Authors: Catrin Collier
âHave you ever seen such a stinking slum?' David questioned.
âI'll concede it's worse than Basra, Amara, and Qurna.'
âWorse â this place is a cesspit.'
âWe cleaned up the towns in the south, give us time we'll do the same to this one,' Peter said.
David stopped outside a café and looked through the window. âMichael, Bowditch, Grace, Brooke, and practically every convalescent officer I've signed off duty are in there. Want to go in and find out what the attraction is?'
Peter pushed the door open. Half the café was filled with Arabs lounging on wooden benches cradling glasses of mint tea. The other half was occupied by British officers, jugs of water and raki in front of them.
A naked girl was dancing on top of a large table in the centre of the room. Musical accompaniment was provided by a trio: two men were playing peculiar stringed instruments that resembled lyres while a third thumped an out-of-tune piano. The resulting noise was weird and deafening.
David raised his eyebrows at the expression on Peter's face. âI presume this is what they call “Eastern Promise”.'
Peter grabbed a chair and squeezed it in next to Michael's at his crowded table. âResearching a political article or still searching for golden minarets?'
âAbsorbing background,' Michael winked at David who joined them. âBritish majors at play. How do you spell “Knight” and “Smythe”?'
Turkish Prison Camp
June 1917
Rebeka had set the table in the small kitchen in the hospital for her and John's evening meal. She'd grated tinned cheese from a Red Cross parcel and beat it together with a few slices of leftover potato into an egg, milk, and tinned butter mix. She'd laid out tin plates, knives, and forks, and arranged a few flowers she'd picked in the garden in a bully beef tin she'd cleaned and polished. She looked at the clock on the wall. Another ten minutes and John should have finished his last patient round for the day.
She was looking forward to spending some time alone with him. Mrs Gulbenkian and Hasmik were helping Major Crabbe move into a room in the officers' quarters. John had discharged him from the hospital that morning to make room for four new fever cases and everyone was worried that the fever would spread throughout the other inmates in the camp.
The door opened. She turned and smiled, expecting to see John. She backed into the wall when Mehmet advanced towards her. âYou â¦'
Mehmet tugged at the insignia on his sleeve. âI was promoted and sent to the regular army for killing people like you. What are you doing still alive?'
âI work here â for the British soldiers,' she added, in the hope he'd leave her alone.
âAn Armenian has no right to draw breath.' He reached behind him, closed the door and turned the key. Locking them in together.
Rebeka screamed.
âShhh.' He pulled a long-bladed knife from a sheath on his belt. She opened her mouth to scream again.
He silenced her by clamping his hand over her mouth. She felt his hand pulling at her dress, the bite of the tip of the blade at her throat. The sensations were horrifyingly familiar.
Unlike in the desert, though, they galvanised her to fight back. She tried to wrench her head away from him but he forced his hand into her mouth. She bit down hard. He slapped her, sending her reeling into the wall.
âNot again,' she shouted, ânot ever again.'
Someone tried the door. When the lock held they banged on it.
âRebeka?'
âJohn!' Something sharp, agonisingly so, jabbed into her neck. She staggered. Dark shadows crowded in on her, rising from the ground, drifting down from the ceiling, closing in from the corners of the room.
Warm, wet liquid ran down her neck, soaking her. The door crashed open.
Someone hauled Mehmet from her. She saw Major Crabbe standing behind the Turk, heard the crack of bones snapping. Mehmet disappeared from her view.
John wrapped his arms around her, and lowered her gently on to his knees. She looked up at him and clutched her stomach in an attempt to protect the child within her. She saw John's soft brown eyes cloud in sorrow, felt his hand, warm, gentle on hers.
She smiled up at him.
âDon't leave me ⦠Rebeka â¦'
She tried to say ânever' but she couldn't speak. She could still see John, still hear him, but he was moving away from her. He grew smaller and smaller while the shadows continued to grow, swallowing him until there was only darkness and his voice, faint, fading into a single pulse that kept time with her heartbeat â¦
John never knew how long he remained on the floor of the kitchen cradling Rebeka. But when Crabbe gently took her from him, he realised she'd died in his arms.
