Passions of War (16 page)

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Authors: Hilary Green

BOOK: Passions of War
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Luke backtracked a short way and then climbed cautiously out of the ravine on to the open hillside. He was now behind the Turkish lines and he wondered if this might be a possible route by which an attacking force might bypass the defences. A moment's thought brought the realization that troops could only advance in single file and to do so in silence, in the dark, would be impossible. Once detected, they would be sitting targets for fire from the trenches above and the guns at the top of the valley. He squatted under an olive tree and peered along the contour of the hillside. The Turkish trenches seemed to extend right across the peninsula, resuming again on the far side of the ravine. Any attack would entail a frontal assault, straight into the teeth of the enemy guns. Luke bit his lips and wondered whether he should now attempt to return and deliver that gloomy message. It seemed a pretty pathetic outcome to the expedition.
Surely
, he thought,
there must be some more useful information to be gleaned
. He looked up at the sky and realized that the short summer night was almost over and the sky in the east was paling towards the dawn. If he was going back, he would have to hurry. On the other hand, if he stayed he might see something that would be more helpful to the commanders planning the assault. He had seen that the villagers still went about tending their fields and their flocks behind the Turkish lines. There was no reason why he should not pass for one of them.

An hour later the sun came up and he heard movement and voices. From the reserve trenches the smoke of cooking fires rose into the still air, and he saw the tops of Turkish fezes moving backwards and forwards as watches were changed and the men on night duty were relieved. He tried to estimate numbers but all he could reasonably deduce was that there was a large force in occupation. A movement in the vicinity of the village caught his eye and he saw a group of women filing along to the rearmost trench, bearing baskets of what he took to be freshly baked loaves. Soon they were followed by men carrying hoes and bagging hooks and boys leading small flocks of goats and sheep. Luke got stiffly to his feet and sauntered as casually as he could towards an orchard on the slope ahead of him. From there, he reckoned, he would be able to look down directly into the trenches.

He was strolling through the trees when a voice stopped him in his tracks.

‘Who are you?'

Luke looked up. A boy of about twelve was sitting in the branches of a mulberry tree. The language was the Macedonian Serb he had learned from his grandparents but a glance told him that the boy was dressed in Turkish style. He cursed himself for a fool. He knew that although the village was part of the Ottoman Empire the population was a mixture of Serbs and Greeks, with a few Bulgarians for good measure. But he had forgotten that some of them were ethnic Turks.

He forced a smile and responded, ‘You haven't seen a stray goat, have you? She's brown and white, with a slight limp.'

‘Whose goat?' the boy asked suspiciously.

‘Mine, of course.'

‘You're not from round here.'

Luke gritted his teeth. He had reckoned on passing as a local if challenged by the soldiers but had not expected hostility from the people in the village.

‘No, that's right, I'm not. But you know what goats are like. They can wander for miles if the fancy takes them.'

‘Where are you from, then?'

Luke racked his brain for the names of nearby villages and came up with nothing. He waved his hand vaguely inland. ‘Back there.'

‘I've never seen you before.'

‘No, well, I've been away. I was in the war. Not this one, the last one.'

‘Which side were you on?'

Luke struggled for an answer, then inspiration struck. ‘Ours, of course.'

The boy was not fooled. ‘I think you're a spy. I'm going to tell my father. He's the mayor.'

He was starting to climb down and Luke knew if he let him go he would bring the whole village out in search of him. He had to make a snap decision. As the boy's feet touched the ground Luke jumped forward and grabbed him.

‘Don't be silly. If you go rushing off and tell everyone I'm a spy you'll just make yourself look a fool . . .' He was improvising frantically and the boy struggled in his grip, shouting, ‘Let me go! Let me go!'

A man's voice cut across the tumult. ‘Let the boy go! Put your hands above your head and turn round.'

Luke did as he was bid and found himself looking down the barrel of a shotgun.

The inside of the small hut was dark and smelt of animals. Luke heard the bar that held the door shut slotted home and a brief investigation convinced him that there was no other way out.

