Authors: Catrin Collier
Their figures silhouetted against the flickering embers of thorn reminded him of the woodcut illustrations in his nursery edition of
Grimm's Fairy Tales
. It was a scene that had been played out in army camps throughout the centuries. One he could imagine the Greeks and Romans who'd invaded this same desert enacting it. He turned his back and faced the profound blackness. The air was so dense, so thick he felt as though he could almost rub it between his fingers.
The silence that punctuated the intermittent conversation of his companions and the guards was total and absolute. Not for the first time he reflected it was no accident that the three greatest world religions had been born in the desert. After more than two years soldiering in the wastelands, he suspected that even the sanest of men walking alone in the barren country would fall prey to hallucinations after a few hours, let alone the biblical forty days and forty nights.
When he judged himself far enough from the camp, he relieved himself. He was buttoning his trousers when he heard Sergeant Greening calling out to him. As he turned he glimpsed something large moving in the shadows to the left of their camp. Reality or hallucination?
He retraced his steps and shouted, âIs anyone there?' When there was no response, he repeated the question.
Sergeant Greening and Private Jones ran towards him.
âYou see something, sir?' Greening asked.
âNot sure.' John pointed in the direction of the movement he thought he'd glimpsed.
âYallah!' A Turkish guard joined them and pushed John and Greening back towards the tents with his rifle butt. He yelled to his comrades. Two of his fellow guards thrust branches of brush into their fire. Brandishing the flaming sticks they and the Turkish lieutenant in charge of the platoon rose and walked to the perimeter of the camp.
John continued to peer into the darkness but the more he looked the more he felt his eyes were playing tricks on him. He could no longer distinguish between ground and air and had the oddest sensation that he was perched on the edge of a precipice. One step and he'd hurtle into an abyss â¦
Then he heard it. A loud inhuman groan, resounding eerily from the black void. Seconds later there was a harsh crack.
âA whip?' Greening asked.
The lieutenant barked another command. The guards inched forward, reluctantly continuing their inspection. The lieutenant shouted again. A herd of camels charged out of the darkness and bore directly down on the Turks. The crack of a rifle shot was swiftly followed by another and another.
Greening yelled, âHit the ground, sir!'
John flung himself on to the desert floor. Greening landed next to him with a thud. Gunshots continued to be fired overhead. John turned his head and found himself staring into Greening's eyes.
âBedouin by the sound of them,' Greening whispered as the assailants shouted to one another in Arabic. He raised his voice. âWilliams, Roberts, Baker, Dira, Jones?'
âLying low, sir,' Baker's voice echoed over the ground.
âAny lower and we'd be under the worms, sir,' Jones added.
âIf there are any bloody worms in this gravel.' Roberts added.
âEnough, Roberts. Stay put the lot of you,' Greening ordered.
âWe weren't planning on going anywhere, sarge,' Baker called back as more bullets whistled overhead.
John heard camels snorting, and boots hitting the ground as the tribesmen dismounted. He raised his head again and saw a brown Bedouin hand extended towards him.
âYou can get up now, Major Mason. Your Turkish guards have all been killed.'
The desert between Baghdad and Turkey
July 1916
Mitkhal and John sat beside the fire Dira had lit in front of John's tent. The Bedouin who'd ridden in with Mitkhal were crouched around Dira's cook fire, sharing their food and the Turkish brandy and raki they'd found in the Turks' saddlebags with Sergeant Greening and John's orderlies.
âThere's no need for you to continue on to Turkey, John,' Mitkhal advised. âWe can get you and your men back through the Turkish lines to the Tigris and Basra.'
âIf my men want to go with you, I won't stop them, but I won't abandon our men who've been marched into Turkey. The way the Turks are treating them they'll be in dire need of medical care.'
âYou're the only doctor who can give it to them?' Mitkhal questioned.
âThere's a shortage of doctors. Townshend sent too many downstream with the sick.'
