Authors: Catrin Collier
Angela saw the men and paled. The nursemaid took the child from her and she barely noticed.
âPeter â¦' she whispered.
âWas well last time we received a communication from upstream, Mrs Smythe.' Reggie sat next to Angela and reached for her hand. She pulled it away before he could touch her.
Cleck-Heaton coughed. âWe have, however, received a wireless message informing us that Major Charles Reid was killed by a sniper at Sheikh Saad yesterday evening.'
âWe know, Major â¦?' Georgiana entered and looked from Brooke to Cleck-Heaton.
Reggie indicated his companion. âMajor Cleck-Heaton, I'm Major Brooke. May I enquire how you heard about Major Reid's death? The message has only just come down official lines, Miss â¦'
â
Dr
Downe,' Georgiana corrected sharply. âWe heard last night. My brother, Michael Downe, is a war correspondent attached to General Maude's force upstream. He has access to the wireless.'
âThe message we received in HQ suggested that you, Mrs Smythe, might be the best person to inform Major Reid's fiancée of his demise. I believe she's a nursing sister who works in the Basra Hospital.'
âSister Jones is here and resting under my care, Major Cleck-Heaton. I trust it won't be necessary for you to see her?' Georgiana glared at Reggie.
âNot if you have everything under control, Dr Downe.'
âI do.' She continued to stare at him until he rose from the chair. âThank you for calling, Major Cleck-Heaton, Major Brooke. I regret that you had a wasted journey. The maid will see you out.'
Both officers were clearly unused to being dismissed in a perfunctory manner, especially by a civilian.
âAs a fiancée Sister Jones is not entitled to a pension, but I may be able to arrange a hardship payment â¦'
Georgiana cut him short. âThat will not be necessary, Major Brooke. Major Reid left his fiancée well provided for.'
âIf she requires passage home â¦'
âMatron has already arranged for Kitty to travel back to Britain with the next transport of sick and convalescent soldiers.' Georgiana nodded to the maid who opened the door. âGood evening, gentlemen.'
Angela went to the window and watched them walk down the path. âHorrible men. Peter can't stand either of them and every time I see Major Brooke I feel as though insects are crawling over my skin.'
âHe's also younger and fitter than many of the senior officers with General Maude. Makes you wonder what strings he's pulled to stay here when so many men who are less fit and have already been wounded, as Charles was, are either already upstream or being posted to Maude's command.'
âAfter the way you turfed them out, they're not likely to be back. How is Kitty?'
âSleeping off the effects of the draught I gave her. After the shock you've just had perhaps I should mix you one.'
âI should have realised they were here to tell us about Charles, not Peter. It's just that â¦'
Tears started in Angela's eyes and Georgiana gave her a hug. âThey had no business calling this late in the evening.'
âUnless Charles put Peter and I down as his next of kin. I didn't think to ask them. Charles, Peter, and I have become close over the last year, I think because Peter was Charles's last link to Harry and John.'
The nursemaid stood shyly before Angela.
âYes, please, take Master Robin to his room and you can go to bed as well.'
âThank you, ma'am.'
Angela went to the sideboard poured two brandies and handed one to Georgiana. âI can't believe Charles has gone and I won't until Peter and the others return without him. That's if â¦' her voice broke.
âDon't even think it, Angela,' Georgiana countered. âPeter and the others will return. They
have
to.'
Angela thought of Peter, of the damage that had already been done that prevented them from ever sleeping another night in the same bed together. âBut after so much death and destruction,' she murmured. âAt what cost.'
Sheikh Saad
September 1916
Michael poured two glasses of Chianti and set them on the table. He pulled up a second chair and offered it to Chatta Ram.
âIt wouldn't be proper for me to sit in your presence, sahib,' said Chatta Ram.
âIt wouldn't if I was an officer, but I'm not, and you are no longer employed by an officer or entitled to draw rations and uniform from the British Army, so that makes us both civilians. Indulge me, sit down and have a drink with me.'
