Authors: Catrin Collier
Georgiana checked Angela's pulse. âTell me if the pain become unbearable.'
âHow much longer?' Angela gasped.
âWhen the next pain comes give one almighty push with every particle of strength you can summon.'
Angela did just that and as she pushed, Georgiana heard a knock at the door.
âThat will be Dr Wallace. Show him into the living room,' she ordered the maid without looking away from Angela. âI can see the baby's head, Angela. One more push when the next pain comes.'
Five minutes later Georgiana was holding a red, squirming baby in her arms.
âHas it red hair?' Angela fell back on to her pillows.
âThat's a strange question for a new mother to ask.'
âIt's a boy, isn't it?'
âA beautiful boy with fair hair. He's all in one piece and absolutely gorgeous.' Georgiana wrapped the baby in a towel and gave him to Angela. âI'll cut the cord, wash you and the baby, then get your brother.'
By the time she had made Angela and the baby comfortable and gone into the living room, Theo had fallen asleep, although he was sitting bolt upright in a chair.
Georgiana poured two small brandies, woke him, and handed him one. âYou look as though you haven't slept in days.'
âJust two.'
âWhat's happening?'
âHeavy fighting upstream. Turks have been flooding into the Lansing again.'
âWhat about British wounded?' Georgiana's blood ran cold when she thought of Michael, Peter ⦠and David.
âI spoke to a British medic on the wharf. He said they've been warned to expect an enormous influx. Initial reports suggest a fifty per cent casualty rate.'
âAny news on lists of names?'
âIt's too early. Angela?'
âCome and meet your nephew.'
Theo prised himself out of the chair and followed Georgiana into Angela's bedroom. Angela was lying in bed staring at and cuddling her son. She didn't even look at Theo, just held out her hand to him. He squeezed it.
âHe's beautiful, isn't he?'
âA handsome fellow.' Theo stroked the baby's cheek with his forefinger.
If Georgiana didn't know Theo better, she'd have said he'd sounded emotional.
Angela finally looked away from her son long enough to see how tired her brother was. âYou're sleeping on your feet.'
âJust finished a long shift.'
âThere's fighting upstream?'
âNot for officers above the rank of captains. The majors will be standing at the back pushing the ranks forward,' Theo reassured her clumsily. âI have to get back. You did write and tell Peter that he was going to be a father, didn't you?'
âYes, but he hasn't replied. The mail is so uncertain.'
âI could call into the wireless room at HQ on the way and ask them to send him a wire.'
âWould you?'
âI would,' he smiled. âHave you picked out a name for young Smythe?'
She gazed down at the child. âPeter Charles Theodore Smythe.'
âCharles for our father?'
âAnd another Charles I knew and loved and valued as a friend.'
Georgiana turned away from Angela and Theo and folded back the sheets and blankets on the baby's cot. Theo stroked the baby's cheek again, dropped a kiss on Angela's head, and went to the door.
âWould you like tea, coffee, something to eat, Theo?' Georgiana asked.
âNo, thank you. I have to go.' He walked past her. Georgiana saw that she wasn't the only one struggling to hold her emotions in check.
British Relief Force, Shumrun
February 1917
The sky grew gradually paler, but the grey was unrelenting. Simply a lighter shade than that of the night. Rain teemed down in sheets, cold, penetrating, and interminable.
âThis trench is a right bloody sodden mess, isn't it, sir?' A private in the Cheshires addressed Michael who was crouched beneath a flimsy shelter he'd patched together from his mackintosh and two ammunition boxes.
Michael carried on scribbling in his notebook. âNo more than any other sodden mess of a trench in this area, private. You know the saying, “if God meant for soldiers to be content with their lot in life he would have staffed the army with angels”.'
âYou're a war correspondent, sir?'
â
Daily Mirror
.'
âMy missus likes reading that. I'm not much of a reader myself.'
Michael had learned long ago that the man who admitted that he âwasn't much of a reader' generally couldn't read much beyond his own name.
