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Authors: Peter Watt

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BOOK: Papua
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Erika Mann stood amongst the small crowd of men, women and children bidding their sons, husbands, fathers and lovers a dreadful farewell. They had tried to be brave and display the stiff upper lip – reputed to their enemies, the British – but the tears of grief had flowed. For in the fourth year of the terrible war none held the optimism of August 1914. This was a war of stalemate bogged down in the stinking mire of barbed wire, trenches, mud and raked by machine guns. This was a war that had at its dark heart the belief that the last man standing was the winner. A war where men used up their enemy’s bullets in their bodies and the terrible screaming whistle of an artillery shell randomly fragmented flesh. Erika knew all this and could not believe that her beloved Wolfgang should quit his medical studies to enlist as an infantry officer. Another year and he would have been a doctor. But he had been restless and patriotic despite what he and so many other Germans knew: the war was decimating the youth of a great nation.

The night before he had held her in his arms in the big eiderdown covered bed as she had sobbed after their lovemaking. ‘I will be with your brother’s regiment,’ he had soothed as she desperately clung to him. ‘He has survived the war since ’14.’

The young officer had attempted to console her and she had wanted to be reassured by his words. She tried to smile bravely for him but the thought of losing his precious body and soul racked her further with sobs. She attempted to sleep, enveloped by the warmth of his love and the thick eiderdown, but watched every tiny shadow in the small room until they were chased away by the pale light of a winter’s day outside.

Now she stood and watched the troop train leave Munich in the winter snows of early 1918. When it was gone she turned and walked away. She did not believe in God but she did say a prayer on this occasion just in case she was wrong. Her whispered plea was the same as millions of others being intoned all over Europe and beyond: ‘Please bring him home to me.’

The raiding party had set out to avenge the death of Serero’s brother. But all had not gone well and the avenging warriors had lost one of their own. Despite the loss of a valued member of the clan, five dark skinned, naked young men squatted around Serero, grinning at his pain.

‘It is nothing,’ one of the men said as he watched the young warrior tugging the slender wooden arrowhead from his thigh. ‘I once had two of the enemy’s arrows sticking out of my backside – now that really hurt – but I did not cry when they were pulled out.’

Serero grimaced but did not display discomfort as he yanked the broken bamboo reed shaft protruding from his thigh. The arrowhead emerged, as did a stream of blood to splash the rocks of the mountain stream. He was sweating despite the coolness of the air in the jungle-covered mountains but noticed the newfound respect the older men had for him now reflected in their grim set expressions and head nods.

‘It did not hurt,’ Serero grunted.

He rose to his feet uncertainly, not sure whether he would be able to walk. The mountain stream had yet to be crossed if they were to keep ahead of their enemies who even now rallied their kinsmen in the rugged mountain valleys looking for payback.

‘Stand in the water for a moment,’ one of the older warriors said. ‘It will help.’

Serero went to protest but the pain of the wound shot through his thigh, almost toppling him. He stepped into the cold mountain stream up to his waist. The water tugged at him but he stood his ground as the rest of his war party waded cautiously across the creek.

Clutching their long bows strung with a sliver of bamboo, the raiding party had crossed and Serero followed them into the great rainforest. Within two days they would reach the village where the women would wail for the loss of a warrior from the clan. But Serero would boast of the two men he had personally killed in the dawn raid on their enemy sleeping in their longhouses. It had been a daring venture and Serero knew that his brother’s avenging spirit would be at rest. The story of the raid and the part he played would be told around the cooking fires and his prestige enhanced in its telling.

Serero limped behind his older comrades, beaming with pride for his prowess. A giant butterfly the size of a small bird fluttered in the canopy of the trees above. With any luck they might come across a pig or cassowary on their trek home. To bring such a prize to the village would make the homecoming victory even more sweet. The thought caused the young man to feel less of the pain in his thigh. To be alive in the land of his ancestors on this day was a wondrous thing. His people had a long history of great raids and enemy warriors defeated, going back much further than even the oldest member of the clan could remember.

