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THE
FORTY DAYS
OF
MUSA DAGH
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THE FORTY DAYS
OF
MUSA DAGH
By
FRANZ WERFEL
TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN BY GEOFFREY DUNLOP
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THE MODERN LIBRARY
NEW YORK
COPYRIGHT, 1933, BY PAUL ZSOLNAY VERLAG A.G., BERLIN-VIENNA-LEIPZIG
COPYRIGHT, 1934, BY THE VIKING PRESS, INC.
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THE MODERN LIBRARY
IS PUBLISHED BY
RANDOM HOUSE, INC.
BENNETT A CERF • DONALD S KLOPFER • ROBERT K. HAAS
Manufactured in the United States of America Printed by Parkway Printing Company Bound by H Wolf
FRANZ WERFEL
(1890— )
A NOTE ON THE AUTHOR OF “THE FORTY DAYS OF MUSA DAGH”
To the American reader and theatregoer, Franz Werfel is known principally for his heroic novel, The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, and his two plays, Goat Song and Juarez and Maximilian, both produced by the Theatre Guild in New York. In Europe his poetry first brought him recognition and established him as a youthful leader of a growing spiritual movement. Subsequently his novels added to his stature as a man of letters all over the world. The son of wealthy Jewish parents, Werfel was born in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Every advantage of education and travel was lavished on him. As a student at a Prague gymnasium and later at the University of Leipzig, he devoted himself to the study of philosophy, and at the age of twenty-two, he became a lecturer in philosophy at his own university. The World War interrupted and terminated his academic career; he served from 1915 to 1917 in the German army on the Russian front. The impact of this experience has been evident in all his post-war writings. Abandoning scholastic work for the career of a writer, Werfel moved to Vienna, where he has lived since. Today he is an illustrious exile from the country which he served during the War. The Forty Days of Musa Dagh was written in 1932-33 and reflects the admiration and compassion he felt for the plight of the Armenian people when they faced and resisted extermination.
Note
This book was conceived in March of 1929, in the course of a stay in Damascus. The miserable sight of some maimed and famished-looking refugee children, working in a carpet factory, gave me the final impulse to snatch from the Hades of all that was, this incomprehensible destiny of the Armenian nation. The writing of the book followed between July 1932 and March 1933. Meanwhile, in November, on a lecture tour through German cities, the author selected Chapter V of Book I for public readings. It was read in its present form, based on the historic records of a conversation between Enver Pasha and Pastor Johannes Lepsius.
Breitenstein, Spring 1933.
Contents
BOOK ONE: COMING EVENTS
1. TESKERE 3
2 . KONAK — HAMAM — SELAMLIK 22
3. THE NOTABLES OF YOGHONOLUK 4I
4. THE FIRST INCIDENT 65
5. INTERLUDE OF THE GODS 123
6. THE GREAT ASSEMBLY 152
7. THE FUNERAL OF THE BELLS 236
BOOK TWO: THE STRUGGLE OF THE WEAK
1. LIFE ON THE MOUNTAIN 295
2 . THE EXPLOITS OF THE BOYS 338
3. THE PROCESSION OF FIRE 395
4. SATO’S WAYS 483
BOOK THREE: DISASTER, RESCUE, THE END
1. INTERLUDE OF THE GODS 529
2. STEPHAN SETS OUT AND RETURNS 566
3. PAIN 612
4. DECLINE AND TEMPTATION 637
5. THE ALTAR FLAME 679
6. THE SCRIPT IN THE FOG 754
7. TO THE INEXPLICABLE IN US AND ABOVE US! 811
LIST OF CHARACTERS 819
GLOSSARY OF ARMENIAN AND TURKISH TERMS 821
BOOK ONE
COMING EVENTS
“How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?”
Revelation vi, 10
1
Teskere
“How did I get here?”
Gabriel Bagradian really spoke these solitary words without knowing it. Nor did they frame a question, but something indehnite, a kind of ceremomous amazement, which filled every inch of him. The clear glitter of this Sunday in March may have inspired it, in this Syrian spring, which shepherded flocks of giant anemones down along the flanks of Musa Dagh and far out across the irregular plain of Antioch. Everywhere their bright blood sprang from the meadow slopes, stifling the more reticent white of big narcissi, whose time had also come. A golden, invisible humming seemed to have encased the mountain. Were these the vagrant swarms of the hives of Kebussiye, or was it the surge of the Mediterranean, audible in the bright transparency of the hour, eroding the naked back of Musa Dagh^ The uneven road wound upwards, in and out among fallen walls. Then, where it suddenly ended in heaps of stone, It narrowed out into a sheep-track. He had come to the top of the outer slope.
Gabriel Bagradian turned. His shape, in rough European homespun, straightened itself, listening. He thrust the fez a httle back off his damp forehead. His eyes were set wide apart. They were a shade lighter, but not in the least smaller than Armenian eyes usually arc.
Now Gabriel saw what he had come from. The house gleamed out, with its dazzlmg walls, its flat roof, between the eucalyptus trees of the park. The stables, too, and the out*
3
houses, glittered in this early morning sunshine. Although be- tween Bagradian and his property there was now more than half an hour’s walk, it sull looked so close to him that it might have been following at his heels. And further along the valley the church of Yoghonoluk, with its big cupolas and pointed, gabled minarets at the sides, greeted him clearly. This solemn, massive church and Bagradian’s villa formed an entity. Bagradian’s grandfather, the fabled founder and bene- factor, had built them both fifty years ago. It was the custom of Armenian peasants and craftsmen, after their journeys abroad — to America even — ^in search of profit, to return home, into the nest. But bourgeois grown rich had other notions. They built their luxury villas along the Riviera from Cannes, among the gardens of Heliopolis, or at least on the slopes of Lebanon, in the neighbourhood of Beirut. Old Avetis Bagradian had drawn a definite line of demarcation between himself and such new-rich. He, the founder of that world-famous Istanbul business, which had offices in Paris, New York, and London, resided, in so far as his time and affairs allowed him to do so, year after year in his villa above the hamlet of Yoghono- luk, under Musa Dagh. But not only Yoghonoluk; the other six Armenian villages ot the district of Suedia had basked in the rich blessing of his kingly presence in their midst. Quite apart from the schools and churches built by him — from his summoning of American mission teachers — let it suflEce to in- dicate the gift which in spite of every other event remained, even today, fresh in the memory of his people: that shipload of Singer sewing-machines which after a more than usually prosperous business year Avetis had distributed among fifty needy famihes in the villages.
Gabriel — ^he had still not turned his hstemng gaze away from the villa — ^had known his grandfather. He had been born in the house down there and spent many long months of his childhood m it. Till his twelfth year. And yet this early life, which was, after all, his own life, seemed so unreal that
4
It almost hurt to think of it. It seemed like a kind of life in the womb, the vague memories of which stir the soul to un- welcome shudderings. Had he really ever known his grand- father, or only read of him and seen his pictures in a story book? A httle man with a white goatee, in a long black-and- yellow-striped silk gown. His gold eyeglass dangling from a chain upon his chest. In red shoes he had walked over the grass of the garden. Everyone bowed deeply. Tapered old man’s fingers stroked the boy’s cheeks. Had it all happened, or was It no more than empty dreaming? To Gabriel Bagradian his grandfather and Musa Dagh connoted the same. When a few weeks ago he had first beheld again that mount of his childhood, that darkening ridge against the sunset, he had been invaded by indescribable, terrifying, and yet delight- ful sensations. Their depths had refused to reveal themselves. He had at once given up the attempt. Had it been the first breath of a presentiment? Or only these twenty-three years?
Twenty-three years of Europe, Pans! Years of complete as- similation. They were as good as twice, or three times, that. They extinguished everything. After the old man’s death his family, absolved at last from the local patriotism of its founder, had escaped this Oriental nook. The firm’s bead office was, and remained, Istanbul. But Gabriel’s parents had lived with their two sons in Pans. Yet Gabriel’s brother — he, too, had been called Avetis — about fifteen years Gabriel’s senior, had soon disappeared. He went back to Turkey, as active partner in the importing-house. Not unfittingly had he been given his grandfather’s name. With him, after some years of neg- lect, the villa in Yoghonoluk reassumed its seigniorial status. His one amusement had been hunting, and with Yoghonoluk as his base he set forth into the Taurus mountains and to the Harun. Gabriel, who scarcely had known his brother, had been sent to a Pans lycee and then to study at the Sorbonne. No one insisted on putting him into the business, to which he, a miraculous exception in his family, would not have been
5
suited in the least. He had been allowed to live as a scholar* a bel espnt, an archaeologist, a historian of art, a philosopher* and in addition had been adlotted a yearly income which made him a free, even a very well-to-do, man. Still quite young, he had married Juhette. This marriage had worked a profound change m him. The Frenchwoman had drawn him her way. At present he was more French than ever. Armeman still, but only in a sense — academically. Still, he did not forget it alto- gether, and at times published a scientific article in an Ar- menian paper. And, at ten years old, Stephan, his son, had been given an Armenian tutor, so that he imght be taught the speech of his fathers. At first all this had seemed entirely use- less, harmful even, to Juliette. But, since she happened td like young Samuel Avakian, she had surrendered, after a few retreating skirmishes. Their tiffs had always the same origin. Yet, no matter how hard Gabriel might try to concern him- self with the politics of foreigners, he was still sometimes drawn back into those of his people. Since he bore a respected name, Armenian leaders, whenever they were in Pans, would come to call on him. He had even been offered the leadership of the Dashnakzagan party. Though he retreated in terror from this suggestion, he at least had taken part in that famous congress which, in 1907, united the Young Turks with Ar- menian nationahsts. An empire was to be grounded in which the two races should live at peace side by side and not dis- honour each other. Such an object excited even an alienated enthusiasm. In those days Turks had paid Armenians the most charming comphments, declaring their love. Gabriel, as his habit was, took these compliments more seriously than other people. That was why, when the Balkan war broke out, he had volunteered. He had been hastily trained in the school for reservist oflScers in Istanbul and had just had time to fight, as the officer of a howitzer battery, at the battle of Bulair. This one long separation from his family had lasted over six months. He had missed them greatly. He may have feared
6
that Juliette would slip away from him. Something seemed imperilled in their rdationship though he could not have given a reason for any such feeling. He was a thinker, an abstract man, an individual. What did the Turks matter, what the Armemans^ He had thoughts of taking French citizen- ship. That, above all, would have made Juliette happy. But always, in the end, the same vague uneasiness had prevented it. He had volunteered for the war. Even if he did not hve in his country, he could at least always re-evoke it. His fathers’ country.
These fathers had suffered in it monstrously and still not given It up. Gabriel had never suffered. Massacre and torture he only knew through books and stories. It is not, he thought, a matter of indifference which country even an abstract man belongs to. So he remained an Ottoman subject. Two happy years in a charming flat in the Avenue Klcber. It really looked as though all problems had been solved and his life taken on its final definite shape. Gabriel was thirty-five; Juliette^ thirty- four; Stephan, thirteen Their lives were untroubled, their work intellectual, they had some very pleasant friends. Juliette was the decisive factor in choosing them. This was chiefly evident in the fact that Gabnel’s former Armeman acquaint- ances — ^his parents had been dead some time — came less and less frequently to the flat. Juhette, so to speak, insisted re- lentlessly on her blood-stream. But she could not manage to, change her son’s eyes. Yet Gabriel seemed to notice none of all this. An express letter from Avetis Bagradian gave a new direction to fate. His elder brother urgently begged Gabriel to come to Istanbul. He was a very sick man, he wrote, and no longer able to manage the business. So that for some weeks he had been making all preliminary arrangements to trans- form it into a limited company. Gabriel must be there to defend his interests. Juliette, whose habit it was to emphasize her knowledge of the world, had announced at once that she would hke to accompany Gabriel and back Him up
7
throughout the negotiations. Matters of great importance would be involved. But he was so simple by nature and cer- tainly not up to the Armenian ruses of all the others. June 1914. An incredible world. Gabriel decided to take not only Juhette, but Stephan and Avakian, his tutor. The school year was nearly over. This business might prove long drawn out, and the ways of the world are unpreictable. In the second week of July they had all arrived m Constantinople.
But, even so, Avetis Bagradian had not been able to await them. He had sailed in a small Italian boat for Beirut. The state of his lungs had been g[oing from bad to worse in the last weeks, with cruel celerity, and he could no longer stand the air of Istanbul. (Remarkable that this brother of Gabriel, the European, should have chosen Syria, not Switzerland, to die in.) So that Gabriel now, instead of dealing with Avetis, had to deal with directors and solicitors. Still, he soon per- ceived that this unknown brother had watched over his in- terests with the greatest tenderness and foresight. For the first time he grew intensely conscious of the fact that his ail- ing, elderly Avetis had been a worker on his behalf, the brother to whom he owed his well-being. What an anomaly that brothers should have been such strangers. Gabriel was ap- palled at the pride in himself which he had never managed to stifle, his scorn of “the Oriental,” the “business man.” Now he was seized with the wish — a kind of longing even — to re- pair an mjusuce while there was time. The heat in Istanbul was really unbearable. It did not seem wise at present to turn back westwards. “Let us wait till the storm has blown over.” On the other hand the very thought of a short sea voyage was a tome. One of the newest boats of the Khcdival Mail would touch Beirut on its way to Alexandria, Modern villas were to let on the western slopes of Lebanon, of a kind to fulfil the most exacting requirements. Connoisseurs know that no landscape on earth has greater charms. But Gabriel had need of no such persuasions since Juhette agreed at once. In her,
8
ior a long ume now, some vague impatience had been ac- cumulating. The prospect of something new enticed her. While they were sull at sea, declarations of war had come rattling down between state and state. When they stood on the quay at Beirut, the fighang had already begun in Bel- gium, in the Balkans, in Galiaa Impossible now to think of going back to France. They stayed where they were. The newspapers announced that the Sublime Porte would enter into alliance with the Central Powers. Pans had become enemy country.
The real purpose of the journey proved unfulfillable. Avetis Bagradian had missed his younger brother a second time. He had left Beirut a few days before and undertaken the difficult journey, via Aleppo and Antioch, to Yoghonoluk. Even Leb- anon did not suffice him to die in. It had to be Musa Dagh. But the letter in which his brother foretold his own death did not reach Gabriel until the autumn. Meanwhile the Bagradians had moved into a pleasant villa only a little way above the town. Juliette found life in Beirut possible. There were crowds of French people. The various consuls also came to call. Here, as everywhere else, she knew how to gather many acquaint- ances. Gabriel rejoiced, since exile did not seem to weigh too heavily on her. There was nothing to be done against it. Beirut, in any case, was safer than European aties. For the moment at least. But still Gabriel kept thinking of the house at Yo ghonoluk. Avetis, in his letter, had implored him not to neg- lect It. Five days after the letter came Dr. Altouni’s telegram, announcing his death. And now Gabriel not only thought, but constantly spoke of, the house of his childhood. Yet, when Juliette suddenly declared that she wanted to move as soon as possible into the house in which he had been a little boy and had now inherited, the thought scared him. Stubbornly she dis- missed his objections. Country solitude? Nothing could be more welcome. Out of the world? Uncomfortable? She her- self would see to all that. It was just what so attracted her.
9
Her parents had owned a country house, in which she had grown up. One of her pet dreams had always been to arrange a country house of her own, to manage it all en chatelcinc — it made not the least difference where, in what country, it hap- pened to be. In spite of all tins vivacious eagerness Gabriel still opposed her till after the rainy season. Wouldn’t it be far more prudent to get his family back to Switzerland? But Juliette held to her caprice. She became almost challenging. Nor could he repress a strange uneasiness mingled with long- ing. It was already December by the time they began to make arrangements to return to the house of his fathers. The train journey, m spite of the moving troops, was quite bearable as far as Aleppo. In Aleppo they hired two indescribable cars. Through the thick mud of district roads they arrived, as by a miracle, in Antioch. There, at the Orontes bridge, Kristaphor, the steward, was awaiting them with the hunting-trap of the house and two ox-carts for the luggage. Less than two hours on, to Yoghonoluk. They passed hilariously. It hadn’t been half bad, declared Juliette. . . .
“How did I get here!”’ These surface combinations of events only seemed to answer the question very imperfectly. Gabriel’s solemn amazement still remamed. A vague restlessness vi- brated through It. Antediluvian things, buried under twenty- three years in Pans, must be re-established in his mind. Only now did Gabriel turn his half-seeing eyes away from his house. Juliette and Stephan must certainly still be asleep. Nor had church bells in Yoghonoluk as yet proclaimed Sunday morning. His eyes followed this valley of Armenian villages a certain way northwards From where he stood he could still see the village of the silkworms, Azir, but Kebussiyc, the last village in that direction, had disappeared. Azir lay asleep in a dark bed of mulberry trees. Over there, on the little hill which nestles against the flank of Musa Dagh, stood the r uins of a cloister. Thomas the Apostle, in person, had founded that hermitage. The scattered stones bore strange inscriptions.
lO
Once Antioch, the regent of the world of those days, had extended as far as to the sea. Everywhere the ground was strewn with anuques, or they rewarded the first turn of the excavator’s spade. Gabriel had already in these few weeks gathered a whole collection of valuable trophies inside his house. The search for them was his chief occupation here. Yet, till now, some reverence had protected him from climb- ing the hill of St. Thomas’s rum. (It was guarded by great copper-coloured snakes, with crowns on their heads. Those who came sacrilegiously pilfermg holy stones to build their houses found, as they carried them away, that the stones had grown into their backs, and so had to carry the load to the grave with them.) Who had told him that story? Once, in his mother’s room (now Juliette’s) old women had sat with curiously painted faces. Or was that only an illusion? Was it possible — had his mother in Yoghonoluk and his mother in Paris been the same?
Gabriel had long since entered the dark wood. A steep, wide gully, which led on up to the summit, had been cut into the mountain slope. They called it the ilex ravine. While Bagrad- ian was climbing this sheep-track, which forced itself pain- fully upwards, through thick undergrowth, he knew sud- denly: I have reached the end of the provisional. Something deasive is going to happen.
Provisional? Gabriel Bagradian was an Ottoman officer in the reserve of an artillery regiment. The Turkish armies were fighting for dear life on four fronts. Against the Russians in the Caucasus. Against the English and Indians in Mesopo- tamia. Australian divisions had been landed in Gallipoli, to force the gates of the Bosporus in conjunction with the Allied fleets. The fourth army, in Syria and Palestine, was prepar- ing a fresh onslaught on the Suez Canal. It needed super- human efforts to keep all these four fronts unbroken. Enver Pasha, that deified war-lord, had sacrificed two whole army
II
corps to his madly daring campaign in Caucasian snows. No- where had the Turks enough officers. Their war material was inadequate.
For Bagradian the hopes of 1908 and 1912 were extinguished. Ittihad, the Young Turkish “Qimmittee for Umty and Prog- ress,” had only made use of the Armemans, and at once pro- ceeded to break every oath. Gabriel had certainly no reason to give especial proof of his Turkish patriotism. This time things were different in every way. His wife was French. He would therefore have to take up arms against a nation he loved, to which he owed the deepest gratitude, to which he was allied by marriage. None the less he had reported in Aleppo at the district headquarters of his former regiment. It had been his duty. Any other course would have meant that he could be treated as a deserter. But, strangely, the colonel in charge had seemed in no need of officers. He had studied Bagradian’s papers very closely and sent him away agam. He was to give his address and await his orders. That had been in November. This was the end of March, and still no orders had come from Antioch. Did that hide some impenetrable intention or merely the impenetrable chaos of a Turkish mili- tary office.^
But, in that moment, Gabriel knew for certain that today would bring him a decision. On Sundays the post arrived from Antioch — not only newspapers and letters, but government orders from the Kaimakam to commoners and subjects.
Gabriel Bagradian was thinkmg solely of his family. The position was complicated. What was to happen to Juhette and Stephan while he was serving? Gabriel was delighted with Juliette’s lemency. But not all her indulgence prevented the fact that his wife and son, if they stayed on alone here, would be cut off from the rest of the world.
The ilex grove was behind Bagradian before he had reached any further clarity on this point. The stamped-out path led northwards, losing itself on the mountain in a tangle at
12
arbutus and wild rhododendron. This part of Musa Dagh was called the Damlayik by the hill-folk. The two peaks to the south rose to about eight hundred metres. The Damlayik did not reach any considerable height. These two peaks formed the last ridges of the central mass, which then, unexpectedly, without regular gradations, fell sheer, as though broken off sharp, in huge stony cliifs, into the plain of the Orontes. Here in the north, where the wanderer was beginmng to feel his way, the Damlayik was lower. Then it fell m a saddle-notch. This was the narrowest part of the whole mountainside along the coast — ^the waist of Musa Dagh. The plateau at the sum- mit narrowed down to a few hundred yards, and the con- fusion of rocks on this steeply jutting side was thrust far out. Gabriel believed he knew every bush and rock. Of all the pictures of his childhood this place had imprinted itself most vividly. The same wide umbr^a-pines, forming a grove. The same creeping gorse, which struggles over the stony ground. Ivy and other clinging plants embrace a circle of white stones, which, like the giant members of a senate of nature, break off their deliberations the instant an intruder’s step is heard. A departing tribe of swallows twitters in the midst of the quiet. Excitement ripples the greenish, land-locked sea of air. As of leaping trout. The sudden spread and beat of wings is like the flicker of many eyelids.
Gabriel lay down in a grassy place, joining his hands behind his head. Twice already he had climbed Musa Dagh in search of these pines, these blocks of stone, but had lost his way. So they don’t really exist, had been his thought. Now he closed tired eyes. When a human being comes back to any former place of contemplation and inner life, those spirits which he, the returned, once cherished and left there return and eagerly possess him. The ghosts of Bagradian’s childhood rushed upon him, as though for twenty-three years they had waited feithfully under pines and rocks, in tins charming wilderness, for him to return. They are warhke ghosts. The mad dreams
13
o£ every Armenian boy. (G>uld they be otherwise?) . . . Abdul Hamid, the blood-stained Sultan, had issued a ferman against Christians. The hounds of the Prophet, Turks, Kurds, Circassians, rally to the green banners, to burn and plunder, to massacre Armenian folk. But they had reckoned without Gabriel Bagradian. He assembles his own. He leads them into the mountains. With indescribable valour he fights off this overwhelming power and beats it back.
Gabriel could not shake oS these childish fantasies. He, the Parisian, Juliette’s husband, the savant, the officer minded to do his duty as a Turkish subject, and who knew the realities of modern warfare, was also, simultaneously, a boy who with primitive blood-hate flung himself on the arch-enemy of his race. The dream of every Armenian boy. To be sure it only lasted an instant. But Gabriel marvelled and smiled iromcally before failing asleep.
Bagradian started up with a certain fear. Someone had watched him closely as he slept. Apparently he had been asleep some time. He looked up, into the quietly glowing eyes of Stephan, his son. Some distinctly unpleasant, even if vague, sensation invaded him. It is not for a son to come upon his father as he sleeps. Some profound law of custom had violated. His voice was rather sharp as he asked: “What are you doing here? Where’s Monsieur Avakian?’’
Now Stephan, too, seemed embarrassed at having found lus father asleep. He did not quite know what to do with his hands. His full bps opened. He was wearing schoolboy clothes, a Norfolk jacket, short stockings, a wide collar out over the coat. He tugged at his jacket as he answered: “Maman said 1 could go for a walk by myself. This is Monsieur Avakian’s free day. We don’t do any work on Sundays.’’
“We’re not in France now, but in Syria, Stephan,” his father somewhat ominously explained. “Next time you mustn’t come straying about the hills alone.”
Stephan eyed his father eagerly, as though in addition to this mild scolding he were expecting more important direc- tions. But Gabrid said no more. An absurd embarrassment had possession of him. He felt as though this were the first time he had ever been alone with his son. He had not taken very much notice of him since their arrival here in Yoghono- luk and had usually only seen him at meals. True that in Paris or in the holidays in Switzerland he had often taken Stephan for walks. But is one ever alone in Parish In Mon- treux, or Chamonix? In any case the limpid air of Musa Dagh contained a releasing element which seemed to bring them dose together, in a proximity neither had ever known. Gabriel went onwards like a guide, familiar with all the important landmarks. Stephan came after, still expectantly silent.
Father and son in the East* Their relationship can scarcely be compared with the superficial contact of European parents and children. Whoso sees his father secs God. For that father 1$ the last link in a long, unbroken chain of ancestors, binding all men to Adam, and hence to the origin of creation. And yet whoso sees his son sees God. For this son is the next link, binding humans to the Last Judgment, the end of all things, the consummation. Must not so holy a relationship be timid and sparing of words?
This father, as beseemed him, gave a serious turn to the conversation: “What subjects is Monsieur Avakian teaching you now?”
“We started reading Greek a httle while ago. Father. And we do physics, history, and geography."
Bagradian raised his head. Stephan had said it in Armenian. But had he asked his question in Armenian? Usually they spoke French to one another. His son’s Armenian words stirred the father strangely. He was conscious that in Stephan he had far more often seen a French than an Armenian boy.
“Geography?” he repeated. “And what continent are you on now?”
15
“Asia Minor and Syria,” Stephan rather zealously an- nounced.
Gabriel nodded approval, as though it was the best thing he could have said. Then, still a httle absent-minded, he tried to round of{ their talk pedagogically: “Think you could draw a map of Musa Dagh?”
Stephan was pleased at so much paternal confidence. “Oh, yes, Dad. In your room there’s one of Uncle Avetis’s maps, you know. Antioch and the coast. You’ve only got to enlarge the scale and put in all that they leave out.”
Quite right. For an instant Gabriel rejoiced in Stephan’s in- telligence. But then his thoughts strayed back to marching- orders, perhaps already on their way, or perhaps still buried on a Turkish office desk in Aleppo, in Istanbul even. A silent digression.
Stephan’s expectant soul awaited another remark. This is Dad’s country. He longed to be told stories of Dad’s child- hood, that secret tune, of which they had so seldom told him anything. His father seemed to make for a definite point. And already they were near that peculiar terrace he had in mmd. It extended, jutting straight out from the mountain, into a void. A mighty arm of rock upheld it on spread fingers, like a dish. It IS a flat spur of gramte strewn with stones, so wide that two houses could have been built on it. Sea storms, to be sure, which have here free play, scarcely tolerate a few shrubs on this rock, and a clump of Mexican grass, tough as leather. This overhanging, freely jutting terrace springs so far out that any suicide who had plunged to destrucuon from its edge into salt water, twelve hundred feet beneath, could have van- ished unwounded by any rock. Young Stephan tried, of course, to run to the edge. His father pulled him sharply back and held his hand clasped very tight. His free right hand pointed out the four quarters of the globe.
“There to the north we co^d see the Gulf of Alexandretta if Ras el-Khanzir, the Swine cape, weren’t in the way. And
i6
south there’s the mouth of the Orontes, but the mountain takes a curve. . .
Stephan attentively followed the movements of his father’s forefinger as it traced its half-circle of rufSed sea. But what he asked had nothing to do with the geography of Musa Dagh. “Dad — ^wiU you really go to the war?”
Gabriel did not even notice that he was still keeping tight hold of Stephan’s hand. “Yes. I expect my orders any day.”
“Have you got to?”
“Must, Stephan. All Turkish reserve officers are being called
Up.
“But we aren’t Turks. And why didn’t they call you up at once?”
“They say the artillery hasn’t enough big guns at present. When the new batteries are set up, they’ll bt calling all the reservist officers.”
“And where’ll they send you?”
“I belong to the fourth army, in Syria and Palcsune.”
It consoled Bagradian to think that he might be sent for a certain time to Aleppo, Damascus, or Jerusalem. Perhaps there would be a chance of taking Juliette and Stephan. Stephan seemed to divine these fatherly cares.
“And what about us, Dad?”
“That’s just It. . . .”
The boy fervently interrupted: “Leave us here. Dad— please leave us here. Maman likes our house as much as I do.” Stephan was trying to paafy his father as to Maman’s feelings here in a foreign country. His delicate alertness was well aware of the two opposing currents in their marriage.
But Bagradian reflected. “It would be best if I tried to send you both to Switzerland, via Istanbul. But unluckily that’s also in the war zone.”
Stephan clenched his fists across his heart. “No — not to Swit' ierland. Do let’s stay, Dadl”
Gabriel looked at the pleading eyes of his son in some aston*
17
ishment. Mysterious! That this boy, who never had known his father’s home, should feel, none the less, so deeply bound to it. This emotion had lived m hin), this afBnity with the mountain of the Bagradians; Stephan, born in Pans, bad in- herited it with his very blood. He put his arm round the boy’s shoulder, but only said: “We’ll see.”
When they got back to the flat plateau of the Damlayik, morning sounds from Yoghonoluk assailed them. It did not take more than another hour to reach the valley. They had to hurry to be in time for at least the second half of mass.
In Azir, the silkworm village, the Bagradians only met a few people, who passed them with morning greetings: “Bari luis” — “Good light.” The inhabitants of Azir usually went to church in Yoghonoluk. In front of many houses there were tables with wide boards laid out on them. The silkworms’ eggs were spread upon these boards, whitish masses hatching in the sun. Stephan learned from hi* father that old Avetts had been the son of a silk-spinner and had begun his career very early, at fifteen, by going to Baghdad to buy spawn.
Midway to Yoghonoluk the old gendarme. All Nassif, passed them. That worthy saptich was one of the ten Turks who for many years had lived among the Armenians in these villages in peace and amity with them. Besides himself, the only Turks worth mentiomng here were the five gendarmes at his orders, composing his gendarmerie post. They were often changed, but he remained, as firm as Musa Dagh itself. The only other representative of Ottoman authority was the deformed postman, who lived here with his family and on Wednesdays and Sundays brought the post in from Antioch.
Today All Nassif looked worried. This scrubby functionary of the Sublime Porte seemed to be m a very great hurry. His pock-marked face glistened with perspiration under his Turk- ish cap. His martial cavalry sword kept clattering against his bowed legs. Usually the sight of Bagradian Efiendi was enough to make him turn a reverent face; today he only
saluted stiffly, though even his salute had a worried look. This change of manner struck Gabriel so, that for some minutes he stood looking after him.
A few stragglers were still hastemng over the square be- fore the church of Yoghonoluk — the latc<omcrs who lived a long way off. Women in gaily patterned head-scarves and puffed-out coats. Men wearing the shalwar, in baggy trousers, and over these the entari, a kmd of gaberdine. Their faces all looked serious and withdrawn. This sun had already the power of summer in it; the chalk-white houses glittered harshly. Most were single-storied and freshly daubed: Ter Haigasun’s presbytery, the doctor’s house, the apothecary, the big council-house, owned by the chief of Yoghonoluk’s no- tables, that rich mukhtar Thomas Kebussyan. The Church of the Ever-Increasing Angelic Powers was built on a wide pedi- ment. Unbalustercd steps led up to its portals. Avetis Ba- gradian, its donor, had copied on a smaller scale a certain famous nauonal edifice in the Caucasus. The voices of the choir, singing mass, flowed out through its open doorways. Away, beyond the dense congregation, the altar, pale with lit tapers, shone in the gloom. The gold cross gleamed on the back of Ter Haigasun’s red vestment.
Gabriel and Stephan went up the steps. Samuel Avakian, Stephan’s tutor, met them. He had been waiting impatiently.
“Go along in, Stephan,” he ordered his pupil. “Your mother’s waiting for you.”
Then, when Stephan had vamshed through the buzzing congregation, he turned quiedy to his employer. “I only wanted to tell you that they’ve been here, asking for your passports. Travelling passport and passport for the interior. Three officials came from Antioch.”
Gabriel glanced sharply at the student’s face. He had hved for some years as one of the family. It was the face of an Armenian intellectual. A rather sloping forehead. Watchful, deeply troubled eyes bchmd glasses. An expression of eternal
19
surrender to fate, but at the same time a sharp look of being on guard, ready every second to parry an attacker’s blow. Only after a few instants’ concentrated study of that face did Bagradian ask: “And what have you done?”
“Madame gave the officials all they wanted.”
“Even the passport for the interior?”
“Yes, foreign passport and teskere.”
Gabriel turned back down the church steps to light a ciga- rette. He drew a few deeply reflective puffs. The passport for the interior is a document which gives its possessor freedom to move as he pleases over the length and breadth of the Ottoman empire. In theory, without this scrap of paper a subject of the Sultan has no right to move from his village into the next. Gabriel threw away his cigarette and straightened his shoul- ders with a jerk. “It only means that today or tomorrow I shall have to join my battery in Aleppo.”
Avakian stood looking down at a deeply sunken wheel-rut, left by the last rams in the loam of the church square. “I don’t think it means your marching orders for Aleppo, Effendi.”
“It can’t mean anything else."
Avakian’s voice had become very quiet. “They made me give them mine, as well.”
Bagradian, who had begun to laugh, checked himself. “That only means you’ll have to go to Aleppo to be medically exam- ined, my dear Avakian. This time it isn’t a joke. But don’t you worry. We’ll manage the mihtary tax again for you, all right. I need you for Stephan.”
Still Avakian did not raise his eyes from the wheel-rut. “Dr. Altouni, Apothecary Krikor, and Pastor Nokhudian certainly aren’t of military age, though I may be. They’ve all had their tesker& taken away from them.”
“Are you certain of that?” Gabriel was beginning to lose his temper. “Who demanded them? What sort of officials? What grounds did they state? And where are these gentry,
20
that’s the main thing? I fed very much inclined to have a word with them.”
He learned that it was nearly half an hour since the odiciais, escorted by mounted gendarmes, had vanished in the direc- tion of Suedia. Judging by their demands it could only be a question of village notables, since the common craftsman and peasant owns no tesker^ but at most a written permission from the market in Antioch.
Gabriel took a few long strides to and fro, no longer notic- ing the tutor. At last he said to him: “Go on into church, Avakian. I’ll follow you.”
But he did not so much as think of hearing the rest of the mass, whose many-voiced choral that same instant came out to him in an especially loud burst of devotion. His head was on one side, sharply reflective, as he wandered back across the square, walked a little way down the village street, and left it where the road forked to the villa. Without even entering the house, he stopped at the stables to tell them to saddle one of his horses, which had once been the pride of Avetis, his brother. Unluckily no Kristaphor was there to accompany him So he took a stable-boy. He had not yet made up his mind what to do.
But an hour’s quick riding would get him to Antioch.
2
Konak — Hamam — Selamlik
The Hukumct of Antioch, as the government konak of the Kaimakam was often called, stood under the hill of the citadel. A drab but extensive building, since the Kazah Antakiya is one of the most extensive Syrian provinces.
Gabriel Bagradian, who had left his boy with the horses at the Orontes bridge, had already waited some time in the big central office of the konak. He hoped to be received by the Kaimakam himself, to whom he had sent in his card.
A Turkish government office like all the others Gabriel knew so well; on the mottled wall, from which plaster was crumbling, a clumsy portrait of the Sultan and a couple of say> ings from the Koran. Nearly every window-pane had been cracked and repaired with oil paper. The filthy deal floor strewn with gobbets of spittle and cigarette-ends. Some minor official sat behind an empty desk, sucking his teeth and gazing out into space. An unopposed legion of portly flies were en- gaged in a fierce, disgusting concert. Low benches ran round the walls. A few people were waiting — Turkish and Arab peasants. One, not too squeamish, squatted on the floor, spread- mg his long garments out around him, as though he could not embrace enough of its filth. A sour aroma hke that of Russia leather, made up of sweat, stale tobacco, sloth, and poverty, infested the room. Gabriel knew that the district head oflices of the various peoples had each its distinctive smell. But this stink of fear and kismet was common to all of
32
them— of little people receiving the impact of the state as a natural and monstrous force.
At last the gaudily patterned doorkeeper conducted him negligently into a small room, differing from the other by its rugs, its intact window-panes, its desk, thickly strewn with documents, its attempt at cleanliness. The walls displayed no portrait of the Sultan, but a huge photograph of Enver Pasha on horseback. Gabriel found himself facing a young man, with reddish hair, freckles, a small, mihtary moustache. This was not the Kaimakam, only a mudir in charge of the coastal district, the nahiyeh of Suedia. The most noticeable thmg about the mudir were his long, scrupulously manicured finger- nails. He was wearing a grey suit, which seemed a litde too tight even for his measly person; with it a red tie and canary-yellow lace-up boots. Bagradian knew at once — Salon- ika! He had no reason for knowing it except the young man’s outward appearance. Salonika had been the birthplace of the Turkish nauonalist movement, of frantic Westernization, boundless reverence of Western progress in all its forms. Doubtless this mudir was a hanger-on, perhaps even a member of Ittihad, that secretive "Comtte Pour I’umon et le progres" which today held unimpeded dominion over the Caliph’s state. He was excessively pohte to his visitor. He got up and himself brought the chair to the desk. Most of the time his red- nmmed eyes, with the sparse lashes of red-haired people, looked past Bagradian.
Gabriel rather stressed his name. The mudir nodded, almost imperceptibly. “The highly esteemed Bagradian family is known to us.”
It cannot be denied that his tone and words produced a certain glow of satisfaction in Gabriel, whose voice became more assured. “Today certain citizens of my village — I was among them — have had our passports taken away. Is that official? Did you know of it?”
After long reflection and fumbling among documents, the
23
miidir announced that, with all the press of official business, he found it impossible to put his hand on every trifle directly. At last hght dawned. “Oh, yes, of course. The passports for the interior. That’s not an independent ruhng of the kazah — it’s a new order from His Excellency the Minister of the Interior.’’
Now at last he had found the crumpled sheet, which he spread in front of him. He seemed willing, on request, to read the full text of this decree of His Excellency Taalat Bey. Gabriel asked if the order were to be generally applied. The answer sounded rather evasive. The mass of people would scarcely be affected by it, since usually only the richer shop- keepers, merchants, and such like owned a pass for the interior.
Gabriel stared at the long finger-nails. “I’ve lived most of my life abroad, in Paris ”
Again the official slighdy inclined his head. “We know that, Effendi.”
