The rusty crane creaked and swayed slightly as Tom climbed and the rungs of the ladder were slick from the cold drizzle that was falling. He gritted his teeth and fixed his eyes straight ahead of him, knowing that if he looked up or down he would be lost. He had hated heights ever since the day some of the boys on the estate had dared him to climb a slender poplar in the grounds. ‘Go on! A bit higher! A bit higher! You’re not scared, are you?’ He must have been about eight at the time. The higher he climbed, the more the tree swayed and when he tried to climb down he found he was stuck and one of the game keepers had had to scramble up to fetch him. The man had told his father, thinking it a joke, and Tom had been beaten for causing a nuisance – or was it for being a coward? He forced the thought to the back of his mind and climbed further.
At last he reached the little driver’s cabin and, once he was safely seated inside it, he was able to look down. Below him stretched an industrial landscape of pit heads and slag heaps, interspersed with small red-brick villages divided by cobbled streets. The pits were silent today and the sound of church bells from the town behind him reminded Tom that it was Sunday. If it had been a weekday, he wondered, would the pits be working, ignoring the fact that they were about to be the epicentre of a battle? Certainly, in the town, as he passed through, the people seemed to be going about their normal Sunday activities as if what was happening did not concern them.
Tom raised his gaze beyond the pitheads to where the canal gleamed dully between its marshy banks. On the far side, the ground was level, running back to woods about three hundred yards distant, indistinct in the morning mist. He strained his eyes, looking for any sign of movement, but if the enemy were out there he could not see them. Below him, between the mining villages and the canal, he could just make out the dark lines of shallow trenches dug into a ridge of coal spoil and the heads of men crouched in them. It seemed to him a pathetically thin line, more a series of isolated posts with nothing to back them – but apparently this was the best that could be arranged. Only yesterday, they had been marching forward, confident that they were advancing to join their French allies and roll back the German attackers. Then, suddenly, the orders had been countermanded. They were to stop where they were and dig in. No one seemed to know why. Tom took his sketch pad out of his rucksack and flexed his chilled fingers. If this was going to be the British Expeditionary Force’s first battle, he would have a bird’s-eye view of it. He headed the first page ‘Mons, Belgium – Sunday August 23rd.
A movement away to his right caught his eye. A company of cavalry came cantering out of the mist, heading towards the trenches. At first Tom thought they were British, a reconnaissance party coming to report; then he saw that the uniforms were wrong. French possibly? Or Belgian? Then there was a boom that made him jump and he saw smoke billowing up from an artillery position on the right flank and a gout of earth shot up just in front of the advancing horsemen. ‘Boches, by God!’ he said aloud. The rest of the guns had joined in by now and Tom saw shells falling among the horses. For a brief moment it seemed the riders intended to come on, regardless, then they wheeled away and galloped off into the trees. ‘First blood to us,’ Tom muttered, sketching busily.
He had no time to complete the picture. As if the initial gunfire had been a starting signal, the air was shaken by a series of huge explosions and shells began to fall all along the line of the British trenches. The crane trembled under Tom with the violence of the impacts and he saw huge craters opening up to both sides of him. He strained his eyes towards the forest on the far side of the canal and saw that the mist was lifting and beyond the trees the ground rose to a low ridge, from where he could see the muzzle flashes of the German cannons. The noise was terrifying – a continuous roar as one gun after another spewed flame and then a sobbing whistle as the shells flew through the air and explosion after explosion as they landed. Tom had seen what artillery could do, on the road to Kumanovo, and heard it around Bitola, but he had never encountered a bombardment like this. Even with his limited experience, he could tell that these German guns were bigger and more powerful than anything the Serbs had possessed – or than anything his own country could produce, he suspected.
The bombardment went on for hours and Tom looked down at the devastation below him and wondered if anything could possibly remain alive. His hands were shaking and his head was ringing and all he could think of was that Ralph was down there, somewhere, with his men. They had parted quite casually that morning, as if what was coming was nothing more than an exercise. ‘Is this where it ends?’ Tom wondered. ‘All our high hopes wiped out, and Ralph with them, almost without firing a shot.’