The young warrior did not count the passage of years as the ancestor spirits did. Had he counted years he would have less than ten before his world was turned upside down forever in the feverish sago swamps of the great Papuan river. That distant day would mark an irreparable rent in the fabric of Paradise and the forests of Eden.

Part One
BARBED WIRE
AND JUNGLES
1918–1924
 
ONE
 

M
ajor Paul Mann of the Kaiser Alexander Regiment was vaguely aware that the earth no longer shook with the ferocity of a wild animal in its death throes. The terrible onslaught of the British eight-inch shells, that had pummelled his company of helpless and terrified men since five thirty in the morning, was gone from the air around him.

Lying at the bottom of the freshly dug trench, Major Mann could taste blood in his mouth. The big artillery guns behind the British lines had sought targets of human flesh to rip and shred to meaty fragments. He was numb but his whole body shook with the elation of still being alive and untouched by the splinters of searing hot metal that the explosions scattered.

‘Major Mann! They are coming!’

The voice sounded as if it had come from another world. A world where he would like to return. A place of happiness and the sweet scents of home. It was the voice of his second in command Captain Wolfgang Betz, the voice of his future brother-in-law, who called to him.

‘Sir, they are advancing,’ Wolfgang screamed at his shell-deafened commander.

Paul reached out to take his extended hand and scramble to his feet. There was no time to check the state of defences after the heavy artillery barrage. The advancing enemy were already in sight, even though they appeared so small and puny for the moment. But as an experienced soldier of four years on the Western Front, Paul knew many of his younger and less experienced troops would still be stunned into inactivity in the bottom of the trenches, cowered by the awful carnage brought by the barrage. ‘Get the men to their posts,’ he yelled at his second in command who had already turned his back to move down the line. He too was a veteran of almost a year’s trench fighting.

Major Paul Mann studied the advancing troops who moved in scattered groups across the green fields dotted with French farmhouses. The Allies’ rapid advances had finally broken the deadlock on the Western Front and forced the German army out of its trenches and back into the relatively unscarred fields around Mont St Quentin. Paul’s position forward of the main defences of the Hindenburg Line had been hastily dug and lacked the old, deep fortifications he had known at the Somme. The trench line he commanded had no overhead cover and he knew that some of the shells would have penetrated the soft, early autumn earth to explode, causing caveins along the trench line to bury men alive.

Paul also knew that the men advancing on his line of defence were not British or French troops but those of one of Britain’s distant former colonies. He would have preferred to face the British. They respected the rules of war. The men advancing on his front had a fearsome reputation as soldiers who asked no quarter and gave none once they engaged in an attack. They were a volunteer army who held the philosophy that if their enemy was prepared to mow them down when they were vulnerable in the open then they had no right to surrender when they had lost. It was not the way of their masters – the British Tommies.

The silence was no more as rifles and machine guns sowed the fields with a deadly crop of metal. Some of the advancing men fell as the bullets ripped through their bodies. Paul Mann felt no pity seeing the young men of another nation fall. He knew that they would not show his men any if they reached his lines. He prayed that the advancing Australian soldiers’ reputation did not affect his men. Germany was fighting for its very survival. Winter was once again coming to Europe and so too were the bitter winter snows to Munich. With the winter would come famine as the British naval blockade had not been broken.

Captain Jack Kelly also knew acute fear. He was known as one of the ‘fair dinkums’ by the men he commanded. A soldier who had enlisted after the heavy losses inflicted by the Turkish soldiers on the Australian and New Zealand troops in the Dardenelles at Gallipoli back in 1915, it had taken him some time to travel from the Australian administered territory of Papua where he had lived for some years to enlist in a New South Wales infantry battalion.

Since landing in France he had survived the battles of the Western Front to be promoted through the ranks from private to captain. His natural skills were acknowledged by an army that accepted leadership above authority invested in mere rank alone. Twice wounded, he had been recognised for his courage a year earlier with the Distinguished Conduct Medal and a bar added since then for further courage.