“And so I’m not very used to these deprivations of liberty."
The mudir smiled an indulgent smile. “You over-rate the matter, Effcndi. This is war-time. And nowadays even Ger- man, French, and English citizens find they have to submit to a great deal to which they used not to be accustomed. All over Europe it’s much the same as it is here. May I also re- mind you that this is the war zone of the fourth army, and therefore a military area? It’s absolutely essential to keep some control of people’s movements.”
These reasons sounded so cogent that Gabriel Bagradian felt relieved. That morning’s event, which had brought him to Antioch, suddenly seemed to lose its astringent quahty. He had been hearing rumours everywhere of traitors, deserters, spies. The state had to protect itself. Impossible to judge such measures as this by the hole-and-corner methods of Yogho- noluk. And the mudir’s further observations were of a kmd to allay Armeman mistrust. The Minister had, to be sure, withdrawn all passports, but this did not mean that, in certain
34
cases, new ones might not be procurable. The vilayet office in Aleppo was the competent authority for these. Bagradian Effendi must know himself that the Wali, Djelal Bey, was the most just and benevolent governor of the whole empire. A request, backed by recommendations from these offices, would be sent to Aleppo. . . . The mudir broke off: “Unless I’m mistaken, Effendi, you’re hable for military service.”
Gabriel gave a short account of the matter. Yesterday, per- haps, he might still have asked the official to find out why no marching-orders had reached him. But the last few hours had altered everything. The thought of war — of Juliette and Stephan — oppressed him. His sense of duty as a Turkish officer had evaporated. He hoped now that the battery in Aleppo had forgotten him and he felt no desire to attract atten- tion. But it struck him how well informed these Antioch officials seemed to be, of all that concerned him.
The mudir’s red-rimmcd eyes transmitted his satisfaction. “So that now, Effendi, you arc, so to speak, a soldier on leave. So, for you, there can be no question of any teskerd.”
“But my wife and son ...
As he said this (it seemed to mystify the mudir), Gabriel felt for the first time: “We’re in a trap. . . .”
That same instant the double doors into the next office were pushed open. There entered two gentlemen. One was an elderly officer; the other, doubtless, the Kaimakam. This provincial governor was a big, puffy-looking man, in a grey, crumpled frock<oat. Heavy, dark-brown pouches under the eyes, in the sallow face of a dyspeptic. Bagradian and the mudir rose. The Kaimakam paid not the least attention to the Armenian. In a low voice he gave some directions to his subordinate, raised a hand carelessly to his fez, and, followed by the major, walked out of the office, since he seemed to have finished his day’s work.
Gabriel stared at the door. "Are you making distmctions be- tween officers, then?”
25
The mudir had begun to tidy his desk. "I don’t quite know what you mean, Eilendi.”
“I meant, are Turks and Armenians to be given separate treatment?”
This seemed to horrify the mudir. “Every Ottoman subject is equal before the law.”
That, he continued, had been the most important achieve- ment of the revolution of 1908. That certain habits of pre- revolutionary days should still persist— as for instance the preferential treatment of Ottomans in military and govern- ment offices — that was one of the things that could never be altered by act of parliament. Peoples did not change as quickly as did their constitutions, and reforms were far easier on paper than in reality. He concluded his excursion into poliucal theory: “The war will bring a great many important changes.”
Gabriel took this for a hopeful prophecy. But the mudir suddenly jerked his freckled face, which, for no apparent reason, was twitching with hate.
“Meanwhile let us hope that n6 incidents will force the government to relentless severity with certain sections of the populace.”
When Gabriel Bagradian turned into the bazaar at Antioch, he had made up his mind on two points. If they called him up, he would not shrink from any sacrifice to buy himself clear of the army. And he would await the end of the war in the peace and quiet of his house at Yoghonoluk, un- molested and unperceived. Surely, since this was the spring of 1915, it could only be a few months before peace was signed. He reckoned on September or October. Surely none of the Powers would dare another winter campaign. Till peace he would have to make the best of things and then— back to Paris, as fast as possible.
The bazaar bore him along. That deep surge which knows none of the ebb and flow, the hurry, of a crowd along a Euro-
26
pean pavement, which rolls on with an irresistible, even motion, as time flows on into eternity. He might not have been in this God-forsaken provincial hole^ Antakiya, but transported to Aleppo or Damascus, so inexhaustibly did the two opposing streams of the bazaar surge past each other. Turks in Euro- pean dress, wearing the fez, with stand-up collars and walking- sticks, officials or merchants. Armenians, Greeks, Syrians, these too in European dress, but with different headgear. In and out among them, Kurds and Circassians in their tribal garb. Most displayed weapons. For the government, which in the case of Christian peoples viewed every pocket-knife with mistrust, tolerated the latest infantry rifles in the hands of these restless mountaineers; it even supplied them. Arab peasants, in from the neighbourhood. Also a few bedouins from the south, in long, many-folded cloaks, desert-hued, in picturesque tarbushes, the silken fringes of which hung over their shoulders. Women in charshafFcs, the modest attire of female Moslems. But then, too, the unveiled, the emancipated, in frocks that left free silk- stockinged legs. Here and there, in this stream of human be- ings, a donkey, under a heavy load, the hopeless proletarian among beasts. To Gabriel it seemed always the same donkey which came stumbling past him in a coma, with the same ragged fellow tugging his bridle. But this whole world, men, women, Turks, Arabs, Armenians, Kurds, with trench-brown soldiers in its midst — ^its goats, its donkeys — was smelted to- , gether into an indescribable unity by its gait— a long stride, slow and undulating, moving onwards irresistibly, to a goal not to be determined.
And Gabriel smelt the savours of his childhood. The whifif of seething oil of sesame, which came in sharp gusts across the street through crevices in the herbalists’ vats, the onion- laden reek of mutton fricassees, simmering over open fires. The stench of rotting vegetables. And of humanity, more noisome than all the rest, which slept in the clothes it wore by day.
27
He recognized the yearning cries of the street-venders; Ja rezzah, ja kerim, ja fettah, ja alim — so the boy who offered for sale his rings of white bread from a basket still chanted senti- mentally. — ^“O All-Nourishcr, O All-Good, O All-Provident, O Knower of all things.” The ancient cry of the ages still prof- fered fresh dates — “Thou brown one, O brown of the desert, O maiden.” The salad-vender retained his throaty conviction: “Ed daim Allah, Allah ed daim” — that the Everlasting alone was God, that God alone was the Everlasting — some consola- tion, in view of his wares, to the purchaser. Gabriel bought a berazik, a little cake spread with grape syrup. This “food for swallows" also brought its memories of childhood. But the first bite of it turned his stomach, and he gave the sweetmeat to a youngster who had stood in rapture, eyeing his mouth.
His heart sank so, that for an instant he had to close his eyes. What could have happened to change the world so com- pletely? Here, in this country, he had been born. Surely he ought to feel at home here. But— the irresistible, evenly moving crowd in the bazaar seemed to put his home at enmity with him. And that young mudir? Surely he had been scrupulously pohte. . . “The highly esteemed Bagradian family . . .” Yet in a flash Gabriel knew for a certainty that this suavity and its “highly esteemed family” had been no more than a single piece of insolence. It had been worse — ^hate masked as courtesy. This same hate flowed around him here. It seared his skin, galled his back. And indeed his back was suddenly panic- stricken, with the panic of a man hunted by enemies, without a soul to befriend him in the world. In Yoghonoluk, apart, in the big house, he had known nothing of all that. And before in Paris? There, in spite of all his prosperity, he had lived in the cool spaces surrounding aliens, who strike root anywhere. Had he struck root here? Here for the first time, m this mean bazaar, at home, he could measure fully the absolute degree of his alien state upon this earth. Armenian! In him an ancient blood-stream, an ancient people. But why did his
28
thoughts more often speak French than Armenian — as for in- stance now? (And yet that morning he had felt a distinct thrill of pleasure when his son answered him in Armenian.) Blood-stream, and people. To be honourable. Were not these mere empty concepts? Human beings in every age have strewn the bitter bread of existence with a different spice of ideas, only to make it still more unpalatable. A side-alley of the bazaar came into view. Most of its venders were Arme- nian^ standing before their shops and booths: money- changers, carpet-sellers, jewellers. So these were his brothers, then? These battered faces, these ghstening eyes, alert for custom? No, many thanks, he refused such brotherhood, every- thing in him rebelled against iti But had old Avetis Bagradian been anything other, or better, than such as these? — even though he were more far-sighted, gifted, energetic. And had he not his grandfather alone to thank that he was not forced to live as they? He went on, shuddering with repugnance. Then he was suddenly conscious of the fact that one or the great difficulties of his hfe sprang from the circumstance that nowadays he saw so much through Juhettc’s eyes. So that not only in the world was he an ahen, but within himself, the instant he came mto contact with other people. Jesus Christ! Couldn’t one be an individual, free from all this seething, stinking hosulity, as one had that morning on Musa Dagh?
Nothing more unnerving than such a test of one’s rcahty. Gabriel fled from the Usun Charshy, the Long Market, as the Turks called the bazaar. He could no longer endure its hos- tile rhythm. He found himself in a httle square, composed of new buildings. A pleasant-looking house leapt to his eyes, hamam, the steam-bath, arranged, as everywhere in Turkey, with a certain luxury. It was still too early to call on the old Agha Rifaat Berekct. And, since he felt no inclination to go into one of the dubious restaurants, he turned into the bath.
He spent twenty minutes in the big steam-room amid slowly mounting vapours, which not only made the other
29
bathers look like far-off ghosts, but seemed evea to divorce him from his own body. It was a kind of minor death. He could fed this day’s impenetrable significance.
In the cooling-room next door he lay down on one of the bare couches to submit to the usual treatment after a bath. Now he fdt more naked than he had before in the steam. An attendant hurled himself upon him and began, according to all the rules of his art (which truly is one), to knead his flesh. With resonant smackings he played on Gabriel’s rump as on cymbals, humming and pantmg as he did it. A few Turkish beys, on the other pdlets, were undergoing similar treatment. They surrendered to it with gasps of dolorous pleasure. At intervals, interrupted by grunts of pain, their voices talked in broken phrases through the angry zeal of the masseurs. Gabriel had at first no wish to listen. But, mingled with the hummings of his torturer, their voices assailed him inescapably. They sounded so individual, so sharply distin- guished from one another, that he felt as though he could see them.
The first, a well-fed bass. No doubt a very self-assured gentle- man, to whom it was highly important to know the ms and outs of everything — ^if possible, even before the officials con- cerned. This man of information had secret sources. “The English sent him in a torpedo-boat, from Cyprus to the coast. . . . That was near Oshalki. . . . The fellow brought money and arms and v/as seven days nosing about the village. . . . Of course, the saptiehs didn’t know anything. ... I can even give you the names . . . Koshkerian is the name of the unclean swine.”
The second voice, high and flurried. An elderly, peaceable httlc gent, who always did his best to be optimistic. ’The voice seemed somehow not so tall as the other, as though it were looking up at it. Its interjections of pleasurable pain were framed to an august verse of the Koran: “La ilah ila ’Hah. . . . God is great. . . . We can’t have that sort of thing. . . .
30
But it may not be true ... la ilah ila ’Uah . . . one hears all kinds of things . . . This is probably only a rumour.”
The well-fed bass, contemptuously: “I have very serious let- ters from a highly placed personage ... a close friend.”
Third voice. That of a strident amateur politician, who seemed to find it highly satisfactory that things in the world should be so unsettled. “We can’t let it go on much longer. . . . We shall have to finish it. . . . What’s the government diere for.? What about Ituhad? . . . The unfortunate thing is this conscription. . . . We’ve even armed the curs. . . . Now, how do you think we’ll be able to deal with them? . . . The war . . . For weeks I’ve shouted myself hoarse.”
Fourth voice, heavy with the cares of state: “And Zeitun?”
The peaceable voice: “Zeitun? Why, what do you mean? . . . Good heavens. . . . What’s been happening in Zeitun?”
The politician, ominously: “In Zeitun? . . , Why, the news has been posted up in every reading-room of the Hukumet. . . . Anyone can convince hunself . . .”
The informative bass: “The reading-rooms established everywhere by the German consulates . .
A fifth voice, interrupting from the farthest pallet: “We ourselves established them.”
An indistinct tangle of obscure allusions: “Koshkerian — Zeitun . . . We’ve got to finish it . . .”
But Gabriel understood, without knowing the details. A» the bath attendant dug his two fists into his shoulders, these Turkish voices roared in his ears like water. Acute shame. He who a short time ago had passed the Armenian shop keepers in the bazaar with such a shiver of repugnance felt himself now to be involved, answerable for the destiny of his people.
Meanwhile the bather farthest away from him had heaved himself, groaning, off his pallet. He gathered up his burnous, which served as a bath-gown, and, on toddhng feet, ambled a few steps about the room. Gabriel could see only that he was
31
tall and stout. His consequential way of speech, the respect with which they heard him out, made Gabriel conclude that this was a very wealthy man.
“People are unjust to the government. Impatience alone does not suffice to determine policy. The true state of afEairs is very difFerent to what the uninformed masses suppose it to be. Treaties, capitulations, considerations of all kinds, foreign opinion. . . . But let me assure the beys in confidence that orders have just been issued by the War Office, by His Excel- lency Enver Pasha in person to the district mihtary authorities, to disarm melun ermeni millet (the treacherous Armenian race) — that is to say, to recall Armenians from the firing-line and degrade them to the basest tasks — road-making, carry- ing loads. . . . Such is the truth. . . . But it must not be mentioned.”
“I can’t let it pass. I won’t swallow that,” Gabriel said to himself. Another voice warned him quietly: “You yourself are the persecuted.” But some dark force, which drew him up from the pallet, decided the struggle. He pushed the attendant to one side and sprang on to the tiles. He tied the white towel around his loins. His face aglow with rage, his hair disordered from the bath, his broad chest, seemed not to be- long to the gentleman who, that morning, had worn tourist’s tweeds. He planted himself squarely before the rich man. Suddenly, by the dark bags under the eyes, the liverish face, he knew the Kaimakam. The sight only served to increase his fury.
“His Excellency Enver Pasha and his whole staff had their lives saved in the Caucasus by Armenian troops. He was as good as taken prisoner by the Russians. You know that as well as I do, Effiendi. You also know that His Excellency, in a letter to the Catholicos of Sis, or to the Bishop of Conia, praised the valour of sadika ermeni millet (the loyal Armenian people). This letter was posted up by government order. That is the truth. And whosoever poisons that truth by spreading
32
rumours is weakening the conduct of the war, destroying our unity, is an enemy of the empire, a traitor. I, Gabriel Bagradian, tell you this, an officer m the Turkish army.”
He stopped, and waited for the answer. But the beys, non- plussed by this wild outburst, did not utter a word — ^not even the Kaimakam, who only drew his burnous more tightly around his nakedness. So that Gabriel could get out of the bath victorious, although still shaking with excitement. As he dressed, he was already aware that this was the stupidest thing he had ever done. Now the way to Antioch was barred. And it was the only way in, or out, of the world. He ought, before offending the Kaimakam, to have considered Juliette and Stephan. Yet he could not altogether reproach himself.
His heart was still beating fast as the Agha Rifaat Bereket’s servant conducted him into the selamlik, the reception-room of this cool Turkish house. Gabriel walked up and down over wide vistas of carpet lost m the gloom. His watch, which, idiotically, he still kept set to European time, pointed to the second hour of the afternoon. It was, therefore, the sacred domesuc hour, the hour of kef, the never-to-be-cncroachcd-on midday peace, in which every visit was a very serious piece of tactlessness. He had got here far too early. And the Agha, a stickler for the forms of old-Turkish etiquette, allowed him to wait.
Bagradian walked to and fro, from one end to the other of this almost empty apartment, in which, besides two long divans, there were only braziers and a htde table for cups. He jusufied his discourtesy to himself. — There’s something brew- ing, I don’t quite know what it is, but 1 haven’t a minute to waste till I get it clear. — ^Rifaat Bereket had been a friend of the house of Bagradian from its origins, even in the palmy days of old Aveds. Some of Gabriel’s pleasantest, most re- spectful memories centred upon him. He had called on him twice since coming to stay in Yoghonoluk. The Agha had
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not only helped him to make purchases, but frmn time to time would send him agents with offers, at absurdly low prices, o£ rare finds for his collection of antiques.
The master of the house, who entered noiselessly on thin slippers made of goatskin, found Gabriel talking to himself. The Agha Rifaat Bereket, over seventy, with a white goat- beard and thin features, half-shut eyes, and small, shimmering hands, wore a yellow scarf around his fez. It was the emblem of the Moslem who performs his rchgious duties more exaedy and regularly than the many. This old man’s httle hands waved in ceremonious welcome; they touched his heart, his mouth, his forehead. Gabriel was equally ceremonious. No impatience would have seemed to tighten his nerves. The Agha came nearer and stretched forth his right hand towards his visitor’s heart, so that his finger-tips just rested on Ga- briel’s chest. This was the “heart-felt contact,’’ the closest form of personal sympathy and mysdc usage, which pious men of a certain order of dervishes have adopted. The small white hand gleamed whiter still in the pleasant twilight of the selamlik. Gabriel fancied this hand a face, even perhaps more sensitive and delicate than the actual one.
“Friend, and son of my friend’’ — the long-drawn emphasis of this was still a part of the ceremony of welcome — “your visiting-card has already come to me as a pleasantly unex- pected gift. Now your presence itself brightens the day for me.’’ Gabriel, who knew his manners, found the right for- mula for reply.
“My deceased parents very soon left me alone. But in you I find a living witness of their memory and fond atta chment . How happy am I to possess in you a second father.’’
“I am in your debt.” The old man led his guest to the divan. “Today you honour me for the third time. It has long been my undischarged duty to await you as a visitor in your house. But you see in me an old and infirm man. The ro^ to Yoghonoluk is bad and long. And, besides, a long and urgent
34
journey lies before me for which 1 must spare my limbs. For- give me^ therefore.”
This ended the ritual of reception. They sat down. A bc^ brought coffee and cigarettes. They sipp^ and smoked in silence. Custom ordained that this young visitor must wait for the old man to give him an opening to direct the conver- sation as he desired. But the Agha did not yet seem inclined to emerge out of his own twiht world into any reality of the day. He signed to his serving-boy, who handed the master a small leather case, which he held in readiness. Rifaat Bereket pressed a spring, and the case flew open; his thin, old fingers stroked the satin, which embedded two ancient coins, one silver, the other gold.
“You are a very learned man, who has studied at the Paris university, a deapherer and knower of inscriptions. I am only an uneducated lover of antiquity, who could never vie with you. But in die last few days I have had these trifles prepared as a gift for you. The one, the silver coin, was struck a thou- sand years ago by that Armenian king whose name resembles that of your family, Ashod Bagrathuni. It comes from the neighbourhood of Lake Van, and they are rarely found. The other, the gold, is of Hellenic origin. You can decipher the profound and beautiful inscription, even without a magnifying- glass:
“ ‘To the inexplicable, in us and above us.’ ”
Gabriel Bagradian rose to take dv* gift. “You shame mi^ Father. Really I do not know how to thank you. We have always been proud of bearing a similar-sounding name. How plastic the head is! A real Armenian head. And one should wear the Greek com round one’s neck as an admonition. ‘To the inexplicable, in us and above us.’ What philosophers those must have been who paid their way in coins like these. How low we have sunk!”
The Agha nodded, pleased indeed with so conservadve a ■enument. ‘Tou are right. How low we have sunk I”
35
Gabriel laid the coins back on the satin. But it would have been impobte too soon to change the subject o£ the gift. “I would beg you to choose yourself a present in exchange from among my collection of antiques. But I know that your belief forbids you to set up any image that casts a shadow.”
On this point the old man hngered with unmistakable sat^ isf action. “Yes, and for that very reason you Europeans de- spise our holy Koran. Is there not supreme insight concealed in this law, which forbids all statues that cast shadows? The imitation of the Creator and His creation is the first begin- ning of that wild pride in men which leads on to destruction.”
“These times and this war seem to show us that your prophet was in the right, Agha.”
This conversational bridge extended its curve towards the Agha. He began to cross it. “Yes, so it is. Man, as the inso- lent imitator of God, as technician, falls into atheism. That is the deepest reason for this war into which the West has dragged us. To our misfortune. Since what have we to gain by it?”
Bagradian tested the next step. “And they have infected Turkey with their most dangerous pestilence — raaal hatred.”
Rifaat Bereket tilted his head a little backwards. His soft fingers were playing lisdessly with the beads of his amber rosary. It was as if these hands emitted a faint aureole of sanctity. “It is the worst of doctrines, to bid us seek our own faults in our neighbours.”
“God bless you! To seek our own faults in our neighbours. This doctrine has possession of all Europe. But today, alas, I have had to learn that it has its adepts even among Turks and Moslems.”
“To which Turks do you refer?” The Agha’s fingers sud- denly ceased to tell his beads. “Do you mean that absurd pack of imitators at Istanbul? And the imitators of those imitators? The apes in frock-coats and dinner-jackets? Those traitors, those atheists, who would anmhilate God’s umverse itself
^6
merely in order to get money and power? Those are neither Turks nor Moslems. They are mere empty rascals and money- grubbers.”
Gabriel lifted the tiny coffee cup, in which by now there was only thick sediment. An embarrassed gesture. “I adimt that years ago I sat together with these people, because I ex- pected good things from them. I took them for idealists, and, perhaps, in those days they really were so. Youth always be- lieves in everything new. But today, alas, I am forced to see the truth as you see it. Just now, in the hamam, I heard a talk which troubles me greatly. That is the reason why I visit you at this unseemly hour.”
The Agha’s perspicacity needed no closer indication. “Was this talk of the secret army order degrading Armemans to street-sweeping and service as porters?”
Gabriel Bagradian deciphered the flowery riddle of the carpet at his feet. “Even this morning I sull awaited orders to join my regiment. . . . Then there was also some talk of the town of Zeitun. Help me. What exaedy is happening? What has occurred?”
The amber beads were again flowing evenly through the Agha’s fingers. “As to Zeitun, I am well informed. What has happened there happens every day in the mountains. Some af- fair of thieving hordes, deserters and saptiehs. There were a few Armenian deserters. Before, nobody noticed such things.” His voice was more deliberate as he added: “But what are occurrences? They are only what interpretation makes of them.”
Gabriel seemed about to lose control. “That’s just it. In the solitude in which I live no news of it reached me. The basest interpretations are being attempted. What does the govern- ment intend?”
The sage put aside these indignant words with a weary movement of the hands. “I will tell you something, friend and son of my friend. A karmic destiny hovers over you, sine*: a
37
part of you belong to the Russian empire the other part o£ you to us. The war has cleft you. You are dispersed among the nations. . . . Yet since, in this world, all things interpene- trate, we too are submitted to your destiny.”
“Would it not be better to do as we did in 1968 and strive to reconcile and adjust?”
“Rcconalc? That is no more than an empty word used by worldlings. On earth there is no rcconaliation. We live here in corruption and self-assertion.”
And, to confirm this view, the Agha, in prescribed sing- song, quoted a verse of the sixteenth sura: “And He created the earth diverse m colour; see, there is in this truly a sign, for those that can take warning.”
Gabriel, who could no longer sit qmet on the divan, stood up. The old man’s astonished eyes, reprimanding so arbitrary a movement, forced him to sit again.
“You wish to know the government’s intentions? I only know that the atheists in Istanbul need racial hatred for their purposes, since the deepest essence of all godlessncss is fear, and the sense of having lost the game. So that now, of every litde city, they make a sounding-box of rumours, to spread abroad their evil will. It is good you have come to me.”
Gabriel’s right hand tightened round the case vtdth the coins. “If it were only I . . . But, as you know, I am not alone. My brother Avetis died without issue, so that my thirteen-year-old son is the last of our family. Moreover, I have married a Frenchwoman, who must not be dragged into this calamity, which docs not concern her.”
The Agha dismissed this plea with some severity. “She be- longs to your nation, smee you have married her, and cannot be absolved from its karma.”
It would have been a vain attempt to explain to this con- firmed Oriental the feminine independence of the West. So Bagradian ignored this objection. “I should have sent my family abroad, or at least to Istanbul. But now th^ have
38
taken, away oar passports, and I can expect nothing good from the Kaim^am.”
The Turk placed his right hand on his guest’s knee. “I must seriously warn you not to go to Istanbul with your family, even if you should find the journey possible.”
“What do you mean? Why? In Istanbul I have friends of all kinds, even in government circles. There our business has its central office. My name is very well known there.”
The hand on Gabriel’s knee became heavier. “For that very reason— because you are so well known there— I would warn you against even a short stay in the capital”
“Because of the fighting in the Dardane ll es?”
“No. Not because of that.” The Agha’s face became in- scrutable. Before continuing, he listened to some inner voice. “No one can tell how far the government may go. But this much is certain — the great and respected among your people will be the first to suffer. And it is equally certain in such a case that arrests and accusations will be begun in the capital.”
“Do you speak by hearsay, or have you any certain grounds for your warning?”
The Agha let his amber beads vanish into his wide sleeve, “Yes, I have certain grounds.”
Now Gabriel could no longer control himself and sprang up. “What shall we do?”
“If I may advise you — go home to your house in Yogho-» noluk, stay there in peace, and wait. You could not have chosen a pleasanter place of sojourn for yourself and your family, in the circumstances.”
“In peace?” Gabriel cried out scornfully. “It is already a prison.”
Rifaat Bereket turned away his face, perturbed by this loud voice in the quiet selamlik. “You must not lose your self- control Forgive me if my candid words have wounded you. You have not the least reason for anxiety. Probably it will all vanish in sand. Nothing bad can happen in our vilayet, since,
39
God be praised, Djelal Bey is the Wali. He submits to no high-handed measures. Yet whatever is to come is there already, enfolded within itself, like bud, blossom, and fruit within the seed. What will happen to us has happened already in God.”
Riled by these flowery theological commonplaces, Bagradian, careless now of forms, paced up and down. “The most horrible thin g IS that there is nothing to hold on to — ^nothing to fight against.”
The Agha approached the distraught Gabriel, to hold his two hands firmly within his own. “Never forget, my friend, that the blasphemous knaves from your Committee are no more than a very small minority. Our people is a kindly people. If again and agam blood has been shed in anger, you yourselves are no less guilty of that than we. And then — there are enough men of God who live in the tekkehs, in the cloisters, and fight for the purity of the future within their holy circles of prayer. Either they win or we all perish. I must tell you, too, that my journey to Anatolia and Istanbul is to be made on behalf of the Armenians. I implore you to trust in God.”
The Agha’s httle hands were strong enough to pacify Gabriel. “You arc righ*^. I will do as you say. Best to creep back into Yoghonoluk and not stir again till the war is over.”
Still the Agha did not let go of his hands. “Promise me that at home you will say no word of all these things. After all, why should you? If all goes as before, you will only have frightened people unnecessarily. If any evil should come upon you, the fear of it will have been of no avail. You under- stand me — trust, and keep silence.”
And in taking leave he repeated urgently: “Trust, and keep silence. . . . You will not see me again for many months. But think that in all that time I shall be workmg for you. I received much kindness from your fathers. And now, in my age, God is permitting me to be grateful.”
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3
The Notables of Yoghonoluk
The ride home took some time, since Gabriel seldom galloped his horse and kept letting it slow down to its own pace. This also led to his straying ofl the shortest road and remaining on the highroad along the Orontes. Only when, beyond the clustered houses of Suedia and £1 Eskel, the far sea-line came into sight, did the rider start out of his dream and turn oS sharply northwards, into the valley of Armenian villages. He reached the road — if the rough cart-track could be called one — which linked the seven to one another, just as the long spring dusk was gathering.
Yoghonoluk was nearly in the centre. Therefore he had to ride through the southern villages, Wakef, Kheder Beg, Hadji Habibli, to reach home, which would scarcely be possible before darkness. But he was in no hurry.
In these hours the village streets round Musa Dagh were crowded. People all stood out in front of their doors. The gentleness of a Sunday evening brought them together. Bodies, eyes, voices, sought one another, to enhance, with family gossip and general complaints about the times, the pleasure of being alive. Sex and degrees of age made separate groups. Matrons stood eyeing each other askance, the young wives joyous in their Sunday best, the girls full of laughter. Their coin- ornaments tinkled. They displayed their magnificent teeth. Gabriel was struck by the numbers of able-bodied young men, fit for the army, but not yet called up. They joked and hughed as though no Enver Pasha existed for them. From
41
' vineyards and orchards came the nasal twangings of the tar, the Armenian guitar. A few ovcr-industrious men were jwet- paring their handiwork. The Turkish day ends with dusk, and so the Sabbath rest ends also. Settled, industrious men felt the urge to fuss over odd jobs before going to bed.
Instead of calling them by their Turkish names, it would have been possible to christen the villages by the handicraft which distinguished each. All planted grapes and fruit. Scarcely any, grain. But their fame was for skill in handicraft. Here was Hadji Habibli, the wood-workers’ village. Its men not only cut the best hardwood and bone combs, pipes, cigarette-holders, and such like objects for daily use, but could carve ivory crucifixes, madonnas, statues of the saints, which were sent as far as Aleppo, Damascus, Jerusalem. These carv- ings had their own style, achieved only in the shadow of Musa Dagh; they were not mere rough peasant handiwork. Wakef was the lace village. The delicate kerchiefs and cover- lets of its women found buyers even in Egypt, without the artists knowing that this was so, since their wares were sent only to the markets in Antioch, and that not more than twice a year. Of Azir and its silkworms we have spoken. The silk was spun in Kheder Beg. In the two largest villages, Bitias and Yoghonoluk, all these various crafts worked side by side. But Kebussiye, the most northern, isolated village, kept bees. The honey of Kebussiye, or so at least Bagradian considered, had not its equal anywhere on earth. The bees sucked from the innermost essence of Musa Dagh, from its magic dower of beauty, which set it apart from all the other melancholy peaks in the land. Why should it have been Musa Dagh which gushed forth such innumerable springs, most of whose waters fell, in long, cascading veils, to the sea? Why Musa Dagh, and not Turkish mountains, like Naulu Dagh and Jebd Akra? Truly it seemed as though, miraculously, the divine quality in water, offended in some unknown previous time by Mos> lems, the sons of the desert, had withdrawn from ofi these
42
arid, imploring heights to enrich with superabundance a Christian mountain. The flower-strewn meadows of its eastern slopes, the fat pasturage of its many-folded flanks, its lithe orchards of apricot, vine, and orange around its feet; its quiet, as of protectmg seraphim — all this seemed scarcely touched by the fall of man, under which, in rocky melancholy, the rest of Asia Minor mourns. It was as though, through some small negligence in the setting up of the divine order of the world — the good-natured indulgence of an archangel open to persuasion, and who loved his home — an afterglow, a reminiscent flavour of Paradise, had been allowed to linger on for ever in the lands around Musa Dagh. Here along the Syrian coast, and a little farther, in the country of four rivers, where experts in Bibhcal geography are so fond of locating the Garden of Eden.
It goes without saying that the seven villages round the mountain had retained their share of this benediction. They were not to be compared with the wretched hamlets which Gabriel had passed as he rode through the plain. Here there were no loam huts, which had not even the look of human- dwellings, but of caked deposits into which someone had bored a dark hole for living-room and stable, humans and beasts. Most of these houses were built of stone. Each con- tained several rooms. Little verandas ran round the walls. Walls and windows sparkled with cleanlmess. Only a few huts from the dark ages, observing the custom of the East, had no windows turned towards the street. As far as the dark shadows of Damlayik extended, sharp across the plain, so far this friendly prosperity was evident. Beyond these shadows began the desert. Here, wine, fruit, mulb«ry, terrace upon terrace; there the flat, monotonous fields of maize and cotton, revealing in places the naked steppe, as a beggar shows his skin through rags. But it was not only the blessmg of the mountain. Here, after half a century, the energy of old Avetis Bagradian had borne full fruit, the love of this one enterprising
43
man, who had concentrated such stormy energies on this, his strip of native earth, despite all the enticements of the world. That man’s grandson watched with astonished eyes this people invested in some strange beauty. The chattering groups became silent a few minutes before his approach; they turned towards the centre of the street and greeted him with loud evening salutations: “Ban mkun!” He believed — ^it may have been fancy — that he saw in their eyes a brief flicker of grati- tude, not towards him, but towards the ancient benefactor. Women and girls stood looking after him; the spindles in their hands twirled in and out, hke separate beings.
These people were no less foreign than the crowd that day in the bazaar. What had he to do with them — ^hc who a few months ago had gone out for drives into the Bois, attended Bergson’s lectures, talked of books, published articles on art in precious reviews? And yet, deep peace enveloped him from them. Because he had seen the threat of which they knew nothing, he felt some strange fathcrliness towards them. He bore a great load of care in his heart, he alone, and would keep It from them as long as he could. The old Agha Rifaat Bereket was no dreamer, even though he wrapped his shrewd- ness m flowery sayings. He was right. Stay in Yoghonoluk and await the event. Musa Dagh stood beyond the world. No storm would reach it, even if one should break.
A warm love of his people invaded Gabriel. May you long continue to rejoice; tomorrow, the day after . . .
And, from his horse, he raised his hand gravely m greeting.
In cool, starry darkness he chmbed the road through the park to the villa. He entered the big hall of his house. The old wrought-iron lamp hanging from its ceiling rejoiced his heart with Its pale light. In some incomprehensible cranny of con- sciousness It seemed hke his mother. Not that old lady who, in Paris, in a standardized Parisian flat, had welcomed him back from the lyc% with a peck, but the mildly silent mother
44
of days as impalpable as dreams. “Hokud madagh kes kurban” — ^had she redly ever spoken those Eastern words as she bent down over her sleeping child? “May I be as a sacrifice to your soul.”
There was only one other benediction from that primal age — the little lamp under the Madonna in the mche on the stairs. Everything else dated from the time of the young Avetis. And those, in so far at least as the hall was concerned, had been days of war and of the chase. Trophies and arms himg on the walls, a whole collection of ancient bedouin rifles, with very long barrels. That this sohtary master had been more than a man of one crude passion was proved by some magnifi* cent bits of furmture — chests, carpets, lustres, which he had brought back home with him from his travels, and which delighted Juliette.
As Gabriel absent-mindedly went upstairs, he scarcely heard the babel of voices from the rooms on the ground floor. The notables of Yoghonoluk were assembled. In his room he stood some time by the open window and stared, immobile, at the black silhouette of the Damlayik, which at that hour seemed twice its size. It was ten minutes before he rang for his valet, Missak, whom, on his brother’s death, he had taken into his service, along with Kristaphor, the steward, Hovhannes, the cook, and all the other house and outside staff.
Gabriel washed from head to foot and changed. Then he went into Stephan’s room. The boy was already in bed and so childishly fast asleep that not even the glare of an electric torch could wake him. The windows were open, and outside the masses of plane tree crowns rusded in some slow presenu- ment. Here, too, the black, living mass of Musa Dagh invaded the room. But now the crest of the mountain glowed against some gently shining depths, as though there had been no salt sea behind it, but a sea composed of the gleaming essence of eternity. Bagradian sat on a chair beside the bed. 'That morning the son had watched his father asleep. Now it was
45
the father who watched his son. But that was permitted
Stephan’s forehead (it was Gabriel’s forehead over again) shimmered translucent. Below it the shadows of closed eyes, like two rose leaves blown from outside on to his face. Even asleep, you could see how big these eyes were. The pointed, narrow nose was not his father’s; it was Juliette’s legacy, exotic. Stephan breathed quickly. The walls of his sleep en- cased a rushing life. His folded hands were pressed against his body, as though he had to keep tight hold of reins or gal- loping dreams might run away with him.
The son’s sleep became restless. The father did not move. He drew his son’s face into himself. Did he fear for Stephan? He could not teU. No thoughts were in him. At last he stood up, unable, as he did so, to stifle a sigh, so depressed he felt. As he fumbled his way out, he bumped a table. The dark intensified the short noise. Gabrid stood sail. He was afraid he had waked Stephan. A boy’s drowsy voice in the dark murmured: “Who’s that . . . Dad, is it you?’’
At once his breathing became quiet again. Gabriel, who had switched off the electric torch, after a while switched it on Again, bhnding its litde light with his hand. The beam caught the table, on which lay drawings. Stephan had already got to work and begun a sketch of Musa Dagh, as his father suggested. A hesitant sketcL Avakian’s many red pencil- corrections intersected the hnes.
Bagradian did not at first remember the stimulus he had given his son, when they met that morning. Then he recol- lected the stormy eagerness with which his son had sought and tried to persuade him. The uncertain sketch had become a symbol.
The reception-room of the villa led out into a wide room, which opened into the hall. It was barely furnished and used only as an anteroom. Old Avetis had built his residence with a view to numerous descendants, so that neither the solitary
46
hunter nor this small family, now remaining^ could use more than a few of the rooms. An oil lamp, screwed down to the floor, lit this bare anteroom. Gabriel stopped for an instant and listened to the voices next door. He heard Juliette laugh. So she was pleased, then, with the admiration of the Armenian villagers in there. Something gained.
Old Dr. Bedros Altouni was just opening the door on his way out. He lit the candle in his lantern and took up his leather bag, which stood on a chair. Altouni only noticed his host when Bagradian called to hi m softly: “Hairik Bedros” — Bedros, litde Father. The doctor started. He was a small, shrivelled man with an untidy goatee, a survival of those Armenians who, unlike the younger generation, seemed to bear on their shoulders the whole load of a persecuted race. In his youth, as Avetis Bagradian’s protege and at his expense, he had studied medicine in Vienna and seen the world. In those days the benefactor of Yoghonoluk had cherished vast projects, which even included the building of a hospital. But he had gone no further than to install the district doctor, though this was much, considering the general state of affairs. Of all living people Gabriel had known this old doctor longest, this “hekim” who had brought him into the world. He felt tenderly respectful towards him, another legacy of his feelmgs as a child. Dr. Altoum was struggling into a rough serge over- coat, which looked as though it might have been a relic of his student days in Vienna.
