THE SPORT OF KINGS
John Scott, who was suffering from
his second immersion in a French river, came up with
mouth, eyes and nose full of water. The stream
around him was crowded with men swimming or with those
who had reached water shallow enough to permit of
wading. As well as he could see, the shell had
done no damage besides giving them a huge bath, of
which every one stood in much need.
But he had a keen and active mind
and it never worked quicker than it did now.
He had thought his chance for escape might come in
the confusion of a hurried crossing, and here it was.
He dived and swam down the stream toward the willows
that lined the bank. When he could hold his breath
no longer he came up in one of the thickest clumps.
The water reached to his waist there, and standing
on the bottom in all the density of willows and bushes
he was hidden thoroughly from all except watchful
searchers. And who would miss him at such a time,
and who, if missing, would take the trouble to look
for him while the French cannon were thundering upon
them and a perilous crossing was to be made?
It was all so ridiculously easy.
He knew that he had nothing to do but stand close
while the men pulled themselves out of the river and
the remaining boats made their passage. For further
protection he moved into water deep enough to reach
to his neck, while he still retained the cover of
the willows and bushes. Here he watched the German
troops pass over, and listened to the heavy cannonade.
He soon noted that the Germans, after crossing, were
taking up strong positions on the other side.
He could tell it from the tremendous artillery fire
that came from their side of the Marne.
John now found that his position,
while safe from observation, was far from comfortable.
The chill of the water began to creep into his bones
and more shells struck unpleasantly near. Another
fell into the river and he was blinded for a moment
by the violent showers of foam and spray. He
began to feel uneasy. If the German and French
armies were going to fight each other from the opposing
sides of the Marne he would be held there indefinitely,
either to be killed by a shell or bullet or to drown
from cramp.
But time passed and he saw no chance
of leaving his watery lair. The chill went further
into his bones. He was lonesome too. He longed
for the companionship of Fleury, and he wondered what
had become of him. He sincerely hoped that he
too had reached a covert and that they should meet
again.
No rumbling came from the bridge below,
and, glancing down the stream, John saw that it was
empty. There must be many other bridges over the
Marne, but he believed that the German armies had now
crossed it, and would devote their energy to a new
attack. He was squarely between the lines and
he did not see any chance to escape until darkness.
He looked up and saw a bright sun
and blue skies. Night was distant, and so far
as he was concerned it might be a year away. If
two armies were firing shells directly at a man they
must hit him in an hour or two, and if not, a polar
stream such as the Marne had now become would certainly
freeze him to death. He had no idea French rivers
could be so cold. The Marne must be fed by a
whole flock of glaciers.
His teeth began to chatter violently,
and then he took stern hold of himself. He felt
that he was allowing his imagination to run away with
him, and he rebuked John Scott sternly and often for
such foolishness. He tried to get some warmth
into his veins by jumping up and down in the water,
but it was of little avail. Yet he stood it another
hour. Then he made one more long and critical
examination of the ground.
Shells were now screaming high overhead,
but nobody was in sight. He judged that it was
now an artillery battle, with the foes perhaps three
or four miles apart, and, leaving the willows, he crept
out upon the bank. It was the side held by the
Germans, but he knew that if he attempted to swim
the river to the other bank he would be taken with
cramps and would drown.
There was a little patch of long grass
about ten yards from the river, and, crawling to it,
he lay down. The grass rose a foot high on either
side of him, but the sun, bright and hot, shone directly
down upon his face and body. It felt wonderfully
good after that long submersion in the Marne.
Removing all his heavy wet clothing, he wrung the water
out of it as much as he could, and lay back in a state
of nature, for both himself and his clothing to dry.
Meanwhile, in order to avoid cold, he stretched and
tensed his muscles for a quarter of an hour before
he lay still again.