Chatta Ram took the chair.
âHave you read Charles's will?'
âNo, but he told me he'd left some money to me.'
âOn condition you look after your mother â and his.'
âHe acknowledged me as his brother?'
âYou seem surprised.'
âHe said he would, but I didn't believe him. But then I didn't think he would get killed.'
âNone of us believe ourselves mortal,' Michael agreed. âMy sister and I are executors of Charles's will. He left you thirty thousand pounds.'
âThirty thousand pounds.' Chatta Ram repeated.
âYes.'
âI didn't know there was so much money in the world.'
âNot just in the world but shortly in your bank account, Chatta Ram,' Michael assured him.
âI don't have a bank account, sahib. Only a strongbox.'
âThen we'll have to open one for you in a bank that has a branch in India. Once that's done we can arrange to have the money transferred there. If you need money for the journey, we can pay your expenses.'
âNo, Charles was generous. He paid me well. I can meet my own expenses.'
âCharles wrote that you saved his life. That you ignored the demands of senior officers that he be left to die after Nasiriyeh.'
âCharles was kind. A good brother. When I found him I didn't know what to expect. Now ⦠Our mother will shed many tears.'
âWill you take Charles's papers and personal belongings to my sister in Basra for safekeeping?'
âIt will be an honour.'
âIf there is anything you would like. His wallet â his watch'
âThey should go to his son.'
âYou know about his son?' It was Michael's turn to be surprised.
âI too was wounded at Nasiriyeh. When my wounds healed I returned from India and resumed my duties. Charles was still convalescing and had difficulty sleeping so sometimes we talked late into the night. We had no secrets from one another. I think he talked to me because he missed your brother and Major Mason.'
âVisit my sister as soon as you return to Basra. I will write to her so she will be expecting you. She will arrange the payment of the bequest and execute the rest of Charles's will. Are you sure you won't take anything of his to remember him by?'
âI don't need anything to help me remember my brother, sir.'
âPerhaps my sister will persuade you to rethink.' Michael rose and held out his hand. âIt's been a privilege to meet you, Chatta Ram.' He rose from his chair walked out of the tent with Chatta Ram and watched him salute David, who returned the Indian's acknowledgement before wandering into the tent and helping himself to wine.
âThat's ten bottles you owe me,' Michael joked.
âYou're counting?'
âAbsolutely.'
âSend you a case after the war.'
âDo you say that to all the officers you sponge off?'
âOf course, you all have money, I don't. Comes of being the last in a long line of second sons. We never get to inherit or â I warn you now â pay our debts. But we're amusing company as well as great promisers. Rumour has it you're moving out tonight?'
âUpstream to write more articles about Maude,' Michael confirmed.
âThen you should be grateful I'm relieving you of some of your stock. Wine's too heavy to drag around the desert.'
âThank you so much for your consideration.' Michael emptied the last of the bottle between their glasses.
âYou'll be taking a detour to some of the tribal camps?' David fished.
âI'll talk to the Arabs,' Michael acknowledged.
âYou, like your brother Harry before you, are a political officer.'
Michael debated whether to deny David's suggestion. Instead he reached for a fresh bottle and the corkscrew. âWho else knows?'
âAnyone who's been watching your movements.'
âYou've seen someone?'
âPerry has two subalterns monitoring you. Blake and Harries. Blake wandered up to my tent a couple of hours ago and offered me a glass of brandy.'
âYou accepted.'
âI drank a good deal more than a glass.'
âBlake?'
âMy bearer carried him back to his tent ten minutes ago.'
âHe tried to get into a drinking competition with you?' Michael smiled.
âHe asked a lot of questions about you, Harry, and John. At the risk of you snubbing me as John did when I asked him about Perry when we were in Kut, why is the colonel watching you?'
âI have no idea.'
âYou do know that he tried to have John shot in Kut.'
âI heard.'
âJohn said he hated him and Harry. You've no idea why?'