The man with the gun had turned out to be the boy's father and he had been accompanied by two others holding bagging hooks, so there had been no point in resisting. Luke had been marched up to the village and into the square, passing small groups of local people, mainly women and children, who stared at him with as little expression as cattle. One or two of them wore Turkish costume but the majority were dressed in the full skirts and bodices and headscarves of Serbian peasants. Once he thought for a second that he recognized a face in the crowd but when he looked again the woman had turned away.

He had been kept standing in the square until an officer arrived from the military camp to interrogate him. He tried to bluff him with the same story but it was useless.

‘You are a spy! Who are you working for? The Serbs?'

It struck Luke that Serbia was a long way off and if he was working for them his captors might feel that they could execute him with impunity. On the other hand, the British forces were close at hand and might be expected to take revenge if he was harmed.

He said, ‘No, not the Serbs. I'm a New Zealander.' The Turk stared at him blankly and he realized that he might as well have claimed to be a Hottentot or a mountain gorilla. ‘I'm British,' he amended, nodding his head seaward. ‘I'm with the British forces down there.'

The Turk took a step or two closer and stared into his face for a moment as if he were a rare and fascinating specimen. Then he turned away and said sharply, ‘The colonel will wish to interrogate this man personally. He is away until tomorrow. Shut him up somewhere safe and keep him until the colonel gets back.'

So now he was shut in this little hut and there was nothing to do but wait. He settled down on the floor with his back to the wall and watched the thin line of sunshine that penetrated through a crack in the fabric move slowly across the floor. As the day wore on the heat in the confined space grew more and more oppressive. Luke's throat was parched and he could feel the sweat trickling down between his shoulder blades. He went to the door and banged on it.

‘Water! Please, I need water!' He tried in Serbian and Turkish, but the only response was an unfriendly growl from outside. It answered one question, anyway. Someone was keeping watch.

More time passed and then he heard movement outside and a woman's voice, speaking Serbian.

‘I have brought water and bread for the prisoner. Let me in.'

There was another growl in answer. ‘Leave him be. No one is allowed in.'

‘But if he does not have water he will die. What will the colonel say if he comes tomorrow and finds we have let the prisoner he wants to interrogate die?'

More grunting and then the bar was lifted and a small woman in black slipped through the door carrying a tray. She was wearing a headscarf and kept her head bent so that Luke could not see her face. She went straight to the back of the hut, where she knelt down and set the tray on the ground.

Looking up, she said very softly, ‘I did not think we should meet again like this.'

Luke stared down at her, then suddenly he was on his knees facing her. ‘Sophie! My God, it's you! What are you doing here? The last time I saw you, you were nursing the Serbs at Adrianople, during the last showdown.'

She reached out and put her fingers on his lips. ‘Quiet! I can only stay a moment but I will come back tonight. There is one thing you must promise me. If I help you to escape, you must swear to take us with you.'

For a moment he could only look at her in silence. ‘Us?' Who did she mean? Then he had a mental vision of himself and Victoria and Leo in the mess tent of the hospital at Adrianople and opposite them a laughing, round-faced girl and a small dark man. Iannis! Of course! Now he knew why the name of the village was familiar. Iannis came from Krithia. He nodded quickly. ‘Yes, of course. If that's what you want.'

‘It is vital, if I am to help you. I have your word? You will take us to the British lines?'

‘Yes, I promise. But can you really get me out?'

‘Trust me!' She rose and moved towards the door, saying more loudly, ‘Eat! Drink! It is all you will get today.' The door opened and she was gone.

Luke lifted the cloth covering the tray and found a flask of water, a hunk of bread and some goat's cheese. The water was straight from the well, metallic tasting but icy cold. He took a long swig but forced himself to save some of it for later. Then he fell on the bread and cheese, aware that it was a long time since he last ate.

When his hunger was blunted, he sat back against the wall and thought about what Sophie had said. It was hard to recognize the girl he remembered in the hollow-cheeked woman who had just left him. Iannis was a doctor, he recalled, a Macedonian Greek, and had made his way through the Turkish lines to care for the Serbian and Bulgarian wounded in that first Balkan war. He and Sophie had been engaged. Presumably now they were married. Obviously it would not be safe for either of them to remain if Sophie helped him to escape. It would not be easy to get them back to the British camp but if Sophie could get him out, the rest would have to be left to the inspiration of the moment.

