With Rifle and Bayonet Part 16
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"By Jove, they've started already, so we're in the nick of time!"
exclaimed Jack, jumping up and rus.h.i.+ng outside the tent, where he was joined by Farney. "What has happened?" he asked an officer, who was pa.s.sing at that moment.
"Lucas Meyer has occupied Talana Hill," was the reply, "and he is sh.e.l.ling us with six guns. Wait a few minutes! Our batteries are galloping out, and you will see how soon they will polish those beggars off!"
Hastily slinging their belts across their shoulders and picking up their rifles and blankets, Jack and his friend saddled their ponies, which had spent the night close by, and cantered out of the camp after the British guns, which had already taken up a position.
"That was a close one," exclaimed Jack calmly a moment later, as a sh.e.l.l whizzed just above his head and plunged into the ground behind, where it failed to explode. "A foot lower and it would have knocked my head to pieces!"
"Ah, there's many a slip!" laughed Farney light-heartedly. "Look at our fellows! They are giving our friends over there a good peppering."
Jack turned to watch the British guns, of which there were twelve, and then directed the field-gla.s.ses which he had purchased in Ladysmith at the heights of the Talana Hill. There he could see six cannon belching forth sharp spirts of flame, but no smoke, for the latest ammunition was being used.
As he looked, the British batteries spoke out, and the reports were followed by a succession of blinding flashes close by the Boer guns.
For twenty minutes the storm of sh.e.l.l continued to fall, and by that time the enemy had ceased to fire, and their guns stood unattended.
By now the troops had poured out of the camp, and while some remained behind in case of an attack, the King's Royal Rifles, a gallant corps commonly known as the 60th, the Dublin Fusiliers, and the Royal Irish Fusiliers, both regiments composed of stalwart, das.h.i.+ng Irishmen, fell in on the bugle-call, and formed up for the attack. Smart, bold fellows they all looked too, clad in their khaki uniforms, with belts, helmets, and b.u.t.tons all of the same mud-colour. And true heroes they were soon to prove themselves, for the bugles now rang out the "Advance", and in open order they set off for Talana Hill across a wide, sweeping plain, almost completely devoid of cover, and shortly to be swept by a murderous hail of Mauser bullets directed by unseen hands.
At this moment another Boer commando was reported advancing from the left, and the Leicester Regiment and a battery of guns was sent against them.
"By George, it looks as though we meant to clear that hill!" exclaimed Farney excitedly. "What shall we do, Somerton? Leave our horses and follow them, or stay where we are for a time?"
"Let us ask Preston," said Jack, nodding to the Hussar officer who had befriended them on the previous night, and who galloped up at that moment.
"Look here, Preston," Farney called out. "Somerton and I want to have a hand in this battle. What shall we do?"
"If you will take my advice," Preston answered, "you will join us. The chances are you would be in the way over there with the regulars, and your ponies would certainly be picked off. We are going to form over by the shoulder of the hill, and when our boys have set the beggars running, we will gallop round and break them up. There will be some fun in it, and you may both of you just as well have a share."
Accordingly Jack and Lord O'Farnel joined the Hussars and a body of mounted infantry supplied by the Rifle Regiments and by the Dublin Fusiliers.
Jack was mounted on Prince, and had left Vic behind, as it was unlikely that he would require two mounts.
They rode forward close in rear of the advancing regiments until the bullets began to whistle past them, while now and again some poor fellow tumbled forward on the ground. But undeterred, with never a backward glance or a thought of flinching, the three British regiments pushed forward, the nonchalance and absolute coolness of the men being superb.
They acted just as if on a big field-day at home in the Long Valley, and as if sure that, within a certain time, and after firing so many rounds and marching a given number of miles, they would return to camp, and to a comfortable dinner which would await them.
Many of the men smoked pipes and cigarettes, and joked and called to one another as they advanced, but for all that, beneath all their dogged pluck and coolness, there was a certain restlessness, a nervous grasp of the rifle, and a keen look in their eyes which told that they had braced themselves for a determined effort, and that nothing, not even thoughts of sweethearts and wives and children at home, or even death, should deter them from mounting the slopes of the hill in front of them and putting the Boers to flight.