“I couldn’t wait any longer for you, my child. . . . Wdl, what did you manage to get out of the Hukiimet?”
Gabriel glanced at the shrivelled litde face. Everything in this old man was angular — his movements, his voice, even the occasional sharpness of what he said. He had been sharpened, inside and out. The road from Yoghonoluk to the vrood- carvers’ village on the one side, the beekeepers’ village on the other, seemed damnably long when you had to travel it several times a week on the hard back of a donkey. Gabriel recognized
47
the eternal leather bag in which, besides sticking-plaster, thermometer, surgical instruments, and a German medical handbook dated 1875, there was only a pair of antediluvian obstetrical forceps. The sight of this medical bag made him swallow down an impulse to confide his experiences in Antioch.
“Nothing special,” he answered, dismissing it.
Altouni fastened the lantern to his belt and buckled it. “I’ve had to renew my teskere at least seven times in my life. They take them away to get the tax which you’ve got to pay on every new one. It’s an old game. But they won’t get any more out of me. I shan’t need any more passports in this world.” And he added caustically: “Not that I even needed the others. It’s forty years now since I moved out of here.”
Bagradian turned his head to the door. “What sort of a people are we, who submit without a murmur to everything?”
“Submit?” The doctor seemed to relish the word. “You young people don’t know what submitting means. You’ve grown up in very different times.”
But Gabriel stuck to his question: “What sort of people are we?”
“My dear child, you’ve lived all your life in Europe. And I should have, too, if only I’d stopped in Vienna. It was my great misfortune I ever left it. I might have become some- body. But you see, your grandfiither was as big a fool as your brother, and he wouldn’t so much as hear of an outside world. I had to sign a promise to come back. It was my misfortune. It would have been better if he’d never sent me away.”
“One can’t always go on livmg as a foreigner.” The Parisian Gabriel felt surprised at his own words.
Altouni laughed harshly. “And here — can one live here? With uncertainty always in the background? I suppose you fancied it all very different.”
Suddenly the thought came to Bagradian: “We shall at least have to do something to defend ourselves.”
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Altoiuii set down his bag on the chair again. “Curse iti What arc we talking about? You’re dragging the old stories out of me again. I’m a doctor, and I’ve never believed par- ticularly in ^d. And yet, at one time, I was always having arguments with Hun about it. You can be a Russian, or a Turk, or a Hottentot, or God krw)ws what— but to be an Armenian — ^why it’s impossible.”
He seemed to jerk himself back from the edge of a gulf to which he had strayed. “That’s enough. Let’s leave all that. I am the hekun. lliat’s all that matters to me. And I’ve just been called away from this pleasant company to a woman in labour. You see, we sull keep putting Armenian children into the world. It’s crazy.”
Grimly he seized his leather bag. This talk on the threshold, which had gone to the roots of the matter, seemed to have riled him. “And you? What’s wrong with you? You’ve got a very beautiful wife, a clever son, no worries, all the money you want— what more do you need? You live your lifel Don’t bother yourself with all this filth. Whenever the Turks have a war, they leave us in peace — ^wc’ve always known that. And after the war you’ll go back to Paris and forget all about us and Musa Dagh.”
Gabriel Bagradian smiled as though he were not taking his own question seriously.
“And suppose they don’t leave us in peace, litde Father?”
Gabkiei. stopped an instant on the threshold of the big reception-room. About a dozen people were assembled. Three elderly women sat together round a little table, in silence, with the tutor keeping them company, presumably at Juliette’s orders. But even he seemed to take no trouble to get them to talk. One of these matrons. Dr. Altouni's wife, was also a sur- vival of Gabriel’s childhood. Her name was Maink Antaram, little Mother Antaram. She wore black silk. Her hair, drawn back oflf her forehead, was not yet quite grey. Her wide bony
49
face had a look of daring in it. Even though she said nothing, she sat at her ease, allowing her inquisitive glances to travel freely about these people. The same could not be said of her neighbours, the wives of Harutiun Nokhudian, the pastor of Bitias, and of the village mayor, the Mukhtar of Yoghonoluk, Thomas Kebussyan. It was enough to look at them to see how embarrassed they felt, how much on their best behaviour, even though they had taken all their finery out of the wardrobe so as not to be shamed by the Frenchwoman.
Madame Kebussyan had the worst time, since she could not understand a word of French, though she was one of those who had been to school in the American mission at Marash. She blinked up at this extravagant candlelight, from lustres and chandeliers. Ah, Madame Bagradian had no need to economize' Where did she buy such thick wax candles? They must have come from Aleppo or Istanbul even. The Mukhtar Kebussyan might be the richest man in the district, but in his house, apart from petroleum, they only burned thin tallow candles and tapers of mutton-fat. And over there, next the piano, in tall candlesticks, there were even two painted candles, as in church. Wasn’t that going a bit too far?
The pastor’s wife, who was feeling equally ill at ease, asked herself this very same question. To her honour be it said that, in her case, no squinting envy coloured her feelings. The women’s hands were folded on their laps. This evening, in honour of the soiree, they had left their sewing at home. The wives of the pastor and the mukhtar eyed their husbands in astomshment at these two old men.
And indeed both gentle pastor and massive mukhtar had changed completely. They formed only a part of the mascuhne group around Juliette. (She was just then displaying the antiques which Gabriel had collected and set up in this room.) Among this group were the two schoolmasters, one of whom, Hapeth Shatakhian, had once spent a few weeks in Lausanne and ever since been conscious of the fact that he
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had an unusually good French accent. The other, Hrand Oskanian, was a dwarf, whose black hair grew very bw upon his forehead. As Gabriel entered the room, he heard the loud-voiced French of the proud Shatakhian: “But, Madame, we should be so grateful to you for bringing a ray of culture into our wilderness.”
That day Juliette had had an inner conflict to sustain. It had been so hard to decide in which clothes to receive her new fellow-countrymen. So far, on such occasions, she had always dressed very simply, since it had seemed to her both undigmfied and superfluous to attempt to dazzle “ignorant half-savages.” But even the last time she had noticed how the magic she could shed upon her guests was reflected back upon herself. So that today she had yielded to temptation and chosen her most elaborate evemng frock. (“Oh, well,” she had thought as she examined it, “it dates from last spring, and at home I shouldn’t dare show my nose in it.”) After some hesitation, since the frock itself was so resplendent, she had also decided to wear jewellery. The effect of this dehberate decision, of wbch she had at first been rather ashamed, sur- prised even her. It is pleasant enough to be a beautiful woman among many, but the feeling soon wears off. In lighted restaurants one is only a pretty member of a beauty chorus. But to be the unique, the ycUow-haircd chatelaine, among all these dark, glittcring-cyed Armemans — that surely was no everyday fate! It was an experience, brmging back the flush of youth, a glow to the lips, a hght of triumph to the eyes.
Gabriel found his wife surrounded by humble, admirers. When Juliette moved, he rccogmzcd again her “sparkhng step,” as he once had called it. Juliette, here in Yoghonoluk, seemed to have found her way into the hearts of his simple-minded compatriots, though in Europe she had often jibbed at the society of the most cultivated Armenians. And strangest of all ... In Beirut, overtaken by the war, without any chance to get back home, Gabriel had been
haunted by the fear that Juliette would be devoured with homesickness. France was fighting the worst batdes in her history. European newspapers seldom reached that corner of the world. One was entirely cut off, could find out noth- ing. Till now only one letter, dated November, had reached them, by many long detours. From Juhette's mother. Lucky that at least she had no brothers. Her marriage with a for- eigner had estranged her a httle from her family. Be that as it might, her present tranquil frivolity had come as a great surprise to Gabriel. She seldom seemed to think about home. In this fourteenth year of their married life the unhoped-for seemed to have taken place.
And indeed there was something esscnually new in her, as she put her arms round his neck. “At last, mon ami, I was just bcginnmg to be anxious.”
She began to be concerned with his hunger and thirst, almost to the point of exaggeration. But Gabriel had no tune to cat. He was surrounded. Naturally that morning’s official inspecuon had not passed without leaving some trace on people’s minds. The very fact that the Turkish authorities should have chosen a Sunday — ^the hour of high mass — ^for their visit, might itself be considered a hostile sign. An omen of intricate hostility.
But the Musa Dagh colony had been almost spared in the bloody events of 1896 and 1909. Yet such men as Kebussyan and the little pastor of Bitias were sharp-eared enough to be- come alert at the slightest suspiaous rusding. Only this evening-party and Juliette’s radiant presence had been enough to distract them from such troubling of their peace. Now, as, remembering his promise, Gabriel repeated the mudir’s words — that this was no more than a general war-time measure — they all, Kebussyan, Nokhudian, the schoolmasters, had of course long since answered the riddle themselves. They became light-heartedly optiimstic. The most hopeful of all was Shatakhian. He drew himself up to his full height. The Middle
52
Ages were over, he opined, addressing his gbwing words to Madame Bagradian. The sun of progress would rise, even over Turkey. This war was its crimson dawn. The Turkish govern- ment was under the surveillance of its allies. Shatakhian glanced expectantly at Juhettc. Had he not acclaimed prog- ress in faultless French? His hearers, in so far as they under- stood them, seemed to share his views. Only the silent Oskan- ian, the other teacher, smiled sarcastically. But he always did when friend Shatakhian let himself go and revelled in his own linguistic verbosity. Another voice made itself heard: “Never mind the Turks. Let’s talk about something more important.”
This had been said by Krikor, the apothecary, the most remarkable person in the room.
Krikor’s very garb denoted the fact that his character was subject to no change. All the other men, even the mukhtar, wore European dress (a tailor, back from London, lived in Yoghonoluk). Knkor had on a kind of light-blue Russian blouse, but made of the softest raw silk. His face, without a wrinkle in spite of the fact that he was sixty, with its white goatee and rather slanting eyes, was more that of a wise mandarin than an Armenian. He spoke in a high, but oddly hollow, voice, which sounded as though much learning had exhausted it. And in fact Apothecary i^ikor owned a library surely unequalled in all Syria — and was moreover himself a walking library, a man of encyclopaedic information, in one of the remotest valleys on earth. Be the subject the flora of Musa Dagh, desert geology, an cxunct species of bird, copper smelt- ing, meteorology, the fathers of the Church, fixed stars, cook- ing receipts, the Persian secret of extracting oil of roses — Krikor’s hollow voice could supply information, and that in a careless, casual manner, as though it were rather an im- pertinence to have asked him such a trivial question. There are many “know-alls” in the world. But Krikor’s genuine
5S
personality could not have shown itself by this alone. No, Krikor was like his library.
This was composed of only a few thousand volumes, most of which were written in languages which he himself was unable to read. Providence had set many obstacles m the way of his ruling passion. Such French and Armenian works as he possessed were the least interesting. But Krikor was more than learned, he was a bibliophile. The bibliophile is more enamoured of the very existence of a book than of its form and contents. He has no need to read it. (Is not all true love much the same.?) The apothecary was not a rich man. He could not afford to give expensive orders to book-sellers and antique shops in Istanbul or abroad. He could scarcely have paid the freightage. He had to take what came his way. The foundations of his hbrary, he insisted, had already been laid in his boyhood and his years of travel. Now he had agents and patrons in Anuoch, Alexandretta, Aleppo, Damas- cus, who from time to time sent him a parcel of books. What a red-letter day when they arrived! Whatever they might be —Arabic or Hebrew fohos, French novels, second-hand rub- bish — ^what did It matter, they were always so much printed paper. Krikor contained within himself that deep Armeman love of culture, the secret of all very ancient races which sur- vive the centuries. This queer, and most of it unread, library would scarcely have sufficed to supply the apothecary’s vast store of informauon. His own creative audacity filled in the gaps. Krikor completed his universe. Any question, from statistics to theology, he answered out of his plenitude of power. The innocent hairiness of poets glowed in his veins each time he threw out a few major scientific terms. That such a man had disciples goes without saying. Equally obvious that they were composed of the schoolmasters of all seven vil- lages. Apothecary l^ikor was the Socrates of Musa Dagh — a peripatetic who, usually in the night, took long walks with these, his disciples. Such walks offered nuuiy chances to in-
54
crease his followers’ respect He would point up at the starry sky.
“Hapcth Shatakhian, do you know the name of that red- dish star, up there?”— “Which? That one there? Isn’t that a planet?”— “Wrong, Schoolmaster. That star is called Alde- baran. And do you know what gives it that reddish tinge?” — “Well— perhaps our atmosphere.” — ^“Wrong, Teacher. The star Aldebaran is composed of molten, magnetic iron, and that’s what makes it look so red. Such at least is the opinion of the famous Camille Flammarion, as he writes in 1^ last letter to me.”
And that great astronomer’s letter was no mere empty fabrication. It existed in fact. Krikor, in the person of Camille Flammarion, had written the letter to himsdf. To be sure, he rarely sent himself such letters; only on the most solemn occasions. Usually the disciples heard nothing of them, since even Voltaire and Raffi, the great Armenian poet, had several times been inspired to exhaustive answers to Krikor’s ques- tions. Knkor was therefore a corresponding member of Olympus.
All the educated famihes in Musa Dagh took an annual holiday, if only to Aleppo or Marash, to the American, French, German missionary schools there, in which their education had been completed. Not a few among the village elders had returned from America to enjoy their earnings. Almost as war broke out, a batch of emigres had crossed the Atlantic. Only Krikor had remained where he was. It was rare for Kinri even to visit a neighbouring village. In his youth, he declared, his bodily eyes had seen enough wonders of the world. Occa- sionally he hinted at these journeyings, which had lost them- selves m remote distances, eastwards and westwards, but in which he had, on principle, taken no train. It is uncertain whether they were of the same nature as Flammarion’s letter. Nothing in Krikor’s tales savoured in the least of exaggeration or bragging. His accoimts were steeped in shrewd observa-
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tion and consistency, so that even such a man as Bagradian might not have suspected. But Krikor was always insisting on how litde need he saw for travel. All places were alike, since the outside world is contained in the mner. The sage sits, quiet as a spider, in the net which his mind has spun round the universe. So that, when the talk was of war or pohtics, of any burning question of the hour, Krikor would begin to get restless. Last arrogance of the mind! He despised all wars not contained in books. That was why Krikor had snubbed the political observations of the schoolteacher. And he concluded:
“I can’t make out why people must be for ever eyeing their neighbours. War, government orders, Wali, Kaimakam — let the Turks do as they please. If you don’t worry about them, they won’t worry about you. We have our own earth here. And it has distinguished admirers. If you please . .
With this Krikor introduced a young man to his host, a foreigner, who had ather been hidden by all the others or whom Gabriel had failed to notice. Krikor rolled out the young man’s sonorous name: “Gonzague Maris.”
This young man, to judge by his appearance, was a Euro- pean, or at least a distinctly Europeanized Levantine. His small black moustache, on a pale, highly alert face, looked as French as his name sounded. His most distinctive trait were the eyebrows, which forked upwards in a blunt angle. Krikor played herald to the foreigner: “Monsieur Gonzague Maris is a Greek.”
At once he improved on this, as though he were afraid of demeaning his guest: “Not a Turkish Greek, but a European.”
This stranger had very long eyelashes. He was smiling, and these feminine lashes were lowered almost over his eyes. “My father was Greek, my mother’s French. I’m an Ameri- can.”
The quiet, almost shy approach of this young stranger favourably impressed Bagradian. He shook his hand. “What
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extraordinary combination of circumstances — ^if you don’t mind my calling it that — brings an American with a French mother here— of all places?”
Gonzague smiled again, lowering his eyes. “It’s qmte simple. I had business for a few weeks m Alexandretta and got ill there. The doctor sent me up to the hills, to Beilan. Beilan didn’t suit me. ... In Alexandretta they told me so much about Musa Dagh that I felt inquisitive. It was a great surprise to me, in the God-forsaken East, to find such beauty, such cultured people, and such comfort as I’m enjoying with my host. Monsieur Knkor. I like everything strange. If Musa Dagh were in Europe, it’d be famous. Well, I’m glad it belongs only to you.”
The apothecary announced, in the hollow, indifferent voice which he used for giving important mfoimauon: “He’s a writer, and he’s going to work in my house.”
But Gonzague Mans seemed embarrassed. “I’m not a writer. I send an occasional article to an American newspaper. That’s all I do. I’m not even a real journalist.” Vaguely, with a gesture, he indicated that his scribbling was no more than an attempt to make money.
But Knkor would not let go of his victim, who must be used as an asset. “But you’re also an artist, a musician, a virtu- oso. Haven’t you given concerts?”
The young man’s hand was raised in self-defence: “That’s not quite right. Among other things I’ve been an accom- panist. One must try all kinds of things.” His eyes sought Juliette’s assistance.
She marvelled: “How small the world really is. How strange that I should have met a compatriot here. You’re half French.”
Thanks to Juliette’s verve the evening was a very successful one, not to be compared with former gatherings in Villa Bagradian. Most of these rustic Armenians lived Orientally, that is to say they foregathered only in church or in the
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street Visits were for state occasions. This cloistered domes- tiaty was the true cause of the women's uneasiness. But this evening they thawed, little by litdc. The pastor’s wife forgot to warn her husband, whose life she devoted her energies to prolonging, and whose sleep must therefore never be en- croached upon, that it was tune to go home. The mukhtar’s wife had come dose up to Juliette, to finger the silk of her dress. Maink Antaram, however, had suddenly vanished. Her husband had sent a small boy to fetch her, since he needed her hdp in a difficult delivery. It was one of her duties to chase away the old spey-women, who at every childbirth besieged a house to sell magic potions to the mother. In the course of decades Madame Altouni had become the doctor’s valued assistant and had ended by taking over most of his pracuce. “She’s better at it than I am,” he always said.
The host took longest to unbend. But little by little he grew convivial. He eyed discontentedly the long table laid with plates of cakes, tea and coffee cups, and two carafes of raki. He sprang to his feet. “My friends, we must have something better than this to drink.” He went down to the cellar witli Kristaphor and Missak to fetch up wine. The younger Avetis had laid down an ample store of the best years’ vintages. The steward had charge of them. It is true that the heady wines of Musa Dagh did not keep long. This may have been because they were not bottled, but kept, in accordance with old tradi- tion, in big scaled jars. It was a dark golden drink, very heady, similar to the wines which fiourish at Xara on Lebanon.
When they had filled their glasses, Bagradian rose to give a toast. It came out as uncertainly and ominously as cverythmg else he had said that evening: It was good that they should all be situng here, happy, tonight. Who could tell whether next time, or the time ^tcr that, they would suU be so care- free! But nobody must let such thoughts spoil his evening. They brought no good with them. . . .
This toast, or rather this veiled warning, Gabriel had given
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in Armenian. Juliette raised her glass and looked across at him. “I could understand every word you said. But why so gloomy, my dear?”
“I’m such a bad sptakcr,” he excused himself. “I should never have made a leader of the people.”
“Rafael Patkanian,” the apothecary interjected, turning to Juliette, “Patkanian was one of our greatest popqjidr leaders, a real inspirer of the Armenian people — ^and he was the worst speaker you could imagine. He stuttered worse than the young Demosthenes. As a young man I had the honour of knowing and hearing him speak. In Erivan.”
“You mean,” Gabriel laughed, “that everything’s possible.”
The heady wine was producing its effect. Tongues wagged. Only the schoolteacher Oskaman still kept the embittered, dignified silence due to himself and his importance. Nokhud- ian, the man of God, who carried his liquor poorly, defended his glass against the onslaughts of his spouse as she tried to take it away from him. He kept saying: “Why, woman, this is a feast day, isn’t it?”
As Gabriel opened a window for a glance at the night, he felt Juhette behind his back.
“Are you having a nice time?” she whispered.
He put his arm about her waist. “Whom have I to thank for it, if not you?” But his strained voice was unsuitcd to the loving words.
Wine brought the desire for song. Several people pointed out a young man, one of the teachers — a. disciple of Krikor. His name was Asayan. This wisp of a man was known to have an excellent voice and memory for Armenian songs. Asayan showed all the diffidence of amateurs. He couldn’t possibly sing without accompaniment, and his house was too far away to fetch a tar. Juliette had already thought of sendmg upstairs for her gramophone; to be sure most of the natives of Yoghonoluk already knew this triumph of technical skill. But it was Krikor who settled the matter, with a significant
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glance at his foreign guest: “We have a professional among us.”
It did not need too much persuasion to make Gonzague Maris sit down to the piano. “One of the twelve pianos in Syria,” announced Gabriel. “It was sent from Vienna for my mother a quarter of a century ago. But Kristaphor tells me that my brother Avetis had an expert in from Aleppo to tunc it and put it to rights. In the last weeks of his life he played a good deal. And I never even knew he was musical.”
Gonzague struck a few chords. But, as often happens, the professional could not find the right tune for this late hour, the unusual relaxation, the need these people felt to be amused. Carelessly, his head bent forward over the keys, he sat there, cigarette in mouth — but his fingers became more and more involved in macabre sounds. “Out of tune,” he murmured, “horribly out of tune,” and was perhaps for that reason unable to disentangle himself from howhng discords. A veil of bore- dom and faugue descended upon his face, which had looked so handsome. Bagradian quietly observed this face; it seemed no longer boyishly shy, but dissipated and disingenuous. He looked round for Juliette, who had pulled her chair nearer the piano. Her face was suddenly sagging and middle-aged. Softly she answered his questioning expression; “Headache.— It comes from this wine.”
Gonzague suddenly stopped, and shut down the piano-lid. “Please excuse me.”
Although, to let the others see he was musical, Shatakhian began in highly techmcal language to praise the foreigner’s playing, the evemng was really at an end. Pastor Nokhudian’s wife a few minutes later set the example for breaking up. To be sure they were to stay the night with friends in Yoghono- luk, but they must set out for Biuas at sunrise. The «ilen» Oskanian stayed on longest. When the others were already in the park, he turned back, to approach Juhette on his short
6o
kgs, so resolutely, so severely, that she felt a little scared. But he had only come to present her with a big and imposing manuscript roll, written in difierent coloured inks, in Ar- menian letters, before he vanished.
It was a passionate rhymed declaration of love.
Juliette awoke in the night to find Gabriel sitting bolt up- right at her bedside. He had hghted his candle and for some time must have been watching her asleep. She could distinctly feel that his eyes, not the candlelight, had awakened her.
He touched her arm. “1 didn’t mean to wake you. But I wanted you to wake up.”
She shook back her hair. Her face was amiable and re- freshed. “I shouldn’t have minded your waking me. You know that. You know I always like to talk in the night.”
“I’ve been thinking things out . . .” His voice was hesitant.
“And I’ve been having a simply marvellous sleep. So my headache can’t have come from your Armenian wine. It must have been brought on by the playing of my— comment dire? —my semKompatriot. What a coincidence! Fancy using Yoghonoluk as a spa, and Monsieur Knkor’s house as a hotel. But the funniest one of all was that litde black-haired school- teacher who gave me his rolled-up poem. And that other teacher, drawling through his nose. He seemed to think he was speaking such good French — ^and it sounded like a mixture of stones being ground and whining dogs. You Armemans have such a funny accent. Even you, mon amt, have it slighdy. Oh, well, I mustn’t be too critical! They’re really such nice people.”
“Poor people. Poor, poor people.”
Juliette had never observed the least sentimentality in Gabriel. All the greater, therefore, her astonishment. She looked across at him in silence. The candle behind his head made her unable to study his face; she could see only the upper
6i
half of his body, like a dark mass of carved stone. But Gabriel — since now, not only candlelight, but the first starry dawn- light fell upon Juhette — was in the presence of a tenderly radiant being. “Fourteen years in October. The greatest hap- piness in my life. And yet it was a bad mistake. I ought never to have dragged you away . . . thrust you into a foreign destmy.”
She felt for matches to light her own candle. But he snatched her hand and prevented it. So that again she heard him speak through the formless dark. “It would be best if you could escape. . . . We ought to divorce.”
A long silence. It simply did not occur to Juliette that this mad, incomprehensible suggestion had any serious reality. She shifted nearer him. “Have I hurt you, wounded your feel- ings, made you jealous?”
“You’ve never been so kind as you were tonight. It’s years since I’ve felt so much in love. . . . That makes it all the more horrible.”
He sat up more stiffly, so that the dark mass of his body looked stranger still. “Juhett^ you must take what I’m going to say seriously. Ter Haigasun will do whatever he can to get a divorce put through as fast as possible. And the Turkish authorities don’t put many obstacles in the way of that sort of thing. Then you’d be free, you’d have ceased to be an Ar- menian, you could get away from the ghastly fate of my peo- ple, in which I’ve involved you. We could go to Aleppo. There you can place yourself under the protecuon of a European con- sul, the American, or the Swiss, it doesn’t matter. And you’ll be safe, whatever happens here— or there. Stephan’ll go with you. You’ll be able to leave Turkey without difficulty. Of course I’ll make over my property and the income to you. . . .”
He had said all this with difficulty, but quickly, so that she should not interrupt. But Juliette’s face came close to his. “And are you really taking this madness seriously?"
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“If I’m still alive when it’s all over, I’ll come back to you.”
“But yesterday we were quietly discussing what was to hap- pen when you got called up. . .
“Yesterday? Yesterday was all an illusion. The world’s changed smee.”
“What’s changed? This busmess with the passports? We shall be given new ones. Why, you yourself said that in Antioch you heard nothing terrible.”
“I heard all kinds of disturbmg things — but that’s not the point. Perhaps, really, very little may have changed. But it always comes suddenly, like a desert storm. It’s in my bones. My ancestors in me, who suffered incredible things, can feel it. My whole body feels it. No, Juhette, you can’t understand! Nobody could understand who hasn’t been hated because of his race.”
Juliette jumped out of bed, sat down beside him, and took his hands. “You’re just like Stephan. Whenever he’s had a bad dream, he only half wakes up and can’t shake it off for the next hour. Why should we ourselves be in danger? What about all your Turkish friends, those charming, sensitive peo- pie we knew in Pans, who called so often? Have they sud- denly changed into cunning wild beasts? No. You Armenians have always been unjust to the Turks.”
“I’m not being unjust to them. There are some very fine people among them. After all, m the war I got to know the poor people, how good and patient they are. It isn’t their fault and it isn’t ours. But what difference does that make?”
The dawnlight had kept increasmg; the crest of Musa Dagh, beyond the windows, had begun to sharpen. Gabriel stared up at the mountain. “I’ve been thinkuig how odd it is that we should have come here in pursuit of Avetis, who kept escap- ing us. As though he’d meant to lure me to Yoghonoluk by his death. . . . But no — really it was you who insisted on coming here.”
It was getting chilly. Juliette’s bare feet were freezing. She
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did not want to argue. “Well — ^you seel It was just my ob- stinacy. That ought to calm you.”
But Gabncl’s thoughts were pursuing another object. “Yes- terday, for an instant, I felt unshakably convinced that I’d been brought here by some supernatural power, that God has something or other in store for me. My feeling really was un- shakable, though It only lasted an instant. The life I’ve been leading so far can’t have been right. It’s so pleasant to imagine oneself an exceptional personage — the only grain in a wheat sheaf, not subject to the law of gravity, but free to wander, without obligations. . . . And so, by His will, through Avetis, God brought me back here. . .
He stopped. For some time she had been peering into his indistinct face. “This is the fust time I’ve seen you afraid.”
Still he did not turn away his eyes from the sharpening crest of Musa Dagh. "Afraid.^ As I should be of anything supernatural. As a child I used sometimes to imagine a tiny star in the sky growing bigger and bigger, swelling up, com- ing nearer and nearer, and crushing the earth.”
He shook himself to regain his self-control. “Juliette. It’s not for me. It’s for you and Stephan.”
Then at last she got very angry. "I simply don’t believe in all your bogies. This is 1915. I’ve never met with anything in Turkey, or anywhere else, but friendship and civility. I’m not frightened of people. But, even suppose there should be dan- ger, do you really think I’d be such a low-down coward as to run away and leave you here to face iti* ... I couldn’t even do that if I’d stopped loving you.”
He said no more and shut his eyes. Juliette already wanted to get up quietly. But Gabriel let his head sink into her lap. His forehead was damp and cold. In a sudden burst the birds struck up their shrill dawn twitterings.
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The First Incident
4
This sudden weakness and surrender passed as quickly as it had come. Yet Gabriel was transformed since that day in Antioch. He, who for hours together had worked in his room, had now begun only to sleep at home. But then he was so ured out that he slept like a corpse. He did not say another word of the menace which had shaken him so profoundly that Sunday night. Juliette, too, avoided the subject. She was con- vinced that there was really nothing to fear. Already, in the course of their marriage, she had been through three or four such crises with Gabriel — days of depressed, apparently cause- less brooding, of heavy silences, which no affection served to dissipate. She knew it of old. At such times a wall grew up between them, and they were strangers, so unapproachable to each other that Juliette felt appalled at the childish reckless- ness which had let her join her destiny to this strange blood;
To be sure, in Pans things had been different for Juhette; Her own world, in which Gabriel was the foreigner, had sun- ported her like a higher power. In Yoghonoluk their posidons were reversed, and it is very easily understood that Juliette, for all her irony, should have striven to fortify in herself her feeling of being well disposed towards the “half<ivilized” peo- ple with whom she was living.
Gabriel must be left to his own devices. That painful talk in the night seemed no more to Juliette than one of the moods she already knew. For this Frenchwoman, grown up amid im- measurable security, could not imagine in the least what
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.Gabriel had meant by bs “desert storm.” Europe was now a battlefield. Even in Pans people were having to spend the night in cellars, takmg refuge from enemy aircraft. But here she lived amid paradisaic spring. A few more months of tbs would be delightful. Then, sooner or later, they would be sure to return to the Avenue Kleber — and meanwble Juliette’s days were fully, and very pleasandy, occupied. She had not the time to do much thinking. Her ambitions as a chatelaine were aroused. These servants must be trained to civilization. She soon found herself admiring the natural talents of Armenians; witbn a few weeks Hovhanncs, the cook, had developed into almost a cordon bleu. The butler, Missak, was so versatile that she had thoughts of taking bm back with her to Paris. Her two maids bade fair to become expert ladies’ maids. The viUa on the whole was in good condiuon, yet sharp feminine eyes could pick out many points where decay and ddapidation tbeatened. Workmen invaded the house. Their master, To- masian, undertook to do all the carpentering. But Tomasian must never be called a master-carpenter to bs face. He de- scribed himself as a “builder and contractor,” wore a heavy gold watch-chain across bs middle, hung with a big medabon of his late wife, that had been painted by the schoolteacher Oskanian, and never let slip a chance of tclhng people how bs two children, a son and a daughter, had been to school in Geneva. He was tediously thorough and msisted on engaging Juliette in endless discussions. In compensation, however, he succeeded in repairing any structural damage the house had sustamed and could even make certain additions and im- provements necessary to European habits. His men worked fast and with astonisbng quiet. By the beginning of April, Juliette was already proudly aware that here, on the remotest coast of Syria, she possessed a country house wbch, apart from its rather primitive lighting and samtation, could easily compare with any in Europe.
Her cbef delights were the rose garden and orchard. Here
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her inherited instincts found expression. Is there not in every Frenchman an inborn gardener and fruit-grower? But Armenians also are born gardeners, especially those round Musa Dagh. Knstaphor, the steward, was an expert. Juliette had never conceived of such fruit. No one, without having tasted them, can have any idea of the sweetness and juiciness of Armenian apricots. Even here, beyond the watershed of the Taurus, they retained all the savour of their home up along the shores of Lake Van, so rich in gardens. Juliette kept mak- ing the acquaintance of more and more new kinds of fruit, of flowers and vegetables of which she had never heard. She spent most time in pruning rose trees, on her head a sombrero, a vast pair of Kristaphor’s gardening-scissors in her hand. For such a rose-lover the dehghts of this could not have been equalled. Long beds of rose trees, shrub after shrub, tree after tree, not in stiflE European hnes, but a tangled tumult of scent and colour, on dark green waves.
Apothecary Knkor had promised that, if she would send him enough baskets of the real moschata damascena, he would extract for her a tiny vial of that attar, the receipt for which goes back through the centuries. And he told her a legend. A single drop of the genuine essence has such power that a corpse, on to whose hair it has been sprinkled, will still be perfumed with it at the Last Judgment, and so will influence the recording angel in his favour.
Sometimes Juliette went for rides with Stephan. Behind them rode a stable-boy, for whom she had designed pic- turesque livery. The instinct to embellish, to decorate, pos- sessed her completely. When she rode forth with Stephan and the decorative groom down the village street and across the church square of Yoghonoluk, she felt like the princess of this fairy-tale world. She sometimes thought of h^ mother and sister in Paris. What a much better time she was bavingl Wherever she went, she was greeted with the deepest obusanc^ even in the Mohammedan villages, which she
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touched oa her longer rides. It was obvious. Poor Gabriel had another of his crises de nerfs. She, Juliette, could see not the slightest agn of a changed world.
Gabriel Bagradian left the house early every morning, but no longer to explore Musa Dagh. He went trough the vil- lages. His hankerings after memories of his childhood had been replaced by more adult cravings. He was determined to get to know these people thoroughly, their way of lif^ their needs, their comings and goings.
At the same time he had sent a batch of letters to Istanbul, to Armeman friends in the Dashnakzagan party, and some to former friends among the Young Turks. He shrewdly hoped that, though the metropohtan censorship might prevent most of these from being delivered, some at least would get to their destination. The answers that came must decide the future. If everything was as usual in the capital, or if it were simply a case of general military control, he would, he had decided, break up this household and dare the journey to Istanbul, even without the necessary passport. If no answers came, or unfavourable ones, the old Agha’s fears must be well founded, his fate sealed, retreat cut off. Then there would remain only the hope that such a friend of Armenians as the Wall Djelal Bey might tolerate no “incidents” in his vilayet, and that a peasant community like this round Musa Dagh would be left unmolested by the firebrands, who, after all, congregate in big cities. In that case the house in Yoghonoluk might, as the Agha had said, be an ideal refuge.
In so far as the absence of marching-orders was mnrf rnrd, Bagradian fancied he could perceive the exact wor king s of the minds of the Turkish Hig^ Command. Why were Arme- nians being retired from the hnc and disarmed? Surely the Turks feared that defeat would mean that a strong minority, armed with aU the latest weapons, might be tempted to de- mand certain rights from the dominant race. But where there
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could be no soldiers, officers, who at the proper moment might snatch up the leadership of such a movement, were sdll less to be tolerated.
Valid as were all these reasons, Gabriel had not a second’s real peace. Yet now his unrest was no longer neurotically on edge, but fruitful and purposeful. He hiund in himself a me> ticulous sense of detail, so far known only in his scientific work. It was useful as a means of discovering exact relation* ships. He did not once ask himself to what object his new exertions were being directed or to whom he imagined they might be useful.
His first step was to investigate the village of Yoghonoluk. It was the largest village. In its communal house the municipal business of all seven villages was transacted, particularly their dealings with the authorities. Mukhtar Kebussyan was away. The village clerk let Gabriel m with many bows; a visit from the head of the fabulous Bagradian family was a great dis- tinction.
Was there a register? The clerk pointed ceremoniously to, the dusty shelves round the walls of his little office. Naturally there were lists. And not only had every inhabitant been, entered in the proper church register — ^these were not Kurds or nomads, but Christian folk — only a few years ago the mukhtars had taken an independent census. In 1909— after thej reaction against the Young Turks and the big massacre in Adana — Armenian party leaders had given orders for hsts to be taken in the villages. By a rough calculation there must be about seven thousand Christians. But if the Eilendi so desired, he could have the exact figures within a few days. Gabriel did so desire.
His next mquu’y-was more dchcate. How were those young men placed who were liable for military service? The village clerk had begun to squint a little, like his master, the muldh' tar. So far the order had concerned all able-bodied men be- tween twenty and thirty, though legally twenty-seven was the
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age-limit. About two hundred men in this whole village dis- trict had been affected. Just one hundred and fifty of these had paid theur bedel, the sum which bought them clear of the army — fifty Turkish pounds a head. The Effendi knew how thrifty people were in the villages. Most fathers began to save for the bedel the instant their sons were born ... to spare them the horrors of Turkish barrack-life. The Mukhtar of Yoghonoluk, in conjunction with the gendarmerie station, had to collect it as every batch received its marching-orders and pass it on to the Hukumet at Antioch.
"But how is it,” Bagradian asked, “that in a population of six thousand there should only be two hundred men fit for service?”
The answer did not come as a surprise. The Effendi must remember that this lack of able-bodied men was a legacy from the past, a consequence of the blood-letting to which, at least once every decade, the Armeman people was subjected. But that was only a euphenusm. Gabriel himself had seen over two hundred young men in the village streets. There were other ways of avoiding conscription, without having to pay the bedel. The pock-marked saptieh, Ah Nassif, was no doubt fully conversant with these other methods.
Bagradian came back to the point; “Well, then . . . Fifty people were sent to barracks in Antakiya. What’s happened to them?”
“Forty were kept for service.”
“And in which regiments, on what fronts, would they be serving?”
That was uncertain. It was weeks, months, now, since the families had had news of their sons. The reliability of the Turkish field-post was all too well known. Possibly they were in barracks in Aleppo, where General Jemal Pasha was re- conditioning his army.
“And docs nobody say in the villages that they’re going to
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use the Armenians as inshaat taburi, as depot soldiers?”
“They say all kinds of things m the villages.” The clerk looked rather uneasy as he answered.
Gabriel eyed the httle bookcase. A List of Householders stood next a copy of the Imperial Ottoman Boo\ of haws, and next that a pair of rusty scales for weighing letters. He turned suddenly: “What about deserters?”
The harassed village clerk tip-toed to the door, opened and shut it again mysteriously. Of course there were deserters, here as everywhere. Why shouldn’t Armenians desert, when Turks were setting them the example? How many? Fifteen to twenty. Yes! They’d been after them, too. A few days ago. A mixed platoon of saptiehs and regular infantry, led by a mulasim. They’d looked all over Musa Dagh. Made fools of themselves.