A wonderful warmth and restfulness
flowed back into his veins. He had feared chills
and a serious illness, but he knew now that they would
not come. Youth, wiry and seasoned by hard campaigning,
would quickly recover, but knowing that, for the present,
he could neither go forward nor backward, he luxuriated
in the grass, while the sun sucked the damp out of
his clothing.
Meanwhile the battle was raging over
his head and he scarcely noticed it. The shells
whistled and shrieked incessantly, but, midway between
the contending lines, he felt that they were no longer
likely to drop near. So he relaxed, and a dreamy
feeling crept over him. He could hear the murmur
of insects in the grass, and he reflected that the
smaller one was, the safer one was. A shell was
not likely to take any notice of a gnat.
He felt of his clothing. It was
not dry yet and he would wait a little longer.
Anyhow, what was the use of hurrying? He turned
over on his side and continued to luxuriate in the
long grass.
The warmth and dryness had sent the
blood pulsing in a strong flood through his veins
once more, and the mental rebound came too. Although
he lay immediately between two gigantic armies which
were sending showers of metal at each other along
a line of many miles, he considered his escape sure
and the thought of personal danger disappeared.
If one only had something to eat! It is curious
how the normal instincts and wants of man assert themselves
even under the most dangerous conditions. He
began to think of the good German brown bread and the
hot sausage that he had devoured, and the hot coffee
that he had drunk. One could eat the food of
an enemy without compunction.
But it was folly to move, even to
seek dinner or supper, while the shells were flying
in such quantities over his head. As he turned
once more and lay on his back he caught glimpses as
of swift shadows passing high above, and the whistling
and screaming of shells and shrapnel was continuous.
It was true that a missile might fall short and find
him in the grass, but he considered the possibility
remote and it did not give him a tremor. As he
was sure now that he would suffer no bodily ill from
his long bath in the Marne he might remain in the grass
until night and then creep away. Blessed night!
It was the kindly veil for all fugitives, and no one
ever awaited it with more eagerness than John Scott.
The sun was now well beyond the zenith,
and its golden darts came indirectly. His clothing
was thoroughly dry at last, and he put it on again.
Clad anew he was tempted to seek escape at once, but
the sound of a footstep caused him to lie down in
the shelter of the grass again.
His ear was now against the earth
and the footsteps were much more distinct. He
was sure that they were made by a horse, and he believed
that a Uhlan was riding near. He remembered how
long and sharp their lances were, and he was grateful
that the grass was so thick and tall. He longed
for the automatic revolver that had been such a trusty
friend, but the Germans had taken it long since, and
he was wholly unarmed.
He was afraid to raise his head high
enough to see the horseman, lest he be seen, but the
footsteps, as if fate had a grudge against him, were
coming nearer. His blood grew hot in a kind of
rebellion against chance, or the power that directed
the universe. It was really a grim joke that,
after having escaped so much, a mere wandering scout
of a Uhlan should pick him up, so to speak, on the
point of his lance.
He pressed hard against the earth.
He would have pressed himself into it if he could,
and imagination, the deceiver, made him think that
he was doing so. The temptation to raise his
head above the grass and look became more violent,
but will held him firm and he still lay flat.
Then he noticed that the hoofbeats
wandered about in an irregular, aimless fashion.
Not even a scout hunting a good position for observation
would ride in such a way, and becoming more daring
he raised his head slowly, until he could peep over
the grass stems. He saw a horse, fifteen or twenty
feet from him, but without rider, bridle or saddle.
It was a black horse of gigantic build like a Percheron,
with feet as large as a half-bushel measure, and a
huge rough mane.
The horse saw John and gazed at him
out of great, mild, limpid eyes. The young American
thought he beheld fright there and the desire for
companionship. The animal, probably belonging
to some farmer who had fled before the armies, had
wandered into the battle area, seeking the human friends
to whom he was so used, and nothing living was more
harmless than he. He reminded John in some ways
of those stalwart and honest peasants who were so
ruthlessly made into cannon food by the gigantic and
infinitely more dangerous Tammany that rules the seventy
million Germans.