At last the band of sunlight faded and he heard the noises of the villagers settling down for the evening. Children shouted, women's voices rose and fell, gossiping round the well, he guessed. There was a smell of wood smoke as cooking fires were lit, and then the odour of roasting meat. Luke's stomach growled in response. He heard voices outside and gathered that his guard was being relieved; then a woman's voice –
Sophie's
, he thought – and the clatter of a knife on a plate, followed by a belch. Finally darkness fell and the sounds died away, to be replaced by the high-pitched susurration of crickets.

The minutes dragged by. Then Luke heard a new sound: a steady rhythmic snore. Moments later the bar holding the door was lifted quietly and Sophie beckoned him out. On a stool by the door, his back against the wall of the hut, the guard was sleeping soundly, his mouth gaping, a string of drool hanging from his jaw.

Sophie took Luke's hand and led him through the silent streets. At the door of a house she stopped suddenly and whispered, ‘Wait here.' Then she vanished inside and Luke had to fight down a moment's panic in case she had led him into some sort of trap. Seconds later she reappeared, carrying a large bundle wrapped in a dark cloth. He made to take it from her but she shook her head and led him onwards to the edge of the village.

The countryside was quiet. Even the nightingale had stopped and there was no sign of movement. Further down the hillside Luke could make out the line of the reserve trenches and the bulk of gun emplacements but he reminded himself that the sentries there would be looking out towards the British lines, not in their direction.

He turned to Sophie. ‘Where's Iannis?'

She frowned at him, then shook her head. ‘Iannis is gone – dead.'

‘My God! When? How?'

At that moment the bundle in Sophie's arms stirred and gave a low whimper. She rocked it gently and murmured something and it was quiet again.

‘You have a child!' Luke said.

‘Anton,' she answered. ‘That is why you must get us safely to the British camp.'

‘But it will make a noise! It will give us away!'

‘He will not wake. I have seen to it.'

It took a moment for him to understand. The sleeping guard, the silent child . . . Sophie had been a nurse, Iannis a doctor . . . He nodded. ‘This way. Keep low and follow me.'

He led them across the hillside, navigating by memory, towards the ravine. He misjudged the distance and they almost stumbled into the gun emplacement at the head of the valley and had to backtrack. When they reached the edge of the gully he took the child from her, surprised by how heavy he was, and inched his way downwards, afraid that one of them would start a stone rolling away and alert the men round the gun. Somehow they reached the bottom, where the prickly undergrowth caught at Sophie's skirt. Luke glanced round in time to see her gather it up round her waist, giving him a glimpse of pale legs. He turned away quickly and forged onwards.

It seemed a very long way before he was sure that they had crossed no-man's-land and were behind the British trenches. Then he told Sophie to wait while he scrambled up to the rim of the valley. He was challenged immediately.

‘Halt! Who goes there?'

‘Pavel, Wellington's. I've been on a recce and I've got a prisoner with me.' It seemed the best way of explaining Sophie's presence.

Ten minutes later they were standing outside the colonel's tent in the first light of dawn, waiting while his orderly went in to wake him. Luke looked at Sophie.

‘I don't understand how you come to be here. What happened to Iannis?'

The child in her arms woke up and began to cry. She produced a crust of dry bread from her pocket and gave it to him and he grabbed it in a small, pink fist and gnawed at it.

‘When the fighting was over and Adrianople surrendered and there was a peace treaty we thought everything would go back to being as it was. The Turks still held Gallipoli but Krithia had always been mainly Serb and Greek. Iannis's old mother was still here and he felt he should go back. He was the only doctor and he knew people needed him. So we came back, and to begin with it all seemed fine. People were glad to see him. Even the Turks were grateful, because he treated them, too. So we settled down and Anton was born; we opened a dispensary and I acted as nurse and midwife. But then this new war started. To begin with it didn't seem as if it concerned us, but when Turkey declared on the side of the Germans people became suspicious of each other. Then you arrived,' she gestured towards the ships out in the bay, ‘and the Turkish garrison was reinforced. Someone, I don't know who, must have had a grudge against Iannis. They went to the commander and told him that Iannis had gone over to the other side in the first war. He was arrested and shot as a traitor.'

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