âNone other than the man seems to be the worst kind of unbending stuffed shirt.'
âWatch your back, or,' David emptied his glass. âEven better get Daoud to do it. Or â¦'
âOr?' Michael prompted.
âOr you and I could conspire to get Perry into the front line.'
âOne, I don't know anyone in command with the power to post Perry anywhere. Two, what little I know of the man suggests he's an expert lead swinger, if he wasn't he'd be in a POW camp in Turkey, not lording it here. Three, now he's a brigadier we'd have more luck trying to get the Prince of Wales into the front line in this forsaken place.'
âLeave it with me. I'll think of a strategy while I watch you pack.'
âAre you never on duty?' Michael stretched over David to pick up his saddlebags.
âTwelve hours last night.'
âShouldn't you be sleeping?'
âAnd waste good drinking time?' David chuckled. âNot likely. You have another four bottles there.'
âPity help anyone who needs surgery tonight.'
âDoctors always operate better when drunk.' David glanced around the tent. âDon't suppose you have anything good to eat in here?'
âLike what?'
âYour sister always has these little salt crackers â¦'
âI don't know why she puts up with you.'
âMy charm,' David rummaged in Michael's boxes.
âYou'll find nothing edible in those. I have dried dates, or dried figs.' Michael tossed two paper bags at him.
âI'll take the figs, thank you. Have you written to John?' David asked.
âWhat would be the point when no one has the faintest idea where he is?'
âSooner or later he'll reach a prisoner of war camp and when he does a letter sent through the Red Cross should reach him.'
Michael sat back on his camp chair still clutching his open saddlebags. âYou think someone should write to him about Charles's will?'
âIf you were John, wouldn't you want a friend to tell you about Maud's son as soon as possible rather than find out from a stranger after everyone had been gossiping about it?'
âI'll write to him after I've packed.'
âPass me a clean sheet of paper, ink, pen, and your travelling desk and I'll write to him now. That way should one of our letters go astray he'll have the other.'
âAnything else I can pass you?' Michael asked in amusement as David propped his feet on his cot.
âAn envelope. If you know John's number can you address it for me, please? It will save me having to look it up.'
Prisoner of War Camp, Turkey
September 1916
John saw the town long before they reached there. Nestling at the foot of gently sloping hills, from a distance it appeared almost like a fairy-tale illustration of what a small oriental country town should be. Neat and clean with red-roofed, whitewashed buildings.
Their guards escorted them and their exhausted mules through a network of narrow streets to the outskirts, where three fairly large buildings stood side by side enclosed in a garden fenced off from the street and surrounding woodland by high wire.
Orderlies dressed in the ragged remnants of British uniforms were hanging washing on rope lines stretched between trees. A knot of officers were walking the perimeter of the fence inspecting the plants. One turned in their direction, recognised John, and rushed to the gate. He would have run out into the street if the guards hadn't stopped him.
âI was hoping you'd make it here, sir.' Alf Grace shouted enthusiastically. âDo you have all your original crew with you? You didn't lose any on the way?'
âGathered a few.' John pointed to Evans as Corporal Baker helped the private down from the cart.
âYou're alive, Evans,' Grace shouted.
âSo Major Mason tells me, sir.' Evans waved.
Corporal Baker lifted Hasmik from the back of the cart and offered Mrs Gulbenkian his hand.
There was a rapid exchange of dialogue between their Turkish captain and the guards at the gate. A Turkish major appeared and started shouting at the captain. John approached, doffed his cap, and began speaking in Turkish.
âSince when has Major Mason spoken the local lingo?' Grace asked Greening when the sergeant moved within earshot of the gate.
âSince he started learning on the journey, Lieutenant Grace, sir. Good to see you.'
âGood to see you too, Greening.'
âWhat's this place like, sir?' Greening asked.
âI've been in worse, but it's no place for women.' Crabbe looked at the two women who were standing either side of Hasmik. âArmenians?'