The horse walked nearer and the look
in his eyes became so full of terror and the need
of man’s support that for the time he stood as
a human being in John’s imagination.
“Poor old horse!” he called,
“I’m sorry for you, but your case is no
worse than mine. Here we both are, wishing harm
to nobody, but with a million men shooting over our
backs.”
The horse, emboldened by the friendly
voice, came nearer and nuzzled at the human friend
whom he had found so opportunely, and who, although
so much smaller than himself, was, as he knew, so
much more powerful. This human comrade would
show him what to do and protect him from all harm.
But John took alarm. He too found pleasure in
having a comrade, even if it were only a horse, but
the animal would probably attract the attention of
scouts or skirmishers. He tried to shoo him away,
but for a long time the horse would not move.
At last he pulled a heavy bunch of grass, wadded it
together and threw it in his face.
The horse, staring at him reproachfully,
turned and walked away. John’s lively fancy
saw a tear in the huge, luminous eye, and his conscience
smote him hard.
“I had to do it, Marne, old
fellow,” he called. “You’re
so big and you stick up so high that you arouse attention,
and that’s just what I don’t want.”
He had decided to call the horse Marne,
after the river near by, and he noticed that he did
not go far. The animal, reassured by John’s
friendly after-word, began to crop the grass about
twenty feet away. He had a human friend after
all, one on whom he could rely. Man did not want
to be bothered by him just then, but that was the
way of man, and he did not mind, since the grass was
so plentiful and good. He would be there, close
at hand, when he was needed.
John was really moved by the interlude.
The loneliness, and then the friendliness of the horse
appealed to him. He too needed a comrade, and
here he was. He forgot, for a time, the moaning
of the shells over his head, and began to think again
about his escape. So thinking, the horse came
once more into his mind. He showed every sign
of grazing there until dark came. Then why not
ride away on him? It was true that a horse was
larger and made more noise than a fugitive man slipping
through the grass, but there were times when strength
and speed, especially speed, counted for a lot.
The last hours of the afternoon waned,
trailing their slow length, minute by minute, and
throughout that time the roar of the battle was as
steady as the fall of Niagara. It even came to
the point that John paid little attention to it, but
the sport of kings, in which thousands of men were
ground up, they knew not why, went merrily on.
None of the shells struck near John, and with infinite
joy he saw the coming of the long shadows betokening
the twilight. The horse, still grazing near by,
raised his head more than once and looked at him, as
if it were time to go. As the sun sank and the
dusk grew John stood up. He saw that the night
was going to be dark and he was thankful. The
Marne was merely a silver streak in the shadow, and
in the wood near by the trees were fusing into a single
clump of darkness.
He stood erect, stretching his muscles
and feeling that it was glorious to be a man with
his head in the air, instead of a creature that grovelled
on the ground. Then he walked over to the horse
and patted him on the shoulder.
“Marne, old boy,” he said,
“I think it’s about time for you and me
to go.”
The horse rubbed his great head against
John’s arm, signifying that he was ready to
obey any command his new master might give him.
John knew from his build that he was a draught horse,
but there were times in which one could not choose
a particular horse for a particular need.
“Marne, old fellow,” he
said, stroking the animal’s mane, “you’re
not to be a menial cart horse tonight. I am an
Arabian genie and I hereby turn you into a light,
smooth, beautifully built automobile for one passenger
only, and I’m that passenger.”
Holding fast to the thick mane he
sprang upon the horse’s back, and urged him
down the stream, keeping close to the water where there
was shelter among the willows and bushes. He
had no definite idea in his head, but he felt that
if he kept on going he must arrive somewhere.
He was afraid to make the horse swim the river in
an effort to reach the French army. Appearing
on the surface of the water he felt that he would
almost certainly be seen and some good rifleman or
other would be sure to pick him off.