The rain had stopped and steam was rising from the marshes as the sun came out, and suddenly there they were! An ordered phalanx of troops in their grey uniforms, marching out, rank on rank, from the sheltering trees. They advanced in a solid block and Tom, staring down, thought what an unmissable target they would make, if only anyone were left alive to shoot. He visualised them pouring across the canal, through the trenches full of dead, and realised that soon his crane would be surrounded. Would they see him? If so, he could look forward to spending the rest of the war as a prisoner. Should he draw his revolver and hope to kill one or two, before they shot him down? For a moment he felt constriction in his throat, not at the prospect of captivity but at the thought that he should have been down there, with Ralph and the others, taking his chance like the rest of them. Perhaps his father had been right all along!
Steadily, the grey-clad figures advanced, until they were less than a hundred yards from the canal bank. Then a voice rang out. ‘Fire!’ and all along the trenches heads appeared, rifles were aimed and bullets tore into the massed ranks of the enemy. So rapidly were the shots repeated that the sound was continuous and the German soldiers fell like wheat before the harvester. Watching, Tom remembered that Ralph had told him that it was the pride of the infantry that they could fire fifteen aimed rounds per minute. For all his hatred of war, he found himself cheering as the German ranks wavered and then fell back. His cheer was echoed along the thin line of the trenches.
The sun rose higher and Tom began to sweat in the confined space of the cabin but the battle continued to rage below him and the crane shuddered with the impact of the German shells on the ground below. The German infantry made two further attempts to advance, but each time they were driven back, leaving the ground beyond the canal strew with bodies. Tom worked feverishly, filling page after page with sketches. Then, looking to the west, he saw movement. Small groups of men were retreating towards him, each in turn providing covering fire while the others withdrew through them. With a sickening lurch in his stomach Tom realised that the enemy had succeeded in crossing the canal by one of the bridges. Below him, other groups were moving, slipping back towards the slag heaps and the buildings of the mining villages. It was time to leave his vantage point. With cramped and shaking limbs, he began the long climb down to the ground.
At ground level the cacophony of the bombardment was more deafening than before. At the whistle of an approaching shell he threw himself face down and felt the ground heave. Soil thrown up by the explosion pattered down onto his back. He scrambled up and, keeping low, scuttled in the direction of the mine buildings until he encountered a platoon of Coldstream Guards.
‘I’m looking for Lieutenant Malham Brown,’ Tom said. ‘Do you know where he is?’
‘Back there, sir,’ the corporal said, nodding towards a long low building. ‘Casualty clearing station.’
Tom’s stomach churned again. Somehow he had convinced himself that in the midst of all this desolation he would find Ralph unharmed. He turned and stumbled towards the building. It was a disused factory and Tom entered a huge, echoing room, empty except for lines of wounded men lying on the floor. There was no sign of any doctors or orderlies, and the prospect of trawling the lines in search of Ralph was too daunting, so he picked his way across to a doorway leading into a second room. This one, too, was full of wounded but there was more activity. Two doctors were at work at trestle tables on the far side and several orderlies with Red Cross armbands were bustling about with trays of dressings.
Tom waylaid the nearest one. ‘Lieutenant Malham Brown? Is he here?’
‘Over there, sir.’ The man indicated with a jerk of his chin and Tom turned to see Ralph crouched beside a prone figure.
Ralph looked up as he approached and for a moment his eyes were blank, as if he did not recognise his friend. Then he said, ‘Ah, Tom. You’re still in one piece then,’ in a flat tone that expressed neither surprise nor relief. His face was smeared with coal dust and spent powder but beneath the filth he was chalk white.
‘And you?’ Tom said breathlessly. ‘You’re not hurt?’
‘Me? No, no I’m all right. Just checking on the lads, like this one.’
He looked down at the still figure on the stretcher and Tom saw that it was a boy who looked hardly old enough to enlist. One sleeve of his tunic was ripped and a rough bandage had been applied, which was already dark with blood. Ralph put his hand on the boy’s other shoulder and pressed it gently. ‘Hang on, old chap. The medics will be with you soon.’