A runner came down the line, âAnyone seen Major Smythe?'
Michael held his hand out from under his waterproof to attract the runner's attention. âWho's asking?'
âMessage just come down the wire for him, sir.'
âI'll look for him if you're busy.'
âI am, sir. Thank you. Much obliged, sir.' The runner handed Michael a piece of sodden folded paper. There was no envelope, Michael opened it carefully.
Peter Charles Theodore Smythe born 4.15 a.m. Mother, son, well. Congratulations, Theo
Michael checked the date â 3 hours ago. âThis is one piece of news I can't wait to pass on to Major Smythe.' He pushed his notebook and pencil into his pocket, shook out his mackintosh, and slipped it on.
âDo you know where Major Smythe is, sir?' The runner asked.
âI'll find him.' Michael fought his way through the trenches until he reached the river. He found Peter in the front line trench on the British side, standing on a rifle step watching through his field glasses as the Turkish guns blasted the British foothold on the opposite bank. Michael tapped Peter's shoulder. He stepped down.
âThe Gurkhas are advancing. We're getting there. You here to write copy, Michael?'
âWhy are you shouting?'
Peter pointed to his ears. âShell blast.'
Michael handed Peter the scrap of paper. âYou play your cards close to your chest,' he yelled in Peter's ear. âNot a word.'
Peter read and re read the note. âIt makes sense.'
âWhat?' Michael yelled.
âPerry said I was a coward who wanted to get back to my wife and child. I thought he was talking about Maud's baby â¦'
Michael laughed at the bewildered expression on Peter's face. He dug out his flask and handed it to him. âYou're a father, Smythe, Congratulations.'
âCongratulations, sir ⦠congratulations â¦'
Within seconds Peter was surrounded by a sea of junior officers slapping his back and wishing him well.
âI need to send a return wire.'
Michael pulled out his pencil and notebook. âI'll do it for you,' he mouthed above the noise of the shelling and congratulations of officers. âWhat do you want me to say?'
âIf wishes could carry me, I'd be home tonight. Love to both of you, Peter.'
Michael walked back and looked for the command post. General Maude insisted on hourly wireless updates, which infuriated most of his staff officers. It took twenty minutes to set up the wireless and fifteen minutes to take it down. Thirty-five minutes during which Maude and his staff were forced to remained static. Minutes the majority of his senior officers believed could have been put to better use.
He walked past the staff tent to the wireless operator's shelter, which also held a tea station manned by sepoys. He was in luck. The lieutenant was just about to disconnect the wireless. He persuaded him to keep it open a few more minutes, handed over Peter's message, and watched him send it.
âTwo sugars isn't it, sir?' A sepoy who remembered Michael from previous visits, asked from behind the tea urn.
âIt is,' he took the tin mug the man handed him and warmed his hands on it. âThank you, just what I needed.' As he'd stocked up in the stores before the battle, he offered the sepoy a full pack of cigarettes. The man beamed.
âThank you, sir. You just come up from the river, sir?' the sepoy asked.
âI have.'
âDo you know if we've crossed to the Turkish side?'
âWe most certainly have.' Michael tried to forget just how precarious the British foothold was.
âDo you think we'll win, sir?'
âIt would be unthinkable to put in all this effort and get nowhere.'
âThat's probably what the Expeditionary Force thought before they surrendered at Kut, sir.' A wounded private with bandages around his head, arm, and leg limped towards them on crutches.
âPessimism's a court martial offence, private,' Michael joked.
âIf the cell's dry, I wouldn't mind, sir.'
David's orderly, Singh, ran up. âMr Downe, sir, you on your way somewhere?'
âNot particularly, why?'
âWe're desperate for help in the field hospital, sir. The doctors are overwhelmed by the numbers of wounded. Men are still flooding in and half the stretcher-bearers have been hit.'
Michael turned back to the wireless operator who was busy disconnecting wires.
âAny plan to advance?'