âThey say Townshend didn't care what happened to his men. He was too busy being feted by the Turks at welcoming dinners. Apparently the Ottoman government has set aside a fine villa for him overlooking Constantinople.'
âWho's “they”?'
âOfficers and men of the Relief Force.'
John nodded. He envied Mitkhal's freedom which enabled him to roam from British, through Bedouin, to Turkish encampments at will. âTownshend might not have given a damn but I do. Have you seen many of our men in the desert?'
âYes.'
âIn bad condition?'
âThe worst were bones, the ones who still breathed not much better. Your Indian troops, the ones that aren't Muslim, are being treated very badly. We buried twenty yesterday, not ten miles from here. Your rank and file aren't being cared for any better.'
âWho was looking after them?'
âNo one and they had nothing. Everything they possessed had been stolen from them by their Turkish and Arab auxiliary guards. The sick die where they lie from starvation and dysentery.'
âIf I'd been there â¦'
âYou have food and medicines?' Mitkhal interrupted.
âSome.'
Mitkhal glanced at the two mule carts. âNot enough for thousands of men.'
âBut enough for a few, and every life is precious,' John countered.
âHarry always said your greatest fault was putting every other man before yourself.'
âYou haven't mentioned our officers.'
âThey are faring better. They have been given horses and mules to ride into Turkey to the prison camps.'
John leaped to his feet at the sound of camels' hooves.
âThe other half of our party.' Mitkhal carried on smoking his cigarette.
âHow many men do you have with you?'
âAbout a hundred, all Shalan's men.'
âScavenging from the Turks?'
âDoing what we can to protect our allies â the British,' Mitkhal smiled. âBut a hundred men spread between Baghdad and Turkey can't accomplish a great deal against the Turks.' He tossed his cigarette butt aside and went to meet the men who'd joined them. A thickset heavily built man ordered his camel to kneel, slid to the ground, and lifted a child from his saddle.
âMore Armenians?' Mitkhal called.
âWe found three alive. But all are close to death.'
âGet them into my tent.' John looked at the young man holding the girl. âFarik, isn't it?'
âI am surprised you recognise me, sir.'
âThe time I spent in your master's house in Basra just before the war was memorable and happy. How are you, Farik?'
âAs well as an Arab can be when his land is invaded by so many infidels, sir.'
âWith luck we'll leave you in peace soon.'
âI hope so, sir.' He ducked under the tent flap and carried the child inside.
John shouted for Dira who came running with water bottles.
John followed Farik and examined the girl. âShe's just a baby, no more than three or four years old. Poor thing is skin and bone.'
âThe Turks don't feed Armenians. Not even the babies.' Mitkhal took a water bottle from Dira, opened it, and handed it to John.
Farik left and returned carrying a middle-aged woman. She was unconscious and in the same deplorable starved and dehydrated state as the girl. Farik settled her on a blanket next to the child, before lifting a young woman from a man just outside the tent.
âAll three, even the child, have been raped, and brutally, sir,' Farik informed John.
âThen I'll need to examine and stitch them. Dira, I'll need catgut, needle, more water and gruel, and that cream the colonel gave us to put on sunburn. And bring more lamps,' John added.
Mitkhal entered the tent after John had examined the women. âWill they survive?'
âDifficult to say.' John moistened the woman's lips. âThey're dehydrated like everyone and everything else in this damned country, even the camel thorn. They're malnourished and exhausted, their skin is burned, and their feet like their genitals are cut to ribbons. The damage done to the child is significant, but there's no sign of venereal disease, which frankly is a miracle after being raped by the Turks. I'm sick of seeing the signs in soldiers who've been used by the guards.'
âWe gave them sour camel milk. It was all we had,' Farik said apologetically.
âWhen did you find them?'
âFirst light this morning. They were with around twenty others in a dried-up wadi about six miles from here.'
âThe others?'
âAll dead,' Farik said shortly.
John continued to spoon feed the child water. Her eyes were closed but she was conscious enough to open her mouth and swallow. The two women were both comatose. Neither reacted when he wet their lips.