"By Jove, it's fine to see them!" Farney cried, with a ring of pride in his voice. "Look at them now! They have opened out, and the foremost lines have reached the edge of the hill. Ah, now they are giving it to them! Volley-firing, regular and well delivered. Look at them now, Jack; they are pus.h.i.+ng up the hill, and more of the poor fellows are dropping! Ah! who would now dare to say that my countrymen are disloyal? I know some of them have acted as blackguards at home, but they are the sc.u.m of Irishmen, while these soldiers are real, brave boys!"
By this time the three advancing regiments had commenced to climb the hill, and the batteries had galloped up to closer range, and were now pouring in a hail of shrapnel at the puffs of flame which told where the Boer marksmen were. On our side, too, the men were cunningly taking advantage of every stone and boulder, or bravely facing the hail where no cover existed, and from their rifles a steady discharge of bullets was kept up at the heights above.
And behind them, and right up in the firing line, with no time to think of cover, the army surgeons and the bearers of the Army Medical Corps were at work picking up the wounded, applying dressings, and carrying the poor fellows away with a coolness and bravery which matched that of the other soldiers.
But our lads were gradually creeping up the hill, and were now within 300 yards of the summit, where they lay down, and poured in murderous volleys at the Boers, while a few feet overhead a succession of screaming sh.e.l.ls flew by, to plunge amongst the boulders a few moments later, and burst with an appalling roar, scattering death-dealing bullets on every side.
Gallantly did our brave fellows fight, and gallantly too did the Boer marksmen prove their devotion to their country. Struck down on every side, they still stuck to their posts, and in those last few minutes added numbers to our list of dead and wounded.
But British pluck, whether bred in England, Ireland, Scotland, or Wales, or indeed in any of our colonies, was not to be gainsaid. With a roaring cheer and the shrill notes of the "charge" sounding along the hill, the British fixed bayonets, sprang to their feet, and made one rush for the summit of Talana, never pausing to fire, but trusting to reach the enemy and apply cold steel, the most terrifying death of all.
But the Boers did not wait for them. Those that had held so stubbornly to the crest of the hill had performed their allotted task, for they had enabled their comrades to withdraw the guns and retreat in order; and now, springing from behind the boulders, they darted down the other side, a mark for the bullets of our soldiers.
Meanwhile the two hundred cavalry with whom Jack and Farney had thrown in their lot had been quietly walking their horses round the shoulder of the hill. As the infantry lay down for the last time before the charge, Colonel Moller, who was in command, gave the order to trot, and the little column swept round the shoulder, a Maxim gun on a galloping carriage trundling along in the centre. Arrived in sight of the reverse side of the hill, they halted for a few moments and waited for the flight of the Boers. Already they were retiring in ones and twos, but a minute later they came in a swarm.
"Draw swords! Trot! Charge! At them, my lads!" came in quick, sharp tones, and in a second the hors.e.m.e.n had opened out, and were going pell-mell across the open s.p.a.ce.
Jack was close to Farney, and as, like the mounted infantry, neither possessed a sword, they had fixed their bayonets on their rifles, and holding the latter close to the lock, with the bayonet well advanced, prepared to use them as lances.
A moment later they were amongst the flying enemy, bullets singing about their heads and knocking men out of their saddles. But all the time the sabres were flas.h.i.+ng fiercely in the sunlight, and Jack and his friend were using their bayonets to advantage. It was a wild ten minutes, and what happened during that time Jack never knew. Almost before he had expected it, Boers rose up in front of him and fired point-blank in his face. One bullet actually grazed his forehead and sent his hat flying, while another smashed his water-bottle to pieces. But he knew nothing about it at the time. Gripping Prince firmly with his knees, and keeping him well in hand, he leant forward in the saddle prepared to act at any moment. Suddenly a huge, bearded Boer stood in his way, half-hidden by a boulder, and, waiting till Jack was almost on him, pulled his trigger. What happened to the bullet Jack never knew; probably it went beneath his arm, for he found a slit in the sleeve after the fight was over, but the concussion and flash of light almost blinded him. Next moment with a hitch at the reins and a touch with his leg, given almost unconsciously, he was round the boulder and had plunged his bayonet into the Boer's body.