âNot for the next twenty-five minutes, sir.'
Michael turned up the collar of his mackintosh, headed towards the river and the booming artillery, and hit a crowd of walking wounded. He glanced over to the trenches that held the aid stations and field hospitals. They were so packed with injured and bleeding bodies he couldn't see the surgeons.
Behind the mounds of wounded waiting for attention was a hillock of bodies. He paled. Lying on top was the corpse of Boris Bell; beneath him, a stretcher and two dead stretcher-bearers, their skulls riddled with bullets. He lifted Boris's corpse and placed him gently on a line of sandbags before extricating the stretcher. He looked around. A sepoy was standing, staring, mesmerized by the mass of walking wounded. Michael hailed him and held up the stretcher. The sepoy joined him. Without exchanging a word they headed towards the river.
Chapter Twenty-eight
British Relief Force, Shumrun
March 1917
David swam slowly out of confused dreams into consciousness. Disorientated, he opened his eyes. The oil lamp in his tent was flickering low, shedding amber light that sent shadows dancing on his cot and the walls of his tent. He reached for his pocket watch and opened it. Four o'clock. It was dark so it had to be early morning. But which day?
He had a vague memory of going to bed in daylight but he had no idea of the month let alone the day. He also recalled a letter from home. Had he dreamed it?
He found it on his campaign chest, opened it, and read it. He hadn't dreamed its contents. The impact of the life-changing news it contained hit him anew with full force. All his life he'd managed to avoid taking responsibility for any and everything, especially his mistakes, and the debts he incurred, but fate had conspired against him â or so it would appear.
He returned the letter to its envelope and stowed it in the top drawer of his chest. He'd placed a framed photograph of himself with Georgiana on top. It had been taken by a Jewish photographer in the Basra Club shortly after he'd travelled downstream with the wounded from Kut. He'd paid the man for a copy and if Georgiana remembered it being taken she'd never mentioned it again, so the print had remained his secret.
He looked at it for a long time. Georgiana certainly couldn't be described as beautiful, not in the conventional sense, but neither was she as plain as she tried to make out. One thing was certain, he adored her more than any woman he'd ever known simply because she treated him as her intellectual inferior, which in his most honest moments he admitted he probably was.
She'd lent an element of surprise to his life which had jerked him out of cynicism and complacency. He never knew what she was going to say or do next and the only thing he was absolutely certain of was he didn't want to imagine a life without her.
He took out his writing case, opened it flat to give himself a surface to press on, unscrewed the top of his ink bottle, and picked up his pen.
Dear Georgie,
This isn't going to be a letter about what we're doing upriver because frankly you don't want to know, I don't want to write about it, and even if I did, the censor would have to paint thick black lines all over my nice clean letter to you and that would spoil it. Especially in view of what I want to say and the importance history will bequeath on this epistle.
I've had news from home. Frankly I don't want to talk about that either because I don't want to think about it.
The only thing I do want to write about is us.
Marry me, Georgie.
I'll list all the reasons why you should.
First, you're absolutely the only woman other than my mother who's willingly put up with my company for more than a few hours.
We'd look really good together I'll be the handsome one and you can be the intelligent one.
I need you to be my mentor and give me good medical advice which will benefit my patients and hopefully prevent me from making any more fatal mistakes than I've already made. Not that I know of any that I've made as yet. (I put in that last sentence for legal purposes in case someone sees this and remembers that I doctored a friend or relative of theirs who has subsequently died.)
I miss you more than anyone would believe it possible for a devastatingly handsome man like me to miss a girl. It's very cold at night wrapped in a damp soggy blanket with no warm body to cuddle.
I expect to receive your acceptance by return of post â given it's wartime I'll allow six months for it to reach me,
Your loving fiancé, David.
P.S. Peter is over the moon at the news that he's a father. He's handed out cigarettes to everyone in between firing salvos at the Turks. We have no cigars upstream and that should tell just how uncivilised the conditions are here.