The pointed face of the blinking little man was suddenly craftily triumphant. “Fools of themselves, Effendi. You see, our lads know their own mountam.”
Ter Haigasun’s presbytery was the third best house in the church square of Yoghonoluk. Only the mukhtar’s house and the school buildings could compare with it. With its flat roof and single-stoned, flve-wmdowed fa9ade, it might have stood in any small town in the south of Italy. Ter Haigasun was Gregorian chief priest to the whole district. His province even included hamlets with mixed inhabitants and the small Armenian communities in such Turkish towns as Suedia and El Eskel. Ter Haigasun had studied in the seminary at Ejmiadzm, at the feet of the Catholicos, in whom all Arme- nian Christianity acclaimed its chief spiritual head, and was therefore in every way the chosen vicar of his district.
And Pastor Harutiun Nokhudian? How did a Protestant pastor suddenly come to inhabit such a remote Armenian vil- lage? The answer is that Syria and Anatolia contained a great
7 *
many Protestants and that the Evangelical church had those German and American missionaries who had cared so well for Armenian orphans and victims to thank for these proselytes. The worthy Nokhudian had been such an orphan, sent by these compassionate mission-folk to Dorpat in East Germany to study theology. But in everything that was not of strictly spiritual concern Nokhudian submitted to Ter Haigasun. In View of the constant danger besetting Armenians theological differences became of comparative unimportance, and Ter Haigasun’s spiritual leadership— he was, in the truest sense, a spiritual leader — remained uncontested and uncnticized.
An old man, the sacristan, led Gabriel into the priest’s study. A bare room with a wide carpet. Against the window a small writing-desk with, beside it, a tattered, straw-seated chair for visitors. Ter Haigasun stood up behind the desk and came round it a step nearer Bagradian. He could not have been .more than forty-eight, yet his beard had long grey streaks on cither side. His big eyes (Armenian eyes arc nearly always big; big with a thousand years of terror) had a mingled look of shy isolation and resolute knowledge of the world. The priest was wearing a black alpaca cassock with a hood that rose to a point over his head. His hands were hidden in wide sleeves, as though they were freezing even on this warm, spring day. Was it a shiver of humility'* Bagradian sat down carefully on the rickety straw-seated chair.
“I much regret the fact, reverend Father, that I am never able to greet you at my house.”
The priest cast down his eyes; both hands waved a gesture of apology. “I regret it even more than you, Effendi. But Sun- day evenmg is the only time we priests have free in the whole week.”
Gabriel looked about him. He had hoped in this presbytery study to End some documents and records. Nothing at all. Only a few written papers on the desk. “I can well believe that you carry a heavy burden.”
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Ter Haigasun did not deny it.
Gabriel tried to arrest the eyes o£ the priest. “Don’t you agree, Ter Haigasun, that these are not the days for social gatherings?”
A brief, attentive glance was his reply. “On the contrary, Effendi. This is the right time for people to come together.”
Gabriel at first said nothing in answer to these strange words with their double meaning. It was a while before he observed: “It really is surprising that hfe here should go on so calmly, and that nobody seems to be perturbed.”
Again the priest was sitting with downcast eyes, as though he were prepared to accept any scorn with humility.
“I was in Antioch a few days ago,” Gabriel very slowly ob- served, “where I heard a good deal.”
Ter Haigasun’s freezing hands slipped out of his sleeves. He joined his finger-tips. “The people in our villages only very seldom go to Antioch. And that is good. They live within their own boundaries and know httlc of things in the world out- side.”
"How long will they still be able to live at peace in their own boundaries. Ter Haigasun? . . . What will happen, for instance, if all our leaders and rich men in Istanbul get ar^ rested?”
“They have already been arrested,” the priest answered very softly. “For the last three days they have been in the prisons of Istanbul. And they are many, very many.”
So that Gabriel’s fate was sealed, the way to the capital blocked. Yet for the moment this major fact impressed him less than Ter Haigasun’s calm. He had no doubt that the news was reliable. The clergy, m spite of the liberal Dashnak- zagan, was still the one great power, the only real organization of the people. The priest was the first to learn, by quick and secret ways, of any new and dangerous factor, long before the newspapers of the capital had dared report it. Gabriel wanted to convmce himself that he really had understood.
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“Actually arrested? And who? . . .'Are you perfectly sure?”
“I’m certain.”
“And yet you, the head priest of seven large villages, keep so calm?”
“Excitement would be of no use and would probably only injure my people.”
“Have any priests been arrested^"
Ter Haigasun doubtless perceived the guile m this question. He nodded gravely. “Seven, so far. Among them Archbishop Hemayak and three highly placed prelates.”
For all this devastating news Gabriel craved a agarette. He was given one, and a light. “I ought to have come to see you before, Ter Haigasun. You have no idea how hard it has been to keep silence.”
“You did very well to keep silence. And we must continue to keep it.”
“Would it perhaps be better to prepare these people for what may happen?”
Ter Haigasun’s face, as though carved in wax, showed no emotion. “I can't tell what may happen. But I know the dan- gers of panic in a commumty.”
This Christian priest had spoken to almost the same effect as had Rifaat, the pious Moslem. But in Gabriel’s mind a lightning vision came and went; a huge dog. One of those stray mad curs that make all Turkey dangerous ground. An old man on a road, stopping in terror of the dog, swaying on his feet, and turning, with a sudden jerk, for flight-^ut already the rabid fangs are m his back. . . . Gabrid passed his hand across his forehead.
“Fear,” he said, “is the surest way of exciting our enemy to slaughter us. But isn’t it rather sinfcl, and perhaps even more dangerous, to keep the people ignorant of their fate? How bng can the secret be kept?”
Ter Haigasun seemed to be listemng into the distance. “The
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papers are still not allowed to report these things, so that foreign countries may not know anything of them. And in the spring there’s so much work to do that our people have no time and scarcely go anywhere. So that, with God’s help, we can be spared anxiety for some little while. But one day it will come. Sooner or later . . .”
“Will come.? How do you see it coming?’’
“I don’t see anything.”
“Our soldiers disarmed? Our leaders arrested?”
Ter Haigasun, in the same quiet voice, as though it gave him secret pleasure to torment both himself and his listener, concluded his story. “They have even arrested Vartkes, the bosom friend of Talaat and Enver. Some of them have been deported. They may be dead by now. All Armenian news- papers have been shut down, all Armenian shops and busi- nesses closed. And, as we sit here, there are fifteen innocent Armenian men hanging on fifteen gallows on the square be- fore the Seraskeriat.”
Bagradian rose so excitedly that he overturned the straw- seated chair. “What’s the real meaning of all this madness? Can you make it out?”
“I can only see that the government is planning such a stroke against our whole people as even Abdul Hamid never dared.”
Gabriel glared as angrily at Ter Haigasun, as though he had been faced with an enemy, a member of Imhad. “Are we really so helpless? Must we really hold out our heads to the noose in silence?”
“We are helpless. We must bow our heads. We may perhaps be allowed to cry out.”
This damned East, with its kismet, Bagradian thought in a flash of rage. At the same instant his consciousness was in- vaded by a thousand names, connexions, possibilities — poli- ticians, diplomats, his personal friends, Frenchmen, English- men, Germans, Scandinavians. They must arouse the whole
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worldl But how? The trap had closed. The mists returned. His words came out very subdued. “Europe won’t stand for it”
“You see it through foreign eyes.” Ter Haigasun’s passive calm was unendurable. “There are two Europes. The Germans need the Turkish government more than it needs them. And the others can’t help us.”
Gabriel stared at the priest, whose alert cameo-like face nothing could disturb. “You arc the spiritual father of thou- sands of souls” — Bagradian’s voice had almost a mditary sharp- ness — “and your whole skill consists in the ability to withhold the truth from people, just as we hide it from children, or the old, to spare them. Is that all you can do for your flock? What else can you do?”
The attack seemed to have pierced the priest to the quick. His hands on the table slowly clenched. His chin sank on to his chest.
“I pray . . .” Ter Haigasun whispered, as though ashamed of letting be seen by a stranger the spiritual struggle which day by day he waged with God for the safety of his flock Per- haps this grandson of Avetis Bagradian was a freethinker, a scoffer. But Gabriel paced the room, breathing heavily. He struck the wall with the flat of his hand, suddenly, so hard that plaster came flaking down. “Pray then, Ter Haigasun” — and still hkc an officer giving an order — “pray . . . But God has to be reinforced.”
The first incident which revealed these secret happenings to Yoghonoluk occurred that very same day. It was a warm, cloudy day in April.
Gabriel, at Stephan’s request, had had a few roughly car- pentered gymnasium fittings set up in the park. Stephan was naturally athletic. His father often joined his exercises. Shoot- ing at the target was their favourite, though Juliette, to be sure, preferred croquet. Today, immediately after lunch, at which
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Gabriel had still not said a word, Avakian, Stephan, and his father went out to the range set up outside the park enclosure on a little woody hillock of Musa Dagh. There Gabriel had had a transverse gully, about fifty feet long, cleared of its undergrowth. Under a high oak there was a lymg-board wedged down into the soil, from which to aim at tlie target fixed to a tree at the farther end of the gully. Avetis had left his brother well supplied with arms — a box of eight hunting- rifles of various patterns, two Mauser infantry rifles, and a full supply of ammunition.
Gabriel was a fairly good shot, but for five cartridges he got only one bull’s eye. The very short-sighted Avakian kept clear of the contest, so as not to put too hard a strain on his pupil’s respect. But Stephan proved a crack shot, since, of seven cartridges fired out of the smallest of the hunting-rifles, six pierced the playing-card which served as bull’s eye to the target, and four hit the face of the figure. It excited Stephan greatly to beat his father. He would have liked to go on shoot- ing till the evening, had Gabriel not suddenly broken off: “That’s enough.”
Gabriel’s state of mind was one he had never before expe- rienced. He could not think of anything quite like it. He felt insipid. His tongue was dry and heavy m his mouth. His hands and feet were cold. All the blood seemed to have left his head. But these were the mere outward signs of some change at the very centre of his being. “I don’t feel ill,” he re- flected, having waited some time to see what would happen. “All 1 feel IS that I’d like to get out of my skin, strip oS my body.” At the same instant came the senseless longing to run away, far away from this, no matter where. “Let’s go for a short walk together,” he decided. He did not want to be left alone. If they left him, he would have to walk on and on m short, quick steps, farther and farther, and never turn round till he had walked right out of the world.
Avakian undertook to carry the rifles back to the house.
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The son and father left the park and went down the road to Yoghonoluk, not ten minutes’ walk. Suddenly Gabriel felt like a very old man, his body so heavy that he leant on Stephan. They could hear the noisy buzz of voices even be- fore they came into the church square.
Armenians, in contrast to Arabs and the other clamorous races of the East, are quietly reticent m public. Their anaent destiny in itself is enough to inhibit their taking part in noisy gatherings, or themselves producing them. But here and now about three hundred villagers had collected in a wide half- circle, besieging the church. Among these men and women, peasants and craftsmen, there were several who emitted long, hoarse objurgations and shook their fists. No doubt these curses were aimed at the saptiehs, whose shabby lambskin busbies rose above the heads of the crowd. Apparently these protectors of law and order were trying to clear a space before the church, so as to leave the steps and entrance free. Gabriel seized Stephan’s hand and forced a way through the shoal of people. At first they saw only a tall, ragged fellow, who had crowned his black cap with a straw wreath, and whose right hand waved the head of a sunflower, broken off short. This apparition, obeying some rhythm of its own, executed with deathly seriousness a dance of wearily thudding steps. But this was in no sense the dance of a drunkard; that was at once plain.
The crowd did not even notice this dancer, waving his sunflower-head. Thar eyes were set on another picture.
On the steps of the church four people squatted. A man, two young women, a little girl of twelve or thirteen. All four wae staring out into the distance with a dazed expression — their eyes seemed unaware of thar surroundings, of the excited crowd, the apothecary’s house immediately opposite.
The man, still young, with a thin, crazed-looking, unshaven face, wore a long, grey alpaca cassock, of the kind worn here by Protestant pastors. His soft straw hat had rolled down the
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steps. The ends of his trouser-legs were tattered. His broken boots, the thick coating of dust on his face and cloak, showed that he must have trudged for several days. The women, too, wore European dress, and not by any means the cheapest, as far as could be judged by their present state. The one sittmg beside the pastor — doubtless his wife — ^looked as though she might faint or go into convulsions at any minute, since sud- denly she fell backwards on to the steps and would have bumped her head against the stone had her husband not put out an arm to support her. This was the first, still strangely jerky movement of the group.
The other woman, still in her earliest youth, looked beau- tiful, even in such a plight. Her httle face was thin and hvid, but the eyes had in them a feverish shimmer of vitality; the full, soft lips were parted, gasping for air. She was in obvious pain, must be wounded or have met with an acadent, since her left arm, which looked contorted, hung in a sling. Fmally the child, a perky, sparrow-like httle creature, had on the striped smock worn by children in orphanages. This little girl stretched her feet convulsively out from under her frock, ob- viously concerned to touch nothing with them.
“Like a hurt animal,” Gabriel thought, “stretching its wounded paws away from its body.” And indeed the poor child’s feet looked very swollen, purple, and covered with open wounds. Only the dancer with the sunflower-head seemed sound of hmb and full of strength.
An older man came runmng across the square. Apparendy he had been called away from his work, since he still had on a blue apron. Stephan recognized Tomasian the builder, who had supervised the improvements in the villa. Young Stephan had often loitered round him inquisitively, and Tomasian had proudly told him of Aram, his son, a very respected man in the town of Zeitun, a pastor, and the head of the orp’nanage there. So this must be the son, thought Stephan. Old Tomasian stopped, with raised inquiring arms, in &ont of the group.
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Pastor Aram came back to his surroundings with di£Bculty, sprang to his feet with forced agility, and did his best to wear an appeasing smile, as though nothing very serious had hap- pened. The women, too, stood up, but not so easily, smce one had a broken arm and the other, it was apparent, expected a child. Only the little girl, in her striped orphanage smock, sat on, squinting suspiciously up at her fellow-sufferers. Impos- sible to make out the sense of their sudden questions and sounds of woe. But for an instant, as Pastor Aram embraced his father, he lost control. His head sagged on to the old man’s shoulder, and a short, hoarse sob of grief became fully audible. It came and went, and still the women did not speak. But It spread, like an electric shock, through the crowd. Whim- perings, sobs, loud clearings of the throat. Only oppressed and persecuted peoples are such good pain-conductors. What has befallen one has been done to all. Here, in the church square of Yoghonoluk, three hundred Armemans were shaken by a grief, the story of which they had not yet heard. Even Gabriel, the stranger, the Parisian, the cosmopolitan, who had long since overcome his origins — even he had to force down something which throttled him. He glanced surreptiuously at Stephan. The last tinge of colour had faded out of that crack marksman’s face, Juliette would have been starded, not only at her son’s pallor, but at the wild look of uncompre- hending horror in his eyes. She would have been scared to see her child look so Armenian.
Meanwhile Dr. Altouni had joined the group, as well as Antaram Altouni, the two schoolmasters, who had been called away from their classes, the mukhtar Kebussyan, and, last of all. Ter Haigasun, just back from a visit to Bitias, on his donkey. The priest called out a few words in Turkish to the saptieh. All Nassif. None of the crowd were to be let into the church. He, however, bundled the Tomasian family and the little orphan through the door. 'The doctor and his wife^ the teachers, and the mukhtar followed. The crowd and th^
8o
sunflower-dancer, who sank down on the steps ana went to sleep, remained in the square.
Ter Haigasun led the exhausted people into the sacristy, a big, light room containing a divan and some church benches. The sacristan was sent for wine and hot water. The doctor and his wife got to work at once. The girl with the broken arm — ^Iskuhi Tomasian, the pastor’s sister — was examined. So were the wounded feet of Sato, the little orphan whom Pastor Aram had brought from Zeitun.
Gabriel Bagradian stood apart, holding Stephan’s hand, a stranger — for the present at least. He listened to the confused questions, the bioken answers. Thus, bit by bit, he heard the disordered tale of Zeifdii, the tragic history of this town, of Pastor Aram, and of his flock.
Zeitun is the name of an ancient hill town on the northern slopes of the CiLcian Taurus range. Like the villages around Musa Dagh, it was almost entirely inhabited by its original Armenian population. Smee, however, it was a town of some importance, of about thirty thousand mhabitants, the Turkish government had garrisoned it with considerable numbers of troops and .saptiehs, officers and officials, with their families — as they did wherever it seemed necessary to keep non-Turks under surveillance. Only such people as Bagiadian, whose fives had been spent m Pans or some other capital in the West, could still have hoped for any reconciliation of op- posites, any stilling of a hatred in the blood, or “triumph of Justice,” under the Young Turkish banner. Gabriel had once been friends with a certain number of journalists and lawyers whom the revolution had helped into the saddle. In the days of conspiracy he had sat up all night, arguing with them till dawn in Montmartre cafes, with assurances of eternal friend- ship, messianic prophcc,es of the future, cxclunged between Turks and Armenians. In defence of a fatherland with which he had had very little to do, he, a married man, went to the
8i
vvar — a notion which had not even occurred to most of the Turkish patriots m Pans. And now? Their faces were soil in his mind; some dame, still not quite extinguished, of remi- niscent friendship made him ask himself: “What? Can such old friends be my mortal enemies?”
Zeitun was the crude answer. It should be pictured as a high, many-creviced rock, crowned by a savage-looking citadel, honeycombed with the streets of an ancient town. A haughtily repelling pyramid of ways piled one above the other, only its modern quarters spreading their tentacles a little way out into the plain. Zeitun had been a perpetual thorn in Turkish flesh. For the earth has both its holy places, its sites of pilgrimage, which frame the human mind to devotion, and its natural fortresses, redolent of hate and deflance, whose spirit is such as to rouse to seething-point the blood of an opposing racial fanaticism. In Zeitun such hate had its deflnite reasons. First, until far into the nineteenth century the city had governed itself. But more unpardonable still was the memory of its astounding conduct in the year 1896.
In those days the good Sultan Abdul Hamid had called into being the Hamidiyehs — predatory bands of nomads, robbers, convicts, let out of jail for the purpose — with their sole object the formation of a troop of valiants restlessly bent on provok- ing “incidents,” with which he hoped to stop the mouths of the Armenian reformers. Everywhere else these bands were distinguished for their successes — ^in Zeitun only did they en- counter bloody defeat instead of achieving what had been promised them, an enjoyable and remunerative massacre. Worse still, even the battalion of regulars hurried to their as- sistance was driven back with heavy losses out of the narrow streets. Not even the siege with full armament following this rout brought the least success. Zeitun remained impregnably rebellious. When at last European diplomacy intervened on behalf of these brave Armemans, and ambassadors to the Sub- lime Porte, which, spattered with dishonour, had no alterfi a.
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live, achieved full amnesty for Zeitun — the Turk set his teeth, abysmally humbled.
All mihtary races, not only the Ottoman, have encountered defeat at the hands of their own bnd and forgotten it. But to have been beaten by a race of merchants and craftsmen, peo- ple whose ideal had never been military — a race of bookworms — ^it was more than any soldierly people can forget. So that the new government, now that the old had been disposed of, still had old scores to pay off in Zeitun.
And what better chance of paying off old scores than the Great War? Martial law and a state of emergency were pro- claimed. Most young men of Zeitun were at the front or in distant barracks- Repeated house-to-house searches, in the earliest days of the war, had enurely disarmed such inhabit- ants as remained.
Only one thing was lacking: a pretext.
The mayor of Zeitun was a man named Nazareth Chaush. He was a typical Armenian mountaineer — haggard, bent, sal- low, with a drooping bushy moustache and a hooked nose. But he was aihng, no longer young, and had bng done his best to avoid election. He could scent the reek of future holocausts. The lines from his nostrils sharpened daily as he toiled up the steep hill to the Hukumet, to receive the latest orders of the Kaimakam. His hand, round a rough stick, was deformed by rheumatic knots. Nazareth Chaush was highly intelligent. He had seen at once that in future there could be only one policy — that of being on guard against provocation. Nothing should be allowed to cast any slur on the patriotic integrity of Arme* mans. All traps must be skilfully avoided. One was, and re- mained, a thoroughgoing Ottoman patriot. Not that Nazareth Chaush really bore any grudge against Turkey, nor did any other inhabitant of Zeitun. Turkey was the destiny of the race. It is futile to bicker with the earth on which one has to live, with the air one breathes. He cherished no childish dream of emancipation, since, after all, the choice lay between Tsar and
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Sultan and it was as hard to make as it was superfluous. He remained in agreement with the words which had achieved a certain celebrity with Armenians: “Better perish physically in Turkey than spiritually in Russia.” There was no third way.
A clearly defined line of conduct towards Turkish author!' ties was therefore laid down. The living example of their leader, Nazareth Chaush, forged iron discipline among the in* habitants of Zeitun. So far no longed-for “incident” had as- suaged the secret itch of the High Command. A medical board, eager for blood-letting, passed cripples and invahds for the army. Good! They reported for duty without a mur- mur. The Kaimakam imposed illegal taxes and war levies. Good! They were punctually supplied. This same Kaimakam used the most foolish pretexts for arranging victory celebra- tions and mass demonstrauons of patriotism. The townsfolk mustered in full force, their faces aglow with honest loyalty, to bawl the prescribed hymns and victorious anthems to the braying of Turkish army bands.
So nothing was to be done along such lines. But what mass- provocation had failed to achieve might yet be managed by petty tyranny. Suddenly the caf&, the bazaar, every street and square, the inns of Zeitun, became infested with strange Ar- menians, soon on gossiping terms at every corner, taking a hand at cards and dominoes, even worming their way mto private houses, to bemoan with peculiar acrimony this intoler- able and increasing Turkish oppression. Such grains of sedi- tion as they could gather hardly paid these spies’ personal ex- penses. The first winter of war descended without one “inci- dent” having been angled out of the still waters of Zeitun, though a certain exalted quarter urgently needed one. At last the Kaimakam decided to take over the part of agent provo- cateur.
It was Nazareth Chaush’s good fortune — or indeed, as things turned out, his bad — to have a very clumsy player to deal with. This Kaimakam was no blood-smeared tyrant, but a mediocre
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poxy official in the style of the old regime, who, on the one hand, wanted a quiet hfe, on the other, to "keep in” with his superiors. These superiors began with the Mutessarif of the sanjak of Marash, to which the kazah of Zeitun was subordi- nate. This Mutessarif was a very sharp-eyed individual, a dauntless member of Ittihad, resolute to enforce without com- punction all decisions of Enver and Talaat as to the fate of the “accursed people” — even against the orders of his superior, the Wah of Aleppo, Djelal Bey. The Mutessarif overwhelmed the Kaimakam with questionnaires, warnings, acrid repri- mands. So that the portly chief justice of Zeitun — ^who would far rather have lived at peace with Armenians — ^found that he must trump up grounds of complaint, if only against a single prominent personality. It is the essence of a good negative civil servant that, having no character of his own, he should mirror that of any temporary superior. The Kaimakam there- fore addressed himself to the mukhtar, Nazareth Chaush, whom daily he invited to come to see him, overwhelmed with cordial civiliues, and even offered the chance of a very good busmess deal with the government. Not only did Chaush turn up punctually whenever he was required, but, with the most innocent expression, made the most of these business-like in- ducements. Naturally such constant visits gave rise to more and more heart-felt conversations. The chief justice kept as- suring the mayor how passionately fond he was of Arme- nians. Chaush begged him earnestly not to exaggerate: all peo- ples had their faults, and not least his compatriots. It was for Armenians to win their position in the fatherland by the services they rendered in the war. What newspapers did the mukhtar read to get the true account of the situauon? Only the Tamn, the official Ottoman newspaper, answered Chaush. And, as for truth, these were the days of world-shaking mili- tary events — surely truth was one of the prohibited weapons. The Kaimakam, in his helpless simplicity, grew plainer. He began to abuse Ittdiad, the power behind the power. (Probably
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he meant what he was saying.) Nazareth Chaush was visibly horror-stricken. “They are great men, and great men always act for the best.”
The Kaimakam lost his temper at being laughed at. “And Enver Pasha P What do you think of the Enver, Mukhtar?”
“Enver Pasha is the greatest general of our ume. But what else can I think of him, EfEcndi?”
The Kaimakam began to bhnk, whine, and implore. “Mukh- tar, be frank with me. Have you heard the Russians are ad- vanang?”
“What are you saying, Efiendi? I don’t believe it. There’s nothing about it in the papers.”
“Well, I tell you they arc. Be frank, Mukhtar. Wouldn’t that be the solution?”
Nazareth Chaush interrupted, noisy with horror: “I warn you, Eifcndi. Such a highly placed man as you. Please say no more, in Heaven’s name. It sounds like high treason. But have no fear. Your word shall be buried within me.”
When such ruses had failed, open aggression could not be far off. Naturally, even in Zeitun, and in the wild country surrounding it, there were “elements.” Their numbers, the longer the war lasted, kept being increased from without. Be- sides Armenians there were at least an equal number of Mo- hammedans escaped from the barracks at Marash. The jagged mountain range, Ala Kaya, was a safe and pleasant retreat for deserters of all kinds, or so the rumour went in all the bar- racks. But these deserters were inoffensive: apart from the usual country pilferings, they harmed nobody, were even anxious not to cause trouble.
One day, however, a Turkish muleteer was attacked in the mountains, whether by deserters or others remained unknown. Some incredulous people even suggested that this lousy patriot had let himself be thrashed half to death for the baksheesh of the Imperial Ottoman government. In any case the man was discovered in a ditch, half unconscious. Here was the longed*
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for “incident.” Mudirs and petty officials began to wear a look of inscrutability, all saptiehs were ordered to patrol the streets of Zeitun m pairs, and this time Nazareth Chaush was commanded, not invited, to attend the Kaimakam.
Revoluuonary unrest, the Kaimakam mourned, seemed in- creasing to a most alarming extent. His superiors, in particular the Mutessarif of Marash, were demanding extra measures to deal with it. If he delayed any longer it would be all over with him. Therefore he counted implicitly on the help of his friend, Nazareth Chaush, so highly respected all over the dis- trict. It ought not to be difficult for the mukhtar, in the inter- ests of the whole Armenian people, to give up a few fire- brands and criminals; there must be a great many in the neighbourhood, even in the town itself. And here this clever man walked into the trap set by the stupid one. He ought to have said: “Effendi, I am at your orders and those of the Mutessarif. Command me, what I am to do.” Instead he made his first real blunder: “I know nothing of criminals or rev- olutionaries, Effendi.”
“So you can’t even tell me the place where you hide your rabble to molest honest Turks in full daylight?”
“Smce I know of no rabble, I am also unaware where it is to be found.”
“That’s a pity. But the worst of it is that you yourself, in the last few days, have received some of these scoundrelly traitors in your house.”
Nazareth Chaush raised gouty fingers to heaven and denied it. But he could not manage to sound very persuasive.
The Kaimakam had an inspiration, not born in the least of cunning, merely of his own inertia, which instinctively shunned anything troublesome: “I’ll tell you what, Mukhtar. I have a request. I’m really getting to loathe all these difficulties between us. I’m a peaceful man. I’m not a police-hound. You take all this business off my hands. I beg you to go to Marash. Speak to the Mutessarif. You’re the city elder, he’s the respon-
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able man. He’s got my report on what’s been happening here You two will soon find the right way to deal witWit.”
“Is this an order you’re giving me, Effendi?”
“I told you — It’s a personal request. You can refuse, but it would hurt me very much.”
“If I go to Marash, I shall be m danger.’’
The Kaimakam grew reassunngly benevolent. “Danger? Why? The road’s quite safe. I’ll give you the use of my own carriage and two saptiehs for a guard. And I’ll give you a letter of personal recommendation to the Mutessarif, which you can read before you go. If there’s anything else you want, I’ll let you have it.”
The wrinkled face of this Armenian mountaineer turned ashen-grey. He stood there as old and dilapidated as the weatherbeaten rocks of Zeitun itself. Desperately he sought some valid excuse. But his bps, under the overhanging mous- tache, could frame no more words. An unknown power lamed his will. He only nodded weakly, at last. Next day he took quiet leave of his family. A short journey. He would not be away more than a week. His eldest son went with him to the Kaimakam’s carriage. His swollen feet and hands made it hard to climb into it. The young man supported him. As Chaush set one foot on the step, he said in a low, casual voice, so as not to be overheard by the coachman- “Oglum, bir, daha gelmem.” My son, I shall not come back.
He was right. The Mutessarif of Marash made short work of Nazareth Chaush. In spite of his cordial letter of introduc- tion he was received as a criminal, whose crime however was kept secret from him, and finally, as an enemy to the state and member of a treasonable secret society, he was placed in the jail of Osmanieh. Since no further inquiries elicited any in- formation as to the secret orgamzation of an Armenian revolu- tionary movement, nor even as to deserters in Zeitun, he was condemned to the highest degree of the bastinado. After which corrosive acid was poured upon his bleedmg feet. This
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was too much for his failing body. He died after an hour of indescribable agony. A brass band of janizaries played outside the windows of the jail. Their drums and fifes were to drown the shrieks from his cell.
And not even this martyrdom brought the expected results. At first nothing happened. Only the grief, the sullen despera- tion, of these townsfolk became an almost physical miasma. A darkness of the human spint brooded upon this dark moun- tain town, stilling people’s breath like a black fog. It was March before at last two events gave the government its ex- cuse to fulfil Its intentions. The first of these was a shot fired out of a window. A pohce patrol in the Yeni Dunya quarter of the town, as it passed the house of the dead mukhtar, was fired upon, and one of them was slightly wounded. Instead of holding the usual inquiry, the Kaimakam declared at once that his life was in danger in Zeitun and, having sent tele- grams right and left, moved his residence to a barracks outside the town. This mode of procedure was entirely consonant with his character, slyly stupid, and anxious not to take trouble. At the same time, to protect the Mohammedan population, he gave orders for a “civil guard” to be armed — ^that is to say, a few quickly drummed up hooligans received, quite in the manner of Abdul Hamid, a green armlet each and a Mausa rifle. Worthy Turkish citizens in Zeitun, digmfied and law- abiding souls, were the first to lodge angry complaints against their “protectors.” They besieged the Kaimakam and de- manded the instant disbanding of their guardians. It availed them nothing. A paternal government was obstinately con- cerned for their security. At last the civil guard gave a good, clear pretext for the second incident, which brought matters to a head. In the afternoons, Armenian girls and women hked to frequent the Eski Bostan, a small public garden in the suburbs. Wide plane trees shaded a few benches. Children played about round the fountains, the women sewed and gds- siped on the scats. A sherbet-seller pushed his stand. This
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garden was suddenly invaded by the raggedest members of the civil guard. These panting vagabonds flung themselves on the Armenian women, held them, and began to strip off their clothes. For, no matter how intense the itch to slaughter the men of the accursed race, the Turks had always longed for their women, those soft-limbed, f ull-hpped creatures with alien eyes. Shrieks and children’s howls filled the air. But help came the next instant. A much stronger force of Armenian men, who, scenting evil, had crept out after the town’s protectors, thrashed them until they were lame, with bare fists, straps and cudgels, and took away their rifles and bayonets.
To their own disaster. Open rebellion against the stated This disarming of the civil guard by rebels furnished all the proof that was wanted. It could not be denied. That same evening the Kaimakam issued a list of names for arrest to be handed over by the muniapality. The men affected came together in desperate rage, swore not to separate, and took refuge, half an hour east of the town, in an old tekkeh, an abandoned cloister of pilgrims and dervishes. Some deserters on Ala Kaya and other points in the nearby mountains got wind of this and came down to join the fugitives. This little fortress contained about a hundred men.
The Mutessarif in Marash, the government agents in Istan- bul, had all they had planned for. The time for petty provoca- tions was over and a very efiecuve litdc rebellion well under way. Neutral and allied consuls should no longer be allowed to keep their eyes shut to Armenian lawlessness. Within two days military reinforcements had reached Zeitun — ^two pro- visional infantry companies of the line. The bashi, the major in command, laid siege at once. But — ^whether because he was a hero or merely a fool — ^when he rode forth, disdainful of any cover, on a plunging horse at the head of his men, towards the tekkeh, to subdue its garrison in this very frank and warlike manner, he and six of his men were shot down with well- aimed bullets. This was even more than had been desired!
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The major’s heroic death was broadcast at once, with a blare of trumpets, to all four corners of the empire. Ittihad worked feverishly to get the exact note required into the cries of in- dignation that arose. In about three days Zeitun had become an armed camp. A contingent of four battalions with two batteries had been summoned to clear out this httle nest of despairing fugitives. All this, moreover, at a moment when Jemal Pasha needed every man and every gun for his fourth army. In spite of this vast surrounding force a private was sent with a white flag to admonish the rebels to surrender. He received the classic answer: “Since we have to die, let it be fighting.”
But the surprising, the miraculous, thing was that they lived. For scarcely had the siege artillery dropped its fourth super- fluous shell against half-ruined walls when the order came from some mysterious quarter to cease fire. Were the few Moslems among the besieged a suflicient reason for such mis- placed humanity? The townsfolk of Zeitun did not suppose it— they saw in this constrictmg truce the omen of some more than usually gruesome evil. They had reason to do so. And m thar terror they sent a deputation to the Kaimakam, begging him that the valiant troops might free them of these cursed rebels as soon as possible. They had nothing to do with them. The Kaimakam moaned and sighed. It was too late now to see reason. All future decisions were in the hands of the com- mander of the occupying regiments. He himself was now no more than a tolerated cipher.
One radiant morning in March a terrifying rumour spread through the town. The besieged deserters, leaving their dead, whom they had however disfigured past recognition, had escaped from the fortress and disappeared into the mountains. Those Zatunlis who did not bcheve in miracles asked: How could a hundred tattered, highly suspicious-looking men have got through hnes of over four thousand trained soldiers? Ahd the questioners knew well what their question meant. The
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blow had already fallen by midday. The commandant and the Kaimakam called the whole town of Zeitun to account for the disappearance of this hundred. The profoundly treacherous Zeitunlis had, in some dcvihsh fashion, contrived to spirit the besieged garrison past sentries, through lines of peacefully slumbering Turkish troops. News of this crime had brought the Mutessarif in person, in his carriage, all the way from Marash. The munadirs, the drummers-up, passed with a dull rattle down all the streets. Strings of official messengers fol- lowed them, whose business it was to summon the elders and notables of Zeitun to “a conference on the situation with the Mutessarif and the commanding officer.” The summoned, fifty of the town’s most respected inhabitants, doctors, schoolteach- ers, priests, large shopkeepers, business men, appeared without delay at the place appointed, most of them still in their working clothes. Only a fev' of the most far-seeing had hidden any money about them. The “conference” consisted in this — ^that these elderly and highly respected atizens were brutally herded together on a barrack square by sergeants and counted like cattle. This had ended the matter, they were informed, and the very next day they were to set out along the Marash-Aleppo road, on their way to the Mesopotamian desert, to Deir ez Zor, to which they were to be “nugrated.” They stared at one an- other without a word. Not one of them had a stroke, not one of them wept. Half an hour ago they had been the chief citi- zens of a town; now, at one blow, they were degraded to al- most inanimate lumps of clay, livid of face, half bereft of will. The new mukhtar, their spokesman, begged almost voice- lessly for one favour: that their families, in the name of divine compassion, might at least be left in peace in Zeitun. Then they would meet their fate quiedy. The answer came with a crud sneer. Certainly not— the Armemans were already sufficiendy known, and nobody had any desire to separate the respected fathers of families from their nearest relatives. On the con- trary, the order was that all present should by tomorrow, an
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liour before sunrise, have handed in a written declaration of readiness to march, with all their relatives, -their goods and chattels, wives, sons, daughters, children of every age. Orders from Istanbul explicitly stated that the whole Armenian pop- ulation, to the last baby in arms, was to be evacuated. 2^itun had ceased to exist. From now on its name was to be Sultanieh, so that no memory might remain of a township which had dared open rebellion against the heroic Turkish people.
Next day, at the hour assigned, the first piteous convoy did in fact set out, beginning one of the cruellest tragedies that ever in recorded history has overwhelmed a whole people. Military guards followed the emigrants — ^it was suddenly evi- dent now that this vast force, summoned to reduce a hundred fugitives, had other minor, but all the more treacherous, duties assigned it. Every mormng now the same heart-rending pag- eant was staged. Those fifty chief families of the town were followed by fifty others, less well-to-do, and, as the exiles sank .in the social scale, their numbers increased. To be sure the vast* war zones along every European front were equally crowded with refugees. But, hard as was the fate of these homeless people, it was nothing compared with that of these poor towns- folk.
For many people it is depressing even to move house. A lost fragment of life always remains. To move to another town, settle m a foreign country, is for everyone a major decision. But, to be suddenly driven forth, within twenty-four hours, from one’s home, one’s work, the reward of years of steady industry. To become the helpless prey of hate. To be sent de- fenceless out on to Asiatic highroads, with several thousand miles of dust, stones, and morass before one. To know that one will never again find a decently human habitation, never again sit down to a proper table. Yet all this is nothing. To be more shackled than any convict. To be counted as outside the law, a vagabond, whom anyone has the right to kill unpun- ished. To be confined within a crawhng herd of sick people^
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a moving concentration-camp, in which no one is so much as allowed to ease his body without permission. — ^Who shall dare say he can measure the depths of anguish which invaded the minds of these people of Zeitun, in that long week between the setting out of the Hrst transport and the last! Even so young a man as the pastor Aram Tomasian, who, since he was not a native of Zeitun, had better prospects than all the others, became almost a wraith in those seven days.