Chapter Thirty
Baghdad
21
st
November 1917
âDid you hear me, Knight?' Colonel Allan looked him over with a professional eye. âI said General Maude's dead.'
âI heard you, sir. He'll be sorely missed.' It was the standard phrase David resorted to whenever anyone mentioned the dead or the dying.
The entire force was immersed in death and had been for months. He was tired of administering morphine to ease men out of life and sitting beside death beds waiting for the last breath to be drawn so he could give the order to remove the corpse and bring in the next sick man.
He continued to stand in the centre of the ward. He couldn't see the floor for men laid head to toe in every available inch of space and in every direction. Cholera had broken out eight weeks ago closely followed by typhoid fever. They'd run out of beds in the first two days.
The only saving grace was the lack of wounded. The battle for Mesopotamia was, in theory at least, still be being waged against the Turkish troops retreating North back to their own country, but according to dispatches all fight had left the Ottoman Empire. Meanwhile his battles were continuing here.
âWhere do you want me to put him, sir?'
David stared uncomprehendingly at the two orderlies carrying a stretcher.
âThis man, where do you want me to put him, sir?'
âAnywhere where there's an inch of space, orderly.' He looked around for Allan but there were simply too many people crowded into the ward, upright and horizontal.
âCorridor's full, sir. The ward's full â¦'
David glanced at the stretcher. âNo! Please, no. Not Smythe.'
âColonel Allan says it's Typhoid Fever, sir.'
David opened Peter's shirt and saw the rash. âThe office. Push the desk and chair against the wall.'
He tried to follow the orderlies but his legs refused to obey the commands his brains sent. The room swirled around him, gathering speed it moved faster â and faster â than any childhood roundabout. He grabbed a kidney dish from the stretcher and retched.
âSir ⦠sir â¦'
Singh caught him. David heard his orderly say, âMake up two beds in the office.' He closed his eyes. He would leave everything to Singh. Just for a little while.
Turkish Prison Camp
November 1917
Crabbe watched John walk into the kitchen and sit at the table. Yana took a plate of food she'd put in the stove to keep warm and set it in front of him.
âThank you.' John looked at it but made no attempt to eat it.
Yana pushed Hasmik towards him. The girl offered him a piece of paper that had been torn from a notebook. âI made a drawing for you, Major Mason.'
John took it from her and Hasmik climbed on to his lap.
She laid the drawing on the table. âThat's me.' She pointed to a small round-faced figure with stick arms and legs. âThat's you.' She indicated a similar larger figure standing behind her. âAnd that's Rebeka looking down at us from heaven.'
John sensed Crabbe and Yana holding their breath. He smiled in an attempt to put them at their ease. âThat's beautiful, Hasmik.'
âMrs Gulbenkian says Rebeka's watching over all of us all of the time. And the man who hurt her has gone and will never hurt anyone again.'
âThat's right, Hasmik. He won't hurt anyone ever again. â
âCome on, young lady. Bed for you.' Yana scooped the child from John's lap.'
âMust I?'
âIf you're good I'll tell you a story.'
â
Hagop and the Hairy Giant
?'
âIf you give Major Mason and Major Crabbe goodnight kisses.' Yana held the child fast while she swooped down and kissed first John then Crabbe.
âClean plate by the time I get back, Major Mason. We haven't an ounce of food to waste.'
âI know, Yana, thank you.' He picked up his fork.
âHasmik didn't mean anything,' Crabbe explained by way of an apology after Yana left with the child.
âI know.'
âWe had to tell her something.'
âI know, Crabbe,' John reiterated.
âFoul thing to happen. If I'd been in the kitchen when that bastard came in â¦'
âIf any of us had been in here it wouldn't have happened. You killed him with your bare hands. That's more than most men would have done.'
âToo late.'
âThere's no point in going over it or talking about it, Crabbe. What's done is done.' There was no anger, only immense sadness in John's voice.
