The Eye of Zeitoon eBook

Talbot Mundy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Eye of Zeitoon.

The Eye of Zeitoon eBook

Talbot Mundy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Eye of Zeitoon.

There was little leading needed; rather, restraining, and no means of doing it.  Instead of keeping the formation in which we started off, those in the rear began to overtake the men in front and, rather than disobey the order to keep wide intervals, to extend down the face of the hill, so that within fifteen minutes we were in wide-spaced skirmishing order.  Then, instead of keeping along the hills, as I had intended, until we were well to the rear of the Kurdish firing-line, they turned half-left too soon, and headed in diagonal bee line toward the horses, those who had begun by leading being last now, and the last men first.  Being shorter-winded than the rest of them and more tired to begin with, that arrangement soon left me a long way in the rear, dodging and crawling laboriously and stopping every now and then to watch the development of the battle.  There was little to see but the flash of rifles; and they explained nothing more than that the Kurds were forcing their way very close to our center and left wing.

Not all the fighting had been done that day under organized leadership.  I stumbled at one place and fell over the dead bodies of a Kurd and an Armenian, locked in a strangle-hold.  That Kurd must have been bold enough to go pillaging miles in advance of his friends, for the two had been dead for hours.  But the mutual hatred had not died off their faces, and they lay side by side clutching each other’s throats as if passion had continued after death.

The sight of Ephraim and his party hurrying across their front toward Kagig’s weak left wing had evidently convinced the Kurds that no more danger need be expected from their own left.  There can have been no other possible reason why we were unobserved, for the recklessness of my contingent grew as they advanced closer to the horses, and from the rear I saw them brain one outpost with a rock and rush in and knife another with as little regard for concealment as if these two had been the only Kurds within eagle’s view.  Yet they were unseen by the enemy, and five minutes later we all gathered in the shelter of a semicircle of loose rocks, to regain wind for the final effort.

“Korkakma!” I panted, using about ten per cent. of my Turkish vocabulary, and they laughed so loud that I cursed them for a bunch of fools.  But the man nearest me chose to illustrate his feeling for Turks further by taking the corner of his jacket between thumb and finger and going through the motions of squeezing off an insect—­the last, most expressive gesture of contempt.

The horses were within three hundred yards of us.  On rising ground between us and the Kurdish firing-line was a little group of Turkish officers, and to our right beyond the horses was miscellaneous baggage under the guard of Kurds, of whom more than half were wounded.  I could see an obviously Greek doctor bandaging a man seated on an empty ammunition box.

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The Eye of Zeitoon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.