‘Don’t worry about me, sir,’ the boy whispered. ‘I’ll be OK. There’s others worse off than me.’
Ralph straightened up and looked about him with the same blank, lost look and Tom said quietly, ‘Is there anything I can do?’
‘I need to get back,’ Ralph said. ‘We’re withdrawing to the second line of defence. Stay here, will you, and help out?’
‘Of course,’ Tom agreed. ‘If there’s anything useful I can do.’
Ralph started to move towards the door, then he stopped and looked round the room. ‘There are so many,’ he murmured, as if to himself, ‘so many …’ Tom wondered if he meant the Germans or the casualties, but before he could frame the question, Ralph shook himself like a dog and left the room.
Tom located one of the doctors, who was bending over a man who was clutching his belly and sobbing. ‘Is there anything I can do, doctor? I’ve no medical or First Aid training but I’m willing to help in any way I can.’
The doctor looked up. ‘Are you familiar with the concept of triage?’
‘Yes, I think so,’ Tom responded, recalling what he had learned from Leo outside Adrianople.
‘Casualties are divided into three categories. The first, those that need immediate treatment if they are to survive; the second, those whose wounds are less serious and can wait for a while; and the third, those whose condition is beyond our help. In that room out there are the men who fall into the third category. If you really want to help you can go round them and note down names and numbers, so we can inform next of kin.’
He turned back to his work and Tom moved away towards the door. He felt sick, but he knew that to protest would be to brand himself as worse than useless. In the outer room two army chaplains were now at work. Tom’s offer of help was accepted with relief and for the next hour he went from stretcher to stretcher. Soon the pages of his sketch pad were covered, not with drawings, but with names and numbers and units. Many of the men were beyond speech and he had to grope for dog tags to get the necessary information. Some of them asked when the doctors would attend to them, others knew that they were beyond help and begged Tom to write down farewell messages to loved ones. Many begged for water and Tom refilled his canteen again and again, raising their heads and holding it to their parched lips. Some asked him to pray with them. Tom had lost his faith many years earlier, but the familiar words of the Lord’s Prayer came easily and the dying men seemed to find comfort in them. Others simply wanted him to hold their hands and more than once he felt the grip go suddenly slack and saw the eyes glaze over. When one of the chaplains laid a hand on his shoulder and said gently, ‘There’s nothing more you can do here. Thank you for your help,’ he staggered out into the sunshine and sank down on a pile of bricks, oblivious to the noise of the battle going on behind him.
When he dragged himself to his feet he saw that the day was almost over and a bank of clouds had built up in the western sky, black clouds in strange, irregular formations, tinged luridly red at the edges by the setting sun. To Tom’s overwrought imagination they looked like winged creatures. ‘Angels of death,’ he thought. ‘I hope they are coming for the Boches!’
He found Ralph with his company. They had taken up a position behind a broken wall and were preparing for another German attack.
‘For God’s sake, Ralph,’ he begged, ‘give me a rifle. I can’t stand by and watch without doing anything.’
Ralph looked at him and Tom was relieved to see that the blank gaze had been replaced by a look of grim determination. ‘You’ve never fired a rifle, have you?’
‘No, but I’ve used a shotgun. It can’t be so different.’
Ralph turned to a soldier nearby. ‘Give this officer a rifle. There must be spares that belonged to one of our casualties.’
Tom was handed a gun and Ralph gave him brief instructions on how to load and fire it. ‘If they come at us en masse like they did before, you might at least take one or two out before they overrun us,’ he said grimly.
At that moment somebody said, ‘Listen!’ and in the sudden quiet they realised the guns had fallen silent and from the far side of the canal a bugle sounded.
‘That’s the cease fire!’ Ralph said, incredulously. ‘One more push and they would have had us on toast, and they’ve decided to pack up for the night. Praise God!’
