Lorraine Part 40
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"They are piling all the furniture they can get against the gate in the park wall," said Jack; "come out to the kitchen-garden."
She went with him, still holding to his arm. Across the vegetable garden a barricade of furniture--sofas, chairs, and wardrobes--lay piled against the wooden gate of the high stone wall. Engineers were piercing the wall with crowbars and pickaxes, loosening the cement, dragging out huge blocks of stone to make embrasures for three cannon that stood with their limbers among the broken bell-gla.s.ses and cuc.u.mber-frames in the garden.
A ladder lay against the wall, and on it was perched an officer, who rested his field-gla.s.ses across the tiled top and stood studying the woods. Below him a general and half a dozen officers watched the engineers hacking at the wall; a long, double line of infantry crouched behind them, the bugler kneeling, glancing anxiously at his captain, who stood talking to a fat sub-officer in capote and boots.
Artillerymen were gathered about the ammunition-chests, opening the lids and carrying sh.e.l.l and shrapnel to the wall; the balconies of the Chateau were piled up with breastworks of rugs, boxes, and sacks of earth. Here and there a rifleman stood, his cha.s.sepot resting on the iron railing, his face turned towards the woods.
"They are coming," said a soldier, calling back to a comrade, who only laughed and pa.s.sed on towards the kitchen, loaded down with sacks of flour.
A restless movement pa.s.sed through the kneeling battalion of infantry.
"Fiche moi la paix, hein!" muttered a lieutenant, looking resentfully at a gossiping farrier. Another lieutenant drew his sword, and wiped it on the sleeve of his jacket.
"Are they coming?" asked Lorraine.
"I don't know. Watch that officer on the wall. He seems to see nothing yet. Don't you think you had better go to the rear of the house now?"
"No, not unless you do."
"I will, then."
"No, stay here. I am not afraid. Where is Alixe?"
"With the wounded men in the stable. They have hoisted the red cross over the barn; did you notice?"
Before she could answer, one of the soldiers on the balcony of the Chateau fired. Another rose from behind a mattress and fired also; then half a dozen shots rang out, and the smoke whirled up over the roof of the house. The officer on the ladder was motioning to the group of officers below; already the artillerymen were running the three cannon forward to the port-holes that had been pierced in the park wall.
"Come," said Jack.
"Not yet--I am not frightened."
A loud explosion enveloped the wall in sulphurous clouds, and a cannon jumped back in recoil. The cannoneers swarmed around it, there was a quick movement of a sponger, an order, a falling into place of rigid artillerymen, then bang! and another up-rush of smoke. And now the other cannon joined in--cras.h.!.+ bang!--and the garden swam in the swirling fog. Infantry, too, were firing all along the wall, and on the other side of the house the rippling crash of the gatling-gun rolled with the rolling volleys. Jack led Lorraine to the rear of the Chateau, but she refused to stay, and he reluctantly followed her into the house.
From every mattress-stuffed window the red-legged soldiers were firing out across the lawn towards the woods; the smoke drifted back into the house in thin shreds that soon filled the rooms with a blue haze.
Suddenly something struck the chandelier and shattered it to the gilt candle-sockets. Lorraine looked at it, startled, but another bullet whizzed into the room, starring the long mirror, and another knocked the plaster from the fireplace. Jack had her out of the room in a second, and presently they found themselves in the cellar, the very cement beneath their feet shaking under the tremendous shocks of the cannon.
"Wait for me. Do you promise, Lorraine?"
"Yes."
He hurried up to the terrace again, and out across the gravel drive to the stable.
"Alixe!" he called.
She came quietly to him, her arms full of linen bandages. There was nothing of fear or terror in her cheeks, nothing even of grief now, but her eyes transfigured her face, and he scarcely knew it.
"What can I do?" he asked.
"Nothing. The wounded are quiet. Is there water in the well?"