As he now advanced on the German trenches he once again experienced the dread that caused his hands to shake as they gripped the Enfield rifle tipped with a seventeen-inch bayonet. But his fear was more of letting his men down in the attack. This was his first battle as their company commander. His promotion was very recent, the result of his predecessor being killed a month earlier. Until then he had commanded only a platoon. Many of the senior non-commissioned men of the company were mates he had soldiered with as one of their own. His promotion had been popular as he had a reputation for knowing what he was doing in the worst situations. Jack’s colourful past as a gold prospector in the mysterious jungles of British Papua and German New Guinea had honed his abilities to turn things around. Initiative, toughness and a lot of luck had rubbed off onto the men who followed him into hell. He had an easy informal manner that belied his intense reading of tactical situations. He also had an animal instinct for danger that had helped keep the men around him alive. Before the war he had learned to listen to his instincts when living in territory inhabited by warlike tribesmen who sought human heads as trophies to display in the longhouses of their villages.

Jack Kelly stood an inch less than six feet tall and had the build of a finely tuned athlete. His sandy coloured hair had just the faintest first streaks of premature grey. For a man aged twenty-five this was not reassuring. But a consolation was that at least he still had his thick crop of hair, even though he kept it shaved close to his skull to deter the lice ever present on the battlefields. He was not dashingly handsome but had a strong face that inspired a sense of trust in men and willingness on the part of women to engage his company. A woman who met Jack Kelly instinctively knew that his face spoke of an intelligent and mysterious man who could be relied on for protection. But Jack’s was also a face that could have an unsettling effect. It was in his hazel eyes – a kind of faraway dreamy look that could suddenly turn cold and dangerous. He was a man who came with no guarantees of being around when the sun rose on a new day.

The German machine guns had been well placed to enfilade the approaches with a deadly crossfire, Jack noted, as he half crouched to check his map. But the Germans had little in the way of barbed wire to disrupt his infantry in the assault. What they did have had been cut in many places by the artillery although its tangles could still snare a man’s ankles. It must be a very forward position, he thought as he studied the ground ahead. They would have to be quick to engage the Germans before they could fall back to more fortified positions closing on the Hindenburg Line.

Jack had a great respect for the German soldiers. They were as brave as any and well trained. He even mused that maybe one or two of his mother’s family – his cousins – might be in the opposing force. Although his family name was Kelly his mother’s maiden name was Schulenburg. She had met his father in the colony of South Australia when she immigrated with her family from a little village on the Rhine to settle amongst the many German expatriates living in that colony. The German immigrants were growing some of the finest wine grapes in the world and had assimilated easily into Australian society with their reputation for hard work, honesty and warm hospitality. Mixed marriages were common and Jack Kelly was the result of Irish Celtic and Teutonic German blood.

Captain Jack Kelly’s task was to advance his company on the right flank of the attack. The battalion’s CO had decided to attack with all assaulting companies forward but one back in reserve. Jack watched as the forward companies began to take heavy casualties. With a touch of guilt, he was glad it was they and not his own men. But the forward company had gone to ground to return fire as they had rehearsed and he knew it was up to them now.

He raised a whistle to his lips and gave the signal for his platoons to cover the ground with fire and movement as they made the final attack. His lieutenants were to run the battle at their level. He would move with his small company headquarters group at the centre of the attack. They were only three hundred yards out from the line of trenches and Jack could see the face of the enemy.

Major Paul Mann kept his head low. The first line of enemy had gone to ground and were carefully sniping at anything above the level of the parapet. With deadly accuracy an enemy Lewis machine gun had temporarily knocked out the crew of one of his fast firing guns. The crew was quickly replaced and it now became a personal and almost grudging duel between machine gunners.

