Authors: Sebastian Faulks
“We are going to die now,” he said. There was no more composure in his voice, only a wretched, childlike fear.
Stephen sat opposite him and rested his head in his hands. “Yes,” he said. “I think this is the end.”
Jack closed his eyes and rolled on to his side. He wished that the fever he had fought to hold at bay would now come and make him sleep.
Stephen said, “I don’t mind dying. God knows, with all these men dead we couldn’t ask for anything better. If I could have one wish before I went it would be for a small glass of water. The thought of streams and pools and gushing taps is all that’s keeping me going, just the thought of them.”
Jack began to moan softly. Stephen had heard the sound many times; it was the low, primitive cry he himself had made when he was carried in to the surgeon. Jack was calling to his mother.
———
Stephen felt Jack’s shivering body and his soaking shirt. He had nothing dry with which to cover him: his own clothes were saturated with the sweat of carrying and digging. He tried to make Jack comfortable, then left him and crawled up the tunnel.
He wanted to be on his own. He planned to find a place where he could lie down. There he would try to sleep and hope not to wake again.
He kept crawling forward till he came to a larger area, a space perhaps created by the blast. He rolled on his side and pulled up his knees to his chest. He prayed for oblivion and, despite the pain in his arm, he fell asleep.
For many hours the two men lay separated by a few yards, each in his own unconsciousness.
When Stephen awoke, the damp smell and darkness made him think he was in his dugout. Then he stretched and encountered the walls of his narrow tomb. The lamp had gone out.
He cried softly to himself as his memory returned. He moved his injured arm, and as he searched for a grip with his left hand to lever himself up, he touched what felt like cloth.
He recoiled, thinking that, like Jack, he had discovered a corpse, some grim cadaver with whom he had been lying unaware for hours. But the material was coarser even than the weave of army clothes. He felt in his pocket for the electric torch he had been given at the tunnel head. In its weak beam he explored the material further with his fingers. It was a sandbag.
He sat up and pulled at it. He had to brace his legs against the side of the tunnel to shift the weight. Eventually he was able to work it back a few feet toward him. He saw that there was another one behind it. This part of the wall appeared to be built from sandbags. They were packed in too neatly and tightly to have been blown there by the blast, so presumably they had been placed there by the miners at some stage.
Sandbags, in his experience, had only one function, which was to absorb blast, whether from shells or bullets. Presumably they had felt this part of the tunnel to be particularly vulnerable. If so, then they must have known that there was a countermine nearby; and if that was the case, why had they continued to work there? He would have to ask Jack.
At the back of his mind was the shadow of a thought that there might be something behind the bags. Although it was probable that they were there for extra protection, it was just possible that they might lead into another tunnel. But if so, why had Jack not known about it?
Stephen crawled back to where he had left Jack. He found him curled up and shivering. He took him by the shoulder and tried to shake him awake. Jack shouted incoherently. It sounded to Stephen as though he was saying something about a shield.
Slowly Stephen was able to restore him to himself. He rocked him gently and called his name. He felt cruel bringing him back to the facts of his existence when any delirium must have been preferable.
Jack looked up at him imploringly, as though asking him to disappear. Stephen knew that to Jack his face was a reminder that he was still alive.
“Listen,” he said. “I found a sandbag up there. What do you think that means?”
“A full one?”
“Yes.”
Jack shook his head weakly. He did not respond. Stephen took him by the wrists and squeezed them. He put his face close to Jack’s, where he smelt the rotten air that he expelled from his lungs.
“Is it just to shore up the wall, or what? What do you people use them for? Come on. Answer me. Say something.” The flat explosion of his hand against Jack’s face made a magnified sound in the narrow space.
“I don’t know … I don’t know … It’s just a bag. We used to fill them when we dug the tube. The Central Line. Inside the big shield. We stopped at Bank.”
“For God’s sake. Listen. Why sandbags in the wall? Here in France, in the war, not in the underground railway.”
“We got to Liverpool Street in nineteen twelve. I was all in. Didn’t work again.”
