登陆注册
4616100000068

第68章

All the same it was glorious to be out in the open again. Peter's face wore a new look, and he sniffed the bitter air like a stag. There floated up from little wayside camps the odour of wood-smoke and dung-fires. That, and the curious acrid winter smell of great wind-blown spaces, will always come to my memory as I think of that day. Every hour brought me peace of mind and resolution. I felt as I had felt when the battalion first marched from Aire towards the firing-line, a kind of keying-up and wild expectation. I'm not used to cities, and lounging about Constantinople had slackened my fibre. Now, as the sharp wind buffeted us, I felt braced to any kind of risk. We were on the great road to the east and the border hills, and soon we should stand upon the farthest battle-front of the war.

This was no commonplace intelligence job. That was all over, and we were going into the firing-zone, going to take part in what might be the downfall of our enemies. I didn't reflect that we were among those enemies, and would probably share their downfall if we were not shot earlier. The truth is, I had got out of the way of regarding the thing as a struggle between armies and nations. I hardly bothered to think where my sympathies lay. First and foremost it was a contest between the four of us and a crazy woman, and this personal antagonism made the strife of armies only a dimly-felt background.

We slept that night like logs on the floor of a dirty khan, and started next morning in a powder of snow. We were getting very high up now, and it was perishing cold. The Companion - his name sounded like Hussin - had travelled the road before and told me what the places were, but they conveyed nothing to me. All morning we wriggled through a big lot of troops, a brigade at least, who swung along at a great pace with a fine free stride that I don't think I have ever seen bettered. I must say I took a fancy to the Turkish fighting man: I remembered the testimonial our fellows gave him as a clean fighter, and I felt very bitter that Germany should have lugged him into this dirty business. They halted for a meal, and we stopped, too, and lunched off some brown bread and dried figs and a flask of very sour wine. I had a few words with one of the officers who spoke a little German. He told me they were marching straight for Russia, since there had been a great Turkish victory in the Caucasus. 'We have beaten the French and the British, and now it is Russia's turn,' he said stolidly, as if repeating a lesson. But he added that he was mortally sick of war.

In the afternoon we cleared the column and had an open road for some hours. The land now had a tilt eastward, as if we were moving towards the valley of a great river. Soon we began to meet little parties of men coming from the east with a new look in their faces. The first lots of wounded had been the ordinary thing you see on every front, and there had been some pretence at organization.

But these new lots were very weary and broken; they were often barefoot, and they seemed to have lost their transport and to be starving. You would find a group stretched by the roadside in the last stages of exhaustion. Then would come a party limping along, so tired that they never turned their heads to look at us.

Almost all were wounded, some badly, and most were horribly thin. I wondered how my Turkish friend behind would explain the sight to his men, if he believed in a great victory. They had not the air of the backwash of a conquering army.

Even Blenkiron, who was no soldier, noticed it.

'These boys look mighty bad,' he observed. 'We've got to hustle, Major, if we're going to get seats for the last act.'

That was my own feeling. The sight made me mad to get on faster, for I saw that big things were happening in the East. I had reckoned that four days would take us from Angora to Erzerum, but here was the second nearly over and we were not yet a third of the way. I pressed on recklessly, and that hurry was our undoing.

I have said that the Studebaker was a rotten old car. Its steering-gear was pretty dicky, and the bad surface and continual hairpin bends of the road didn't improve it. Soon we came into snow lying fairly deep, frozen hard and rutted by the big transport-wagons.

We bumped and bounced horribly, and were shaken about like peas in a bladder. I began to be acutely anxious about the old boneshaker, the more as we seemed a long way short of the village I had proposed to spend the night in. Twilight was falling and we were still in an unfeatured waste, crossing the shallow glen of a stream.

There was a bridge at the bottom of a slope - a bridge of logs and earth which had apparently been freshly strengthened for heavy traffic. As we approached it at a good pace the car ceased to answer to the wheel.

I struggled desperately to keep it straight, but it swerved to the left and we plunged over a bank into a marshy hollow. There was a sickening bump as we struck the lower ground, and the whole party were shot out into the frozen slush. I don't yet know how Iescaped, for the car turned over and by rights I should have had my back broken. But no one was hurt. Peter was laughing, and Blenkiron, after shaking the snow out of his hair, joined him. For myself I was feverishly examining the machine. It was about as ugly as it could be, for the front axle was broken.