He concluded at last that if no German
troops came in sight he would let the horse take him
where he would. Marne must have a home and a master
somewhere and habit would send him to them. So
he ceased to push at his neck and try to direct him,
and the horse continued a slow and peaceful progress
down the stream in the shadow of small trees.
The night was darker than those just before it, and
the dampness of the air indicated possible flurries
of rain. Cannon still rumbled on the horizon like
the thunder of a summer night.
While trusting to the horse to lead
him to some destination, John kept a wary watch, with
eyes now growing used to the darkness. If German
troops appeared and speed to escape were lacking, he
would jump from Marne’s back and hunt a new
covert. But he saw nobody. The evidences
of man’s work were present continually in the
cannonade, but man himself was absent.
The horse went on with ponderous and
sure tread. Evidently he had wandered far under
the influence of the firing, but it was equally evident
that his certain instinct was guiding him back again.
He crossed a brook flowing down into the Marne, passed
through a wheat field, and entered a little valley,
where grew a number of oaks, clear of undergrowth.
When he saw what was lying under the
oaks he pulled hard at the rough mane, until the horse
stopped. He had distinctly made out the figures
of men, stretched upon the ground, apparently asleep,
and sure to be Germans. He stared hard at them,
but the horse snorted and tried to pull away.
The action of the animal rather than his own eyesight
made him reckon aright.
A horse would not be afraid of living
men, and, slipping from the back of Marne, John approached
cautiously. A few rays of wan moonlight filtered
through the trees, and when he had come close he shuddered
over and over again. About a dozen men lay on
the ground and all were stone dead. The torn
earth and their own torn figures showed that a shell
had burst among them. Doubtless it had been an
infantry patrol, and the survivors had hurried away.
John, still shuddering, was about
to turn back to his horse, when he remembered that
he needed much and that in war one must not be too
scrupulous. Force of will made him return to the
group and he sought for what he wanted. Evidently
the firing had been hot there and the rest of the
patrol had not lingered in their flight.
He took from one man a pair of blankets.
He could have had his choice of two or three good
rifles, but he passed them by in favor of a large
automatic pistol which would not be in the way.
This had been carried by a young man whom he took
to be an officer, and he also found on him many cartridges
for the pistol. Then he searched their knapsacks
for food, finding plenty of bread and sausage and
filling with it one knapsack which he put over his
shoulder.
He returned hastily to his horse,
guided him around the fatal spot, and when he was
some distance on the other side dismounted and ate
as only a half-starved man can eat. Water was
obtained from a convenient brook and carefully storing
the remainder of the food in the knapsack he remounted
the horse.
“Now go on, my good and gallant
beast,” he said, “and I feel sure that
your journey is nearly at an end. A draught horse
like you, bulky and slow, would not wander any great
distance.”
The horse himself immediately justified
his prediction by raising his head, neighing and advancing
at a swifter pace. John saw, standing among some
trees, a low and small house, built of stone and evidently
very old, its humble nature indicating that it belonged
to a peasant. Behind it was a tiny vineyard,
and there was a stable and another outhouse.
“Well, Marne, my lad, here’s
your home, beyond a doubt,” said John. But
no answer came to the neigh. The house remained
silent and dark. It confirmed John’s first
belief that the horse belonged to some peasant who
had fled with his family from the armies. He stroked
the animal’s neck, and felt real pity for him,
as if he had been a child abandoned.
“I know that while I’m
a friend I’m almost a stranger to you, but come,
we’ll examine things,” he said.
He sprang off the horse, and drew
his automatic. The possession of the pistol gave
him an immense amount of courage and confidence, but
he did not anticipate any trouble at the house as
he was sure that it was abandoned.
He pushed open the door and saw a
dark inside. Staring a little he made out a plainly
furnished room, from which all the lighter articles
had been taken. There was a hearth, but with
no fire on it, and John decided that he would sleep
in the house. It was in a lonely place, but he
would take the risk.
The horse had already gone to the
stable and was pushing the door with his nose.