Crabbe indicated John's plate. âIf you don't eat that Yana will have your guts for garters.'
âIt's been a long time since I heard that expression.'
âI warned you I climbed out of a Glaswegian gutter.'
âYou've been a good friend, Crabbe. I wouldn't have survived without you.'
âNonsense.'
âI'm serious.' John countered. âThe war will end soon. If we're fortunate we'll be allowed to go home, and I meant what I said about you, Yana, and Hasmik coming to Stouthall with me.'
âIf you're absolutely sure there'll be real work that I can do there and you'll rent or sell us a house, we'll come.'
âThere's just one thing. I want to sail home from Basra.'
âWhy on earth would you want to go back to that God-forsaken hole? It will only remind you of Harry and Charles â¦'
âIt will, but that's why I want to return. There's someone there I need to say goodbye to.'
âMitkhal and Harry's wife?'
John dropped his fork. âPlease, eat this for me, so I won't offend Yana.'
âYou have to eat.'
âI will tomorrow. I promise. It's just that now, right now, I need to be alone, Crabbe. Thank you.'
âWhat are you thanking me for?' Crabbe pulled the plate of bully beef stew towards him.
âKilling Mehmet. If you hadn't I would have tried and I would have made a right mess of it because I've no experience of killing â intentionally that is. And that's the last I want to say about him.'
âBut not Rebeka,' Crabbe murmured. âWe all have to remember Rebeka.'
âAs if we could ever forget her.' John rose and left the room.
Baghdad
December 1917
David was only vaguely aware of his surroundings. Whenever he opened his eyes it was to see orderlies cleaning the blood, secretions, and pus that flowed from every orifice of his and his Peter's bodies. The entire ward, including the office he and Peter were laid out in, was soaked in bodily fluids and hazy, almost as though they were all under water. Sometimes he managed to focus. When he could, he looked across at Peter, who always seemed to be tossing and turning in delirium. His friend had aged decades, not years, since they'd been struck down. His skin had thickened until it resembled old yellowed parchment, and there was an underlying ominous bluish tinge which he'd come to dread seeing as a doctor, because it invariably heralded death.
His mind constantly wavered and he found it difficult to retain a grasp on reality or determine whether it was his or Peter's breathing that sounded so loud. When he screamed in the agony of muscle cramps, he often turned to see it was Peter, not him making the noise.
He retained enough medical acumen even in delirium to know that he and Peter were both dying and it was only a matter of time before the burial party would pick up their shrouded corpses. Having lost all control over his body he lay on the thin pallet drifting in and out of consciousness, amazed every time it registered that he was still breathing â until the moment he realised Peter was no longer lying next to him.
He reached out to the empty mattress. Singh stayed his hand. He looked into his orderly's eyes.
Singh nodded.
He moved his hand. It felt ridiculously heavy. He laid it on Singh's arm. âI'll be with him soon. Get â¦get â¦' David knew what he wanted to say but he lacked the strength to say it. âDressings â¦Plug me.'
âSir?'
He could see Singh thought he wasn't rational. âPlug my ears, nose â¦every orifice, I'm leaking, dying ⦠make no difference ⦠save you work ⦠you shouldn't clean my mess ⦠Tell Georgie I love her.'
He was vaguely aware of Singh bringing a sheet and dressings, of lifting him on to the sheet â¦wrapping him ⦠then nothing.
Smythes' Bungalow
December 31
st
1917
âHappy New Year.' Georgiana touched her glass to Angela's. âChristmas wasn't like Christmas at all and this New Year doesn't feel very celebratory.'
âIt might tomorrow when we lunch at the Lansing. That was a knock at the door.' Angela rose, glanced in the mirror, and patted her hair into place. Georgiana knew Angela had hoped, just as she had, that Peter and David might wangle leave for Christmas. When they hadn't arrived for the holiday the hope had been postponed to the New Year.
The maid knocked and opened the door. âDr Wallace, ma'am.'
Theo walked in. Angela took one look at him, stepped back, and sank down on a chair. Her hand flew to her mouth.