Paul cursed the new team. They had taken the fire off a company of infantry advancing on his left flank and were coming in fast despite the rifle fire that met them, causing significant casualties in their ranks. If the gun on the left flank did not engage this new company attack then the Australians might break through to within bomb range and their grenades cause havoc in the confinement of his trenches. He looked around desperately for a man to send a message to the gun crew engaged on the flank. But every man was firing desperately into the advancing enemies who were coming on with a terrifying and determined speed. He decided that he would get the message through himself and forced his way up the trench now littered with his dead and dying men. He did not reach the gun crew.

They were running and screaming curses now through a steady rain of spiralling German hand grenades. The tin-like bombs with the long handles could be thrown a greater distance than the dimpled, egg-shaped British Mills bomb before exploding in the ranks of attackers, spraying them with shrapnel.

Jack was screaming with his men as they reached the edge of the trenches. He was hardly aware that shrapnel had torn a long furrow along his arm. As in past attacks he had disassociated himself from his body and experienced nothing other then the blind savagery of a killing machine. Three hundred yards had taken a toll on his men but he had made it to the enemy trenches where the possibility of an impersonal death from bullets and shrapnel was replaced with the very personal form of killing known as hand to hand fighting.

The faces staring up at him were white blurs. Whether they reflected fear or hate was irrelevant as Jack fired point blank into them. Around him the survivors of the attack did the same. Screaming, shouting, grunting, the two forces met as the long bayonets were used to stab through the grey uniforms but the Germans fought back with desperate courage to hold their line.

Major Paul Mann did not see the hand grenade that had landed behind him in the trench. It had been fired from a device fitted to a rifle to further its range. All he remembered was something with the force of a mule knocking him to the ground where he lay in a daze of pain and semi-consciousness. He wanted to go to sleep and wake up under the eiderdown beside Karin in their big double bed, to smell the warmth of her milk white skin and breathe in the sweat of their lovemaking. He wanted to cry for the futility of it all but the tears would not come. He had survived the long years of war despite the odds stacked against him but then his world went black and he knew the war was over for him. He had done his duty to his country as best as he could – only his family might not think that his duty was as important as having him come home alive.

Jack Kelly sensed that the handsome young soldier pointing the Luger pistol at him was an officer. They stood almost toe to toe and stared into each other’s eyes. ‘Drop it, my friend,’ Jack snarled in perfect German.

For a second the younger man seemed startled by his enemy’s good grasp of his language, but in the blink of an eye, Jack could see a pride that could get him killed. The young German had hesitated and Jack did not wait for a reply but lunged with the bayonet. His aim was true and the honed point took the German under the rib cage below the sternum. With a savage upward twist Jack caused the maximum amount of internal damage. The young officer attempted to scream but could only gasp in his agony. His eyes rolled and his legs buckled under him as he slid to the ground. The Luger fell from his hand as he died. Jack placed his foot on the chest of his enemy and with all his strength dragged the bayonet from the body without any remorse. Either him or me had always been his philosophy since he had first killed a man with his hands in a trench raid three years earlier.

‘Captain Kelly! Jack!’ a voice called to him. ‘The bastards have packed it in.’

Jack looked down at the dead man at his feet. ‘Sorry, Fritz,’ he muttered as the still pounding adrenaline surged through his body in waves at the news of the German capitulation in the trenches. ‘Just a bit late for you,’ he said in German, gazing down at the face of the young officer strangely serene in death.

The voice that had shouted the news down to the trench to him belonged to the company sergeant major, an old friend who had enlisted with him in Sydney, back in 1915. He was an Englishman and had once served with an elite British regiment as an officer but for reasons never spoken of had been forced to resign his commission. He had been in Sydney when the war in Europe broke out and had been in line behind Jack at a recruiting depot when he enlisted with the Australian army. Although he had been offered a commission because of his previous experience he had declined – and continued to decline as the war went on. But he had accepted the position of CSM when it had been offered by Jack who had never raised the issue of why George had resigned his commission. It was a friendship based on a respect for each other’s prowess as a soldier. George was an intelligent man who could discuss any subject from Greek drama to geological aspects of mining alluvial gold – the latter a subject near and dear to Jack’s heart.

BOOK: Papua
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