Here was a piece of hopeless bad luck. We were stuck in the middle of Asia Minor with no means of conveyance, for to get a new axle there was as likely as to find snowballs on the Congo. It was all but dark and there was no time to lose. I got out the petrol tins and spare tyres and cached them among some rocks on the hillside. Then we collected our scanty baggage from the derelict Studebaker. Our only hope was Hussin. He had got to find us some lodging for the night, and next day we would have a try for horses or a lift in some passing wagon. I had no hope of another car. Every automobile in Anatolia would now be at a premium.

同类推荐
  • 一乘决疑论

    一乘决疑论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 琅琊漫抄

    琅琊漫抄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 小学诗礼

    小学诗礼

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说圣法印经

    佛说圣法印经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金刚錍显性录

    金刚錍显性录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 阴阳先生

    阴阳先生

    我是个屌丝,美女主管约我修电脑我以为命运女神眷顾我了,好友超子却叫我小心。不久之后超子说他快死了!等我回首时才发现自己已经成为漩涡的中心。为了自保,我不得不学习法术成为一名阴阳先生。神秘的猛鬼!缠身的冥气,天降的神罚。为了活命,我只能一步一步向前!神罚、阴煞之气、野仙、降头、小鬼接踵而至我该如何面对?
  • 象言破疑

    象言破疑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 一个人的灵魂书

    一个人的灵魂书

    这是描摹了古代大河的图纸,黄色的纸张,褐色的图文,当你的阅读进入了状态的时候,你就能感觉到那汹涌的苦水,在凄凉的秋天慢慢将你埋没吞噬的忧伤。黄泥沙,绿草岸,这些古老的艺术美已经没糟蹋得不成体统,满口的烟碱,那是被鸦片一样的文字麻痹的眼睛和心。
  • 从天儿降:老婆是戏精

    从天儿降:老婆是戏精

    生计所迫,楚青枝无奈以“碰瓷儿”为生,可没想到居然碰上了一个响当当的大人物!景氏太子爷!可是,这太子爷怎么看着有点眼熟?这不是那个夺走自己宝贵第一次还让自己一次中奖的男人么!楚青枝灵机一动,扑倒在男人的脚边:“你怎么能这么残忍无情!我都有你的孩子了!”男人冷眼看着眼前完全陌生的女人,薄唇轻掀:“我不认识你。”
  • 药仙之祖

    药仙之祖

    一个穷苦少年,因身得怪病,不想连累家人朋友而离家出走!不料这一走便是二十年………………再归时虽位居仙祖却已是物是人非!
  • The Water Goats and Other Troubles

    The Water Goats and Other Troubles

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 从“丑小鸭”到童话大王:安徒生

    从“丑小鸭”到童话大王:安徒生

    本书是人物传记故事,生动地记述了丹麦童话作家安徒生具有传奇色彩的一生。安徒生是个穷鞋匠的儿子,他冲破社会的重重阻力,凭借坚强的意志、强烈的求知欲,通过艰苦的奋斗,最终从普普通通的“丑小鸭”成长为一名世界著名的童话作家。他用笔为人们奉献了一个又一个脍炙人口的经典童话故事。
  • 限时逼婚:老公不准跑

    限时逼婚:老公不准跑

    她是温家落魄小姐,他是回归复仇总裁,她错认新郎与他步入殿堂,他却借此开场。她陷入难关,他说他能帮她,却是用两年婚约换来的交易。相处,让他们慢慢的了解,甚至爱上彼此,可是没有什么一番风顺。他们之间布满了难关,他有太多无可奈何。他的身世之谜,她的离开,他想要寻回她,可是却找了好久,也没能寻到。再见,她带着两个孩子,而他风采依旧。
  • The Promise Bird 誓鸟

    The Promise Bird 誓鸟

    在大航海时代的宏大历史背景下,一个美丽的中国女子远下南洋,海啸夺走了她的记忆,她在大海里、岛屿上颠沛流离,被欺侮、被抛弃,历经生育、病痛、牢狱之苦,她刺瞎了自己的双目,只为寻找遗失的记忆。她为了寻找自己的过去,甘愿穷尽一生。春迟终于没能在沧海中找到那枚藏着她的记忆的贝壳,但她并没有把自己的故事归于茫茫。她被人们视为圣女。她是世上最富有的女人。海盗、歌女、宦官、部族首领、西洋牧师,他们的命运在南洋旖旎的风光里交汇。
  • 佛说出生菩提心经

    佛说出生菩提心经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。