He brought her half a dozen buckets, one after another, and set them side by side in the harness-room, where three or four surgeons lounged around two kitchen-tables, on which sponges, basins, and cases of instruments lay. There was a sickly odour of ether in the air, mingled with the rank stench of carbolic acid.
"Lorraine is in the cellar. Do you need her? Surely not--when I am ready," he said.
"No; go and stay with her. If I need you I will send."
He could scarcely hear her in the tumult and din, but he understood and nodded, watching her busy with her lint and bandages. As he turned to go, the first of the wounded, a mere boy, was brought in on the shoulders of a comrade. Jack heard him scream as they laid him on the table; then he went soberly away to the cellar where Lorraine sat, her face in her hands.
"We are holding the Chateau," he said. "Will you stay quietly for a little while longer, if I go out again?"
"If you wish," she said.
He longed to take her in his arms. He did not; he merely said, "Wait for me," and went away again out into the smoke.
From the upper-story windows, where he had climbed, he could see to the edge of the forest. Already three columns of men had started out from the trees across the meadow towards the park wall. They advanced slowly and steadily, firing as they came on.
Somewhere, in the smoke, a Prussian band was playing gayly, and Jack thought of the Bavarians at the Geisberg, and their bands playing as the men fell like leaves in the Chateau gardens.
He had his field-gla.s.ses with him, and he fixed them on the advancing columns. They were Bavarians, after all--there was no mistaking the light-blue uniforms and fur-crested helmets. And now he made out their band, plodding stolidly along, trombones and ba.s.s-drums wheezing and banging away in the rifle-smoke; he could even see the band-master swinging his halberd forward.
Suddenly the nearest column broke into a heavy run, cheering hoa.r.s.ely. The other columns came on with a rush; the band halted, playing them in at the death with a rollicking quickstep; then all was blotted out in the pouring cannon-smoke. Flash on flash the explosions followed each other, lighting the gloom with a wavering yellow glare, and on the terrace the gatling whirred and spluttered its slender streams of flame, while the treble crash of the cha.s.sepots roared accompaniment.
Once or twice Jack thought he heard the rattle of their little harsh, flat drums, but he could see them no longer; they were in that smoke-pall somewhere, coming on towards the park wall.
Bugles began to sound--French bugles--clear and sonorous. Across the lawn by the river a battalion of French infantry were running, firing as they ran. He saw them settle at last like quail among the stubble, curling up and crouching in groups and bevies, alert heads raised. Then the firing rippled along the front, and the lawn became gray with smoke.
As he went down the stairs and into the garden he heard the soldiers saying that the charge had been checked. The wounded were being borne towards the barn, long lines of them, heads and limbs hanging limp. A horse in the garden was ending a death-struggle among the cuc.u.mber-frames, and the battery-men were cutting the traces to give him free play. Upon the roof a thin column of smoke and sparks rose, where a Prussian sh.e.l.l--the first as yet--had fallen and exploded in the garret. Some soldiers were knocking the sparks from the roof with the b.u.t.ts of their rifles.
When he went into the cellar again Lorraine was pacing restlessly along the wine-bins.
"I cannot stay here," she said. "Jack, get some bottles of brandy and come to the barn. The wounded will need them."
"You cannot go out. I will take them."
"No, I shall go."
"I ask you not to."
"Let me, Jack," she said, coming up to him--"with you."
He could not make her listen; she went with him, her slender arms loaded with bottles. The sh.e.l.ls were falling in the garden now; one burst and flung a shower of earth and gla.s.s over them.
"Hurry!" he said. "Are you crazy, Lorraine, to come out into this?"
"Don't scold, Jack," she whispered.
When she entered the stable he breathed more freely. He watched her face narrowly, but she did not blanch at the sickening spectacle of the surgeons' tables.
They placed their bottles of brandy along the side of a box-stall, and stood together watching the file of wounded pa.s.sing in at the door.
Lorraine Part 40
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Lorraine Part 40 summary
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