Pastor Aram — ^he was called only by his Christian name — had for over a year been the pastor of the Protestant congrega- tion of Zeitun and head of the big orphanage. His appoint- ment, at scarcely thirty, to the directorship of that mstitution was due to the fact that the American missionaries in Marash had considered Aram their most promising pupil and hoped great things of him. They had even sent him with a stipend for three years to Geneva, to finish his studies there. His French, therefore, was fluent, his German and English both very good. The orphanage of the American missionaries was one of the most pleasing results of their civilizing work of fifty years. Its large, bright rooms gave shelter to over a hun- dred children. There was a school attached to it, also open to children from the town. A small farm surrounded the institute, so that the orphanage supplied its own goat’s milk, vegetables, and other provisions. Therefore, to be director of this orphan- age required not only scholastic ability, but sound, business- like common sense. Pastor Aram, attracted like most other young men by the thought of being independent, had em- braced his new duties with enthusiasm. He had spent a very happy and active year and was full of projects. He had mar- ried, in the previous spring, shortly before beginning his new duties, Hovsannah, an old flame, a girl from Marash, the daughter of a pastor of the first generation of the seminary there. Whereas most Armenian women are soft-limbed and not very tall, Hovsannah was tall and well-developed. She moved slowly, never had much to say, and often gave the
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impression of complete detachment from her surroundings. Iskuhi, however, had once suggested to her brother that Hov- sannah’s quietness had someumes a dash of malice and stub- bornness in it. It was said as a joke, and seemed to be an un* justified observation, since what really malicious and obstmate married woman would ever have had her sister-in-law to live with her? The relationship was peculiar in the case of the nineteen-year-old Iskuhi. Aram worshipped his young sister. In her ninth year, after their mother’s death, he had already fetched her away from Yoghonoluk to place her in the mis- sionary school in Marash. Later he sent her to Lausanne, where she spent a year in a finishing-school. The cost of this select ambition on his younger sister’s behalf he had paid by many cleverly contrived economics. He could not imagine hfc without Iskuhi. Hovsannah knew it and had herself proposed this menage a trots. The girl had been given a post as assist- ant teacher in the orphanage. She taught French. It was not surprising that Iskuhi should have inspired love, and not only in her brother. Apart from her magnificent eyes, the most beautiful thing about her was her mouth. Her deeply tinged lips had always a glistening, smiling sheen upon them, like her eyes, as though her mouth could see. The three had con- trived a pleasant life together, quite unlike the usual life around them. The pastor’s quarters were in the orphanage. Their bare look had soon vanished under Hovsannah’s hands, for she had a gift for decoration and a sharp instinct for beau- tiful things. She made excursions into the town and surround- ing villages to bargain with the Zeitun women for fine tapes- tries, wood-carvings, household gear, with which to enhven these rooms — a pursuit which took up weeks of her time. Iskuhi was fonder of books. Aram, Hovsannah, and Iskuhi lived for each other. This orphanage and its school were such worlds away from the rest of the town that the three flourish- ing people had scarcely noticed the oppressive atmosphere of Zeitun. The pastor’s Sunday sermons had expressed, until well
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on into March, a heartening cheerfulness, more redolent of the peaceful joys of his own existence than of any clear-sighted estimate of what the government might intend.
The blow almost stunned him. He saw his work all gone for nothing. But then he was seized with frenzied hope that the government would not dare close down the orphanage. Aram had soon pulled himself together. A word from Hovsan- nah, in the very first days of bamshment, gave him back his strength. Only at such a moment as this did the full meaning of the Christian priesthood become evident. Thus spoke the pastor’s daughter. Heartened by her admonishment. Pastor Aram began to put forth superhuman energy. He not only kept his church open day and night, to give spiritual comfort to groups of exiles as they departed — he went from house to house among his flock, from family to family, mingled with the sobbing people, helped them with every penny he pos- sessed, organized a certain order in the convoys, wrote cries for help to all the missions which lay along their route into exile, and carefully worded peutions to Turkish officials, wherever he considered them well disposed, begging letters and testi- monials; attempted to obtain delays, haggled with Turkish muleteers — in short did everythmg he could possibly have done in these grievous circumstances. Then, when he could do no more, could no longer console with the sufferings of the gospel, he would sit in silence, beside these people, dazed with grief, shut his eyes, close convulsive fingers, and cry aloud in his soul to Christ.
The town emptied from day to day. The roads to Marash filled with long serpentine convoys, whose marchers seemed unable to aovance. A watcher from the citadel of Zeitun might have seen them far into the mountains, and nothing could have aroused more horror in him than the creeping quiet of these hnes of death, rendered more piteous still by the shouts and laughter of the armed escort. Meanwhile the dying streets of Zeitun were reanimated by carrion birds, pilferers, profes-
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sional thieves, the dregs of the town, and robbers from the country round it. They infested the deserted houses and began in them a vigorous search for plunder. Carts and barrows truu' died through the streets, sumpter mules came clattering in. Carpets, clothes, bedsteads, heaps of linen, furniture, mirrors, were all piled up, in leisurely, undisturbed tranquillity, as though it were an ordinary, lawful house-moving. The author- ities did nothing to prevent it They even seemed to look upon such plunder as the natural reward of Turkish scum — always providing that the Armemans were made to go peace- fully into exile. The order that, of every craft, six representa- tives should remain in “Sultameh,” so that the drifting wreck of daily life might not be left entirely without its crew, had the ring of some barbaric fairy-tale. These lucky ones were not chosen by the authorities; the commune was ordered to elect them, a cunning intensification of punishment, since it in- flicted a new, acute, mental agony.
The fifth day had already dawned, and Pastor Aram had still received no summons. All that had so far happened was the visit of a Mohammedan mullah, a stranger, moreover, to Zeitun, who had come to demand the keys of the church. This Protestant church, as he courteously informed its pastor, was to be reconsecrated as a mosque, before evemng prayer. Yet Tomasian still clung to the hope that his orphanage would be left in peace. He ordered that, from now onwards, everyone was to keep indoors, nather teacher nor child to show him- self at the windows, and no loud word was to be spoken. The shutters were to be kept bolted all day, no lights were to be shown in the evening. A strained, death-like rigidity de- scended on this house, as a rule so alive. But it is just such mockeries of fate which provoke its onslaught. On the next day, the sixth, one of those official messengers who sped, hke angels of destruction, gruesomcly up and down the streets of Zeitun summoned the pastor instantly before the town- commandant.
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Aram iiet foith in his priestly gown. His prayer had been heard. Not a trace of fear or excitement ruffled his dignity. He came, quietly erect, mto the staff-officer’s presence. In the present case, unluckily, this bearmg of his was a great mis- take, since the bimbashi enjoyed the sight of tearful cringers. Then he was sometimes ready to wink, ameliorate, show him- self kindly and humane. But Aram’s certainty of manner stifled this benevolence at its source, since it was born of the ointrast between his greatness and the miserable writhings of worms.
"You are the Protestant pastor, Aram Tomasian, native of Yoghonoluk, near Alcxandretta?” The colonel growled this warrant of apprehension before he hurled himself on the victim. “You leave with the last convoy, tomorrow morning. In the direction Marash- Aleppo. You understand?”
“I’m ready.”
“I didn’t ask if you were ready. . . . Your wife and other relatives to accompany you. You are to take only such bag- gage as you can carry. You will receive, as far as it is possible to supply it, a daily ration of one hundred direms of bread. You are permitted to purchase extra supplies. Any attempt to leave your column of march without permission will be pun- ished by the officer in charge; with death, in the case of a second infringement. The use of vehicles is forbidden.”
“My wife is expecting a child,” said Aram quietly.
This seemed to amuse the bimbashi. “You ought to have thought of that before.” He glanced again at his papers. “The pupils of your orphanage, as Armeman children, are natu- rally not exempt from transportauon. They are to hold them- selves in readiness punctually, and in full muster — they and the whole staff of your institution.”
Pastor Aram retreated a step. “May I ask if any provision is to be made for these hundred innocent children? A great many of them arc under ten years of age, and have never undertaken a long march. And children need milk.”
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“It is not your place to ask questions, Pastorl" the colonel touted. “You’re here to take my orders. For the last week you’ve been living in a military area.”
Had this bellow made the pastor break down in terror, the bimbashi, from superlative heights, might perhaps have con- ceded him his goats. But Aram continued, quietly stubborn: “I shall therefore arrange for our herd of goats to be driven out, so that the children may get their milk as usual.”
“You’ll keep your insolent mouth shut. Pastor, and knuckle under.”
“Moreover, Eifendi, I make you personally responsible for the orphanage building, which is the inahenable property of American citizens, under the protection of their ambassador.”
At first the bimbashi could find no answer. This threat seemed to have had its effect. Such gods subdue their tinny voices as soon as higher gods come into sight. After a long and, for a colonel, rather disastrous pause, he spluttered; “Do you know that I can tread on you hke an insect? I have only to breathe, and you never so much as existed.”
“I won’t prevent you,” said Pastor Aram, and meant what he said, for a monstrous longing for death had overwhelmed him.
Later, when Aram, Hovsannah, and Iskuhi were asked which moment of their exile had seemed the worst, they all three answered: “The minutes when we were waiting for our transport to get under way.” It was an instant in which their actual, concrete wretchedness seemed only half as acute as a kind of heavy desolation, a primitive horror within their blood, some awakened memory of a dim primal age before security of domiale had been won as a legal right, so that now this mass of a thousand people, dishonoured, helpless, fused into one, not only felt the find loss of all its possessions, the onslaught of the perils of life, but became aware beneath all this of Itself as a collective entity, a people robbed of the rewards of centuries of efiort, the cultural fruits of a thoU'
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sand years. Pastor Aram and the two women had fallen a prey to this general, unfathomable melancholy.
An overcast day of low-hung clouds, whicii veiled the fa- miliar heads of the moiuitains of Zeitun: far better than a sunny day to march on. But this outward gloom of the day seemed to load down the backs of the exiles more heavily than any of the bundles they had been permitted to take with them. This first step had something deeply significant, some- thing sacred, in its sheer terror, and which flashed upon every soul like lightning. Families herded close together. Not a word, not even the crying of a child. But already, after the first half-hour, when the last outlying houses were behind them, these people felt a certain r^ef. The primitive child- ishness of all humans, their poignant, frivolous faculty of for- getEulness, gained the upper hand for a certain time. As a sin- gle timid chirrup is heard at daybreak, and instantly the whole choir has joined it, soon, above the heads of this whole trans- port, there arose an entangled skein of jagged children’s voices. The mothers quieted them. Even the men called out this or that to one another. Here and there a faint laugh was already heard. Many old people and children were riding donkeys, also laden with bedding, coverlets, sacks. The ofilccr in charge allowed it to be. He seemed, on his own responsibility, at his own peril, to wish to mitigate the harshness of this order of banishment. Aram, too, had procured a donkey for his wife. But most of the time they walked beside it, since she feared the joltings of the ride. Although it would have been more prudent to send them on to the bead, the orphans brought up the rear of the convoy. After them came only the herd of goats, which the pastor, neglecting orders, had fearlessly caused to be driven forth. At first the children enjoyed it aU as an adventure, a delightful change. Iskuhi, who kept among them, did her very best to encourage these high spirits. No- body could have seen the strain of her sleepless nights. Her &ce showed only delight in the moment, the joy of life.
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Tender and weak as her body seemed, the all-powerful re- silience of her youth had surmounted everything. She even tried to get the children to sing. It was a pleasant song from Yoghonoluk, where people sang it at their work among vines and orchards. Iskuhi had introduced it into the school at Zeitun.
“Days of misfortune pass and are gone,
Like the days of winter, dicy come and they go;
The sorrows of men do not last very long.
Like the buyers in shops, they come and go,”
But Aram Tomasian came hurrying back at once to forbid their singing. The young pastor covered twice or three times as much ground as the others. He would be seen at the head of the convoy, then at the rear, among the stragglers, always with his big gourd hung from a strap, out of which he kept offering drinks of raki. And he gave out courage, cracked jokes, adjusted differences, doing his best to bring some shape and order into life, even such hfe as this. Everyone had a duty assigned him. Among the craftsmen, for instance, shoe- makers were entrusted with the task, during every halt, of quickly repairing all broken shoes. Though there were very few Protestants in the convoy, Tomasian was the only priest, since all the Gregorians and Catholics had been sent forth in the first days. So that the pastor had charge of all these souls. He evolved his own particular method cf making these exiles keep up their courage. Only what seems aimless is unbearable; he knew that by his own expenence. Therefore he kept re- peating, in a voice full of the stoutest confidence; “We shall be in Marash by tomorrow evening. There, it will all be different. Probably we shall stay there some time, till orders come to send us home again. And it’s as good as certain we shall go home. The Istanbul government can’t possibly be behind all this. After all, we have deputies and national representation. In three weeks from now it will all be arranged. But what
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matters most is that you should all be well when we get to Marash and that we should keep up our strength and cour- age”
Such speeches had a soothing effect, even on the naturally pessimistic, on those who were too intelligent to bcheve in the innocence of the central government. Despairing faces be- gan to brighten. The miracle was due not only to this rosily pictured future, but to an aim, a definite, firmly defined thought: “We shall be in Marash tomorrow.” In the long rests the young officer in command of the Turkish escort showed himself a very decent fellow. As soon as his men had finished their cooking, he offered the pastor the use of their field- cookers, so that warm food could be cooked for the weak and aihng. But, since tomorrow they would be in a big town, even the strong did not trouble to economize their supplies. And for the next few hours the march took on a new ease and confidence.
And when that evemng they encamped in the open fields and stretched out, weary to death, on their blankets, they could thank God that the first day had passed off tolerably. Not far from their camp there was a big village, called Tutlis- sek. In the night a few mountaineers, yailadjis, came out of the village to visit the Turkish guards. The men squatted to- gether in digmfied conference, gravely smoking, and seemed to be discussing a serious matter. When, just before dawn, the Zeitunlis awoke and went to collect their goats and don- keys, to water them, all the beasts had vanished.
This was the first stroke of a cruel day. They had marched two hours when the first death occurred in their ranks. An old man suddenly sank to the ground. The convoy halted. The young and, as a rule, so friendly officer came riding up in anger. “Get on!” A few tried to lift the old man up. But they soon had to let him shp to the ground. A saptieh prodded him with his foot. “Come on. Get up, you swindler.” But he still lay on, with open mouth and turned-up eyes. His corpse
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was flung into the ditch. The ofiicer harried them • “No stand- ing about. Forbidden. Get on. Get on.” Not all Aram’s prayers, nor the howls of the family, could procure either leave to carry the corpse, or a quick burial. It must suffice that they raised the old man’s head a httle and placed big stones on either side of him. There was no time left even to cross his hands on his chest, since the saptichs brandished their cudgels, cursing and driving on the hesitant crowd. Panic descended on the transport — trotting run, like a stampede, which only ceased when the corpse had been left far behind and carrion birds from the Taurus came circling nearer it.
Scarcely had the horror of this first sacrifice been sur- mounted when a yayli, a ponderous two-horsed coach, held up the convoy. It thrust the exiles off the narrow highroad, into swampy fields. Inside it a portly young gentleman of about twenty-five, with many rings on his fingers. Carelessly he thrust a bejewelled hand through the carriage window to present a document to the ofiicer. It was a government order, duly stamped, giving him the right to select one or several Armenian girls for domestic purposes. Since his coach hap- pened to be surrounded by orphans, his jaded, benevolent eyes alighted on Iskuhi. He pomted his stick at her, beckoned her to him with a smile. This important gentleman did not consider himself in the least a violator of women, but their benefactor — was he not ready to snatch one of these dirty creatures from her fate, take her to his bosom, to that of his highly respected family, in his dignified and secure town housed All the greater therefore his amazement when the fair one, instead of taking happy refuge in his sheltering arms, ran av/ay from him with loud shrieks of “Aram.” The coach pursued her. Perhaps no reasons with which the pastor strove to protect his sister would have availed. That he should have menuoned her European upbringing was a mistake, born of desperation, since this served only to put an edge on the ardour of her would-be protector. Only the sharp inter-
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vendon o£ the young commanding officer setded the matter. He most unceremoniously tore up the smtor’s government order, adding that, as officer in charge, he alone had power to dispose of Armenian convoys. Unless the Effendi mstandy made himself scarce, both he and his yayli would be arrested. He emphasized all this with a cut of his riding-switch on the flanks of the horses. The corpulent benefactor, wounded to the quick at having been balked in a good deed, clattered on at a remorseless trot. Iskuhi soon recovered from the incident. Soon she was seeing it as a joke, so that certain of its comic details made her shout with laughter. But her amusement was not to last long.
That same afternoon it began with the sufferings of the orphans. It is strange that these children should not singly have noticed their wounded feet, but all together — so that a sudden howling, whimpering, wailing, which tore the women’s heart- strings, filled the air. The easy-going young officer, however, was ruthlessly in earnest on one point— no rests or delays over and above the regulations. He had orders to reach Marash with his convoy two hours after sundown. This he was de- termined to carry out punctually, though in all the rest he might use discretion, often against the clear indications of his superiors. His professional pride was involved in this. There could therefore be no question of any halt for the children’s bleeding feet to be dressed with oil.
“All that’s no good to you. See that we get to Marash in ome, then you can dress your wounds. Forward.”
There was nothing for it. Some of the children had to be carried. Here even the weak Iskuhi distinguished herself, though soon she too was involved in disaster.
Her brother had repeatedly warned her not to lag in the rear of the convoy, or even among the orphans who composed it. It was certainly the unsafest part of the transport, immedi- ately in front of the ill-dispos^ soldiers of the escort and the many varieties of hideous vagabond which straggled in-
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quisiuvcly out of villages. But Iskuhi refused to listen, tot she felt her place to be with the children, especially now that, with every fifteen minutes, they became more weary, ill, and footsore. The other teachers of the orphanage httle by little went on ahead, leaving only Iskuhi doing her best to shepherd and encourage, with various arts, her yelping infants. They stumbled more and more miserably, and for this reason the line was often broken, till at last there was a fairly wide gap between the rear and the mam body. At such a juncture as this Iskuhi felt herself gripped from behind. She screamed and tried to wrench herself free. Over her there appeared a terrible face, gigantic, with filthy stubble, snorting, roUing its eyes, stinking, inhuman. She let out another piercing scream and then struggled sdendy with the man, whose spittle dripped into her face, whose brown claws were tearing her dress to shreds, to fasten themselves into naked breasts. Her strength failed. The face above her swelled into a mountamous, shifting hell.
She sank into its horrible breath. ... It was Iskuhi’s good fortune that, attracted by the piercing howls of the children, the officer came galloping sharply back to them. The brown claws flung her to the ground. The tramp tried to run away but did not escape a final stroke with the flat of the sword on the back of his head.
Iskuhi struggled to her feet but could not even manage to cry. At first she only supposed that her left arm had been numbed in the struggle. “As though it has gone to sleep,” she thought. Then, suddenly, wild pain flamed up m it. Speechless with this, she could not tell her brother what had happened. Hovsannah and Aram led her. Not a sound passed her lips. Everything in her became unconsaous — only not her feet, which still took quick, litde steps.
It IS still a riddle how they ever managed to reach Marash. As soon as the town was in sight, the desperate pastor went to the officer and even ventured to ask him how long he
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thought the exiles would be allowed to halt there. That, he was plainly told, would depend on the Mutessarif. He might safely reckon on a halt of several days, since most of the out-going transports were still in the town. There would be some regrouping. Aram raised imploring hands. “You see what a state my wife and sister are in. I beg you to let us go to the American mission, for this evening.”
The young officer was a long time thinking it over. In the end his pity for poor Iskuhi overcame all official considerations. Still on horseback, he scribbled a leave-chit for Pastor Aram and the two women.
“I haven’t the right to let you go. If you’re caught escaping, I shall be held responsible. You are ordered to report to me daily, in the concentration-camp.”
The mission fathers received their three prot^M and pupils with compassionate love. They had devoted their whole lives to Armenian Christians— and now this thunderbolt, which might be the merest indication of the devastating storms to cornel A doctor was sent for at once, unluckily a very young, inexperienced one. He jerked Iskuhi’s arm backwards and forwards. The infernal pam of this, added to all that had gone before it, made her really faint for a few minutes. No bones were broken, said the doctor, as far as he could see, though the arm looked curiously disjointed. The hurt was in the shoulder. He put on a big, tight bandage and gave her a draught to dull the pain. It would certainly be as well, he advised, if she could keep her arm stiffly resting for at least three weeks. Iskuhi did not sleep a wink that night. Hovsan- nah, in the room assigned to the women, had dropped at once into a sleep which was like unconsciousness.
Aram Tomasian sat at the missionaries’ table, discussing what was to be done. The vote was unanimous. The rector, the Reverend E. C. Woodley, said decisively: “Whatever else may happen, you can’t go back into that convoy. Hovsannah and Isktihi would be dead long before you reached Aleppa
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And, apart from that, you aren’t natives of Zeitun, but were sent there by us.”
Pastor Aram had one of the hardest spiritual conflicts of his whole life to sustain. “How can I leave my people, at the very time when they need me most?”
How many Protestants were there in the convoy? they asked. He had to admit that, apart from a tiny minority, they all belonged to the Old Armenian or the United churches. But that did not console him m the least. “In such circum- stances I can’t worry about trifles. I’m the only priest they have.”
Mr. Woodley calmed him: “We’ll send someone else with them. But you’re to go to your home. You must wait there till we have another cure for you.”
“And what’s to happen to my orphans?” groaned Aram Tomasian.
“You can’t help the children by dying with them. The orphanage in Zeitun is our property. You’ve done more than your duty by bringing the orphans to Marash. Leave all the rest to us. It’s ceased to be your affair.”
A teasing voice in Aram was not to be silenced. “Am I not bound to more than just my duty?”
Old Woodley showed impatience, though his heart was rejoicing over Aram. “You surely don’t imagine, Aram Tomasian, that we intend to submit to this treatment of our orphanage so tamely i* It’s not decided yet, by any means, what is to happen to these children. But you’re getting in our way, my dear boy. As the pastor of Zeitun you’re compromised. Understand? Good. I release you formally from your charge as director of the orphanage.”
Aram felt that, if only he could hold out a few mmutes longer, Woodley would not only cease to oppose, but would bless him for his Christian courage in sacriflce. But he said no more, in spite of this distinct sensation, and submitted to the mission father’s arguments. He believed he was doing this
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for Hovsannah and Iskuhi. And yet, every time he woke out of a sleep crowded with images, he was fUled with the heavy sensation of defeat, of having betrayed his vocation to the priesthood, with the shame of weaklings.
Next morning the Reverend E. C. Woodley, accompanied by the American vice<onsul, went to the Mutessarif and pro- cured for Tomasian and his wife and for Iskuhi an official per- mit to travel to Yoghonoluk. But this would be valid for only fourteen days, within which they must have reached their destination. So that, in spite of the serious state of Iskuhi’s arm, they were forced to set out three days later. They might have chosen the shorter route, via Bagche, the nearest railway station along the Anatolian line. They were advised most strongly against it. The Taurus line was crowded with trans- ports for Jemal Pasha’s fourth army. Nowadays prudence for- bade any unnecessary contact with Turkish troops, especially with Armenian women to escort. Since the pastor had already submitted to the Marash fathers’ decision, he was equally ready to let them choose his route. Instead of the short railway journey they began a very difficult carnage drive, of several days’ duration, on mountain roads. First into the mountains, to Aintab, then along the wretched winding tracks over the passes of Taurus, down to Aleppo. The mission fathers placed a large two-horse carriage at Aram’s disposal, and an extra horse, which could also be used as a mount. They wired to their representative in Amtab to prepare relays.
But the travellers were not yet past the suburbs of Marash when pursuing, imploring howls drowned the clatter of hoofs. The orphan girl Sato and the house-boy Kevork came running up behind them, clamouring. Fortunately it was early morning, there was still no one out in the streets to betray this scene. Inconvenient as it was to have to do so, nothing re- mained for Pastor Aram but to rescue these two unwanted additions to his party. The litde vagabond Sato had always been a very difficult child and a burden on the Zeitun orphan-
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age. About every three months she would be overcome with longings for vagabond hfe. Then she would vanish for days, to come back in an almost subhuman state, lousy and caked with dust and very subdued. And before these attacks she was quite unmanageable— mcapable of connected speech or any other laboriously acquired attainment. Nor was it any use to lock her up. She seemed to get through walls like a ghost. But, if she could not manage to get away, Sato would be possessed by devils and could alarm the whole house with her genius for mahcious damage. Iskuhi had been the first to influence her to the point at which her mahee could be restrained and perhaps at last even exorcized — and this not by any specifically educational means. Iskuhi knew very little of pedagogic methods. For this little tramp was devoured with love for young Iskuhi, love which wrought sad confusion in Sato’s already bewildered brain, and even seemed to have the power to engender that most dangerous of emotions — self- contempt. Now, in her pleated orphanage smock, Sato came pattering down the street with many cries.
“Kuchuk HanumI Miss! Please don’t leave Sato alone,” this skmny little waif besought, with eyes widened by deathly fear and yet at the same time insolent — eyes which concealed inescapable resolution withm their depths. Neither Iskuhi nor Hovsannah had ever really been able to repress a shudder of instinctive repugnance at the sight of Sato. Even when she was clean and kempt, she inspired a certain physical dis- gust.
Yet now this unwelcome acquisition had to be stowed away on the back scat. The house-boy Kevork took his place on the box beside the driver. Kevork came from Adana. Ever since, as a half-grown lad, he had been hit over the head with a rifle-butt, in the course of one of the numerous “incidents” there, he had remained a good-natured cretin. He could only talk in a stutter. And when, like Sato with her uncontrollable loAgings to run wild, he was seized with his mama for dano
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ing, he too was impossible to control. This solemn fit had caused him to be named “the dancer.” It was a quiet and very harmless peculiarity, which seldom possessed him altogether, and then only when something had stirred his mind. Other- wise Kcvork faithfully discharged his duties as stoker, water- carrier, wood-chopper, gardener, and with mute zeal did the work of two grown men. How many promising children and useful adults (the thought flashed into Aram’s mind) were there to rescue — and yet God sends me a little criminal girl and an idiot. It seemed to him a significant answer to his lukewarm shrinking away from sacrifice on behalf of the banished folk of Zeitun. Sato, however, was shaken by eerie, boisterous merriment. She wriggled up, with her pointed knees, against Iskuhi; she laughed and jabbered all day long, as though exile were the best conceivable holiday. Perhaps it was her first ride in a carnage. She let her thin litde hand, with Its hig, filthy nails, hang out, as though over the side of a boat, drawing it after her with delight through the cool wake of surrounding air. These high spirits only annoyed and alarmed the others. Iskuhi jerked away hei knees. The pastor, nding beside the carriage, threatened Sato that, unless she could sit still, he would either put her down without com- punction or tie her hands.
The exhausting journey to Aintab — their nights had to be spent in wretched village khans — passed without catastrophe. In Aintab itself they rested three days. The Armenian colony there had received Mr. Woodley’s wire and the relay horses were waiting. On the previous day the first convoy from Zeitun had reached the town. The people of Aintab had seen these miserable people and now awaited their own fate in despair. They scarcely went out of doors. Horrible rumours kept circulating. It was said that the government intended to give even shorter shrift to Aintab — that the Armenian quar- ter was simply to be set on fire, its inhabitants shot in batches. Yet the Aintab commune could not be kind enough to the
no
pastor. It was as though the sight of these rescued victims inspired in them the hope of themselves being saved. Aram Tomasian tried to find a home in the town for Sato. But she clung in such strident terror to Iskuhi that he ended by taking her back into the carriage, perhaps as an act of penance for his own sin.
Things still went smoothly as far as Aleppo, though they spent four days crawling down the passes of the Taurus, had the greatest difficulty in finding relays at the post-houses, and had twice to sleep in empty barns. But the big town, with its many bazaars, its well-paved streets, its government and army buildings, pleasant gardens, and opulent mission-houses, inns, and hostels, acted like a charm on these ailing and dis- pirited people. In spite of sharp inquisition by saptiehs at the octroi — Sato and Kevork, after several minutes’ palpitating fear, were passed as “servants”— the very sight of these streets, with their streams of undisturbed-looking people, gave bonds- men the illusion that they were free. Their recepuon, however, by the missionaries and heads of the commune was very different from those at Aintab and Marash. The fathers here were so overburdened with business and worries of all kinds, they were so bureaucratically organized, that Aram shrank from demanding their help. All he asked was two small rooms for himself and his famdy. The Armenian colony here was very rich, and so more timid, more hard-hearted, than the smaller people in Aintab. Their terror was intensified by the fact that they had so much more to lose than the others. Worse still, when the pastor mentioned Zeitun, he perceived at once that the very name of this town of revolt aroused mixed feelings in these city-brethren. They did not wish to seem, in official eyes, to have any connexion with such folk, pilloried now as stubborn rebels. The pastor’s very presence in theu: offices was enough to compromise them. At present, if one hoped to save one’s skin, it was necessary to seem a fanat- ical devotee of the state and scrupulously shun all suspected
III
company. Aram was offered a sum of money. They could do no more for him. He refused it with thanks.
Time pressed, and Tomasian found himself obliged to hire a yayli for himself — a two-horse cab, of which there were dozens on every rank. At first the owner refused even to think of facing all the discomfort of such a journey. As far as the coast behind Antioch ^ He clutched his fez, astounded at such foolery. However, after many protestations, many “Tnshal- lahs” and “Allah bihrs,” a price was settled, two-thirds of which he insisted on being paid in advance. Since Aram knew that every other cabman would have acted in exactly the same way, he gave him the money. The pastor chose the road to Alexandretta in spite of its windings. He hoped in a day and a half of quick driving to reach the place where it forks to Antioch, and from there to be at home within twenty-four hours. But, just before sunset on the first day, the driver climbed down off his box, inspected damaged hoofs, wheels, axles, and declared that he had had quite enough. His horses were fagged, his carnage overloaded, it wasn’t his business to cart Armenians all over the world — and so he was going straight back home, to be sure of getting to Turont, where he had relatives, in reasonable time. No prayers availed on him, not even the offer of almost double his fare. He had had his money in advance, it was all he wanted, the Turk magnanimously announced. He would do even more; he would take them back all the way to Turont for nothing, where they could spend a delectable night in the excellent beds of the first-class khan of his relations. Tomasian raised his stick and would have given the insolent brute a thrashing had not Hovsannah held his arm. Upon which the man threw thar luggage out of his yayli, jerked his reins, and left these five people stranded in the midst of a wilderness. For an hour they walked on along the road in the hope of coming to a village or getting a lift. But, far and wide, there was nothing, no cart, not even a barn, no huts, no village. They had to
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spend another night in the open, and it passed more slowly than the first, smce no one had reckoned on it. The curve o£ the road shone under the famt moon like a dangerous scimitar. They lay down as far from it as they could, on the bare earth. Yet even that mother of all proved ill disposed towards Armenians. Damp forced its way up through the rugs; poisonous airs from the swamp, alive with insects, en- veloped them. Kcvork and Aram kept guard, the pastor tightly grasping the hunting-nflc which the Marash fathers had given him for the journey.
But the depths of thtir mrery were touched only in the next fifty hours, during which these wanderers reached Yogho- noluk. It was a miracle that no harm came to Hovsannah, that Iskuhi did not entirely collapse. The pastor made the mistake of not sticking to the highroad, off which he struck far too early on to a cart-track, m the south-westerly direction. After a few miles along it, the cart-track trailed off into noth- ing. They were lost and wandered for hours. In the last stage of their way of agony Kcvork displayed great physical strength and earned the women by turns on his back for long dis- tances. (They had soon had to leave their luggage.) The pastor plodded on with only one thought — not to lose direc- tion, given him by the clouds above the mountain along the coast. Again and again they discovered cart-tracks, which they could follow for a couple of miles and which spanned the waterfalls in little budges of rotting planks. Here and there a kangni, an ox-cart, would also give them a lift for some long distance. They were not molested by human beings. The few peasant Moslems they came across were friendly, gave them water and cheese. They would not have defended themselves had they been attacked. Numb to the pain of their aching limbs, their bleeding feet, they stumbled on m a coma of exhaustion. Even the sturdy Aram walked half in a dream, lost in a world of juggling images. Sometimes he burst out laughing. Sato showed remarkable indifference to pain. She
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limped on agonized feet, swollen black and blue, behind Iskuhi, as though all her vagabond escapades had been meant to harden her to such toil.
When Gabriel saw the five, on the church steps, they were still possessed by exhausted dreams. Yet, since they were young, since the sudden sense of having been rescued rose within them, since faces of paiple whom they knew, the pastor, the priest, the doctor, hovered before them, since tremulous words were in their ears, and all the warmth of a home<oming enveloped them, they came quickly to them- selves, and this leaden, superhuman strain melted without transitions into a state of excited animation.
Pastor Aram Tomasian kept insisting: “Don’t think of the old massacres. This is far worse, far more gruesome, far more relentless, than any massacre. And, above all, it’s far slower. It remains with you, day and night.” He pressed his hands against his temples. “I can’t get the horror out of my mind. . . . I keep seeing those children. ... If only Woodley can save them . . .”
Dr. Altouni was m silent attendance on Iskuhi. But the other men kept questioning Aram. A confused outburst of only too natural inquiries: “Will it stop at Zeitun'* . . . Isn’t the colony in Aintab already on the road? . . . What do they say in Aleppo^ . . . Any news from the other vilayets?
. . . And we . .?”
The doctor had unrolled the bandage and was bathing the darkly suJffused arm in warm water. He laughed sharply. “Where can they deport us to? We’re already deported on Musa Dagh.”
The noise of the crowd in the square had become audible in the room. Ter Haigasun cut short these confused inquiries. He turned his timid, yet at the same time very resolute, eyes on Bagradian. “Will you be so kind as to go out and say a few words to the people? Make them go home.”
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What had made Ter Haigasun light on Gabriel, the Parisian, who had nothing in common with these villagers? It should by rights have been the duty of Kebussyan, the mukhtar, to speak to the crowd. Or had the priest his own secret reasons for his request? Bagradian started and felt embarrassed. None the less he did as Ter Haigasun told him, though he took Stephan out with him by the hand. Armenian was his native language, yet in this first instant, as he found himself facing this crowd — which meanwhile had increased to about five hundred — ^it felt like impertinence to use it, an unwar- ranted interference with their affairs. He would almost rather have spoken Turkish, the army language. But only his first words made him feel embarrassed, and then came a clear rush of syllables, the ancient speech within him began to germinate, to spin itself out. He asked the inhabitants of Yoghonoluk, and whoever else had assembled here from the other villages, to go home quietly. So far the only irregularities had occurred in Zcitun, and nowhere else, and their true cause would be investigated. Every Armcman knew that Zcitun had always been exceptional. For the people round Musa Dagh, who belonged to an entirely different district, and had never been mixed up in politics, there was not the very slightest danger. But in just such times as these law and order were more than ever necessary. He, Bagradian, would sec to it that from now on every important event was regu- larly reported in the villages. And, if necessary, all the com- munes should meet in an assembly of the people to discuss the future.
Gabriel, to his own surprise, found that he was speaking well. The right words came of themselves. A pacifying strength went out of him to his hearers. Somebody even shouted: “Long live the Bagradian family.” Only one woman’s voice wailed: “Asdvaz im, my God, what’s going to happen to us?”
If the crowd did not disperse immediately, it at least broke
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up into smaller groups and no longer besieg^ the church. Of the saptiehs only Ali Nassif snll prowled; both his com- rades had already made themselves scarce. Gabriel went across to the pock-marked Ah, who for some time had seemed to find It hard to make up his mind whether to treat the effmdi as a great gentleman or a khanzir kiafir, an unbelieving swine, who, in view of the latest turn of events, was officially not even worth answering. This very indecision caused Bagradian to take a high-handed line: “You know what I am? I’m your master and official superior. I’m an officer in the army.”
Ali Nassif decided to stand to attention. Gabriel felt sig- nificantly in his pocket. “An ofScer gives no baksheesh. But you will receive from me these two medjidjeh in payment of the unofficial service which I am about to explain to you.”
The rigid All was becoming more and more acquiescent. Bagradian jerked his hand to let him know he might stand at ease. “Lately I’ve been seeing some new faces among you saptiehs. Has your post been increased?”
“There were not enough of us, Effendi, for the long roads and the heavy service. So they sent us some extras.”
“Is that the real reason? Well, you needn’t answer unless you like. But how do you get your orders, your pay, and so on?”
“One of the boys rides to Antakiya every week and brings back the orders.”
“Well, All Nassif, listen to your unofficial service. If ever you get any orders, or hear any news of your command, which seems to be important to this district — ^you understand? — ^you’re to come to me at once, at my house. There you’ll receive three times what I’m giving you now.”
'Then, with the same negligent haughtiness, Bagradian turned away from the saptieh and went back to the sacristy.
Dr. Altouni had finished examimng the arm; he was say- ing scornfully: “And to think that m Marash they’ve a big hospital, instruments, an operating-theatre, medical libraries—
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and yet that ass of a doctor didn't so much as dress it properly. What can I do? I’ve got nothing here but a rusty forceps for pulling out teeth. We shall have to put the arm between two slats. It seems in an awful state. She must have a good long rest in bed, in a pleasant room. And the same, of course, for your wife, Aram.”
The old builder, Tomasian, was in despair. “I’ve so htde room since I sold my house. How shall we ever manage?”
Gabriel at once offered Mademoiselle Tomasian a room in the villa— one with a pleasant view out on to the mountain. Dr. Altouni’s instructions should be carefully followed.
The old doctor was overjoyed: “Koh yem — splendid, my friend. And this poor litde creature — Sato, isn’t it? — ^will you take her, too, so that my honoured patients may be together? My old bones will thank you.”
It was arranged. Aram and Hovsannah went with Tomasian’s father, taking with them Kevork the dancer, whom the old man suggested that he could use in his work- shop. Gabriel sent Stephan ahead to bring Juliette news of all these events.
The boy came breathless into the house.
“Maman' Maman! Something’s happened. We shall be having people in to stay with us. Mademoiselle Iskuhi, the sister of the pastor at Zeitun. And a htde girl, with her feet all bleeding.”