The sentiment was echoed all along the line and the order went round to stand down. Before long, Tom found himself squatting by a campfire, eating bully beef and drinking tea strong enough to tan leather. He watched as Ralph made his rounds, setting sentries and joking with the men. He had never seen him in action as an officer before and it was clear that he was very good at his job, but Tom knew the real Ralph, underneath the uniform. Only he could guess what it had cost him to throw off the numbness of shock that had gripped him in the casualty station. At length, Ralph came and sat beside him and offered him a swig of brandy from his flask.
‘Rotten job I gave you, back there.’ He nodded towards the disused factory. ‘You all right?’
‘Just about,’ Tom said. ‘I was glad to do something vaguely useful, after sitting up in that ivory tower all day.’
‘Get some good pics?’
‘I don’t know. I was too busy to think about it.’ Tom reached for his pad and flipped the pages.
Ralph took it from him. ‘Bloody hell, Tom! You could see all this? Down here at ground level we only knew what was right in front of us – but an overview like this … It could be immensely useful in planning future tactics. You’d better show these to the CO when you get a chance.’
It was too late to pursue the idea further and before long Tom rolled himself in his greatcoat and fell into an exhausted sleep. It seemed he had hardly dropped off before his batman was shaking him awake.
‘Get up, sir! We’re withdrawing. Orders have just come round.’
Tom blinked at him. ‘Withdrawing? You mean retreating? Why?’
‘Sorry, sir. That’s just what I’ve been told. Lieutenant Malham Brown says he’ll meet you at the horse lines.’
Stiff and chilled, Tom scrambled to his feet. The batman collected his belongings and followed as Tom plodded towards the area behind the lines where the horses were tethered. Ralph was already there, preparing to mount.
‘What’s happening?’ Tom asked. ‘Why are we pulling back?’
‘Ours not to reason why, old chap,’ Ralph responded. ‘Buck up and get mounted.’
Dawn was breaking and as they moved out onto the road Tom saw that it was already crowded with men. They were not formed up in marching order, as they had been when they arrived, but were in small groups with men from different units mixed together. There was no sense of panic; in fact, it was eerily quiet, a stream of ghostly shapes in the grey morning light.
‘I don’t understand,’ Tom said. ‘Have we been defeated? I thought we had held them back.’
Ralph looked at him with a hint of his old insouciant grin. ‘Strategic withdrawal. The BEF is going to quietly melt away. If the Boche knew we were withdrawing they’d be after us like a pack of hounds, but this way, by the time they wake up to the fact, we shall be over the hills and far away.’
‘Was it necessary?’ Tom asked.
‘The Germans were across the canal on both sides of us. If we’d stayed we should have been outflanked and surrounded. We have to find a better defensive position.’
At that moment gunfire broke out behind them and Tom looked at Ralph in alarm.
‘Have they spotted what we’re doing?’
‘No, that’s our own artillery. Those poor blighters have been told to stay and cover our retreat. They’ll be lucky to get the guns away before the Boches overrun them.’
Tom scanned the line of men ahead of him. ‘I can see some of our chaps, but they’re all mixed up with men from other regiments.’
‘We’ll gather them together when we stop. Right now, what matters is to put as much distance between us and the Boches as possible.’
As they rode on Tom felt sorry for the foot soldiers. On the march out he had been uncomfortable because, as an officer, he was mounted while they walked, but now the discrepancy was magnified. The men had fought all day, and they each carried a heavy pack as well as their rifles and he saw that some of them were already limping. Many wore bandages on heads or arms and some had to be helped along by colleagues. But in general they did not appear to be downhearted and he heard several asking Ralph why they had been ordered to withdraw.
‘We was on top of them, sir,’ one said. ‘We oughter be going after the buggers, not running away.’
‘We’re not running away,’ Ralph assured him. ‘When we reach a better position we shall turn round and let them run straight into our trap.’
As they reached the outskirts of the town of Mons, Tom saw a sight that reminded him with a jolt of Serbia. The road here was crowded with refugees, mingling with the troops. They pushed handcarts and perambulators piled high with everything they could carry. Women carried babies on their backs and led small children by the hand. A young girl carried a birdcage in which a canary was singing, undisturbed by the tumult around it, and behind her a youth pushed an old man with a long white beard in a wheelbarrow. Some of them struck off across the fields, heading for some refuge unknown to the English soldiers, others plodded on, adding to the congestion and slowing down the retreat.