Jack went on about his work in the London clay. Stephen let go of his wrists so that his arms fell on to his lifeless legs. The pain of the impact seemed to startle Jack.
He looked up again with wild eyes. “Behind the chamber. We packed them in behind the charge.”
“But it’s a fighting tunnel,” said Stephen. “Anyway, they go sideways.”
Jack let out a snort. “Sideways? You’re mad.”
Stephen lifted Jack’s hands again. “Listen, Jack. I may be mad. Maybe we both are. But we are going to die very soon. Before you go, just think very hard. Do that for me. I have carried you this far. Now do me this favour. Think what it might mean.”
He held Jack’s eyes in his from what light remained in the lantern. He could see Jack fighting to be free of him, desperate to shake off his last contact with the living world. Jack shook his head, or rather allowed it to loll from side to side. He closed his eyes and lay back against the tunnel wall.
There was drool and foam at the corners of his mouth. His blank, unemotional face seemed to withdraw further. Then a flicker caught the edge of his eye.
“Unless … no … unless it’s Kiwis. Could be Kiwis.”
“What are you talking about? Kiwis? What do you mean?”
“They lay the bags different, the New Zealanders. We stick them in a straight line behind the charge. They dig a little run at right angles to the main drive, then stick the charge in there. You don’t need so many bags of spoil.”
“I don’t understand. You mean they’d lay a charge not in the main tunnel but off to one side?”
“That’s it. Better compression, they say. Not so much work, if you ask me. Not so many bags.”
Stephen tried to contain his excitement. “What you’re saying is that there could be explosive in there, behind all the sandbags?”
Jack finally looked him in the eye. “It’s possible. We don’t come down so often these days and I know there was a Kiwi company here before us.”
“You mean they didn’t tell you there was an explosives chamber?”
“They would have told the captain, but he wouldn’t necessarily tell me. They never tell me anything. I’ve only been underground twice since we’ve been here.”
“And then because we’re not going to blow any more mines we’ve just been using it as a fighting tunnel to protect the main listening chamber?”
“We haven’t blown a mine for months. We only do fatigues these days.”
“All right. Just suppose there was explosive in a chamber behind those bags. Could we blow it?”
“We’d need wires or a fuse. And it depends how much there was. Probably bring down half the country.”
“We’ve got nothing else to try, have we?”
Jack looked down again. “I just want to die in peace.”
Stephen knelt down and lifted Jack to a crouching position, then heaved him on to his shoulder and began to stumble back into the darkness, the torch gripped between his teeth. A new energy made him unaware of the ache of his limbs or Jack’s weight, or even the torturing thirst in his mouth.
When they got back to the enlarged area where he had found the sandbags, he laid Jack down again. He desperately wanted Jack to survive so that he could tell him how to blow the charge.
Each sandbag was three feet long and two feet across. They
had been packed densely with what Jack called spoil, the debris of digging, in order to maximize their ability to contain the blast. With only one good hand to pull them, Stephen worked very slowly, each drag of about six inches being followed by a rest.
He talked to Jack as he worked, hoping that his voice would stop him from slipping away. There was no response from the figure slumped on the ground. Although progress was measured in inches, he worked with a fury given him by hope. He had a picture in his mind of a great crater being blown into the field above them, and of him and Jack emerging from behind their shelter of sandbags to walk into the bottom of it, which, though thirty feet below ground level, would be open to the rain and the wind.
He was able to stand up in the enlarged area of tunnel and stretch his back from time to time. Each time he rested he bent over Jack and tried to rouse him with a mixture of force and cajoling. There was usually some response, though it was grudging and incoherent; he seemed to be delirious again.
Stephen went back to his work. He switched off the torch and laboured in the darkness. When he had cleared a dozen bags and stacked them in the main tunnel, it became easier to work because there was more space around him. He wanted to stop and make sure Jack was still all right, but feared that the more time he wasted by not clearing the bags, the closer they would come to the end of Jack’s life.
