so were all the people within earshot. ”You mustn't be so cheerful,” I said, as soon as I could speak.
It was the roughest crossing I've ever experienced, and there was no time to indulge in ”that periscope feeling,” so aptly described by Bairnsfather; we were too busy exercising Christian Science on our ”innards” and trying not to think of all the indigestible things we'd eaten the night before! We rose on mountains of waves one moment and then descended into positive valleys the next. I swear I would have been perfectly all right if I had not heard an officer say ”I hope it will not be too rough to get into Boulogne harbour. The last time I crossed we had to return to Folkestone!” * * * * Luckily his fears were incorrect, and at last we arrived in the harbour, and I never was so glad to see France in all my life! The F.A.N.Y.s had almost given us up for good, and were all very envious when they heard of our adventures.
Towards the end of that month the ”Britannic,” a hospital s.h.i.+p, was torpedoed. As a preventive measure against future outrages of the kind (not that it would have made the Germans hesitate for a moment) twenty prisoners were detailed to accompany each hospital s.h.i.+p on the voyage to England. These men, under one of their own Sergeant-Majors, sat on the edge of the platform until all the wounded were on board, and then were marched on into a little wooden shelter specially erected. As they sat on the edge, their feet rested on the narrow quay along which we drove, and I loved to go as near as possible and pretend I was going over them, just for the fun of watching the Boches roll on their backs in terror with their feet high in the air. A new method of saying _Kamerad_! Those prisoners did not care for me very much, I don't think, and I always hope I shan't meet any of them _apres la guerre_. Unfortunately this pastime was stopped by the vigilant E.M.O.
My hut was closed for ”winter decorations,” and the creme de menthe coloured panthers were covered up by a hunting frieze. It was a priceless show, one of the field appearing in a _chic_ pair of red gloves! I suppose they had some extra paint over from the pink coats.
Scene I. was the meet, with the fox lurking well within sight behind a small gorse bush, but funnily enough not a hound got wind of him. Scene III. was a good water-jump where one of the field had taken a toss right into the middle of a stream. Considering the sandy spot he had chosen as a take-off, he had no one to thank but himself. A lady further up on a grey, obviously suffering from spavin, was sailing over like a two-year old. The last scene was of course a kill, the gentleman in the pink gloves on the black horse being well to the fore. Altogether it was most pleasing. Silk hunting ”hankies” in yellow and other vivid colours, ditto with full field, took the place of the now chilly looking Reckitt's blue, and a Turkey rug on the floor completed the transformation.
When an early evacuation was not in progress, breakfast was at eight o'clock, and at 10 minutes to, the whistles went for parade, which was held in the square just in front of the cars. Those who were late were put on fatigues without more ado, but in the ordinary way if there were no delinquents we took it in turns, two every day.
Often when that first whistle went, it found a good many of us still ”complete in flea-bag,” and that scramble to get into things and appear ”fully dressed” was an art in itself. An overcoat, m.u.f.fler, and a pair of field boots went a long way to complete this illusion. Once however, Boss, to everyone's pained surprise, said, ”Will the troopers kindly take off their overcoats!” With great reluctance this was done amid shouts of laughter as three of us stood divested of coats in gaudy pyjamas.
Fatigue consisted of two things: One--”Tidying up the Camp,” which was a comprehensive term and meant folding up everyone's bonnet covers and putting them in neat piles near the mess hut, collecting cotton waste and grease tins, etc., and weeding the garden (a rotten job). The second was called ”Doing the stoke-hole,” i.e. cleaning out the ashes from the huge boiler that heated the bath water, chopping sticks, laying the fire, and brus.h.i.+ng the ”hole” up generally.
Opinions were divided as to the merits of those two jobs. Neither was popular of course, but we could choose. The latter certainly had its points, because once done it was done for the day, while the former might be tidy at nine, and yet by 10 o'clock lumps of cotton waste might be blowing all over the place, tins and bonnet covers once more in untidy heaps. I often ”did the boiler,” but I simply hated chopping the sticks. One day the axe was firmly fixed in a piece of hard wood and I was vainly hitting it against the block, with eyes tight shut, when I heard a chuckle from the top of the steps. I looked up and there was a Tommy looking down into the hole, watching the proceedings. Where he'd come from I don't know. ”Call those 'ands?” he asked. ”'Ere, give it to me”--indicating the axe. ”I guess y'aint chopped many sticks, 'ave yer?”