John let him in, and found some oat straw which he
gave him. Then he left him munching in content,
and as he departed he struck him a resounding blow
of friendliness on the flank.
“Good old Marne,” he said,
“you’re certainly one of the best friends
I’ve found in Europe. In fact, you’re
about the only living being I’ve associated
with that doesn’t want to kill somebody.”
He entered the house and closed the
door. In addition to the sitting-room there was
a bedroom and a kitchen, all bearing the signs of
recent occupancy. He found a small petroleum lamp,
but he concluded not to light it. Instead he
sat on a wooden bench in the main room beside a small
window, ate a little more from the knapsack, and watched
a while lest friend or enemy should come.
It had grown somewhat darker and the
clouds were driving across the sky. The wind
was rising and the threatened flurries of rain came,
beating against the cottage. John was devoutly
glad that he had found the little house. Having
spent many hours immersed to his neck in a river he
felt that he had had enough water for one day.
Moreover, his escape, his snug shelter and the abundance
of food at hand, gave him an extraordinary sense of
ease and rest. He noticed that in the darkness
and rain one might pass within fifty feet of the cottage
without seeing it.
The wind increased and moaned among
the oaks that grew around the house, but above the
moaning the sounds of battle, the distant thunder of
the artillery yet came. The sport of kings was
going merrily on. Neither night nor storm stopped
it and men were still being ground by thousands into
cannon food. But John had now a feeling of detachment.
Three days of continuous battle had dulled his senses.
They might fight on as they pleased. It did not
concern him, for tonight at least. He was going
to look out for himself.
He fastened the door securely, but,
as he left the window open, currents of fresh cool
air poured into the room. He was now fully revived
in both mind and body, and he took present ease and
comfort, thinking but little of the future. The
flurries of rain melted into a steady pour. The
cold deepened, and as he wrapped the two blankets
around him his sense of comfort increased. Lightning
flared at infrequent intervals and now and then real
thunder mingled with that of the artillery.
He felt that he might have been back
at home. It was like some snug little place in
the high hills of Pennsylvania or New York. Like
many other Americans, he often felt surprise that
Europe should be so much like America. The trees
and the grass and the rivers were just the same.
Nothing was different but the ancient buildings.
He knew now that history and a long literature merely
created the illusion of difference.
He wondered why the artillery fire
did not die, with the wind sweeping such gusts of
rain before it. Then he remembered that the sound
of so many great cannon could travel a long distance,
and there might be no rain at the points from which
the firing came. The cottage might stand in a
long narrow valley up which the clouds would travel.
Not feeling sleepy yet he decided
to have another look about the house. A search
revealed a small box of matches near the lamp on the
shelf. Then he closed the window in order to
shut in the flame, and, lighting the lamp, pursued
his investigation.
He found in the kitchen a jar of honey
that he had overlooked, and he resolved to use a part
of it for breakfast. Europeans did not seem able
to live without jam or honey in the mornings, and he
would follow the custom. Not much was left in
the other rooms, besides some old articles of clothing,
including two or three blue blouses of the kind worn
by French peasants or workmen, but on one of the walls
he saw an excellent engraving of the young Napoleon,
conqueror of Italy.
It showed him, horseback, on a high
road looking down upon troops in battle, Castiglione
or Rivoli, perhaps, his face thin and gaunt, his hair
long and cut squarely across his forehead, the eyes
deep, burning and unfathomable. It was so thoroughly
alive that he believed it must be a reproduction of
some great painting. He stood a long time, fascinated
by this picture of the young republican general who
rose like a meteor over Europe and who changed the
world.
John, like nearly all young men, viewed
the Napoleonic cycle with a certain awe and wonder.
A student, he had considered Napoleon the great democratic
champion and mainly in the right as far as Austerlitz.
Then swollen ambition had ruined everything and, in
his opinion, another swollen ambition, though for
far less cause, was now bringing equal disaster upon
Europe. A belief in one’s infallibility
might come from achievement or birth, but only the
former could win any respect from thinking men.