He pressed on. When his left hand was not strong enough he gripped the nozzle of a wedged bag between his teeth and worried it like a terrier. A piece of chalk broke one of his front teeth and drove into his gum, filling his mouth with blood. He was barely aware of the discomfort as he worked on and eventually came to the end of the pile of bags that had been so neatly and tightly stacked by the New Zealanders.
He went back into the tunnel and took the torch from the floor. Crawling back through the space he had cleared, he held the light ahead of him. There were several stacks of boxes marked “Danger. High Explosive. Ammonium Nitrate/Aluminium.” They were piled against the forward wall of the small chamber, toward the enemy.
A small leap of excitement went through him. He stopped for
a moment and found that his eyes were moist. He allowed himself to give in to the sensation of hope. He would be free.
He went carefully back and took Jack by the hand.
“Wake up,” he said. “I’m through. I’ve found the explosive. We can get out. We can be free. You’re going to live.”
Jack’s eyes, with their heavy lids, opened over his narrow, uninquisitive gaze. “What’s in there, then?”
“Boxes of ammonal.”
“How many?”
“I didn’t count. Maybe two hundred.”
Jack let out a snort. He began to laugh, but seemed to lack the strength. “That’s ten thousand pounds. It takes one pound to blow up the Mansion House.”
“Then we’ll have to shift them out and just leave however much we want.”
“One box would let them know we’re here.”
“Help me, Jack.”
“I can’t. I can’t move my—”
“I know. Just encourage me. Tell me it can be done.”
“All right. Do it. Perhaps you can. You’re mad enough.”
When Stephen had rested for half an hour, he crawled back into the hole.
———
The wooden boxes had rope handles. At fifty pounds each, they were the ideal weight to be lifted and stacked by a fit man with both arms. With only his left to use, Stephen struggled badly. The ones he pulled from the top of the pile had to be jerked clear, then held aloft to stop them banging into the ground.
After the first hour he had cleared six boxes and taken them back down to the fighting tunnel to a distance he imagined would make them safe from sympathetic detonation. He took out his watch and calculated. It would take him approximately thirty hours. As he became more tired and dehydrated his rests would become longer. He would need to sleep.
He looked at Jack’s prostrate form on the tunnel floor and asked himself if the effort was really worthwhile. He expected Jack to die before he could finish. He could not be sure that he
himself would last. At least he had found air in the explosive chamber. It was neither fresh nor plentiful, but a small trickle was penetrating from somewhere. It was possible that the explosion had smashed a ventilation pipe. There was a small pool of water on the floor in one corner which he sucked into his mouth, held, and spat back on to the chalky ground. It was too fetid to swallow, and in any case he would need it again.
In the middle of the boxes was a large wad of guncotton attached to a wire, which Stephen set to one side. When he had moved forty boxes he lay down next to Jack and slept. The time on his watch said ten past two, but he did not know if it was morning or afternoon or how long they had been underground.
He used the torch as little as possible. He worked with the instinct of an animal, brutal, stupid, blind. He did not think about what he did or why he did it. His life on the surface of the earth was closed to him. He would not have remembered Gray or Weir, could not have recalled the names of Jeanne or Isabelle. They had gone into his unconscious, and what he lived was like a bestial dream.
Sometimes he stumbled on Jack as he passed, sometimes he kicked him hard enough to make him respond. Occasionally he dropped to his knees and sucked at the puddle on the floor.
As he neared the end of the task he feared that he might die before it was completed. He slowed down and rested more. He checked his own pulse.
It took him three days to clear the chamber and when he finished he was too exhausted to think about setting off the single box that remained. He lay down and slept. When he awoke he at once went over to Jack and shone the torch in his face. His eyes were open and fixed ahead of him. Stephen shook him, certain that he was dead. Jack groaned in protest at being brought back to wakefulness.
Stephen told him he had cleared the chamber. To encourage him, he crawled into it, scooped a handful of water from the puddle, brought it carefully back in his hands, and threw it in Jack’s face.
“Tell me how to blow it, and you’ll have as much water as you want.”
Jack’s voice was almost inaudible. Stephen had to put his ear close to the dry lips. Jack told him they used electric leads.