This surprising news affected Juliette strangely. Gabriel had never before brought strangers to stay in the house without havmg asked her permission. His relationship to her had in it a kmd of hesitation where guests were concerned, especially Armenians. But when, within the next ten minutes, he arrived with Iskuhi, the Altounis, and Sato, juhette was kindness itself. She, like so many pretty women, fell an easy prey to feminine charm, especially the charm of a young girl. The sight of poor Iskuhi moved her and aroused in her all the instinct to help of an elder sister. As she gave all the neces-
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saiy orders, she kept saying to herself with satisfaction: Shes fcsdly u£iusua.L One seldom sees such delic3.teAooking faces among them. She looks hke a lady, even in those ragged clothes. And she seemed to speak such good French, for an Armenian.” The room was soon ready. Juliette herself came to wait on Iskuhi; she even brought her a very pretty lace nightdress of her own. Nor did she hesitate to sacrifice her own expensive scents and eaux de toilette, although these treasures were irreplaceable.
Altouni again inspected Iskuhi’s arm, with many bitter litde jokes on the subject of the doctors in Marash. “Is it very painful, my dear.?” No, she felt no pain in it now, only a kind of feeling, a numb feeling — she tried to think of the word— a feeling of not being able to feel it. The old doctor could see that all his skill would be of very little use to her. Still — ^hc could do nothing else — he smothered her arm in a wide bandage, which sheathed her shoulders, up to the neck. The nimble dexterity soil preserved in his old brown, wrinkled fingers became apparent as he did it. Soon after this Iskuhi was comfortable in bed, clean, cared for, and at peace. Juliette, who had helped with all this, was about to leave her. “If you need anything more, dear, all you have to do is to swing this big hand-bell hard. We’ll send you up something to eat. But I shall be coming in to sec you first.”
Iskuhi turned the eyes of her people upon this bene- factress — eyes which still looked out into terrifying distances, and did not seem to notice this pleasant safety.
“Oh, thank you, Madame — shan’t need anything. . . . Thank you, Madame.” Then came the thing which had never happened in all that fearful week in Zcitun, nor in the days with the convoy, nor on the journey. Iskuhi burst into storms of tears. The outburst was not convulsive, it was sheer weep- ing, without a sob in it, a grief, so to speak, vwthout hill or valley, a release from rigidity, vast and inconsolable as the Asiatic steppes from which it came. As Iskuhi wept on quietly,
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she kept repeating: “Forgive me, Madame. ... I never meant to do this. . . .”
Juliette would have liked to kneel beside her, kiss her, and tell her she was an angel. Yet something made these conven- tional words of comfort quite impossible. Some remoteness still enveloped this young girl, her experience wrapped her like a chrysalis. Juliette could not follow her own warm im- pulse. She contented herself with hghtly stroking Iskuhi’s hair and waiting in silence by her side till this quiet grief had fully spent itself, till the eyehds drooped, and the girl sank down into merciful nothingness.
Meanwhile Mairik Antaram had dressed and bandaged Sato’s feet. The child was put to bed in one of the unused servant’s bedrooms. Scarcely had she dropped into heavy sleep, when she let out her first blood-curdling scream. Her screams continued. In all these days she had never once shown signs of fear, but now, as she dreamed life over again, a hundred whips seemed to swish around her. It was no use shaking her repeatedly. She slept too heavily to be waked, so that after a time her moans and piercing howls began again. Sometimes these long-drawn wailmgs sounded as though the voice were chnging desperately to one saving name: Kuchuk Hanum.
As these hair-raising howls forced themselves out of the dis- tant bedroom, Juliette met her son coming up the wide steps to the front door. Stephan was glowing with excitement. This new thmg, this unknown, with its threat, electrified him and set his nerves pleasantly tingling. In November he had cele- brated his thirteenth birthday and so was just reaching the age when sensations kindle most boys’ enthusiasm. He would even stand at the wmdow watching some unusually heavy thunderstorm, filled with the unholy longing that something out of the ordinary might happen. Now he stood and listened, agreeably horror-stricken.
“Maman, listen to Sato screaming.’’
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“Iskuhi’s eyes— my boy has the same kmd of eyes as Iskuhi.” Juliette perceived it in a flash. And the subterranean snares and entanglements of life revealed themselves. She felt her first great terror for Stephan. She hurried him into her room and kissed him hard. Sato’s screams still rang in the empty hallway.
Later that evening Gabriel Bagradian had invited the priest Ter Haigasun, Bedros Altuuni, the doctor, and Apothecary Krikor to come to see him. They sat together, in the dimly lighted selamhk, over chibuks and cigarettes. Gabriel wanted to know how these highly educated and very worthy notables of Yoghonoluk really viewed the position, how they intended to act in the event of an order of banishment, and what means the commune of Musa Dagh had at its disposal to avert the worst.
He could get nothing out of them. Ter Haigasun stubbornly kept his mouth shut. 1 he doctor announced that, since he was already sixty-eight, the three or four short years he had stJl to live would be got through somehow. If anything happened to bring the end a little sooner, then so much the better as far as he was concerned. Ridiculous to trouble one’s head for the sake of a few scurvy months. Was the whole of life really worth a single worry? The main thing was to save people anxiety as mucii, and for as long as, one possibly could. That he considered his chief duty, which he meant to fulfil, what- ever happened. All the rest was no business of his. Krikor smoked his nargileh, profoundly at peace — he had very prudently brought it with him. He selected, with an air of profundity, from among the glowing coals those which ap- pealed to him most and pressed them down with his naked fingers on a roll of tobacco in the hubble-bubble. Perhaps he wanted to symbolize to the others that he could grasp fire without being burned by it. Thought alone gives any right to rcahty — not vice versa. Why want to do anything? All action IS already in vain, and only thought thinks on for ever. He
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dted a Turkish proverb, which might equally vrell have issued from the lips of the Agha Rifaat Bereket: “Kismetden zyade olmass.” Nothing happens unless predestined.
These words afforded the opportunity of evading the troublesome problems of the horn*. And Krikor’s hollow voice became eloquent on the various theories of predestination, the relationship of Christendom to Islam, the Council of Chalced- ony. The very words inebriated. The priest should be made to hear with amazement how much theology Apothecary Krikor had acquired.
It was too much. Gabriel rudely sprang to his feet All the European in him was up in arms against these sleepers, these gossips, who would unk down into death without a protest, as they rotted their lives away in filth. He interrupted Krikor, with a contemptuous wave of his hand: “I want most urgently to submit an idea of mine to you gentlemen. It came to me today as I talked to the saptieh. All Nassif. I’m still, after all, a Turkish officer, a front-hne soldier, decorated in the last Balkan war. Now suppose I get into uniform and go to Aleppo? How would that be? Years ago I happened to make myself useful to General Jemal Pasha ”
The old doctor almost gleefully interrupted: “Jemal Pasha moved his headquarters some tunc ago to Jerusalem.”
But Bagradian was not to be put off. “It makes no difference. Djelal Bey, the Wall, is even more important than Jemal Pasha. I don’t know him personally, but we all know about him, who he is, and that he’ll do whatever he can for us. Well, now, suppose I go to him and remind him that Musa Dagh IS right out of the world, and that therefore we can’t possibly have had anything to do with politics, perhaps . . .”
Gabriel said no more and listened to the imperturbable silence. Only the bubbling water in Krikor’s nargileh broke it at irregular intervals. It was some tune before Ter Haigasun laid down his chibuk.
“The Wall, Djelal Bey” — he thought it over, staring out in
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front of him— "is certainly a great friend of our nation. He has shown us repeated kindness. And under his government we neva* needed to fear the worst. . . . Unfortunately his friendship for us has done him very httle good. . . .” Out of his wide sleeves Ter Haigasun drew a folded newspaper. “Today is Friday. This is Tuesday’s Tanin. It’s a paragraph m very small print, pushed away into the corner of the paper.” He held up the sheet, far from his eyes.
“‘According to information received from the Ministry of the Interior, His Excellency the Wall of Aleppo, Djelal Bey, has I'cen permanently placed on the retired list.’ . . . That’s all it says.”
X23
Interlude of the Gods
5
At the very instant when, urging his cabman to greater speed, Dr. Johannes Lcpsius reached the great bridge across from Pera, the garden suburb, to Stamboul, the automatic signal started to ring, the barrier sank, the bridge trembled like a hve thing, broke groaning in two, and its rusty halves, this ade and that, rose slowly up, to allow a warship to proceed into the innermost harbour of the Golden Horn. “This is really dreadful,” Dr. Lepsius said, aloud and in German, closing his eyes and sinking back on to the frayed upholstery of his araba, as though he had given up the struggle. Yet he was out of the cab m the next instant, had thrust a few uncounted piastres on the driver, had run (nearly slipping up on a fruit skin) down the steps and on to the quay, where a few kayiks, little ferryboats, plied for hire. There was not much choice; only two phlegmatic old ferrymen drowsed in their boats, not seeming in the least to want a fare. Lepsius jumped into a ferryboat and waved across, in sheer, scurrying desperation, to the Stamboul side. He had still six minutes till his appointment at the Seraskeriat, the War Ministry. Even if his boatman rowed with a will, he would need a whole ten to cross the sound. On the other quay — so reckoned the im- patient Dr. Lepsius — ^there could not fail to be a cab-rank. So that from there it need only take another five minutes to the Ministry. Six from fifteen minutes, if all went smoothly-— nine minutes late. Very unfortunate, but still not so bad a^ all that. . . . And, of course, everything went wrong. Th(.
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boatman, pushing like a gondolier, was not to be roused by admonitions, nor by imploring prayers, from his calm medita- tion. The boat danced up and down but would not go for- ward. “It’s the tide, Effendi. The sea’s coming in.” Thus did die weatherbeaten Turk define fate, against which there can be no striving. To make bad worse, a fishing cutter crossed their bows — which meant the loss of two more minutes. Dully resigned, impotent as only a man can feel who finds himself tossed on waves, the German sank into reflections. He had, for the sake of this one appointment, undertaken all the fatigue of this journey, come to Constantinople from Potsdam, besieged the German ambassador day after day, and not him alone, but every neutral representative. This one appointment had sent him hurrying to meet every German or American in from the interior, in every possible quarter of the town, to get further details. This one appointment had kept him sitting for whole days in the American Bible So- ciety’s offices, had caused him to make himself a nuisance to the people of the various orders, had sent him, by carefully thought-out routes, avoiding spies, to meet Armenians in secret rooms. All so as to be prepared for the great encounter. And now fate played this practical joke of making him late for It. It was almost enough to inspire belief in some direct, Satanic intervention. How hard that very pleasant German naval commander attached to the military mission had worked to get this conversation arranged' Three times it had been conceded, three times postponed. Enver Pasha is the Ottoman war god. He does not care to be ceremonious with such an insignificant antagonist as Dr. Johannes Lepsius.
So — the ten minutes had shpped away. Enver would by now have given orders not to admit this querulous German on any pretext. The game was lost. Let it be lost! “My own country is fighting for dear life. The dark rider with the scales flies above us also. What do Armenians really matter to mei^” Johannes Lepsius discarded these spurious consola-
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dons with a short, dry little gasp. Not These Armenians meant a great deal to li^— even more i£ he dared rigorously to examine his heart — ^more perhaps than even his own countrymen, mad and smful as that no doubt might be. Ever since Abdul Hamid’s butcheries, since the massacres of ’96, since that mission to the interior, his first days of missionary experience, he had felt himself especially sent to these un- fortunates. They were his task on earth. And at once he could see a few of their faces. Such faces as only those beings have who must empty the chalice to its dregs. Christ on the cross may well have had just such eyes. It was perhaps for them that Lepsius loved these people so dearly. An hour ago, in the eyes of the Patriarch, the Armcman chief priest of Turkey, Monsignor Saven, he had seen, or rather had had to keep turning his face away from, an ardent hopelessness. And this visit to the Patriarch had made him late. It had of course been stupid to go back to Pera after calling on him, to the Hotel Tokatlyan, to change. Yes, but — he had had to call on the Patriarch in the long black cassock suitable to a Protestant clergyman. And, with Enver, he did not want to stress his position, was most anxious, in that fateful interview, to avoid any appearance of formality. He knew these Ittihad people his opponents. A casual tone, a grey lounge suit, certainty of man- ner, the hint of powers behind — ^that was the proper way to deal with adventurers. And now, the grey lounge suit had caused all this.
He ought not to have stopped so long with the Patriarch, could have got away in a few minutes. Unluckily Dr. Lepsius’s forte had never been systematic concentration. Even his success in helping Armemans at the time of the Abdul Hamid mas- sacres had been less a matter of thought-out policy than of passionate insistence on being received. He was still far too much at the mercy of that youthful vice, of thinking graphi- cally — ^“dances of death,” “the eternal Jew,” “John Bull,” etc. Improvisation, a tendency to rely on the minute — these, as he
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knew, were his worst faults. So that today he had not been able to free himself from the aspect of that piteous cleric “You’ll be with Enver in an hour.” The faintness of Mon- signor Saven’s voice told its own story of sleepless nights; it seemed to be dying, along with his people “You’ll stand before that man. God bless you! But not even you will be able to do anything.”
“I’m not so pessimistic, Monsignor,” Lepsius had striven to reassure.
But his words had been stopped by a gesture of agonized submission. “We’ve just heard today that, after Zeitun, Aintab, Marash, the same threat of deportation is to be suspended over the East Anatolian vilayets. So that up to now, apart from the west of Asia Minor, only Aleppo and the strip of coast from Alexandretta have been spared. You know better than anyone that deportation is a more painful, more long- drawn-out kind of death by torture. They say that not one inhabitant of Zeitun has survived.” And the Patriarch’s eyes had forbidden Lepsius any protest. “Leave the impossible and concentrate on the possible. You may succeed — I don’t sup- pose you will — ^m getting a respite for Aleppo and the country along the coast. Stress German public opinion, the newspapers you intend to inform. Above all, don’t morahze. It merely provokes him to contempt. Stick to political facts. Threaten him economically — ^that’s your most likely way to make an impression on him. And now, my dear son, you have my blessing for your noble work, Christ be with you.” Lepsius had bent his head, but the Patriarch had signed his chest, with a wide cross.
So that here he sat in this heavy boat, ploughing its way through the waters of the Golden Horn, under its stolid, medi- tative oarsman. And when at last they arrived, it was more than twenty mmutes late. With one glance Dr. Lepsius was aware that no arabas waited along the quayside. He broke into a wry little laugh — smee more than hazard must conceal itself
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somewhere within this chain o£ hindrances. Some oppoang power had taken a hand in the Armeman business, which no doubt must be left to go on unopposed, and was thrusting a stave in between his legs. He made no further attempt to find a cab, but began to run, stout, elderly, conspicuous-looking as he was.
He did not get far. The squares and alleys of old Istanbul were thick with holiday-keeping crowds. Along past shops and cafes, gay with bunting, under beflagged windows, thou- sands in fez and tarbush jostled and shoved. What was it? The Allies driven out of the Dardanelles? Lepsius thought of the distant gun-fire which he heard so often in the night. The big guns of the British fleet, hammering on the gates of Constantinople. But he remembered that this was the anni- versary of some triumph of the Young Turkish revolution — perhaps of that glorious day on which the Committee had killed off all its political opponents, to seize power at last. Not that it mattered what they were celebrating; any crowd shouts and brawls. A sohd mass of people in front of a shop. Boys, hoisted on ready shoulders, clambering up along the shop-front. Next minute a big sign-board came clattering down. Lepsius, wedged in the crowd, asked his neighbour, who wore no fez, what all this was about. “No more foreign signs,” he was told. “Turkey for the Turks. All sign-boards, names of streets, and advertisements to be written exclusively in Turkish from this day on.” And this neighbour (a Greek or Levantine) giggled spitefully. “This time they’ve demol- ished an ally. It’s a German business-house.”
A long line of halted trams crawled on. “Really it doesn’t matter,” Lepsius thought, “when I get there now. It’s all over.” None the less he put on a spurt, thrusting into the crowd, shoving relentlessly. One more side-alley, and the square opened out before him. The vast palace of the Seras- keriat. High rose the tower of Mahmut the Second. And now the pastor took his time. He walked slowly, so as not to come
breathless into the lion’s den. When, fagged out with endless stairs and corridors, he whipped out his card at the offices of the Ministry of War, it was only to be informed by a smartly uniformed and very amiable aide-de-camp that His Excellency Enver Pasha deeply regretted that he had found it impossible to wait and begged the Herr Doktor to do him the honour of calling at the Ministry of the Interior within the Seraglio.
So Dr. Johannes Lepsius had to set out on an even longer journey. But now the malign spell was broken. The demons had thought out another method. They almost forced him to be at his ease. Outside a cab had just set down its fare. The driver had his eye on an easy journey, he avoided crowds, and so, in a magically short time, fully reposed, and invaded now by a self-confidence for which he could have given him- self no reason, the crusader entered the quiet world of the Seraglio and clattered thunderously on across the ancient cobbles to the Ministry. Here they were expecting him. Even before he could show his card, an official had greeted him ivith the question: “Dr. Lepsius?” What a good omen I More stairs, and a long corridor. But, borne on the wings of happy presentiment, the pastor almost felt he hovered along it. The quiet Ministry of the Interior, Talaat Bey’s fortress, made a pleasantly dream-like impression. These official rooms seemed almost enchanted — without doors, only divided by billowy curtains. This, he could not tell why, soothed him with the assurance of coming success. He was conducted to the end of a passage, into a special suite. Enver Pasha’s headquarters in the Ministry. Here, doubtless, m these two rooms the dice of the Armeman fate had been cast. A large apartment, seem- ingly a waiting- and audience-room. Next it, a study, contain- ing only a big, empty writing-table. The curtain into this study had been pulled back. Lepsius saw three portraits on the wall behind the empty table; right, Napoleon; left, Frederick the Great; an enlarg^ photograph of a Turkish general in the middle. Doubtless Enver Pasha, the new war god.
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The expectant pastor seated himself beside the window. His i^es, over the rims of pince-nez, drew in peace from the beauty of heaps of ruins, shattered cupolas, broken columns, sheltered by lunbrella-pines. Beyond, the Bosporus, whose toy steamers thrust their way on. The pastor’s blue, myopic gaze, his full and childish lips pouting through the short grey beard, his severe cheeks still rosy with haste and perturbation— all this produced an image of long-su£Fering, of a soft heart, inflexibly hard upon itself. A servant brought m a copper coffee poL Lepsius greedily gulped three tiny cups. This coffee gave him an advantage, his nerves tightened, his veins pounded fresh blood to his brain. When Enver Pasha came upon him, he had just emptied his fourth cup.
Before leaving Berlin, Johannes Lepsius had asked for minute accounts of Enver Pasha, yet he felt surprised that this Turkish Mars, this one of the seven or nine arbiters of the life or death of the world, should be so unimposmgly diminutive. He in- standy saw the reason for those portraits of Frederick the Great and Napoleon. Heroes five feet tall, litde conquerors, always on tip-toe, who force a way to power to spite their inches. Lepsius would have wagered anything that Enver Pasha wore high heels. He did not, in any case, take off his lambskin kepi, which certainly looked much taller than dress regulations allowed. The gold-tabbed marshal’s (or fancy- dress) uniform, beauafully moulded to the waist, lent added majesty, by the smart, stiff perfection of its line, investing this figure, in conjunction with gleaming rows of medals, with something almost frivolously young, ornately bold. “The gipsy-king,” reflected Lepsius and, although his heart was pounding, he could not escape a rampant waltz of his early youth:
“All this and more You may be sure I-U do.”
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Yet this text, which now assailed him at the aght of the spick'and'span magnificence of the uniform, was in sheer con' tradiction to the glance and manner of this youthful com' mander-in-chief. Enver Pasha looked shy, almost embarrassed; from time to time he would open his eyes like a young girl. The narrow hips and sloping shoulders gave his movements a certain delicate grace. Lepsius felt heavy and obese.
Enver’s first attack took the form of arousing a sudden sym- pathy with his tripping person, a feeling he knew how to awaken in visitors. He did not, having welcomed Lepsius, con- duct him to the adjoining study but, begging him to stay where he was, pulled up a chair for himself from the table to the window, not troubling that his face was in the light while his visitor’s was shaded.
Johannes began the interview (he had thought this out, in deciding his plan of campaign) with greetings from an admir- ing German lady, which he laid at the general’s feet. The gen- erd smiled his peculiar, shy htde smile and said in a pleasant tenor, which, vocally even, gave full effect to the winsomeness of his whole personality, and in excellent German: “I have the very deepest respect for Germany. There can be no doubt that you are one of the most astonishing peoples in the world. Personally, I’m always dehghted to get a chance to receive a German.”
Enver, Pastor Lepsius knew, had been pro-French on the Committee and perhaps, in private, continued to be so. He had stubbornly tried not to come mto the war on Germany’s side, but on that of the Allies. All that did not matter at present. Lepsius went on feeling his way, with civilities: “Your Ex- cellency has so many devoted German admirers. We all ex- pect you to astonish the world with your virtories.”
Enver opened his eyes. A little movement of the hand seemed wearily to defend him against the demands which always lie hidden within such flatteries. A silence, implying
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more or less: “Well now, my dear fellow, look out whom you’re dealing with.” Lepsius turned his head to the window, listening, though out there no noise was audible save the faint hoots and signal-bells on the Bosporus.
“I’ve been noticing how enthusiastic the people seems to be, here in Istanbul. Especially today. I was most impressed by the crowds.”
The general, in his pleasant, but by now quite indifferent voic^ decided on a pithy litde saying, in the style of patriotic pronimciamentos: “The war is hard. But our people is aware of what it owes itself.”
The German made his first sortie: “Is it quite the same in the interior. Excellency?”
Enver glanced with delight into the farthest corner of the room: “Certainly. Great things are happening in the interior.”
“Excellency, these great things are well known to me.”
The war-lord refused, with a hint of surprise, to understand. For the leader of a great empire, his cheeks looked surprisingly fresh and young. “The position on the Caucasian &ont im- proves every day. It is of course a little premature to speak of the southern army under Jemal and your countryman Kress.”
“Most encouraging. Excellency. But, by the interior I mean the peaceful vilayets, not the war zone.”
“While a state is at war, all its government districts arc war zones, more or less.”
This was discharged with a certain delicate crispness. So that the outpost skirmish had gone against Dr. Lepsius, who was forced to open frontal attack: ‘Tour Excellency is aware, perhaps, that I’m not here as a private individual, but as reprc' sentative of the German Orient Society, who will require my report upon certain happenings.”
A surprised Enver sat wide-eyed. What exactly is an Orient Society?
“Our Foreign Office, indeed our Chancellor, is in active
sympathy with my mission. On my return I am to deliver a lecture m the Reichstag on the Armenian question, for the in* formation of the German press.”
Enver Pasha, hstenmg in routine patience, his eyes cast down, looked up at the words “Armenian question.” The sulkiness of a spoilt child whom heavy grown-ups will not stop pestering with thar stale old nonsense clouded his face fejr an instant. It passed at once. Yet Dr. Lepsius’s heart al- ready failed him. “I come to you in my need. Excellency, be- cause I’m convinced that a leader of your distinction will not do anything which might besmirch his name in history.”
“I know, Herr Lepsius,” Enver Pasha began, in the softest, most indulgent voice, “I know that you’ve come here, and asked for this interview, to demand my explanation of all these matters. And although a number of urgent questions require my attention. I’m perfectly willing to spare you whatever time you may need and give any information you choose to ask for."
Lepsius was forced to acknowledge this sacrifice with a deeply grateful little bow.
"Ever since my friends and I have controlled the govern- ment,” the general continued, “we’ve always striven to grant the Armenian millet’s requests, and see that absolute justice was meted out to it. There was an old understanding. Your Armenian friends acclaimed our revolution most cordially; they swore all kinds of oaths of fidelity to us. Unfortunately they broke them overnight. We shut our eyes as long as pos- sible, as long as the Turkish people, the ruling people, was not in danger. We are living in Turkey, are we not? But when, after war was declared, cases of high treason, felony, and sub- versive tendencies kept increasing, when desertion assumed alarming proportions, when it came to open revolt — ^I’m only thinking, mind, of the great revolt in Zcitun — then we found oursdves obliged either to take action to repress it or lose our right to direct the war and remain the leaders of our people.”
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Lepsius nodded, as though he were well on the way to be* Ootning convinced. “In what, Excellency, did these legally proved cases of treason and sedition consist?”
A broad gesture from Enver. This plenitude of crimes could never fully be exhausted. “Conspiracy with Russia. Sasonov’s speech praising Armemans m the Petersburg Duma was clear enough. Conspiracies with France and England. Intrigue^ espionage — all you can think of.”
“And these cases have been legally investigated?”
“By court martial, naturally. It would be just the same in your country. Not long ago fifteen of the worst offenders were sentenced and publicly executed.”
“Clumsy insolence,” Lepsius mentally decided. He leaned back and tried to control his unsteady voice. “According to my knowledge those fifteen Armenians were arrested long bdEore the war. So they can scarcely have been found gmlty of treachery by usual military law.”
“We ourselves derive from the revolunon.” Though the general did not answer to the point, he did so with the glee- fulness of a schoolboy who remembers a most amusing esca- pade. “We know exactly how all that’s done.”
Lepsius sw'allowed down a very expressive description of the revolution and all its works. He cleared his throat for the next inquiry: "And these Armenian notables and intellectuals, whom you’ve arrested here in Istanbul and deported — ^are they also convicted of treachery?”
“You must see for yourself that we can’t keep even possible traitors so near the Dardanelles.”
Johannes Lepsius did not contradict, but plunged, in a burst of sudden temperament, mto the main issue: “And Zeitun? I’m very anxious indeed to hear Your Excellency’s view of Zeitun.”
Enver Pasha’s blankly gleaming suavity was overcast with a sudden disapproval. “The revolt in Zeitun is one of the worst mutinies m the history of the Turkish empire. Unfortunately
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our troops lost heavily in their struggle to subdue the rdxls, though I’m afraid I can’t give you exact figures.”
“My reports of Zeitun differ from those of Your Excel- lency.” Lepsius planted this blow in hesitant syllables. “My accounts make no mention of any revolt of the population there, but of provocative oppression, lasting over a period of months, by the district and sanjak officials. They speak of some trifling disorder, which could easily have been checked by strengthemng the town police, whereas any fair-minded person can easily perceive a deliberate intention in military reinforcements of over a thousand strong.”
“You’ve been given false information.” Enver was still quiedy well behaved. “May I inquire who your informants were, Herr Lepsius?”
“I can name a few of them, but I may as well say that no Armenian sources are included. On the other hand I have the specific memoranda of various German consuls, reports from missionaries, the eye-witnesses of the worst atrocities. And finally I’ve been given a most consistent account of the whole business by the American ambassador, Mr. Morgenthau.”
“Mr. Morgenthau,” said Enver brightly, “is a Jew. And Jews are always fanatically on the side of minorities.”
Lepsius gasped at the graceful evasiveness of this. His feet and hands were cold as ice. “It isn’t a question of Morgenthau, Excellency, but of the facts. And you neither will, nor can, deny them. A hundred thousand people are already on their way into exile. The officials talk of nothing but resettlement. But I suggest to you that, frankly, that’s a misnomer. How can a people of peasant mountaineers, craftsmen, townsfolk, professional people, be resettled by a stroke of the pen in Meso- potamian deserts — empty plains? In waste country, hundreds of miles av^y from their homes, which even bedouin tribes refuse to inhabit? And that object is simply a blind. The dis- trict officials are conducting these deportations in such a way sha^ in ' first eight days’ march, these virctchcd people either
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collapse or go mad of hunger, thirst, disease, so that helpless boys and defenceless men get slaughtered by Kurds and bandits, if not by the mihtary — ^and young girls and women are literally forc^ into prostitution. . .
The attentive general listened scrupulously, though his lan- guid pose most clearly indicated: This is the kind of rigmarole one has to hear at least twelve times a day. “All very regret- table. But the supreme commander of a great military power is responsible for the security of his war areas.”
“War areas?” Lepsius cried out — and at once controlled himself, trying to manage Enver’s calm. “ ‘War areas’ is the one fresh nuance. All the rest— Zcitun, high treason, intrigues — ^was there already. Abdul Hamid made masterly use of all that, if the Armenians cared to believe it all over again. I’m an older man than you are. Excellency, and I saw it all on the spot. But when I think of these deportations, I almost want to apologize to that old sinner. He was a bungler, a harmless chili compared to this new method. And yet, Excellency, your party only took power because it wanted to replace the blood- shed of the old Sultan’s time by justice, unity, and progress. The very name of your Committee proclaims it.”
This stroke was daring, indeed rash. For an instant Johannes Lepsius sat expecting the war-lord to stand up and* conclude the interview. Yet Enver sat quietly on, not the lightest shadow clouding his suave serenity. He even bent forward, confi- dentially. “Dr. Lepsius, may I show you the other side? . . . Germany, luckily, has few, or no, internal enemies. But let’s suppose that, m other arcumstances, she foimd herself with traitors in her midst — ^Alsace-Lorrainers, shall we say, or Poles, or Social-Democrats, or Jews — ^and in far greater numbers than at present. Would you, Herr Lepsius, not endorse any and every means of freeing your country, which is fighting for its life against a whole world of enemies without, from those within? . . . Would you consider it so cruel if, for the sake of victory, all dangerous elements in the population were
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simply to be herded together and sent packing into distant, un* inhabited territory?”
Johannes Lepsius had to hold on tight by both hands to keep himself from springing to his feet and giving full rem to his indignation.
“If my government,” he said very distinctly, “behaved un- justly, unlawfully, inhumanly” (“in an un-Christian way” was the expression on the tip of his tongue) “to our fellow-country- men of a different race, a different persuasion, J should clear out of Germany at once and go to America.”
A long, wide-eyed stare from Enver Pasha. “Sad for Ger- many if many other people think as you do there. A sign that your people lacks the strength to enforce its national will re- lendessly.”
At this point in the interview the pastor was overcome by a great fatigue. It was born of the sensation that, in his way, this little, closed-up fellow was in the right. The hoary wisdom of the world is always, in its way, right against Christ’s wisdom. But the worst of it was that Enver’s rightness infected, at this instant, Johannes Lepsius, and lamed his will. The uncertain destiny of his fatherland descended on his soul with the weight of a mountain. He whispered; “It’s not the same thing.”
“Quite right. It’s not the same thing. But it’s we who gam by the comparison. We Turks have a hundred umes harder struggle to assert our rights than you Germans.”
Lepsius, tortured and absent-minded, pulled out a hand- kerchief, which he held up like a parliamentary banner. “It isn’t a question of protecting yourselves against an enemy in your midst, but of the planned extirpation of another race.”
This he jerked out in a sullen voice; his eyes, no longer able to endure Enver’s cool detachment, strayed towards the study with its three heroes on the wall. Had Monsignore Saven, the Patriarch, no right there? Lepsius suddenly remembered that he was here to discuss economics. Quickly he gathered strength
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for a fresh encounter: “Excellency. I won’t presume to waste your time in empty discussion. But may I venture to draw your attention to certain rather grave drawbacks, which you yourself perhaps may not yet have considered very carefully — ^naturally enough, weighed down as you arc by your burden as commander-m-chief. I may perhaps know the interior, Ana- tolia, Cilicia, Syria, better than you do, since I worked for years under difficult conditions in all that territory. . .
And so, in hurried words — ^he felt time ebbing away — ^hc developed his plea. The Turkish empire, without the Arme- nian millet, would be bound to go to pieces economically, and its army would, as a consequence, be endangered. Why? He did not care to insist on the export trade, ninety percent of which was in Christian hands, and His Excellency knew as well as he did that most of the foreign trade was conducted by Armenian firms, so that in consequence one of the most es- sential branches of war industry, the provision of raw ma- terials, as well as of manufactured goods, could only be suc- cessfully managed by these firms — ^for instance, by such a world-established business as Avetis Bagradian and Sons, which had branches and representatives in twelve different European cities. And as to the interior itself, he, Lepsius, years ago, on his journeys there, had seen that Armenian agricultural methods in Anatolia were a hundred times ahead of Tuikish small landholding. In those days Cilician Armenians had im- ported hundreds of threshing-machines and steam-ploughs from Europe and, by so doing, given the Turks a strong in- centive to massacre, since they not only slaughtered the ten thousand inhabitants of Adana but also broke up the machines and ploughs. In that alone, and nowhere else, lay the real mis- chief. The Armenian millet, the most progressive and active section of the Ottoman population, had for years been making vast efforts to lead Turkey out of its old-fashioned, primitive methods of agriculture into a new world of up-to-date farm- ing and budding industriahzation. And it was for just this
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very beneficent pioneering work that Armenians were being persecuted and slaughtered by the vengeful violence of irritated sloth.
“Let’s admit, Excellency, that craftsmanship, trade, and peas- ant industry, which in the interior arc almost exclusively Ar- menian, could be taken over by Turks — ^who is to replace all the numerous Armenian doctors, trained in the best universi- ties in Europe, who care for their Osmanh patients with the same skill as for their own people? Who’s to replace all the engineers, all the solicitors, all the export traders, whose work so indefatigably drives the country forwards? Your Excellency will perhaps tdl me that, at a pinch, a people can live without intellect. But it can’t hve without a stomach. And at present the stomach of Turkey is being slit open, yet you hope to sur- vive the operation.”
Enver Pasha heard this out, his head inclined gently on one side. His whole aspect, incisive, youthful, subdued only by that hint of shyness in him, displayed as few unintcntiond creases as did his uniform. The pastor, on the other hand, was already beginning to look disheveUed. He was sweatmg, his tic was askew, his sleeves worked their way up his arms. The general crossed his short but slim legs. The glittering riding- boots fitted as though they were on trees.
“You speak of the stomach, Herr Lepsius.” He smiled effusively. “Well, perhaps after the war Turkey may have rather a weak one ”
“She won’t have any stomach left at all. Excellency.”
Unruffled, the commander continued; “The Turkish popu- lation IS forty milhons. Well, now — try to sec it from our pomt of view, Herr Lepsius. Is it not a great and worthy policy to try to weld these forty millions together and establish a nat- ural empire, which henceforth will play the same part m Asia as Germany does in Europe? This empire is waiting. We have only to grasp it. I agree that among Armenians one finds an alarming proportion of intelhgence. Are you really so much
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in favour of that kind of intelligence, Herr Lepsius? I’m not We Turks may not be very intelligent in that way, but on the other hand we’re a great and heroic people, called to estabhsh and govern a world empire. Therefore we intend to surmount all obstacles.”
Lepsius twisted his fingers but said not a word. This spoilt child was the absolute master of a great power. His finely modelled, attractive little head brooded on such statistics as might have amazed all who knew the reality. He could pro- duce none to blind Dr. Lepsius, who was precisely aware that in Anatolia there were scarcely six milhon pure-bred Turks; that, if one went into Northern Persia, to the Caucasus, to Kashgar and Turkestan, he would not be able, even by in- cluding all nomad Turkic tribes, the vagrant horse-thieves and steppe-dwellers spread across a land as wide as the half of Europe, to trump up as many as twenty millions. Such dreams, he reflected, the narcotic of nationalism engenders. Yet at the same time he was moved to pity for this porcelain war god, this childlike Antichrist.
Johannes Lepsius’s voice became soft and surcharged with wisdom: “You want to found a new empire, Excellency. But the corpse of the Armenian people will be beneath its founda- tions. Can that bring you prospenty? Could no more peaceful way be chosen, even now?”
Here for the first time Enver Pasha laid bare his deepest truth. His smile had no longer any reserve in it, a cold stare had come into his eyes, his bps retreated from a strong and dangerous set of teeth.
“There can be no peace,” he said, “between human beings and plague germs.”
Lepsius came down on this in a trice: “So you openly admit your intention of using the war to extirpate the Armeman millet?”
The War Minister had decidedly said too much. He retired at once vinthin his impregnable fortress of discourteous cour-
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tesy. “My personal opinions and intentions are all conuined in the memoranda published by our government on the sub- ject, We are acting under the force majeure of the war, in self- defence, after having waited and observed as long as we could. Citizens who work to destroy the state render themselves liable in all countries to be dealt with by the sharp process of law. So that our government is withm its legal rights.”
They were back at the beginning. Johannes Lepsius could not manage to sa£e a sound like a groan. He could hear Mon- signore Saven’s voice: “Don’t moralizcl Be matter-of-factl ArgumentsI” Oh, if he could but remaih matter-of-fact and use only arguments keen as razor-blades! But this very neces- sity to keep sitting, the impropriety of springing to his feet to answer, set his nerves despairingly on edge. He, the born speaker on committees, at pubhc meetings, needed room, free- dom to move in.
“Excellency” — he pressed a hand against his wide and finely shaped forehead— “I’m not going to speak to you in platitudes. I won’t say that a whole people can’t be made to suffer for the misdemeanours of a few individuals. I won’t ask why women and children, small children, as you yourself were once, must suffer a bestial death for the sake of a policy of which they haven’t so much as heard. I want you to look at the future, your people’s future. Excellency! Even this war will end some day, and Turkey will be faced with the necessity of conclud- ing peace terms. May that day be a good one for all of usi But, if It should be unlucky, what then. Excellency? Surely the responsible head of a people must take some measures against the possibility of an unfavourable ending of the war. And in what position will the Ottoman peace commission be to negotiate if it finds itsdf faced with the question: ‘Where is your brother Abel?’ A highly painful situation. The victori- ous Powers — may God prevent it! — might use this pretext of a great crime that has b«n committed to share out the booty remorselessly among themselves. And General Enver Pasha,
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the man who, in such a case as that, would be the greatest among his people, the man who had shouldered all responsi- bility, whose word had been all-powerful — how would he de- fend himself then agamst that people?”
Enver Pasha’s eyes had begun to dream; he said quite seri- ously: “Thank you for this very excellent hint. But any man who goes into poliucs must possess two special qualifications: first, a certain levity, or, if you hke, indifference to death — ^it comes to the same thing; and, secondly, the unshakable belief in his own decisions, once they are taken.”
