The Road to Mandalay eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about The Road to Mandalay.

The Road to Mandalay eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about The Road to Mandalay.

“I’ve been so long with the Buddhists that the fear of the grave is wore out of me,” said Ryan; “I’d a’most as soon be dead as not—­it’s only another new life—­ye just step in, an’ meet yer old friends.  I suppose, sir, you do not go along with me there.”

“No,” replied Shafto, who had all an Englishman’s shrinking reluctance to discuss his belief, or his inner life; “yours is a nice easy path—­too good to be true, I’m afraid.  My creed is, to do our best, to help other people, and to take what comes.”

“Goodness knows you have helped me, Mr. Shafto”—­and the pongye drew back a step and looked at him queerly—­“what with saving me life and then makin’ sort o’ friends with me—­as man to man—­your kindness will stand in me memory till the clay is over me!”

Shafto and the pongye separated at Marseilles; the latter went round by the Bay, whilst Mrs. Gregory and her party travelled overland, and they did not meet again for nearly two years.

CHAPTER XXXVIII

SERGEANT-MAJOR RYAN

Many months later, on a clear February night, Shafto and Tremenheere stood together outside Headquarters, “somewhere in France,” anxiously observing the signs in the sky.  Shafto, a machine-gun officer attached to the Blanks, had been granted twenty-four hours’ leave, and made a muddy and dangerous journey of fifteen miles to visit his old schoolfellow, now on the staff of a General commanding a division.  He was challenged and so was his companion; their faces expressed the long strain of a terrible war; both looked years older than their actual age, for, like the sons and daughters of the worshippers of Moloch, “they had passed through the fire.”

Shafto was fine-drawn to leanness, heavy lines were scored on his forehead, he had twice been wounded, had taken part in desperate fighting, witnessed many harrowing sights, and lost many friends.

The chill air was full of sounds; a continuous rolling of wheels, rumbling of guns, and the distant scream of a shell.

“There goes a signal to lengthen the German range,” remarked Shafto.

“That’s right, for they often show up lights that mean nothing.”

“Look at that aeroplane of ours dropping red stars over the Boches’ first line of trenches.  I suppose the lines are fairly close?”

“By Jove, you may say so!  The men can shout across at one another, but the trenches are a good four miles from where we stand.”

As he concluded, a star shell broke and lit up a vast expanse of gleaming mud.

To the rolling and rumbling was now added a far-away sound of tramping feet and song.

“Here they come!” exclaimed Tremenheere; “back to billets; they changed at six o’clock, but it’s heavy going—­mostly wading in slosh.”

The marching came nearer and nearer, also the sound of singing and mouth-organs.

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The Road to Mandalay from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.