Part 32 (1/2)

”Well?”

”It's fair blown in, sirr, and a good piece of the sap too. I tried could I find a prisoner to bring in”--our Colonel has promised a reward of fifty francs to the man who can round up a whole live Bosche--”but there were nane. They had got their wounded away, I doubt.”

”Never mind,” says Simson. ”Sergeant, see these men get some sleep now. Stand-to at two-thirty, as usual. I must go and pitch in a report, and I shall say you all did splendidly. Good-night!”

This morning, the official Intelligence Summary of our Division--published daily and known to the unregenerate as ”Comic Cuts”--announced, with solemn relish, among other items of news:--

_Last night a small party bombed a suspected saphead at_--here followed the exact bearings of the crater on the large-scale map.

_Loud groans were heard, so it is probable that the bombs took effect_.

For the moment, life has nothing more to offer to our seven friends.

II

As already noted, our enthusiasm for our own sphere of activity is not always shared by our colleagues. For instance, we in the trenches frequently find the artillery of both sides unduly obtrusive; and we are of opinion that in trench warfare artillery practice should be limited by mutual consent to twelve rounds per gun per day, fired by the gunners _at_ the gunners. ”Except, of course, when the Big Push comes.” The Big Push is seldom absent from our thoughts in these days.

”That,” observed Captain Wagstaffe to Bobby Little, ”would leave us foot-sloggers to settle our own differences. My opinion is that we should do so with much greater satisfaction to ourselves if we weren't constantly interfered with by coal-boxes and Black Marias.”

”Still, you can't blame them for loosing off their big guns,”

contended the fair-minded Bobby. ”It must be great sport.”

”They tell me it's a greatly overrated amus.e.m.e.nt,” replied Wagstaffe--”like posting an insulting letter to some one you dislike.

You see, you aren't there when he opens it at breakfast next morning!

The only man of them who gets any fun is the Forward Observing Officer. And he,” concluded Wagstaffe in an unusual vein of pessimism, ”does not live long enough to enjoy it!”

The grievances of the Infantry, however, are not limited to those supplied by the Royal Artillery. There are the machine-guns and the trench-mortars.

The machine-gunner is a more or less accepted nuisance by this time.

He has his own emplacements in the line, but he never appears to use them. Instead, he adopts the peculiar expedient of removing his weapon from a snug and well-fortified position, and either taking it away somewhere behind the trenches and firing salvoes over your head (which is reprehensible), or planting it upon the parapet in your particular preserve, and firing it from there (which is criminal). Machine-gun fire always provokes retaliation.

”Why in thunder can't you keep your filthy tea-kettle in its own place, instead of bringing it here to draw fire?” inquired Mr.

c.o.c.kerell, not altogether unreasonably, as Ayling and his satellites pa.s.sed along the trench bearing the offending weapon, with water-jacket aboil, back to its official residence.

”It is all for your good, my little man,” explained Ayling loftily.

”It would never do to give away one's real gun positions. If we did, the Bosches would sit tight and say nothing at the time, but just make a note of the occurrence. Then, one fine morning, when they _really_ meant business, they would begin by droping a Black Maria on top of each emplacement; and where would you and your platoon be then, with an attack coming on and _us_ out of action? So long!”

But the most unpopular man in the trenches is undoubtedly the Trench Mortar Officer. His apparatus consists of what looks like a section of rain-pipe, standing on legs. Upon its upturned muzzle is poised a bomb, having the appearance of a plum-pudding on a stick. This he discharges over the parapet into the German trenches, where it causes a comforting explosion. He then walks rapidly away.

For obvious reasons, it is not advisable to fire a trench-mortar too often--at any rate from the same place. But the whole weight of public opinion in our trench is directed against it being fired from anywhere at all. Behold the Trench Mortar Officer and his gang of pariahs creeping stealthily along in the lee of the parados, just as dawn breaks, in the section of trench occupied by No. 10 Platoon. For the moment they are unheeded, for the platoon are ”standing-to,” and the men are lined along the firing-step, with their backs to the conspirators.

On reaching a suitable spot, the mortar party proceed to erect their apparatus with as little ostentation as possible. But they are soon discovered. The platoon subaltern hurries up.

”Awfully sorry, old man,” he says breathlessly, ”but the C.O. gave particular orders that this part of the trench was on no account to be used for trench-mortar fire. You see, we are only about seventy yards from the Bosche trenches here--”

”I know,” explains the T.M.O.; ”that is why I came.”

”But it is most important,” continues the platoon commander, still quoting glibly from an entirely imaginary mandate of the C.O., ”that no retaliatory sh.e.l.l fire should be attracted here. Most serious for the whole Brigade, if this bit of parapet got pushed over. Now, there's a topping place about ten traverses away. You can lob them over from there beautifully. Come along.”