Herr Pastor Lepsius stood up. He crossed his arms upon his breast, almost in the fashion of the East. This guardian angel, sent by God to shield the Armenian people, was in a pitiful state. The big handkerchief hung out of his pocket, his trousers had worked up almost to his knees, his tie wandered nearer and nearer his ear — even his pince-nez seemed to have van- ished utterly.
“I implore Your Excellency” — he bowed before his seated interlocutor — “let it end today. You have made such an ex- ample of this enemy in your midst — who is not one— as his- tory has never recorded. Hundreds and thousands are dying on the highroads of the East. Make an end today. Give orders to keep back these new edicts of transportation. I know that not all the vilayets and sanjaks have been depopulated yet. If, for the sake of the German ambassador and Mr. Morgenthau, you still hesitate with the great deportations in Western Asia Minor, spare Northern Syria, Aleppo, Alexandretta, Antioch, for my sake. Say: ‘This is enough.’ And when I get back to Germany, I’ll sing your praises wherever I go.”
And still the pastor would not sit down again, although the general’s patient hand had several times pointed to his chair.
“Herr Lepsius,” Enver declared at last, “you overestimate my competency. The carrying into effect of such government decrees is a matter for the Mimstry of the Interior.”
The German snatched his pmce-nez from off red eyes. “But
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that’s just it— the way in isdiich the thing’s being carried out It isn’t the Minister, or the Wali, or the Mutessari^ who puts these decrees into execution, but bestial, heartless subordinates and sergeants. Do you, for instance, or does the Minister, in- tend that women and chiidien should collapse on the high- road and be driven on at once with cudgels? Is it your inten- tion that a whole area should be infected with rotting corpses, that the Euphrates should be thick with dead? I know for a fact that that's how it’s being carried out.”
“I’m aware how well you know the mterior.” Enver Pasha came a httlc way to meet him. “And I should be very glad to have your written suggestions as to how these matters can be improved. I’ll examine them carefully.”
But Lepsius stretched out his arms. “Send me down there. That’s my first suggesuon. Not even the old Sultan refused me that. Give me full powers to orgamze these transports and convoys. God will lend me the strength, and I’ve had more experience than anyone. I don’t need a piastre from the Otto- man government, I’ll get hold of the necessary funds. I shall have German and American rehef commissions behind me. Once before I succeeded in a great work of assistance. I helped to establish numbers of orphanages and hospitals and more than fifty industrial societies. In spite of this war I can do the same agam, and better — and in two years you yourself will be thanking me, Excellency.”
This time Enver Pasha had listened with not merely his usual attention, but intense eagerness. And now Herr Lepsius saw and heard a thing he had never experienced in his life. It was no sneering cruelty, no cynicism, that transfigured the boyish look on this war-lord’s face. No. What Herr Lepsius perceived was that arctic mask of the human being who “has overcome all sentimentality” — the mask of a human mind which has got beyond guilt and all its qualms, the strange, almost innocent naivete of utter godlessness. And what force it had, that a man could not hate itl
^2
‘Tour estimable suggestions interest me,” said Enver ap- preciatively, “but it goes without saying that I must reject them. This very request of yours shows me that up to now we have talked at cross-purposes. If 1 let a foreigner help Armenians, I shall create a precedent which will admit of the intervention of foreign personages, and so of the countries they represent. I should be destroying my whole policy, since its object is to teach the Armenian millet the consequences of this longing of theirs for foreign intervention. The Armenians themselves would be bewildered. First I punish their seditious hopes and fantasies, and then I proceed to send one of their most influential friends to reawaken them. No, my dear Herr Lepsius, that’s impossible. I can’t let foreigners benefit these people. The Armenians must see in m their sole benefac- tors.”
The pastor sank down into his chair. Lost. All over. Words were superfluous. If only the man were mahaous, if he were SatanI But he had no malice, he was not Satan; this quietly implacable mass-murderer was boyishly charming. Lepsius had begun to brood and so did not see at once the whole effrontery of Enver’s offer, made in a cheery, confident tone:
“Shall I suggest something, Herr Lepsius? You get money I Get as much money as ever you can, from your societies, a lot of money— in Germany and America. Then, when you’ve col- lected it, bring it to me. I’ll use it all as you want it used, ac- cording to your suggestions. But I must point out that I can’t allow any supervision by Germans or other foreigners.”
Had Johannes not been so perturbed, he would have burst out laughing, so amusing was the thought of those devious channels by which his collected funds, disposed of by Enver, would travel in Turkey. He did not answer. He was beaten. Although he had been without much hope, even before the interview began, he realized only now that a world lay shat- tered. He summoned his wits together and, to bring himself back to self-control, made himself look a trifle more present-
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abl^ mopped his glistening forehead several times, and stood up.
"I can’t bear to think, Excdlency, that this hour which you have been so kind as to grant me has been quite fruitless. There are a hundred thousand Armenians in North Syria and along the coast, living far away from any battlefield. I’m sure Your Excellency agrees that punitive measures which have no object are better left in abeyance.”
Agam the boyish Mars bared a row of smiling teeth. “You may be sure, Herr Lepsius, that our government will avoid all unnecessary harshness.”
This on both sides had been empty formahty, an aimless juggling, to enable this political discussion, like every other, to ebb away in vague inconclusivcness. Enver had not made the least concession. It was still his affair what harshness he might think necessary. And Lepsius, too, knowing that his last words were meaningless, had said them merely to end the interview. The general, who, in contrast to the pastor, looked at that moment especially spick and span, stood back to give his visitor the pas. He even went with him a litde way and then, in his shghtly surprised inscrutability, watched the pastor’s unsteady steps bear him out of sight, down a long corridor, with billowing curtain-doors on cither side.
Enver Pasha went into Talaat Bey’s office. The clerks sprang up. Hero-worship shone out of their faces. That almost mystic love had still not waned which even these paper-gentry felt for their dainty war god. Hundreds of boastful stories of his mad daring were current here m all the departments. When, for instance, during the war in Albania, an artillery regiment had mutimed, he, cigarette m mouth, had stood before the muzzle of a howitzer and challenged the mutineers to pull the firing-cord. Round Enver’s dehcate, silky features, his peo- ple saw a messianic aura. He was the man sent by God, who should re-erect the empire of Osman, Bayazid, Suleiman. The
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general greeted his clerks with a merry shout, evoking over- emphasized delight in them. Too-hasty hands snatched open the doors which led on into Talaat’s sanctum through outer offices. The little room seemed far too small for that Mimster’s crushing personality. When, as he did at this instant, this Hun stood up bchmd his desk, he darkened the window. Talaat’s mighty head was grey at the temples. Above the pursy lips of the Oriental there hovered a small, pitch-black moustache. Fat double chins thrust out of a stick-up double collar. A white piqu^ waistcoat, hkc the symbol of candid open-heartedness, curved over a jutting expanse of belly. Each time Talaat Bey beheld his co-rider in this duumvirate, he felt the urge to place his great paws in fatherly tenderness on the narrow shoulders of this youth blessed of the gods. Yet each time, the aura of glacial shyness surrounding Enver impeded such familiar proximity. Yet Talaat was the exuberant man of the world, the talker, whose heady, confident way could dispose of five diplomats at a time, whereas Enver, the demi- god of his people, the consort of an imperial princess, would often at great receptions stand for half an hour shyly aside, lost in his dreams. Talaat dropped his big, fleshy hand again and contented himself with a single question; “So the Ger- man’s been seeing you?”
Enver Pasha turned his eyes on the Bosporus, with its jocund waters, its little hurrying tugs, its tiny kayiks, its cypresses, which looked so unconvmcing, so badly painted, at that hour —its theatrical ruins. Then he glanced back and let his eyes stray through this empty office till they paused on an old- fashioned Morse apparatus set on a little carpeted table, like some very valuable curiosity. On this wretched machine be- fore the Ittihad revolution had raised him up to be the first statesman in the Cahph’s empire, the young Talaat, the minor post-and-telegraph official, had fingered out Morse code. Let every visitor admire this proof of a giddily steep ascent, the reward of merit. Enver, too, seemed to view this significant
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telegraph apparatus with benevolent eyes before he quite re- membered to answer the question. “Yes, the German! He tried to threaten a little, with the Reichstag.”
This remark showed how right Monsignore Saven had been — how mistaken, from the very start, those humanely im- ploring tactics of Dr. Lepsius. A secretary brought in a sheaf of dispatches, which Talaat began to sign without sitting down agam. He did not look up as he was speaking: “These Ger- mans are only afraid of the odium of being made partly re- sponsible. But they may have to come begging to us for more important things than Armenians.”
This might have ended that day’s discussion of the banish- ment, had Enver’s inquisitive eyes not rested on the dispatches in casual scrutiny. Talaat Bey noticed his glance and made the papers rusde as he waved them. “The precise directions for Aleppo. Meanwhile, I suppose, the roads will be clearer again. In the next few weeks Aleppo, Alexandretta, Antioch, and the whole coast can begin to move out.”
“Antioch and the coast Enver repeated interrogatively, as though he might have something to say on the point. He did not speak another syllable but stared enthralled at Talaat’s fat fingers, which, irresistible as a storming-party, kept scribbling signatures under texts. These same forthright and stumpy fingers had composed that order, sent out to all walls and mutessarifs: “The goal of these deportations is annihila tion.” The short pen-strokes showed all the impetus of complete, implacable conviction; they had no scruples.
The Minister raised up his bent torso. “That’s done. In the autumn I shall be able to say with perfect candour to all these people: 'La question armimenne n’existe pas'"
Enver stood at the window and had not heard. Was he thinking of his future caliphate, which was to reach from Macedoma to India? Was he worried about the mumtiom supplies for the army? Or dreaming of fresh acquisitions for his magic palace on the Bosporus? In its great banqueting-
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hall he had caused the wedding throne to be set up which Nadjieh Sultana, the Sultan’s daughter, had brought with her dowry. Four silver-gilt pillars and, over them, a starry canopy of Byzantine brocade.
Johannes Lepsius was still creeping through the alleys of Istanbul. It was long past midday. He had missed his lunch. The pastor dared not go back to the Hotel Tokatlyan. An Armenian house. Terror and despair were in all its inhabitants, from the host and guests down to the last waiter and hft-boy. They knew his ways and had known of his undertaking. The spies and confidence men who, by order of Talaat Bey, fol- lowed him everywhere might track him now as much as they hked. It hurt him that his friends should be somewhere wait- ing for him in a well-considered place of security. Davidian, the president of the former Armenian National Assembly, would be one of them; an arrested person who had, however, managed to escape and remain illegally in Istanbul. Lepsius had not strength or courage to face them. The fact that he did not come would be enough to show them the truth, and it was to be hoped that by now they would have separated. Even the worst pessimists among them (they all were pessimists, and no wonder) — even they had not considered it out of the question that the pastor might get a permit for the interior. Much would have been gained by it.
Lepsius came to a pubhc garden. Here, too, festivity. Gar- landed benches. Half-moon pennons duttermg out from poles and lamp-posts. The jam of idlers, thick, slab, unpleasant, oozed Its way along gravel paths between the grass-plots. Lepsius, dazed and unsteady, caught sight of a bench. He found a seat on it, beside others. A half-circle, vivid with wav- ing colours, curved out before him. That same instant, over in the grandstand, a Turkish military band burst forth with clashing janizary music. Cornets, flutes, raucous clarinets, clashing brass, ascending and descendmg the short intervals
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with the sharp unity of a razor-blade, mingled with the fanatical yelps of taut-strung drums, the incessant clattering, clinking rattle of tambourines, the shivering hatred of cym- bals. Johannes Lepsius sat in this music up to his chin, as in a bath of glass splinters. But he wanted to suffer, not to free himself, and pressed handfuls of glass splinters into his con- saousness That which Enver Pasha had refused was now conceded him. In the long deportation convoys of this people, given into his charge, he dragged his way down the stony, marshy highroads of Anatolia. Let not his own condemn him — they who in the trenches of the Argonne, on the battle- fields of Podoha and Galicia, at sea and in the air, were bang decimated. Were not those endless hospital trains, at the sight of which a man had to cry out, more terrible still.? Had not the eyes of German wounded and dying become Armcman eyes? Lepsius, under this janizary band, let his head, dull with fatigue, sink lower and lower. He had not been chosen to care for his own, but for that which was not his. A new note was forcing its way into this strident, wrathful Turkish music, a vibrant clatter which rose and rose. And it came from above. A Turkish air squadron was on its way across Istanbul, dropping swirling clouds of proclamations. Though he could not tell why, it grew clear to Johannes Lepsius that these planes above him should be named “Original Sin and Its Pride.” He wandered about within this paception as he might have in a huge building — ^in the Ministry of the Interior. Cur- tains fluttacd out from before the doorways; they waved, hke flames, and he thought of a passage in the Apocalypse, which he had meant to use m his next samon: “And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto batde . . . and they had breast-plates, as it were breast-plates of iron, and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle. . . . And they had tails, like unto scorpions, and thae wae stings in their tails, and thar power was to hurt men five months.”
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Johannes Lepsius started up. New means, new methods must be thought out. If the German Embassy failed, perhaps the Austrian Markgraf Pallavicini, a most distinguished man, might have more success. He might threaten reprisals — the Mohammedan Bosnians were Austro-Hungarian citizens. And, so far, papal admonitions had been too tepid. But then Enver Pasha approached him, with his never-to-be-forgotten smile. No — shy was not the word to describe this boyish (or girlish) amiability of the great mass-murderer. — ^We intend, Herr Lepsius, to pursue the policy of our interests to the very end. Only a power which stood above all interests could pre- vent us, a power never tainted with any rascality. If you should happen to turn up the name of such a power in the diplomat’s register, I shall be so glad to receive you again at the Ministry.
Lepsius shifted and fidgeted so wildly that his veiled neigh- bour on the bench, becoming scared, got up to go. He did not notice, since now he was weighted hand and foot with his leaden conviction: “No more to be done.” There was no more help. What the priest Ter Haigasun in Yoghonoluk had known for weeks was just beginning now to dawn on Pastor Johannes Lepsius: “There’s only one thing left — ^to pray.”
And so, amid the press of these folk on holiday, jostled by laughing women and squalhng brats, as the janizary music brayed again, as his head, with his eyes closed, rolled impo- tently about from side to side, the pastor folded, or at least be- lieved he folded, his hands, as petiuoners should. And his soul began speaking: “Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. . . .”
But how had the “Our Father” changed? Each word was a gulf deeper than the eye could measure. Even at the words “us,” “ours,” his head swirled. Who dare still say “us,” since Christ, who first bound the “us” together, created it, went to heaven on the third day? Without Him it is all no more than a stinkmg heap of shards and bones, as high as half the
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universe. Lepsius thought of his mother, of the words which, after his baptism, she had written fifty-six years ago in her diary: “May his name, Johannes, for ever remind me that it is my sacred duty to bring him up a true Johannes, one who really loves his Lord and walks in His footsteps. . . .” Had he become a real Johannes? Was he really full to the brim of that deep trust in God which cannot be named? Alas, such trust threatens to crumble as the body declines. His diabetes had come back again. He would have to be careful what he ate. Above all, nothing sweet, no bread or potatoes. Perhaps Enver, by forbidding his journey to Anatolia, had prevented his be- coming any worse. But what was the hotel porter of the Tokatlyan doing here? And since when had he worn that lambskin officer’s kepi? Had Enver sent him^ Pohtely the porter handed him a teskere for the interior. It was an auto- graphed photo of Napoleon. And yes, of course, the first con- voy of exiles must be waiting for him outside the hotel. All his friends would be there, Davidian and all the others. They were smihng and beckoning to him. ‘‘They all look jolly well,” thought the pastor. And indeed the worst, most horrible reality has always a compensation at the heart of it, if only one can look at It steadily. On the banks of a river they halted, under wildly overhanging rocks. Why, they even had tents with them. Perhaps, sub rosa, Enver had made a few small conces- sions. When they had all lain down to rest, a tall Armenian man, his clothes thickly caked with slime, came over to him. He spoke queer, ceremonious, broken German: “See — ^this charming river is the Euphrates, and these are my children. But you are to stretch your body across it, from bank to bank, so that my children may have a bridge to cross by.”
Lepsius pretended this was a joke, and retorted: “Well, you and your children’ll have to wait a bit, till I’ve grown a little.” But at once he began to grow, with delightful celerity. His hands and feet spread endlessly far away from him. Now he could fulfil the Armenian man’s request with pleasant non-
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chalance. And yet, in the end, it didn’t work, because Johannes Lepsius lost his balance and almost shpped down o& his bench.
“This is really terrible,” he said to himsdif, for the second time that day. But actually, more than anything else, what he meant was the thirst that tormented him. He shook himself hurried to the first drink-shop, and, without any thought of medical warnings, greedily swallowed down a sweet iced drink. With his enhanced sense of well-being new and cou- rageous plans began to invade him. “I’ll never let go,” he laughed absent-mindedly to himself. And this vague laugh was a declaration of war on Enver Pasha.
In that same instant Talaat Bey’s private secretary was hand- ing the representative on duty at the Ministry of Post and Tele- gragh an official dispatch concerning Aleppo, Alexandretta, Antioch, and the coast.
6
The Great Assembly
Evek since the day on which D]clal Bey, the estimable Wall of Aleppo, had refused to carry out in his province the govern- ment decrees of banishment — smce that spring day there had been no further hindrances, no annoying recalcitrance.
Apart from those directly affected by it, the heaviest burden of this tragic measure lay on the mudirs. Their nahiyehs, the districts they administered, comprised wide stretches of ter- ritory, with scarcely a railway hne, with httle telegraphic com- munication, where even carriage driving along the cruellest highroads and tracks was an agony. So that really the mudirs had no choice but to sit all day and half the night in the saddle, till every Armenian village over every square mile of country had been sent packing at the proper amc. This “proper time” was often the midnight before the morning of setting out. It had been easy enough for the Wah, the Mutessarif, the Kaima- kam, to give their orders and “hold responsible.” In the towns it was child’s play. But when one had ninety-seven small dis- tricts, villages, hamlets, parishes, to control, it looked very different. So that many a mudir, who was both unable to work miracles and not scrupulous as to the letter of the law, decided without much hesitation to “forget” this or that re- mote village. Many mudirs were inspired by good-natured in- dolence. In others such easy-going imldness had in it a dash of cunning. These “overlookmgs” might prove remunerative, since the small Armenian, even the peasant, is not unprosper- ous. Indulgence was only perilous in districts in which' there
15a
was a standing gendarmerie post. The saptiehs wanted to make a httle themselves, and what better, more fruitful method than legalized plunder, at which the authorities winked both eyes? To be sure, the possessions of exiles were legally the property of the state. But the state was well aware that it had not the means rigidly to enforce its just claims and could see the advantage of not allowing the zeal of its executives to flag.
Whereas in all provincial selamliks, cafes, baths, places of assembly, the progressives — all, that is to say, who read a nevi^s- paper, who had been to Smyrna or Istanbul and there seen, instead of karagos, the old-Turkish shadoW'theatre, a couple of French comedies, and who had heard the names “Sarah Bernhardt” and “Bismarck” — whereas these cultured ones, the highly progressive urban middle class, stood to a man behind Enver Pasha’s Armenian policy, the simple Turk, peasant or town proletarian, felt differently. Often, as he rode about his district, a surprised mudir would pull up in the village street, where he had just read out his decree of banishment, to watch Turks and Armenians mingle their tears. He would marvel as, before an Armenian house, its Turkish neighbours stood and wailed, calling after its dazed and tearless inhabitants, who without looking back were leaving the doors of their old home; “May God pity you!” And more, loading them with provisions for the road, with costly presents, a goat, or even a mule. The amazed mudir might even have to see these Turks accompany their wretched neighbours for several leagues. He might even behold his own compatriots casting themselves down before his feet, to beseech him: “Let them stay with us. They haven’t the true faith, but they are good. They are our brothers. Let them stay with us.”
But what use was that? The very best-natured of mudirs could overlook no more than a few unnamed desert villages, where secretly he tolerated the presence of some remnant of the accursed race, cowering into the shelter of its own terror of extinction. Otherwise it went stumbling along field-paths^
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turned off on to cart-tracks, mingled and josded along the roads, to come at last, after days, to the great highway which leads south-west over Aleppo into the desert. A hesitant, million-footed rhythm, such as the earth had not yet known. The route-march of this army had been sketched out and was being followed with real strategic foresight. Only one depart- ment had been neglected by its invisible commanders— the commissariat. In the first few days there was still a httle bread and bulgur, dried wheat, available, when most had still not exhausted their own supplies. In these early days every adult had still the nght to draw from the onbashi, the paymaster- sergeant of the convoy, legal pay amounting to twelve paras, less than a penny. But most were wise enough not to make the demand, which could only have drawn down the hatred of the all-powerful upon their heads; and then, for twelve paras, with the cost of living risen to what it was, the most one could hope to buy would be a couple of oranges or one hen’s egg. So that with every hour the faces became more hollow, the million-footed steps unsteadier. Soon no other sounds forced their way out of this dragging throng along the roads than groanings, pantings, whimperings, with sometimes a wild, convulsive scream. With time this being shed more and more component parts; they sank to earth, were bundled into the ditches, and there perished. The saptiehs’ clubs came thud- ding down on the backs of hesitant throngs. For these saptiehs foamed with irritation. They themselves were having to hve like dogs till such time as they could hand over their convoys at the frontiers of the next kazah, the next gendarmerie dis- trict. At first, roll-calls were still taken. But, as death and sick- ness gained the upper hand, as more and more half-dead and corpses, especially children’s corpses, were flung into the ditches, this keeping of lists seemed highly onerous, and the onbashi relinquished superfluous scribbling. Who cared to know that Sarkis, Astik, or Hapeth, that Anush, Vartuhi, or Keren, were rotting somewhere in the open? These saptiehs
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were not all brutes. It is even probable that most of them were good, plain, middling sort of people. But what can a saptieh do? He is under stnngent orders to reach such and such a point with his whole convoy by such and such a scheduled hour. His heart may be in perfect sympathy with the scream- ing mother who tries to snatch her child out of a ditch, flings herself down on the road, and claws the earth. No use to talk to her. She’s wasted minutes already, and it’s still six miles to the next halt. A convoy held up. All the faces in it twisted with hate. A mad scream from a thousand throats. Why did not these crowds, weak as they were, hurl themselves on the saptieh and his mates, disarm them, and tear them mto shreds? Perhaps the policemen were in constant terror of such as- sault, which would have finished them. And so — one of them fires a shot. The rest whip out their swords to beat the de- fenceless cruelly with the blades. Thirty or forty men and women lie bleeding. And, with this blood, another emotion comes to life in the excited saptiehs — their old itch for the women of the accursed race. In these helpless women you possess more than a human being— in very truth you possess the God of your enemy. Afterwards, the saptiehs scarcely know how it all had happened.
A shifting carpet woven with the threads of blood-stained destinies. It is always the same. After the first few days on the roads all the young men and the men in the prime of life get separated off from the rest of the convoy. Here, for instance, a man of forty-six, in good clothes, an engineer. It needs many cudgel blows to get him away from his wife and children. His youngest is about one and a half. This man is to be enrolled in a labour battalion, for road-making. He stumbles in the long line of men and shuffles, gibbering hke a half-wit: “I never missed paying my bedel . . . paying my bedel.” Suddenly he grips hold of his neighbour. “You’ve never seen such a lovely baby.” ... A torrent of sentimental agony. “Why, the girl had eyes as big as plates. If only I could. I'd crawl after them
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on my belly like a snake." And he shuffles on, enveloped in his grief, completely isolated. That evemng they he down to rest on a hillside. Long after midmght he shakes the same neighbour out of his sleep. “They’re ^1 dead now.” He is per- fectly calm.
In another convoy a husband and wife. Both still quite young. The bridegroom’s upper lip has scarcely a trace of down on it. Their hour is approaching, since all the active men arc to be separated. The bride gets an inspiration to dis- guise her young husband in women’s clothes. These two children have already begun to laugh, delighted at the happy disguise. But the others warn them against any premature triumph. On the outskirts of a big town some strange chettehs, armed roughs, come out to meet them. They are out on a woman-hunt. Among several others, they choose the bride She clings fast to her husband. “For God’s sake, leave me with her. My sister is deaf-mute. She needs me.” “That’s no reason, janum, little soul! The fair one shall come with you.” The couple get taken off to a filthy hut And there the truth is soon made mamfest. The chettehs kill the young man in- stantly, and mutilate his corpse in a fiendish mockery of the disguise which he had assumed. Then, after the most horrible abuse, the girl is tied naked to her groom — ^face to face with his mutilated corpse.
A shifting carpet, woven of fives which none can unravel.
. . . There, again and again, the mother who for days carries her child, dead of starvation, in a sack on her shoulders, until at last, unable any longer to bear the stench, her own people complain to the saptiehs. There, too, the crazed mothers of Kcmakh, who, bawling hymns and with sparkling eyes, as though this were a blessed work in the sight of God, cast their children down from a rock into the Euphrates. Again and again some bishop, some vartabed, approaches. He gathers up and spreads out his robes, casts himself down before the
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mudir, sobs: “Have pity, Effendi, on these innocent.” And the mudir has to give the official answer: “Priest, do not meddle in politics! The government respects the church. I am only con- cerned with you in ecclesiastical matters.”
In many convoys nothing m particular seems to be hap- pening, no apparent suffering, only hunger, thirst, wound^ feet, and disease. And yet one day a German deaconess stood outside the hospital of Marash, at which she had just arrived to go on duty. An endless, mute convoy of Armenians came dragging onwards past the hospital, and she stood waiting to let them pass. She could not manage to stir till the last had vanished. Something which she herself could not understand had begun to stir in this nursing-sister — ^not pity, no, and not horror cither; something vast and unknown, almost exulta- tion. That evening she wrote home to her people: “I ran into a long convoy of exiles, who had only just been turned out of their villages and were still in quite a good state. I had to wait a long time to let them get past me, and I never shall forget what they looked like. Only a sprinkling of men, the rest all women and children. A lot of them had light hair and great blue eyes, which stared at me with such deathly solem- nity, such unconscious grandeur in them, that they might have been the angels of the Last Judgment." These poor avenging angels had come from Zeitun, Marash, Aintab, and the vilayet of Adana. They came plodding down from the north, from the provinces of Sivas, Trebizond, Erzerum. They came out of the east, from Kharput and the Kurd-mfested Diarbckr, from Urfa and Bitlis. Before the Taurus, before Aleppo had been reached, they all mingled in the one endless, shifting carpet of lives. And yet in Aleppo itself nothing had happened, nor in the teemmg sanjaks and kazahs of its vilayet. The coast lay peaceful and untouched. Musa Dagh was at peace. The mountain seemed not to notice this gruesome pilgrimage which passed not so very far away.
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Gabuel Baoraoian pursued his investigations in the villages. He even extended their scope. Southwards he often got as far as Suedia, and northwards, after several hours’ ride, he once even touched Beilan, that deserted viUa-pleasaunce of nch Ar- menians from Alexandretta. He only dared one other journey to Antioch. Gabriel found the ancient doors of the Agha Rifaat Bereket’s mansion closed. He pounded the knocker several times against the copper-inlaid wood, but nobody an- swered. So the Agha was not back yet from Aleppo. Though Gabriel knew he was travelhng in aid of the Armenians, the absence of this friend of his father depressed him.
On his return he decided that henceforth in all his jour- neyings he would not go beyond the farthest precincts of Musa Dagh. Some compelling magic emanating from the mountain of his fathers, becoming stronger and stronger the longer he stayed here, forced him to this. The same solemn amazement still descended on him as each morning he opened his window wide to greet the mountain. He could not understand. The huge mass of Musa Dagh, changing its aspect every hour, now firmly compressed, now almost on the point of evapora- tion into downy sunlight — ^the very essence of this mountain, eternal amid all this mutabihty, seemed to renew Gabriel’s strength and give him courage for the torturing hither and thither of thoughts which had robbed him of sleep ever since the arrival of Pastor Tomasian. But the instant he left the shadow of Musa Dagh the courage to think such thoughts dabed out of him. Meanwhile, his industrious excursions through the villages had born good fruit. He got what he was after — ^not only a fairly consistent general notion of the day- to-day hves of the peasants, frmt-growers, silk-spmners, weavers, beekeepers, and wood-carvers, but many glimpses into the more closed circles of their minds, into the nature of their family relationships. Not that it was easy. At first many of these country folk could only see a wealthy foreigner, no matter how much he might be bound to them by racial
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ties and common ownership. But with time their trust in him grew, and even a secret hope they had of him. The effendi was, to be sure, a powerful man, who knew foreign parts and was feared by the Turks because of his in- fluence. As long as he stayed on in Yoghonoluk, the worst might perhaps be spared the villages. No one scrutinized the real worth of such hopes. But another instinct helped to feed them. Though Gabriel spoke as httle of the future as they themselves, many could sense, in his eyes, his restlessness, his gestures — in the notes which he kept taking — some purpose- ful thought, a special activity, which distinguished hun from everyone else. All their eyes were on him when he came among them. He was asked into many houses. Though the rooms were bare, according to Eastern custom, their clean comfort always surprised him. The clay floors were strewn with clean carpets. Divans covered with pleasant rugs took the place of chairs. Only in the poorest houses were the stables anywhere near the living-room. The walls were by no means bare. Old illustrations and little pictures saved from calendars were pinned up beside the pictures of the saints. Many housewives decorated their rooms with cut flowers — a very unusual habit in the East — laid out as a rule in flat dishes. When the guest was seated, a big wooden stand would be set before him, on which were placed the wide tin dishes of cakes, honey-fingers, and sweet cheese biscuits. Gabriel could remember their taste from his childhood. In those days they had been forbidden luxuries, since his parents were not supposed to know that the servants took young Master Gabriel into village houses. But, now that they were being heaped upon him, Gabriel’s digestion began to protest, especially when they insisted on bringing melon slices and sugared fruit into the bargain. To have refused would have been an outrageous breach of hospi- tality, so he, the guest, in self-defence, had to keep giving dainties to the children whom they always brought in to be introduced, and occasionally munching a sweet himself. It
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moved him to sec how clean and well looked-after these chil- dren were, the smallest especially. The mothers took their greatest pride in the cleanness o£ the httle white smocks, tiny coats and aprons. Later, as these children grew up, even they, it is true, could not keep their boys from running wild, on warlike expeditions after booty, over Musa Dagh and into the gorges of the Damlayik.
Gabriel made many friends m these frequent excursions into the villages. The closest of them all was the staid, respectable Chaush Nurhan, or, more correctly, Sergeant Nurhan. Next to the elder Tomasian, this Chaush Nurhan owned the best craftsman’s business south of Yoghonoluk — he was a smith and locksmith and besides owned a saddlery, a carnage- bmlding establishment in which he built the kangnis used in these parts, and finally, a holy of holies, a shop wheie he worked alone, without any witnesses. Initiates knew that in secret he repaired hunting-rifies and made the cartridges for them. But his occupation was best kept secret from Ah Nassif’s inquisitive eyes.
Chaush Nurhan was an ex-regular. He had served seven years in the Turkish army, which he had spent in the war and in an Anatolian infantry regiment in the huge barracks at Brussa. He looked the hardened regular that he was, with his straight, iron-grey moustache twisted into very long points, his continual, forceful use of army expletives, and above all his stiff respectfulness with Bagradian, whom he greeted only as his superior officer. He may perhaps have sensed certain qualities in Gabriel, who did not himself know he possessed them. Chaush Nurhan, who had already worked for the younger Avetis, agreed to inspect the extensive gun-room of the villa and make sure that everything was ship-shape. He took away the guns to dismember and oil them in his secret workshop. Gabriel often came to see him at work. Sometimes he would bring Stephan with him. They remimsced about the army lik<f keen professionals. The chaush was full of coarse
i6o
barrack-room stories and quirks, of which the bel esprit Ga- briel never weaned. So that, incredibly, m these months of bamshment, two Armenian men became engrossed m their memories of Turkish army life as though they had been in a Turkish barracks. Chaush Nurhan was a widower, like old Tomasian. But he had a promising brood of half-grown chil- dren, whom he himself seemed to find it hard to distinguish. He scarcely ever troubled his head with his progeny. This erstwhile tyrant of recruits, with the awe-inspiring, iron-grey moustache, was placid good nature itself when it came to his own flesh and blood, and he let them run wild without a qualm. In the evenings, when his only journeyman had handed over the workshop keys, he neither entered his own house, full of children, nor knocked at any neighbour’s door. With a pitcher of wine in one hand, m the other an infantry cornet, pilfered from a quartermaster’s store, he would go into his apricot orchard. There, in the dusk, unsteady howhngs rent the air. They were well known to the other villagers. Turkish bugle-calls, halting and kicking, would rattle forth, as though, before night came, Chaush Nurhan meant to rally the folk in all the villages.
There had been some slight disagreement on educational policy in the villages. The scholastic programme of the Miazial Engerutiunk Hayoz, the General Armenian Schools Associa- tion, that recognized scholastic authority for the whole Arme- nian people, had laid it down that the school year was to end in the first days of early summer — that is to say, in the first week of May. But Ter Haigasun, as district head-superintendent of schools, gave sudden orders that this year teaching was to begin again after only one short week of holidays. The priest’s decision sprang from the same motives as did the dully frantic industry of the whole population m these days. The del- uge was at hand. This approaching dissolution of all order must be opposed by twice the normal regularity; utter help-
i6i
lessness, which all awaited as something inevitably should be countered by the severest order and discipline. And besidey in these harassed days, the wild, unconscious clamour of children on holiday would have been an unbearable nuisance about the land. And clearly every grown-up in the district would have sided with Ter Haigasun, had the teachers not bitterly op- posed him. These teachers, above all Hrand Oskanian, did not want to be robbed of their free time, guaranteed them by contract. They appealed to the mukhtars, they warned the parents — the poor little mites would be getting brain-fever if they had to work on in this grilling heat. Oskanian, the ever- silent, vented a perfect torrent of spite against Ter Haigasun. It was all no good. The priest was inflexible. He called a meet- ing of the seven mukhtars of the vdlages and convinced them in a few short words. So that the new school year, in spite of the heat, began more or less where the old had ended. The teachers, as a last resource, tried to bring in Bagradian on their side. Shatakhian and Oskanian, serious and formal, called at the viUa. But Gabriel plainly and ruthlessly declared for the continuation of studies. He welcomed it, not only as a matter of general policy, but in his own interests, since he meant to send his son Stephan to school with Monsieur Shatakhian. He should at last be able to mix with boys of his race and age.
On the first day of term Gabriel arnved at the school-house of Yoghonoluk with Stephan. Sato came, too; her wounded feet were already healed. It had meant a tilf with Juliette. She was worried about Stephan, she told him. Why should he have to squat on the same benches as these unwashed boys in an Oriental stable? Even in Pans, Stephan had never had to go to the public primary school, where after all there had been less danger of infectious disease and lice. Gabriel had stuck to his decision. If one looked at things as they really were, such dangers as that, which any day now might give way to real ones, were certainly not worth taking seriously. As a father he
xfia
considered it far more important that Stephan should at last get to know the life of his people from its beginnings. In former days, in another atmosphere, Juliette could have raised a hundred objections. As it was, she gave in at once and said no more. It was a silent acquiescence which she herself could understand least of all. Ever since that talk in the night, when Gabriel had seemed so very upset, something incomprehensible had been happening. Life on a basis of mutual confidence — the gathered harvest of a marriage that had gone on now for fourteen years — seemed to evaporate more and more. At pres- ent, when Juliette woke in the night, she felt as though she and the sleeper beside her were no longer sharmg the same past. Their marriage had been left behind in Pans, in glittering towns all over Europe; they had lost it, were cut off, it was theirs no longer. What was this thing that had been happen- ing? Had Gabriel altered, or had she? She could still not take the future possibility really seriously. It seemed to her almost absurd that a deluge should not gallantly retire from before her feet— the Frenchwoman. Surely it was simply a question of getting through the next few we^s. And then— back home! Whatever might or might not happen in these weeks was trivial child’s play. So she said no more about Gabriel’s de- cision that Stephan should go to the village school. Yet when in her most secret soul she suddenly was aware of that tepid sensation — “Oh, well, what business is it of mine?” — she felt starded and stirred to an unknown grief, not only for herself but for Stephan.
Young Stephan naturally rejoiced at the very thought of this new arrangement. Lately, as he admitted to his father, he had scarcely been able to fix his mind oq what the good Avak- ian was saying. He, the boy from the Paris lyc&, the Hellea- ist and Latinist, much preferred an Armenian village schooL Such complaisance was not due merely to the boredom of Stephan’s lessons with Avakian. His very soul had become confused, and yet alert, ever since Iskuhi and Sato had been
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their guests. Sato had already got him into mischief. One morning she and Stephan had suddenly vanished into the wilds, not coming back till well after lunch. Since Sato seemed to be threatened with dire consequences, Stephan had gallantly taken all the blame, insisting that they had lost their way on the Damlayik. Juliette had “made a scene” not only with Avakian, but also with Gabriel, and had forbidden her son so much as to speak to Sato in future. The waif had been ban- ished from the drawing-room and told to stay in her room when she was home. All the more frequently therefore had Stephan found himself drawn to Iskuhi, who was still not cured, though she too had long been out of bed. He would squat at her feet as she lay in a deck chair in the garden. He had so many things to ask her. Iskuhi had to tell him all about Zeitun. Yet whenever Maman came upon them, they were silent as a pair of conspirators. “How they all draw him to them'” reflected Juliette.
The school-house of Yoghonoluk was imposing. As the largest school of the Musa Dagh district, it comprised four classes. Ter Haigasun had entrusted their superintendence to Shatakhian. That teacher, on his own initiative, had added continuation classes to those of the usual village school. In these he taught French and history while Oskanian taught ht- erature and calligraphy But even this was not enough. There were evening classes for grown-ups Here such a universal sage as Apothecary Krikor displayed his light. He lectured on stars, flowers, beasts, on geology, and on the nations, poets, and sages of antiquity. As his habit was, he drew no clear distinc- tions between these things, but bathed them all in the efful- gence of one magnificent fairy-tale of science.
