Part 26 (1/2)
”Monsieur has seen the bravest man and the finest leader of all the troops of France,” he remarked.
”Major Maillot?”
”But certainly the major, Monsieur. He needs no medals to prove what he is and where he has been. His deeds are witnessed on his brow and hands.”
He hesitated and then spoke quickly.
”I have no wish to vaunt the deeds of Frenchmen to you, a foreigner, Monsieur, but that is a man in whom we may take an honest pride. The scar you saw came to him by Settat. He and a picket were cut off from the main body by a hidden reserve of the enemy. They retreated fighting and were within measurable distance of safety. And then one of our fallen, whom they had left for dead, cried aloud out of the hands of the enemy. How these savages were dealing with him I shall not disgust Monsieur by telling. Suffice it to say that they were working the will of devils upon him and, in spite of his manhood, he shrieked. The major heard, and like a thunderbolt turned and charged straight for the enemy, and his men, without a thought of the peril, turned with him, a dozen perhaps, against five score. But those hundred Moors were in full retreat before the main body of the regiment raced up to the rescue, and they picked their major up wounded as you have seen, lying across the body of the man he had fought to save, with seven dead foes ringed round him.... They have a confident air, these Tirailleurs of ours. Some say an insolent one. Well, Monsieur, they have their pride, it must be allowed, but G.o.d knows when they are led as that man leads they have a right to it.”
Aylmer nodded. Slowly they turned their horses' heads forestwards again.
Perinaud looked at the line of trees abstractedly and then back again at the receding column.
”France does not desert her children if she remembers,” he remarked quietly. ”It is well that we met these men and their major. He is a man who will see to it that we are not forgotten, if chance wills that we do not soon return. The task of seeking us would be one after his own heart, and his Tirailleurs would think with him.” He smiled confidently.
”So we may go forward with an easy mind, _mon Capitaine_. We are pioneers, as the major said. To pioneers should come adventures, if they are worthy of their name.”
He touched his stallion's flank with the spur. The little band of hors.e.m.e.n cantered up and into the shadow of the cork trees. And there was an air of arrogance and recklessness about the riders. All trace of discomfiture of an hour back was gone. It was as if the Tirailleurs had breathed an infection of valor around them--a bacillus of intrepidity which their major had cultivated with the point of his untiring sword.
CHAPTER XIII
THE TRAP
”That our friends have left is obvious,” said Daoud. ”The question is how long ago and whither.”
The litter of a recently disturbed encampment c.u.mbered the ground. Rags, the feathers of lately plucked chickens, the ashes of recently extinguished fires abounded. But whether the camp had been struck days or only hours before it was impossible to determine. Night as well as day had been rainless, and the dry dust left no trail perceptible to European eyes. Daoud, however, examined the soil carefully.
”They have gone south,” he declared at last. ”They have struck out of the forest and back towards the plain. This grows interesting.”
Perinaud gave a sniff.
”The reason is obvious,” he said a little contemptuously. ”Where did they obtain water? From the spring which welled up at the foot of that cactus to the left. But now it is dry and cracking mud.”
Daoud nodded grudgingly.
”Possibly,” he allowed. ”The nearest wells are at Ain Djemma.”
”Held in force by two companies of the Legion,” said Perinaud. ”They are hardly likely to show themselves there. No, if they have gone south they are seeking the Wad el Mella. They will follow the stream through the gorge towards their own foothills from which it issues.”
”This river? How far is it?” asked Aylmer.
”Eight kilometres, possibly ten,” said Perinaud. ”There are _duars_ and encampments along its banks in a dozen places. We ought to get news of our men, even if we do not overtake them.”
”Our horses have come a matter of thirty kilometres already,” said Aylmer.
”Then as soon as possible they must do ten more,” answered the sergeant, energetically. ”Without water we cannot camp, any more than our friends of the Beni M'Geel. _En avance!_”
Aylmer drew his horse up beside Perinaud's as for the second time they left the shelter of the trees and ambled out on to the plain. The westering sun was turning it to broad belts of dun, and yellow, and green, as the slanting beams fell upon earth, or marigold weed, or crops. Four or five miles distant to their front the rolling uplands culminated in a belt of squat but far-branching trees.
”There, one may suppose, are the river and the gorge,” he suggested.