It seemed to John presently that the
deep, inscrutable eyes were gazing at him, and he
felt a quivering at the roots of his hair. It
was young Bonaparte, the republican general, and not
Napoleon, the emperor, who was looking into his heart.
“Well,” said John, in
a sort of defiance, “if you had stuck to your
early principles we wouldn’t have all this now.
First Consul you might have been, but you shouldn’t
have gone any further.”
He turned away with a sigh of regret
that so great a warrior and statesman, in the end,
should have misused his energies.
He returned to the room below, blew
out the lamp and opened the window again. The
cool fresh air once more poured into the room, and
he took long deep breaths of it. It was still
raining, though lightly, and the pattering of the
drops on the leaves made a pleasant sound. The
thunder and the lightning had ceased, though not the
far rumble of artillery. John knew that the sport
of kings was still going on under the searchlights,
and all his intense horror of the murderous monarchies
returned. He was not sleepy yet, and he listened
a long time. The sound seemed to come from both
sides of him, and he felt that the abandoned cottage
among the trees was merely a little oasis in the sea
of war.
The rain ceased and he concluded to
scout about the house to see if any one was near,
or if any farm animals besides the horse had been left.
But Marne was alone. There was not even a fowl
of any kind. He concluded that the horse had
probably wandered away before the peasant left, as
so valuable an animal would not have been abandoned
otherwise.
His scouting—he was learning
to be very cautious—took him some distance
from the house and he came to a narrow road, but smooth
and hard, a road which troops were almost sure to
use, while such great movements were going on.
He waited behind a hedge a little while, and then
he heard the hum of motors.
He had grown familiar with the throbbing,
grinding sound made by many military automobiles on
the march, but he waited calmly, merely loosening
his automatic for the sake of precaution. He felt
sure that while he stood behind a hedge he would never
be seen on a dark night by men traveling in haste.
The automobiles came quickly into view and in those
in front he saw elderly men in uniforms of high rank.
Nearly all the German generals seemed to him to be
old men who for forty or fifty years had studied nothing
but how to conquer, men too old and hardened to think
much of the rights of others or ever to give way to
generous emotions.
He also saw sitting erect in one of
the motors the man for whom he had felt at first sight
an invincible repulsion. Prince Karl of Auersperg.
Young von Arnheim had represented the good prince to
him, but here was the medieval type, the believer
in divine right, and in his own superiority, decreed
even before birth. John noted in the moonlight
his air of ownership, his insolent eyes and his heavy,
arrogant face. He hoped that the present war
would sweep away all such as Auersperg.
He watched nearly an hour while the
automobiles, cyclists, a column of infantry, and then
several batteries of heavy guns drawn by motors, passed.
He judged that the Germans were executing a change
of front somewhere, and that the Franco-British forces
were still pressing hard. The far thunder of
the guns had not ceased for an instant, although it
must be nearly midnight. He wished he knew what
this movement on the part of the Germans meant, but,
even if he had known, he had no way of reaching his
own army, and he turned back to the cottage.
Having fastened the door securely
again he spread the blankets on the bench by the window
and lay down to sleep. The tension was gone from
his nerves now, and he felt that he could fall asleep
at once, but he did not. A shift in the wind
brought the sound of the artillery more plainly.
His imagination again came into vivid play. He
believed that the bench beneath him, the whole cottage,
in fact, was quivering before the waves of the air,
set in such violent motion by so many great guns.
It annoyed him intensely. He
felt a sort of personal anger against everybody.
It was past midnight of the third day and it was time
for the killing to stop. At least they might
rest until morning, and give his nerves a chance.
He moved restlessly on the bench a half hour or more,
but at last he sank gradually to sleep. As his
eyes closed the thunder of the cannonade was as loud
and steady as ever. He slept, but the murderous
sport of kings went on.