All day they trudged along the straight, tree-lined road with its unforgiving cobbles. Unlike the previous day, which had begun cool and damp, the sun shone from a cloudless sky and Tom saw more than one man cast aside his heavy greatcoat, careless of how he would cover himself when night came. The ration cart threaded its way through the crowd, handing out tins of bully beef and hunks of bread. The men opened the tins and shared them out and ate while they marched. One young lad dropped out of the ranks and sank down on the side of the road. Ralph rode up to him and shouted, ‘On your feet. You can’t stop here. Do you want to be taken prisoner?’
‘It’s me feet, sir,’ the boy whimpered. ‘It’s these boots. Me feet’s bleeding.’
‘You’ve got to keep going just the same,’ Ralph told him. ‘Up you get. That’s an order!’
As the boy hauled himself upright, Tom said quietly, ‘I could give him my horse. My boots are better than his for walking.’
‘Don’t be a fool!’ Ralph replied in an undertone. ‘Do you think he’s the only one? You can’t give up your horse to all of them. You’re an officer now. Behave like one!’
From time to time they heard outbreaks of firing behind them and once they saw a cavalry regiment cantering through the fields alongside the road in the direction of the enemy. It was clear that the Germans were in hot pursuit and only being held back by a determined rearguard action. Dusk came, with some relief from the heat if nothing else, and still they marched. Finally, when it was fully dark, the order was given to halt and fall out and the men stumbled into the fields and dropped to the ground. Tom slid off his horse and handed the reins to his batman. He felt almost as exhausted as the men and wrapping his greatcoat around him he prepared to lie down. Then he saw that Ralph was still on his feet, moving around among the men, exchanging banter and murmuring words of encouragement. He wondered if he should join him, but he was a newcomer, not a regular soldier, and he knew he did not have the rapport with the men that Ralph had. So he sat and waited until eventually his friend came back and sank down beside him.
‘So this is war,’ Ralph grunted. ‘Not quite the way I imagined it.’
‘I did try to warn you,’ Tom replied.
‘I know,’ Ralph said. ‘But then I assumed that – well, that it was a civilian’s view of things. I’m beginning to understand now.’
Tom shook his head sadly. ‘This is only the start. I’m afraid, like the Yanks say, you ain’t seen nothing yet!’
‘Spare me the details,’ Ralph muttered. He pulled his coat over his head and was asleep almost at once.
They were on the move soon after dawn next morning and late that evening they entered the village of Le Cateau. A halt was called as they reached the village square and Ralph was summoned to a briefing with the senior officers. The men dropped to the ground where they were, leaning against each other or any surface that came to hand, some of them already asleep. Tom was muzzy-headed from lack of sleep and his eyes stung with dust and sweat, but he took out his sketchpad and began to draw the faces of the soldiers around him; streaked with dirt, gaunt with hunger and exhaustion, but still amazingly indomitable in their expressions.
Ralph returned after a short interval. ‘Thank God! We’re to stop here and dig in. Our orders are to hold the Boche back as long as possible.’
‘That’s asking a lot,’ Tom said. ‘The men are exhausted. They fought all day at Mons, they’ve had very little sleep and now they’ve marched the best part of thirty miles.’
‘Exactly,’ Ralph said. ‘They can’t walk any further, but they can lie in a field and fire their rifles.’
A group of senior officers entered the square and Tom recognised General Smith-Dorrien. The men struggled wearily to their feet and the General mounted the church steps to address them.
‘Men, this is where we stop retreating and make a stand. Our job is to hold the enemy back so that the rest of our forces have time to regroup. You held them off at Mons. I know I can rely on you to do the same here.’
Tom felt a lump rise in his throat at the ragged cheer that greeted his words.
Ralph’s company was deployed in a cornfield just beyond the village, with other units to the left and right of it. The men got out their entrenching tools and dug shallow pits, as they had done at Mons. Tom scraped a hole for himself behind a stook of corn and unslung the rifle Ralph had given him. He knew he could not match the expertise of the infantrymen around him and he found it hard to imagine that he could cold-bloodedly attempt to take the life of a fellow human being, but he was determined to share the danger and hoped to play some part in the action instead of being an observer. Ralph, having toured the lines, checking and encouraging, came to join him.