Then he dashed on and set his pony full-tilt at three of the enemy who were standing close together and emptying their magazines into the troopers. One he despatched with his bayonet, a second was knocked senseless by Prince's shoulder, and the third was cut down a second later by a man galloping along close behind Jack.
But many of the Boers had managed to reach their ponies, and were galloping away to join their friends; and after them the gallant little body of hors.e.m.e.n spurred, determined to teach them a lesson if they could only reach them. A mile farther on, as they were pa.s.sing some rocky ground, a line of fire spurted out from some bushes, and Lord O'Farnel, who had kept close to Jack, was thrown senseless to the ground, a bullet having killed his pony. Jack at once pulled up and dismounted, to find his friend huddled upon the ground with one leg twisted suspiciously beneath him.
A glance told Jack that it was broken, and that it would be impossible to move his friend until something had been done. As a preliminary he straightened the limb out, and then turned Farney on his back and opened his collar. That done, he sprinkled some water on his face, obtaining it from his friend's bottle, and looked round to see what had become of the column with whom they had charged.
They were out of sight, and it looked as though the two young fellows were alone, but the phit, phit of two bullets flying past his head, and the loud thuds and spurts of dust which followed, told him that some of the Boers were still in the neighbourhood and were firing at him. But he could see no one, though he searched all round. He and his friend lay in a wide hollow about half a mile across, and close to an isolated patch of boulders which cropped up in the centre.
"There are some Boers over there," thought Jack, "and if I am not precious careful they will bag me. But I'm not going to get hit or taken if I can help it."
Determined to make a fight for it, and protect his unconscious friend, he took Farney by the shoulders and dragged him across the ground as gently as possible till he was in a spot with an almost complete barrier of boulders round him. Then he called Prince and ordered him to lie down, which the obedient animal did at once.
A few moments later Jack himself was hidden behind the rocks, and was busied in loading his own and Farney's rifle, and in laying cartridges close at hand. "That's all right," he muttered. "Both magazines are full, so I ought to give a good account of myself. Now I'll pile up a few more boulders, or I shall be getting some of those bullets flying closer to my head than I like."
Keeping his body sheltered as much as possible, he rapidly piled up pieces of rock till there was a complete breastwork round himself and Farney. Then he sprinkled more water on the latter's face, and finding that he was recovering consciousness, repeated it till his companion opened his eyes, looked about him in bewilderment, and then smiled serenely at Jack.
"That you, Jack?" he asked. "What's wrong with my leg? It feels quite dead; and where are the other fellows?"
"Oh, the others have gone on, Farney!" Jack replied, "and as far as I can make out your right leg is broken somewhere above the knee. We're here alone, old chap, and about a dozen Boers are sitting down firing at us. But they can keep that up all day without doing us any harm. We are in a regular fort here."
"Then you'll have to defend it alone," replied Farney, with a groan.
"I'm just like a log. Half a minute though! Lend me that Mauser of yours. If they try to rush us, I shall be able to use that to some purpose."
Jack, who was lying flat on the ground all this time, handed his pistol to his friend, and then raised his head carefully and looked round. As he did so he saw a white flag flying from a rifle barrel some hundreds of yards away at the edge of the hollow. He at once tied his own handkerchief to his rifle and waved it. Then he stood up and advanced to meet the Boer who had first shown the white flag.
"You are surrounded," the latter said, "and so are all your comrades.
Lay down your arms and surrender at once, or we will not be responsible for your life."
"Surrender!" said Jack in reply. "I shall certainly not do that yet.
You have been firing at me for a good half-hour without touching me.
Let me advise you to clear off, or else you will find yourselves prisoners long before you take me. The English are close at hand and will be here soon. You had better get away as quick as you can."
"Ah! we will see to that," the Boer answered calmly. "I will give you five minutes longer, and if at the end of that time you have not agreed to surrender I shall give my men orders to shoot you like a dog."
"Very well," said Jack coolly; "but I should advise you to leave me alone and get away while you can."
The Boer gave an impatient stamp with his foot and turned round brusquely, while Jack made his way back to his friend.
"They have called upon me to surrender," he said, "and I have refused, and advised them to clear off whilst they can. They are to give me five minutes, and if I haven't raised the white flag by then they will attack."
With Rifle and Bayonet Part 16
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With Rifle and Bayonet Part 16 summary
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