âWhere did they come from?' John asked Mitkhal.
The Arab shrugged. âSomewhere in Turkey.'
âThe Turks are sending their own women and children on death marches as well as British soldiers?'
âThey're not Turks, they're Armenians.' Mitkhal said as if that were explanation enough.
âI don't understand. Armenian, Turk â both peoples live in Turkey, don't they?'
âArmenians are Christians. The Turks want a Muslim-only country. They've been killing them so they can steal their lands, farms, and houses.'
âOpenly?' John was appalled at the idea of the slaughter of an entire race.
âEveryone who lives in Turkey can't fail to see what's happening,' Mitkhal continued.
âSo they just march them into the desert â¦'
âI've heard that first they order all the Armenian men and boys over the age of fourteen to report to the authorities in a hall, church, or the market square of their town or village. Then they take them somewhere away from the houses and roads and shoot them.'
âWhat if the men and boys refuse to report?'
âThey kill the family of the men who object.'
âHow do you know?' John was having difficulty believing what Mitkhal was telling him.
âFurja's father heard it from the American consul in Baghdad. Mr Brissel and the American missionaries in Turkey have been trying to help the Armenians as well as the British prisoners of war. Once the Armenian men and boys are out of the way and can't protect their women and children, the Turks order the Armenian women and children to report. Then they march them into the desert. Some of the women have tried to give their children away, but the Turks shoot anyone who takes them â or in the case of American missionaries, deport them.'
âThe Turks shoot the women and children as well?'
âNo. Bullets cost money and there are so many of them it would prove expensive, so they just march them until they drop dead from hunger and thirst.'
âAll the Armenians?' John sat back on his heels and stared at Mitkhal. He was still having difficulty comprehending the enormity of what Mitkhal was telling him. It didn't help that the Arab was speaking in the same deadpan, heavily accented unemotional way, he used in normal conversation.
âNot all, some of the pretty girls are kept by the Turkish officers, either for their own use or to sell as slaves. Furja bought two at the market last month because she felt sorry for them.'
âHow many people are we talking about?' John asked.
âThe American Consul thinks that a million have already been killed. He also said the Americans, who run missions in the towns where the Armenians lived, believe it's not the Turks who organised the killings but the Germans. It's possible. They are allies.'
John looked down at the small girl and the women.
âThe desert is covered with bones,' Mitkhal said. âBritish troops, your Indian sepoys, Armenian men, women, and children, and Turks too, when your army gets the chance to kill them. It's war.'
âWar should not be waged against women and children,' John said feelingly.
Mitkhal heard whispering outside and lifted the tent flap. He nodded to the person he'd spoken to and dropped the flap. âCan you do any more for the women?'
âNot until they wake and they can describe their symptoms.'
âTomorrow you will move on?'
John shook his head. âThe women won't be ready to move on for a few more days. That's if they survive.'
âThen we'll stay with you, look around, see if we can find any more British soldiers for you to doctor. Can your orderly take over here for a while?'
âI'd rather stay.'
âI fetch you, sir, if one of the patients wakes,' Dira offered.
âI have a friend with me who would like to talk to you,' Mitkhal said.
âYou are offering to translate?' John asked.
âIf I need to.'
John left the tent. A short, slight man was sitting beside the small tent Dira had erected for his use. The man turned towards him. John saw that he had an eye patch covering one eye. The man rose to his feet.
âHarry â¦'
John embraced his cousin.
Chapter Thirteen
The desert between Baghdad and Turkey
July 1916
John couldn't look anywhere but at Harry. It was as though he were afraid if he glanced away from his cousin for a second Harry would disappear.
âI'm real, John.'
âWhy didn't you let me know you were alive?'
âBecause â¦' Harry hesitated and when he spoke again his speech was slow, halting, heavily accented, and John realised his cousin's lack of fluency was down to more than simply disuse. Harry was groping for words because English no longer came easily to his mind or his tongue. He was translating every word he said from Arabic. âBecause I haven't seen you.'