No sh.e.l.ls were falling in Nivelle as they left the car on the outskirts of the town and entered the long main street. That was all of Nivelle, a long, treeless main street from which branched a few alleys.
Smouldering debris of what had been houses illuminated the street. There were no other lights. Nothing stirred except a gaunt cat flitting like a shadow along the gutter. There was not a sound save the faint stirring of the cinders over which pale flames played fitfully.
Abandoned trenches ditched the little town in every direction; temporary shelters made of boughs, sheds, and broken-down wagons stood along the street. Otherwise, all impedimenta, materials, and stores had apparently been removed by the retreating columns. There was little wreckage except the burning debris of the few sh.e.l.l-struck houses--a few rags, a few piles of firewood, a bundle of straw and hay here and there.
High, mounting toward the stars, the ancient tower with its gilded hippogriff dominated the place--a vast, vague shape brooding over the single mile-long street and grimy alleys branching from it.
n.o.body guarded the portal; the ancient doors stood wide open; pitch darkness reigned within.
"Do you know the way?" whispered the airman.
"Yes. Take hold of my hand."
He dared not use his flash. Carrying bundle and bombsack under one arm, he sought for her hand and encountered it. Cool, slim fingers closed over his.
After a few moments" stealthy advance, she whispered:
"Here are the stairs. Be careful; they twist."
She started upward, feeling with her feet for every stone step. The ascent appeared to be interminable; the narrowing stone spiral seemed to have no end. Her hand grew warm within his own.
But at last they felt a fresh wind blowing and caught a glimpse of stars above them.
Then, tier on tier, the bells of the carillon, fixed to their great beams, appeared above them--a shadowy, bewildering wilderness of bells, rising, rank above rank, until they vanished in the darkness overhead. Beside them, almost touching them, loomed the great bell Clovis, a gigantic ma.s.s bulking enormously in that shadowy place.
A sonorous wind flowed through the open tower, eddying among the bells--a strong, keen night wind blowing from the north.
The airman walked to the south parapet and looked down. Below him in the starlight, like an indistinct map spread out, lay the Nivelle redoubt and the trench with its gabions, its sand bags, its timbers, its dugouts.
Very far away to the southeast they could see the glare of rockets and exploding sh.e.l.ls, but the sound of the bombardment did not reach them.
North, a single searchlight played and switched across the clouds; west, all was dark.
"They"ll arrive just before dawn," said the airman, placing his sack of bombs on the pavement under the parapet. "Come, little bell-mistress, take me to see your keyboard."
"It is below--a few steps. This way--if you will follow me----"
She turned to the stone stairs again, descended a dozen steps, opened a door on a narrow landing.
And there, in the starlight, he saw the keyboard and the bewildering maze of wires running up and branching like a huge web toward the tiers of bells above.
He looked at the keyboard curiously. The little mistress of the bells displayed the two wooden gloves with which she encased her hands when she played the carillon.
"It would be impossible for one to play unless one"s hands are armoured,"
she explained.
"It is almost a lost art," he mused aloud, "--this playing the carillon--this wonderful bell-music of the middle ages. There are few great bell-masters in this day."
"Few," she said dreamily.
"And"--he turned and stared at her--"few mistresses of the bells, I imagine."
"I think I am the only one in France or in Flanders.... And there are few carillons left. The Huns are battering them down. Towers of the ancient ages are falling everywhere in Flanders and in France under their sh.e.l.l fire. Very soon there will be no more of the old carillons left; no more bell-music in the world." She sighed heavily. "It is a pity."
She seated herself at the keyboard.
"Dare I play?" she asked, looking up over her shoulder.
"No; it would only mean a sh.e.l.l from the Huns."
She nodded, laid the wooden gloves beside her and let her delicate hands wander over the mute keys.
Leaning beside her the airman quietly explained the plan they were to follow.
"With dawn they will come creeping into Nivelle--the Huns," he said. "I have one of their officers" uniforms in that bundle above. I shall try to pa.s.s as a general officer. You see, I speak German. My education was partly ruined in Germany. So I"ll get on very well, I expect.
"And directly under us is the trench and the main redoubt. They"ll occupy that first thing. They"ll swarm there--the whole trench will be crawling with them. They"ll install their gas cylinders at once, this wind being their wind.
"But with sunrise the wind changes--and whether it changes or not, I don"t care," he added. "I"ve got them at last where I want them."
The girl looked up at him. He smiled that terrifying smile of his:
"With the explosion of my first bomb among their gas cylinders you are to start these bells above us. Are you afraid?"
"No."
"You are to play "La Brabanconne." That is the signal to our trenches."
"I have often played it," she said coolly.
"Not in the teeth of a barbarian army. Not in the faces of a murderous soldiery."
The girl sat quite still for a few moments; then looking up at him, and very pale in the starlight:
"Do you think they will tear me to pieces, monsieur?"
He said:
"I mean to hold those stairs with my sack of bombs until our people enter the trenches. If they can do it in an hour we will be all right."
"Yes."
"It is only a half-hour affair from our salient. I allow our people an hour."
"Yes."
"But if, even now, you had rather go back----"
"_No!_"