‘Now what?’ Tom asked.
‘Now we wait,’ was the reply.
The brief hours of darkness passed, and then with the dawn they heard the sound of conflict from the other side of the village, and a detachment of Uhlans, the German cavalry, were seen galloping away. Soon after that the artillery, most of whom had succeeded in withdrawing with their guns from Mons, opened up and the German guns replied. The bombardment went on until midday, tearing great craters in the level ground and wreaking heavy casualties. Tom saw the shallow foxholes on either side of him disintegrate into flying clods of earth, in which were mingled the remains of weapons, shreds of clothing and dismembered body parts. Then the guns fell silent and the grey-uniformed ranks of the German infantry advanced.
Incredibly, to Tom, they still came on in solid blocks, presenting a target even he could not miss. Even more incredibly, as at Mons, from what appeared a scene of lifeless devastation, a scorching rain of bullets erupted. Working the bolts of their rifles until the barrels were red hot, the British Tommies poured a withering fire into the massed ranks and soon the field in front of them was strewn with bodies. But still they came on, the numbers apparently inexhaustible, tramping over their dead comrades and advancing ever closer.
Again and again Tom reloaded and fired, oblivious now to whether his bullets found a living target, until his arms ached so much that he could scarcely support the rifle. To one side, he saw an artillery battery. Half its crew were either dead or wounded, but the survivors scrambled from gun to gun to keep up the fire. The enemy was closer now and it seemed they must be overrun at any moment. Then a bugle sounded and Ralph leapt to his feet, defying the bullets that whistled past him.
‘Fall back! Fall back!’
Those men who could still stand got up and, bent double, raced for the safety of some woods a few hundred yards away. Tom ran with them. Then a sight arrested him. A little to his right the remaining men of the gun crew were struggling to harness their horses to the gun limber. Two horses lay dead already, the others, terrified, reared and plunged. Without pausing for thought, Tom changed course and ran to help. Catching the bridle of one horse, he succeeded in holding it until the straps attaching it to the gun had been buckled. Two other men harnessed the second beast and then one shouted, ‘Jump up, sir! Save the gun!’
Tom did not wait for a second invitation, but vaulted onto the horse’s back and dug in his heels. Crouching low, with the gun limber rattling and swerving behind him, he rode at a flat gallop for the trees. The men were regrouping in a clearing and as he arrived one ran forward to hold the horse’s head. As Tom slid to the ground the second gun team came careering into the clearing and the sergeant in charge came over.
‘Thank you for that, sir. I don’t think we’d have got both guns away without your help. We can manage now.’
Tom went in search of Ralph, but the men were already moving out onto the road beyond the village and he could see no sign of him. A voice called, ‘Over here, sir!’ and he saw his batman leading his horse.
‘Glad to see you’re still with us, Matt,’ he said, as he mounted, and the man grinned.
‘You too, sir, if you’ll pardon the liberty.’
‘Have you seen Lieutenant Malham Brown?’
‘No, sir. Lost sight of him in the retreat. I expect he’s ahead of us.’
It took Tom nearly an hour in the gathering darkness to find Ralph, trudging along with the common soldiers with a bandage round his head. He looked up as Tom slid to the ground beside him and for a moment his eyes were as blank as they had been in the casualty station at Mons. Then his face lit up.
‘Tom! Thank God! I thought you’d bought it!’ He reached out and gripped Tom’s shoulder and Tom slid an arm round him.
‘What about you? Is the wound serious?’
‘No, just a scratch.’
‘Where’s your horse?’
‘Shot out from under me when I went back to round up the stragglers. I’ll get a new one from the remounts when we halt.’
For a moment he let Tom support him. Then he straightened up. ‘Well, we held them for a day. I just hope that’s long enough. Sooner or later we’ve got to call a halt and face up to them properly, or they’ll sweep us into the sea.’