”No,” I said; ”and I'm terrified of the thing!” I sat on the steps and watched him deftly slicing the wood into thin slips. ”This is a fatigue,” I said, by way of an explanation. That tickled him! He stopped and chuckled, ”You do fatigues just the same as we do?” he asked. ”I never heard anything to beat that. Well I never, wot's the crime, I wonder? Look 'ere,” he added, ”I'll chop you enough to last fatigues for a month, and you put 'em somewhere in the meantime,” and in ten minutes, mark you, there was a pile that rejoiced my heart. He was a ”Bird,” that man, and no mistake.
After brekker was over the first thing that had to be done before anything else was to get one's 'bus running and in order for the day.
Once that was done we could do our huts, provided no jobs had come in; and when that was done the engine had to be thoroughly cleaned, and then the car. I might add that this is an ideal account of the proceedings for, as often as not, we went out the minute the cars were started.
Three days elapsed sometimes before the hut could have a ”turn out.” On these occasions one just rolled into one's bed at night unmade and unturned, too tired to care one way or the other.
Some of the girls got a Frenchwoman, ”Alice” by name, to do their ”cues”
for them. She used to bring her small baby with her and dump him down anywhere in the corridor, sometimes in a waste paper basket, till she was done. One morning he howled bitterly for about an hour, and at last I went out to see what could be the matter. ”Oh, Mees, it is that he has burnt himself against the stove, the careless one” (he couldn't walk, so it must have been her own fault). ”I took him to a _Pharmacie_ but he has done nothing but cry ever since.”
Now I had fixed up a small _Pharmacie_ in one of the empty ”cues,”
complete with sterilised dressings and rows of bottles, and bandaged up whatever cuts and hurts there were, in fact my only sorrow was there were not more ”cases.” Considering the many men we had had at Lamarck burnt practically all over from fire-bombs, I suggested that she should bring the baby into the _Pharmacie_ and see if I could do anything for it. She was quite willing, and carried it in, when I undid the little arm (only about six inches long) burnt from the elbow to the wrist! The chemist had simply planked on some zinc ointment and lint. I got some warm boracic and soaked it off gently, though the little thing redoubled its yells, and a small crowd of F.A.N.Y.s dashed down the pa.s.sage to see what was up. ”It's only Pat killing a baby” was one of the cheerful explanations I heard. So encouraging for me. I dressed it with Carron oil and to my relief the wails ceased. She brought it every morning after that, and I referred proudly to my ”out-patient” who made great progress. Within ten days the arm had healed up, and Alice was my devoted follower from that time on.
We had a lot of work that autumn, and barges came down regularly as clockwork. Many of these cases were taken to the d.u.c.h.ess of Sutherland's Hospital. She had given up the Bourbourg Belgian one some time before and now had one for the British, where the famous Carroll-Dakin treatment was given. One night, taking some cases to the Casino hospital, there was a boy on board with his eyes bandaged. He had evidently endeared himself to the Sister on the train, for she came along with the stretcher bearers and saw him safely into my car.
”Good-bye, Sister,” I heard him say, in a cheery voice, ”thank you a thousand times for your kindness--you wait till my old eyes are better and I'll come back and see you. I know you must look nice,” he continued, with a laugh, ”you've got such a kind voice.”
Tears were in her eyes as she came round to speak to me and whisper that it was a hopeless case; he had been so severely injured he would never see again.
I raged inwardly against the powers that cared not a jot who suffered so long as their own selfish ends were achieved.
That journey was one of the worst I've ever done. If the boy had not been so cheerful it would have been easier, but there he lay chatting breezily to me through the canvas, wanting to know all about our work and asking hundreds of questions. ”You wait till I get home,” he said, ”I'll have the best eye chap there is, you bet your life. By Jove, it will be splendid to get these bandages off, and see again.”
Was the war worth even one boy's eyesight? No, I thought not.
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