Shatakhian drew Gabriel aside. “I don’t quite understand you, Effendi. What can you expect your son to learn here?
I should say he knew more than I do about most subjects, though I did study for some time in Switzerland. But I’ve vegetated here for years. Just look at all these children. They’re
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like Hottentots. I don’t know whether they’ll be a good in* fluence.”
“It’s just their influence that I don’t want him to miss, Hapeth Shatakhian,’’ Gabriel explained — and the teacher won- dered at this father who seemed so stubbornly set on turnmg his son from a good European into a little Oriental.
The room was full of children and of parents come to enter their names. An old woman, pushing a little boy in front of her, approached Shatakhian. “Well, Teacher, here he is. Don’t thrash him too much.’’
“You hear?” Shatakhian turned to Gabriel, with a sigh over this wilderness of superstition, medievalism, and darkness of the spirit, which he had to spend such laborious days in com- bating.
It was arranged that Stephan should come to school three times a week. His chief task would be to put the finishing touches to his written and spoken Armenian. Sato was con- signed to the infant’s class, composed mostly of girls and all much younger than the sorry orphan of Zeitun. Even after his second day at school Stephan came home in a very bad temper. He wasn’t going to let them go on ragging him about these stupid English clothes. He was going to wear exactly the same as all the others. In a towering rage he msisted that the local tador should be commissioned to make him the usual entari- smock, with an aghil-belt, and the loose shalwar-trousers. These demands entailed a long dispute with Maman. It re- mained undecided for several days.
Now that he had no Stephan to teach, Samuel Avakian had another, entirely different occupation. Gabriel passed him all the rough notes which he had been collecting for many weeks and asked the student to reduce them to one comprehensive, statisucal statement. Avakian was not told why. His first job was to classify under various headings the population of all the villages, from Wakef, the lace Village in the south to Kebus-
siye, the bee-keeping village in the north. The information gathered by Bagradian from the village clerk of Yoghonoluk and the other six village dders was to be arranged and checked. By next morning Avakian had the following precise table for Gabriel:
Population of the seven villages, classified according to sex and age:
583 babes in arms and children under 4 years of age
579 girls between 4 and 12
823 boys between 4 and 14
2074 females . . over 12
1556 males over 14
This census included the Ba^adian family, with dependants. But, besides such lists, more exact classifications were drawn up, giving the number of famihes in each village according to occupation or craft, indeed from every conceivable angle. But it was not only a matter of human beings. Gabriel had tried to find out the number of head of cattle in the district. That had been by no means an easy task, an only partially success- ful one, since not even the mukhtars knew the exact figures. Only one thing was certain. There were no big hvestock, no oxen or horses. On the other hand, every well-to-do family owned a couple of goats and a donkey, or a riding and sump- ter mule. The larger herds of sheep, owned by individual breeders or communes, were driven, in the fashion of all moun- taineers, up on to the quiet meadow pasturage — sheltered meadows where they stayed from one shearing to the next in the care of shepherds and shepherds’ boys. It proved im- possible to get any exact idea of these herds. The industrious Avakian, to whom every task was a boon, went zealously forth into the villages and had already transformed Bagradian’s study into a kind of statistics bureau. Secredy he rather scoffed
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at this very elaborate hobby, by which a rich man was at* tempting to fill up the days of an indefinite period of suspense. Nodiing seemed too triihng for this pedant, who had obviously conceived the idea of writing a scientific memoir on the village life around Musa Dagh. He even wanted to know how many tonirs, kneading-troughs walled into the ground, there were in the villages. He investigated the harvests minutely and fieemed to be worried by the fact that the mountain folk im- ported their maize and the reddish Syrian wheat from Moham- medans down in the plain. It seemed to annoy him that there should be no Armenian mills, either in Yoghonoluk and Bitias or elsewhere. He even ventured to trespass on Krikor’s pre- serve and inquire as to the state of the drug supplies. Krikor, who had expected to display his hbrary, not his pharmacy, traced the curve of the roof with a pair of disillusioned fingers. On two small shelves bottles, jars, and crucibles of all kinds were set out, painted with exotic inscriptions. It was all there was to suggest a chemist’s shop. Three big petroleum jars in a corner, a sack of salt, a couple of bales of chibuk-tobacco, and some cheap ironmongery indicated the more active side of the business.
Krikor proudly tapped one of the mystic jars with his long bony fingers. “The whole pharmacopoeia, as St. John Chrysos- tom pointed out, can be reduced to seven primary substances: hme, sulphur, saltpetre, iodine, poppy, willow-resin, and bay- oil. It’s always the same thmg in hundreds of different dis- guises.”
After such a lesson in contemporary pharmaceutics Gabriel made no further inquiries. Luckily he had a fairly extenuve medicine chest of his own. But, more sigmficant than all this, was the incident of the small-arms. Chaush Nurhan had al- ready dropped some dark hints on the subject. Yet, the instant Gabriel tried to broach it with village notables, they beat hasty retreat. One day, however, he assailed Mukhtar Kebus- syan of Yoghonoluk m his best parbur and pinned him down:
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“Be frank with me, Thomas Kebussyan. How many rifles have you, and what pattern are they?”
The mukhtar began to squint hornbly, and wagged his bald pate. “Jesus Christ! Do you want to bring lU-luck on us all, Eifcndi?”
“Why should I, of all people, seem so unworthy of your confidence?”
“My wife doesn’t know it, my sons don’t know it, not even the schoolteachers know it. Not a soul.”
“Did my brother Avetis?”
“Your brother Aveus certainly did, God rest his soul. But he never mentioned it to anyone.”
“Do I look the sort of person who can’t keep his mouth shut?”
“If It comes out, we shall all be slaughtered.”
But since Kebussyan, for all his squintings and waggings of the head, could not manage to get away from his guest, he ended at last by double-bolting the parlour door. In a fright- ened hiss he told his story. In 1908, when Ittihad had gone over to revolution against Abdul Hamid, the Young Turkish agents had distributed weapons to all districts and communes of the empire, especially to the Armeman districts, which were re- garded as the chief supporters of the revolt. Enver Pasha had of course known all about it and, when war broke out, his instant order had been to disarm the Armenian population. Naturally the character and methods of the government officials concerned had made a great difference to the way in which the order was carried out. In such vilayets as Erzerum or Sivas, hotbeds of provincial zeal for Ittihad, unarmed people had been forced to buy rifles from the gendarmes, simply to hand them back to the government. To possess no arms in such a district was merely considered a cunning attempt to evade the law. But here, under Djelal Bey, it naturally had all gone far more smoothly. That admirable governor, whose
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humane instincts were always in rebellion against the edicts of the pretty war god in Istanbul, carried out such orders very negligently, where he could not simply allow them to dis- appear in his waste-paper basket. This mildness usually found Its echo in the administrative methods of his subordinates, with one harsh exception — ^the Mutessarif of Marash. The red-haired mudir of Antioch had arrived one day in January in Yoghonoluk, with the chief of the Antioch police, to collect all weapons. He had gone away again qmte peacefully on receiving the smiling assurance that no such weapons had been distributed. Luckily the mukhtar of those days had not given the Committee’s agents a written receipt.
"Very good” — Gabriel was delighted with the mayor — ^“and arc these guns worth anything?”
“Fifty Mauser rifles and two hundred and fifty Greek servicc<arbines. Each has thirty magazines of cartridges, that IS, about a hundred and fifty shots.”
Gabriel Bagradian stood reflecting. Really that was scarcely worth talking about. Had the men in the villages no other firearms of any kind?
Kebussyan hesitated again. “That’s their business. Lots of them hunt. But what use are a few hundred old blunder- busses, with flint locks?”
Gabriel rose, and held out his hand to the mukhtar. “Thank you, Thomas Kebussyan, for having trusted me. But, now that I know, I’d like you to tell me where you’ve hidden them.”
“Must you really know that, EfFendi?”
“No. But I’m curious, and I don’t see why you should keep that secret, now that you’ve told me all the rest.”
The mukhtar writhed in inner conflict. Apart from his brothers in office. Ter Haigasun, and the sexton, there was not a soul who knew that secret. Yet there was something in Gabriel against which Kebussyan could not hold out. He unb'irdened himself, after desperate admoniuons. The chests
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containing these rifles and supplies were in the chiirchyard of Yoghonoluk, buried in what seemed the usual graves, with false inscriptions on the crosses.
“So now I’ve put my life in your hands, Effendi,” the mukhtar moaned as he opened the door agam for his visitor. Gabriel answered him without turning round:
“Perhaps you really have, Thomas Kebussyan.”
Thoughts at which he himself began to tremble kept haunt* ing Gabriel Bagradian. They had such power to move his heart that he could not escape them, day or night. Gabriel saw only the first steps, only the patting of the ways. Five paces on from where they branched, and all was darkness and un- certainty. But in every hfe, as it nears decision, nothmg seems more unreal than its own aim.
Yet was it easy to understand why Gabriel, with all his roused-up energy, should have moved only about this narrow valley, avoiding any avenue of escape that might still have been open to him? Why are you wasting time, Bagradian? Why let day after day slip by? Your name is well known, and you have a fortune. Why not throw both these into the scales? Even though you are faced with danger and the greatest difiiculues, why not try to reach Aleppo, with Juliette and Stephan? After all, Aleppo is a big town. You have connexions there. At least you can put your wife and son under consular protection. No doubt they’ve been arresting notables every- where, banishing them, torturing them, putting them to death. Such a journey would certamly be a terrible risk. But is it any less of a risk to stay here? Don’t lose another mmme, do something before it’s too late to save yourself I . . .
This voice was not always silent. But its cries came muted. Musa Dagh stood serene. Nothing changed. The world around seemed to show that the Agha Rifaat Bereket had been right. Not a breath of outside trouble reached the village. His home^ which even now he could still sometimes m istake for a van-
vp
ished fairy-tale^ kept fast bold of Gabriel Bagradian. Juliette lost reality in bis eyes. Perhaps, even if be bad tried, be might not have freed himself now from Musa Dagh.
He kept his solemn promise not to say a word of the hidden small-arms. Even Avakian had learned nothing. On the other hand that tutor was suddenly given a fresh task. He was appointed cartographer. That map of the Damlayik which Stephan, with clumsy markings, had begun early in March, to please his father, gained fresh significance. Avakian was instructed to make an exact, large-scale map of the mountain in three copies. “So he’s come to the end of the valley, with all its hvestock and people,” thought the student, “and now he has to go to the hills.” The Damlayik is, of course, the real heart of Musa Dagh. That spur of mountain disperses itself in many ridges towards the north, where they peter out in the vale of Beilan in dream-like natural citadels and terraces, while southwards it suddenly descends, disordered, embryonic, into the plains around the mouth of the Orontes. In its centre, Damlayik, it gathers all its strength, its concentrated purpose. Here, with mighty fists of rock, it drags the vale of the seven villages, like a many-folded coverlet, to its breast. Here its two crests rise almost sheer over Yoghonoluk and Hadji Habibli — the only treeless points, grown over with short crop-grass. The back of the Damlayik forms a fairly wide mountain plateau; at its widest point, between the ilex gorge and the steep, shelvmg rocks along the coast, it is, as the crow flies (by Avakian’s reckomng), more than three and a hal f miles across. But what most of all preoccupied Avakian were the curiously sharp demarcauon lines which nature seemed to have set round this mountain plateau. There was, first, the indentation towards theliorth, a narrow defile laced to a ridge between two peaks, even directly approachable from the vad- ley by an old mule-track, which, however, lost itself in under- growth, since here there was no possibihty of reachmg the sea across walls of rock. In the south, where the mountain broke
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oflE suddenly, there rose, above a sparse, almost and half-circle of rocky banks, a towering mass of rock fifty feet high. The view from this natural bastion dominated a sweep of sea and the whole plain of the Orontes with its Turkish villages as far as away beyond the heights of the barren Jebel Akra. One could see the massive ruin of the temple and aqueduct of Seleucia, bent under the load of its green creepers; one could see every cart-rut on the important highroad from Antioch to £1 Eskel and Suedia. The white domino-houses of these towns gleamed, and the big spirit factory on the right bank of the Orontes, in nearest proximity to the sea, stood livid m sun- light. Every strategic intelligence must perceive at once what an ideal place of defence the Damlayik was. Apart from the arduous climb up the side facmg the valley, which exhausted even leisurely sight-seers by its rough, uncompromising ascent, there was only one real point of attack — the narrow ridge towards the north. But it was just here that the terrain offered defenders a thousand advantages, and not least the circum- stance that the treeless declivities, strewn about with knee-pine, dwarf shrubs, tussock grass, and wild bush growths of every kind, provided a difficult series of obstacles.
Avakian’s map-drawing efforts took a long ume to satisfy Gabriel. Again and again he discovered fresh mistakes and inadequacies. The student began to be afraid that his em- ployer’s hobby had little by little become a mania. He had still no inklmg. Now they spent whole days on the Damlayik. Bagradian, the artillery officer of the Balkan war, still possessed field-glasses, a measuring-gauge, a magnetic compass, and other, similar surveying-instruments. They came in very useful now. With stubborn insistence he made certain that the course of every stream, each tall tree, big block of granite, was being marked. And red, green, and blue markings did not suffice him. Strange words and signs were added. Between the dome- shaped peaks and the northern saddle there was a very ex- tensive gentle declivity. Smee it was overgrown with lush and
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excellent grass, it was here that they always found themselves in the midst of herds of sheep, black and white, with shepherds who, like the shepherds of antiquity, drowsed above their flocks in sheepskins, summer and winter. Gabriel and Avakian, counting their steps, got the exact boundaries of this pasturage. Gabriel pointed out two streams which, above, on the verge of the meadow, forced their way through thick growths of fern. “That’s very lucky,” he said; “write above that, in red pencil: ‘town enclosure.’” There was no end of such secret terminology. Gabriel seemed to be looking with particular zest for some spot which he would choose for its quiet, sheltered beauty. He found it. And it, too, was near a well-spring, but nearer the sea, in a place between high pla- teaux of sheer rock, where a dark-green girdle of myrtles and rhododendron bushes extended.
“Pick that out, Avakian, and write over it, in red: ‘Three Tent Square.’”
Avakian could not manage not to ask: “What do you mean by ‘Three-Tent Square’?”
But Gabriel had already gone on and did not hear him.
“Must I help him dream his dreams?” the student thought. Yet only two days later he was to learn exactly what was meant by “Three-Tent Square.”
When Dr. Altouni took the bandages off Iskuhi’s arm and shoulder, he sounded morose: “Just as I thought. Now, if we were in a big town, it could still be set right You ought to have stayed in Aleppo, light of my eyes, and gone into hos- pital there. Still, perhaps you were right to come on here. Who can predict, in times hke these.? Now, my soul, you mustn’t get depressed — we’ll sec what else we can do.”
Iskuhi paafied the old gendeman. “I’m not worrying. It’s lucky it should be my left arm.” But she did not believe the doctor’s feeble reassurances. She glanced down swifdy at herself. Her arm hung hmp, distorted, too short for the shoul-
der. She could not move it. At least she was glad it no longer hurt her. So that now, she supposed, she would be a cripple all her life. But what did that matter, when she con- sidered the fate of most of the convoy? And she had only been with them two short daysl (She, too, like all those people, was now deeply aware that she had no future.) In the night she was still in the midst of horrible sounds and terrifying images. The shuffling, scrapmg, creeping, tapping of thou- sands of feet. Exhausted, whimpering children fell to the ground, and she with her broken arm had to snatch up two or three of them at a time. Crazy shrieks from the end of the column, and already saptiehs with bloodshot eyes, brandishing cudgels, came dashing furiously. Everywhere the face of the man who had tried to rape her. It was not made of one, but thirty different faces; many of them she knew by sight, and they were of people who had not even seemed repugnant. But mosdy it was a filthy, stubbled face, spotted with blood, that kept bending over her. Bubbles of spittle broke on the tumid lips. ... In such detailed clarity could she see that kaleido- scopic surface larger than life. It bent above her and en- veloped her in an anaesthetic vapour of oniony breath. She fought, fleshed her teeth in hairy, simian hands, which closed on her breasts. I’ve only got one arm, she reflected, as though it were a kind of extenuauou to the fact that she surrendered to this horror, and so lost consaousness.
The days that followed such nights were like those of a malaria patient, whose temperature runs down without transi- tions from high fever to well below normal. Then there would be a veil upon her senses, and perhaps that was the reason why she took her misfortune so easily. Her lame arm hung at her side like an impediment. But her body, young and full of sap, surmounted its hurt more skilfully, day by day. With- out quite knowing how she managed it, she accustomed her- self to doing everything with her right hand. It pacified her deeply to think she needed no help from anyone.
Iskuhi had by now been living some time with the Bagrad- ians. A short while back, Pasmr Aram Tomasian had called, thanked them for all their kindness to his sister, and an- nounced that he had come to take her away. He had furnished an empty house near his father’s. The suggestion deeply wounded Gabriel. “But why. Pastor Aram, do you want to deprive us of Iskuhi? We’re all so fond of her — my wife more than anyone.”
“Visitors who stay too long end by becoming a nuisance.”
“Please don’t be so proud. You know yourself that Mademoi- selle Iskuhi is the kind of person whom, unfortunately, one notices all too httle in the house, she’s so quiet and reserved. And then, aren’t we all sharing the same fate here? . .
Aram glanced slowly at Gabriel. “I hope you don’t imagine our fate to be rosier than it is in reality.” These carping words had in them a kmd of suspiaon of the foreigner, of this rich man, who seemed to have no idea of the horrors by which he lived surrounded.
But this very mistrustful reserve made Bagradian feel in- tensely friendly. His voice sounded cordial: “I only wish you were staying with us, too. Pastor Aram Tomasian. But I beg that, whenever you feel like it, you’ll come in and see us. I’ll give orders that from today they always lay two extra places for you and your wife. Please don’t let my invitation annoy you, and come here to meals if it isn’t too much exer- tion for her.”
Juliette showed even more reluctance to let Iskuhi move into other quarters. A very curious relationship had arisen between these two women, nor can it be denied that Juliette sought the favours of the Armenian girl. Iskuhi, for a girl of nineteen, was still strangely unawakened, especially for the East, where women npen so early. In Madame Bagradian this young girl saw only a grande dame, iniinitcly above her in beauty, background, and knowledge of life. When they sat together in Juliette’s room upstairs, Iskuhi, even in such in-
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timacy, seemed unable to conquer her shyness. Perhaps, at such moments, she also sufiered from the idleness to which she was condemned. Juliette, on her side, seeking Iskuhi, never felt quite certain of herself when they were together. This seems absurd, and yet it was so. There are people who need in no way be distinguished, either by position or per- sonahty, and who yet infect us with a feeling of timidity in their presence. Perhaps that constraint which always seemed to get hold of Juliette in Mademoiselle Tomasian’s society had its origins in some such source as this.
She would watch Iskuhi for some time and then burst forth more or less as follows: "Ma chere, do you know, as a rule I detest Oriental women, their laziness, their languid move- ments? I can’t even bear brunettes at home. But you’re not an Oriental, Iskuhi. Right now, situng there against the light, your eyes look quite blue.”
“You say that, Madame!” Iskuhi was startled “You, with your eyes, and your blond hair? . . .”
“How often am I to ask you, chine, to tutoyer me and not to call me ‘Madame’ ^ Call me ‘Juliette.’ Must you always keep rubbing it in that I’m so much older than you?”
“Oh, no — ^really I wasn’t. . . . Forgive me, please.” Juliette had to laugh at so much guilelcssness, which answered a coquettish httle joke with startled, almost terrified eyes.
Iskuhi had had to leave nearly everything in Zeitun and the rest along the road. Juliette fitted her out with a whole new wardrobe. It was a process she thoroughly enjoyed. At last that cabin-trunk packed with garments, the trusty fellow-traveller from Paris via Istanbul and Beirut to this wilderness (you could never be certain), justified the trouble it had given. True that women’s clothes are hke summer leaves and wither in the autumn of fashion, no matter how good and expensive the silks and materials may have been. Juliette knew nothing at all of the present fashions in Pans. She invented a few cf
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her own “by sheer intuition” and began to remodel all her apparel for her own as well as Iskuhi’s benefit. This occupa- tion, eagerly embraced, pleasantly filled up the afternoons after a mormng’s work m house or garden. Juliette had really scarcely the chance to come to herself. The modiste’s workshop was set up in an empty room. She chose two skilful girls from the village as her seamstresses.
Poor Iskuhi could only sit looking on. But she made an admirable fairylike mannequin for the display of Juhette’s handiwork. Dull shades suited her especially. She was for ever having to try on this or that, let down her hair and put it up again, twist and turn round. She did not mind doing it. Her zest for life, shaken by the Zeitun experiences, began to revive, her cheeks to flush a httle.
“You really are a fraud, ma petite" Juliette remarked. “One might have imagined you’d never worn anything all your life but your smock, and perhaps a Turkish veil in front of your face. And yet you put on your clothes and move about in them as though you could think of nothing but fashions. You didn’t come out unscathed from your stay at Lausanne and your contact with French culture.”
One evening Juliette asked her to put on one of her "grandes toilettes,” a very low-necked frock without arms. Iskuhi flushed. “But it’s impossible. I can’t — ^with my arm. . . .”
Juliette looked immeasurably concerned. "It’s true. . . . But how much longer will all this business last? Two— three months. Then we shall all be back in Europe. And I’ll take you with me, Iskuhi. I give you my word. In Paris and Switzerland there are clinics that will soon put you right.”
Almost at the same hour in which Gabriel Bagradian’s wife was expressing so audacious a hope the remnants of the first convoy reached their journey’s end at Deir ez Zor, on the edge of Mesopotamian sands.
Juliette was again full of a theme which had caused her
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husband many bitter hours. Strangely enough, Iskuhi, in- Gabriel’s absence, seemed particularly to inspire her to dwell on It. It took the form of a series of depreciatory remarks on the Armenians, viewed in that brilliant light of Gallic culture, which Juliette turned on their obscurity.
“You may be an ancient paiple,’’ she kept insisting, “c’est bien. A civilized people. No doubt. But in what precisely do you prove it.? Oh, of course, I’ve been told all the names — again and again. Abovian, Raili, Siamanto. But who’s ever heard of them? No one in the world except Armenians. No European can ever really understand or speak your language. You’ve never had a Racine or a Voltaire. And you have no Catulle Mendes, no Pierre Loti. Have you read anything of Pierre Loti’s, ma petite?"
Iskuhi, hit by these shafts, looked up intently. “No, Mad — No. I’ve never read anything.”
“Well, they’re all about distant countries.” Juliette seemed scornfully to suppose that this in itself was a good enough recommendation for Iskuhi. It was not precisely magnanimous of Juliette to work with such overwhelming comparisons. But she was now in the position of having to defend her own against the superior forces of her environment, so it was not unnatural.
From Iskuhi’s eyes it was evident that she might have said much. But after a while she answered in one simple sentence: “We have some old songs that are very beautiful.”
“Won’t you sing one of them. Mademoiselle?” begged Stephan, who sat watching her from a corner. Iskuhi had scarcely known he was there. And now she felt more clearly than ever before that the Frenchwoman’s son was a real Armenian boy, without any trace of foreigner in him. It may have been this perception that made her overcome her re- luctance and begin to sing “The Song of Coming and Go- ing,” which, less on account of its text t^n its flowing melody, had become the working-sorg of the seven villages:
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“Day» of tmsfortune pass ixc gone, like the days of winter, come and they go;
The sorrows oi men do not last very long.
Like the buyers in shops, they come and go.
"Persecution and blood lash the people to tears*
The caravans, they come and they go.
And men spring up in the garden of earth,
Whether henbane or balsam, they come and they go.
"Let the strong not be proud, let the weak not look pale. Since life will transpose them; they come and they go.
The sun pours down fearless, for ever, his light.
While clouds from the altar, they come and they go.
“The world is an inn on the road, oh, singer.
The people, its guests, they come and they go.
Mother Earth embraces her well-taught child.
While Ignorant nations may perish, and go.”
During this song Juliette could feel quite clearly m Iskuhi that impenetrable something, presented as shyness, as grief, even as the reluctant acceptance of gifts, but which stubbornly resisted all her blandishments. Since she had not understood all the words, she asked for some of the song to be translated. The last verses brought from her a cry of triumph: “Well, there you see — how proud you all are I The well-taught child, to whom Mother Earth behaves so obligingly, is Armenian. And the ignoramuses are all the others. . . .”
Stephan asked, almost oeremptonly: “Something else, Iskuhi.”
But Juliette insisted on hearing something amorous. Noth- ing too solemn. And nothing more about “well-taught chil- dren” and “ignorant nations.” “A real love song, Iskuhi.”
Iskuhi sat very still, bent slightly forward. Her left hand, with its crooked fingers, lay in her lap. The deep-hued sun behind her filled the window-space, so that her face was
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dark, its features indistinguishable. After a short silence she seemed to remember something. “I know one or two love songs which they sing round here. One especially. It’s quite mad. Really it ought to be sung by a man, though the girl’s the chief thing m it.”
Her little girl’s, or priestess’^ voice seemed to come from a void. To this cool voice the wild song was in strangest contrast:
‘‘She came out of her garden And held them close against her breasts,
Two fruits of the pomegranate tree.
Two great and shimng apples.
She gave them me, I would not take.
Hien, with her hand, she struck —
Struck with her hand upon her breast-bone.
Struck three times, six times, twelve times —
Struck till the bone was broke.”
“Again!” Stephan demanded. But Iskuhi could not be per- suaded to repeat, for Gabriel Bagradian was quietly standing in the room.
In those days the Bagradian villa grew more and more ani- mated. There were guests at nearly every meal. Juliette and Gabriel both of them welcomed this animation. It was becom- ing hard for them to be alone together. And guests made the time pass more quickly. Every evening meant a fresh vic- tory, since It strengthened a hope that with it the perpetual shadow had moved its threat a little way farther off. July had almost arrived. How much longer could this menace last? There were rumours that peace was soon to be signed, and peace meant safety. Pastor Aram was now a regular guest. Hovsannah, who still had not quite managed to recover, had asked him to go and take care of Iskuhi. She, after all, knew how accustomed he was to living always with his sister, that
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he becatne restless when he had been a few days withoit. having seen her. But there were other frequent guests at Gabriel’s table. The main group was composed of Krikor and his satellites. The apothecary's tenant, Gonzague Maris, was among them. This young Greek was not merely welcome as a pianist. He could appreciate beauty and pretty frocks. He “noticed things”; Gabriel Bagradian no longer, or very seldom, “noticed” them. Juliette’s dress-making hobby, which after all was no more than an aimless method of whiling away her tune with thoughts of Paris, found its applause in Gonzague Mans. He could always, while eschewing vapid flatteries, manage to say sometlung delightful, not only about Juliette’s appearance, but in skilful praise of the inspirations with which she tried to enhance Iskuhi’s charm. Nor did he ever speak as a blind enthusiast; it was as an artist, an initiate, that he raised the thick eyebrows which slanted at so wide an angle. So that Juliette’s workshop, by virtue of Gonzague Mans’s in- sight, was lifted out of the region of hobbies on to a plane of acknowledged values. His xsthetic sense had also been ap- plied to his own appearance Gonzague was doubtless poor and a man with a, presumably, chequered past. But he never mentioned this. He avoided Juliette’s questions on the subject — not because of any special secretiveness, or because he really had much to hide, but because he seemed to regard whatever had been with a contemptuous shrug, as unimportant. In spite of, or because of, his small means, he was extremely well- dressed whenever he called at Villa Bagradian. Since it was certain to be some time before he got another chance of re- plenishing his European wardrobe, he took scrupulous care of his clothes. This spick-and-span-ncss of Gonzague affected Juliette very pleasantly, without her ever knowing that it was so. Its effects on the two schoolteachers, Shatakhian and Oskanian, were not so gratifying. Gonzague aroused splenetic rivalry in them. The diminutive Hrand Oskanian was in- vaded by a reckless jealousy. Neither his poetical calligraphy
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oa parcibmcnt nor his so distinguished, portentous silences had yet succeeded in winning Madame Bagradian’s attention. She ignored his inner worth, his reserve, his dignity. And yet this conceited half-breed, by his vain sartorial display, had managed instantly to attract her. Oskanian made up his mind to take up the unequal struggle in this department. He hur- ried off to the village tailor, who, half a generation back, had practised in London for two years.
On the walls of this English maestro’s establishment there were fashion-plates of impeccable “lords” of that period. But there was not much choice of material — only a few yards of thin, grey cloth, hoary with age, scarcely good enough to use for hning. That did not deter Oskanian. He chose a lord from among the models, one whose male sveltencss was neady moulded into a long swallow-tailed morning-coat. The first fitting revealed the fact that the swallow-tails reached down to litdc Oskanian’s heels. He did not object, though the tailor seemed rather doubtful. When the masterpiece was ready to wear, Oskanian stuck a white flower in his buttonhole— it too in imitation of the “lord.” Unluckily his own inspiration was allowed to supply the finishing touch. He hurried to Krikor, from whom he bought the strongest scent in the shop> a good half-bottle of which he proceeded to sprinkle about his person. So he did, at last, for the first five minutes, manag e to get himself noticed by Madame Bagradian, and by all her guests— the consequence being that Gabriel had to take him on one side and tactfully ask him to wear another coat for a couple of hours, while the grey chef-d'auvre was being hung out to air in the kitchen garden.
One fine morning in July Gabriel made a suggestion. How would It be to spend tomorrow evening and the following night on Musa Dagh? To see the sunrise. It seemed a very European nouon — the genuine inspiration of a tourist whose life is spent between concrete walls, among business letters. But here? The guests, all down the table, were perturbed.
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Only Hapeth Shatakhian, anxious not to put his foot in it^ appeared to welcome the delights of a night spent in the fresh air. But Gabriel Bagradian disillusioned him: “We shan’t have to sleep in the hesh air. I’ve found three tents in one of the attics here, all of them perfectly fit to use. They belonged to my late brother, who took them on his hunting-expeditions. Two of them are perfecdy modern hunting-tents, they’re big enough to hold two or three people. The third is a very beauti- ful Arab pavihon. Either Avetis must have brought it back from one of his journeys or else it belonged to our grand- father. . . .’’
Since Juliette rather welcomed this break in the monotony and Stephan was already jumping for joy, the following morning, a Saturday, was fixed on for the expedition. Apothe- cary Krikor, to whom there was no new thing under the sun, since he had already done and experienced everything from fruit preserving to comparative theology, began to r eminis ce about the days when he had hved and slept in the open.
Iskuhi seemed uncnthusiastic. No wonder! She had too much knowledge of the cruelty of sleeping out of doors— of unsheltered earth. Not three hundred miles east of this dining- room the dying convoys toiled along the roads. Bagradiah’s heartless game annoyed her. She had no inkhng of its purpose. “I’d so much rather stay here,” she begged.
Gabriel turned to her rather sharply. “Impossible, Iskuhi. You don’t want to spoil our sport, do you? You must sleep in the pavilion with Juliette.”
Iskuhi stared at the cloth and struggled with words. “I’ve . . . I’m afraid . . . You see, every mght, I feel so glad I can sleep in a house.”
Gabrid tried to make her look at him. “I’ve been counting especially on you.”
Iskuhi still did not look up. She bit her lips; Bagradian seemed very set on a trifle. *1 really insist on it, Iskuhi.”
Her face had already begun to twitch, juhette signed to her
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husband to stop worrying Iskuhi. She made him understand that later she herself co^d soon persuade the child. But it proved harder than she had thought. She attempted womanly advice. All men were really children, au fond. Any woman who cared to direct life found it best to give them their boyish way whenever possible. A real man was never so grateful for anything else, and consequently never so easy to manage. If one wanted to have one's way in the important things one ought never to mind giving way m trifles. These maxims sounded as if Juliette were advising herself, the married woman. But what, after all, had Iskuhi to do with the httle masculine foibles of her host, Gabriel Bagradian?
She turned away her embarrassed head. “This isn’t a tnfle for me.”
“After all, it may be very jolly. At least it’s new . .
“I have too many recollections of the novelty.”
“Your brother, the pastor, doesn’t mind ”
Iskuhi drew a deep breath “It’s not just my obstinacy,”
But Juliette seemed to have thought of another way, “If you stop here, I won’t go either, I should hate to be the only woman among all those men. I’d rather stay here.”
Iskuhi cast a long glance at Juhettc. “No. Impossible. We can’t do that. I’ll come if you want me to. I’ve got over my first feeling already. I’d love to do it for you ”
Juliette looked suddenly fagged out. “Well, we’ve time enough till tomorrow morning. We can think it over ten times if we like.”
She clasped her forehead and shut her eyes She felt vaguely faint, as though certain of Iskuhi’s memories had at last begun to invade her consciousness.
“Perhaps you're right, Iskuhi, in what you feel. We all live such a safe kind of life.”
Next morning they were up early. Because of the ladies they did not choose the short cut up through the ilex gorge, but
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the gentle, i£ rather tedious, long way round, over the northern saddle. Today, for all its clefts, rocky bastions, wildness, Musa Dagh proved a well-disposed mountain, which showed its best side to the climber. Iskuhi’s quiet was lost m the gen- eral hilarity. But even she seemed, little by httle, to cheer up.
Gabriel Bagradian could observe with what astomshmg celerity his son was shedding his European habits ever since he had begun going to Shatakhian’s school. “I can scarcely recognize him,” Juliette had recently said to Gabriel. “Wc shall have to be very careful. He’s already begun to speak that dreadful, hard Armenian French, like stones being broken. Just hke his wonderful teacher.” By now Stephan knew the Damlayik nearly as thoroughly as his father. He played the guide but could never manage to stay on the road, since he kept looking out for every difficult short cut to climb and exercise his gymnastic skill on. Often he was far ahead and often well behind the rest, so that his voice could only just be heard when they called him.
They reached the beautiful meadow sooner than Gabriel had reckoned. The tents were already set up. There was even a flag, waving above the Arab pavilion of the sheikh, or Grandfather Avetis. It was embroidered with the arms of ancient Armenia — ^Mount Ararat, the Ark, and the dove flut- tering in Its centre.
This pavilion was indeed the resplendent relic of a prouder, more magnificent age. It was eight paces long and seven wide. Its scaffolding was of poles thick as an arm, of precious woods; its interior walls were the finest carpets. It had one great disadvantage. It was impregnated with the reek of camphor and musty cloth. The walls had been rolled up and sewn into sacks, which from time to time the steward Kristaphor had buried under mountains of camphor and msect powder. The modern tents, brought back from London a few years ago by Avetis the younger, aroused far more admiration, though
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they were only made of the usual canvas. But they were “replete” with every convemence which the perspicacity of an experienced hunter could have desired. Nothing had been forgotten in these tents: collapsible field-beds, far from un- comfortable, silk sleeping-bags, featherweight tables and chairs that fitted into one another, cooking-scts, tea sets, pots and plates, all of aluminium. Rubber bathtubs and wash basins. Not to mention wind-proof lamps for petroleum and methy- lated spirit.
They began to sort themselves for the night. Juliette re- fused the sheikh-pavilion and took up her quarters in a modern tent, with Iskuhi. Krikor and Gonzague were given the other canvas tent Teacher Oskanian explained, with a som- bre glance at Juliette, that he preferred, for reasons of his own, to sleep under the open sky — ^apart. As he said it, he threw back his woolly head, as if expecting a general chorus of approba- tion at so proud and resolute a decision, while at the same time a cooing, feminine voice would beseech him to relent and change his tmnd. But Juliette did not so much as mention the wild beasts and deserters to which he exposed himself for her sake.
Bagradian secretly thought of this night out of doors as a dress rehearsal. But it passed without any incident — ^like hun- dreds of picnics of the same kind. Nothing romantic — unless indeed it were the fact that the cook Hovhannes prepared supper over an open fire. The daring house-boy Missak had ventured a few days back to go to Antioch, where a well- disposed army contractor had sold him a whole mule-load of English tinned foods, which they sampled that night. Sato had followed the party at a distance. She lurked in the dusk beyond the fire, and during the meal Stephan jumped up from time to time to take her some of his own food. They sat round the fire on rugs, like all picnickers. Missak had spread out a tablecloth on a fiat knoll for the dishes. The evenmg was pleasandy cool. The moon was near:ts first quarter. The fire
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began to burn more faintly. They drank wme, and the strong mulberry brandy distilled by the peasants of the district. Juliette soon broke up the party. She had a queer feeling of disquiet. Now at last she could understand Iskuhi’s reluctance. All round her glowered the savage, unpeopled earth — so hor- ribly in earnest. This was perhaps a rather malicious game that Gabriel played at. The others also said good-night. Oskan- lan strode off, with head erect, to pay for his vanity with a chilly night, as near the encampment as possible. Gabriel posted sentries. Two men together for three hours were to keep guard around the tents. Gabriel gave out rifles and ball- cartridges. Kristaphor and Missak had gone on hunting- expeditions with Avetis and were quite used to handling fire- arms. At last Gabriel lay down. Neither he nor Iskuhi could sleep.
The girl lay taut, not moving a limb, anxious not to wake Juliette. But Gabriel twisted and turned for hours. The reek of camphor and mildew stifled him. At last he dressed again and came outside. It was about fifteen minutes to twelve. He sent the sentries, Missak and the cook, to bed. Then he paced slowly up and down, sole guardian of the “Three-Tent Square.” Often he switched on his pocket-torch, but it only lit up a tiny circle. Bats flapped through the dark. As the moon rode seawards out of a cloud, a nightingale began singing in the deathly quiet with such bubbhng energy that Gabriel was stirred. He tried to find out how it had happened that his deepest thought was already taking so clear a shape. There they were externahzed — ^three tents against the dark sky. How had it come about'’ Thinking was impossible now. His soul was too full. As Gabriel lit a fresh cigarette, he saw a ghost standing not far off. This phantom wore the lambskin cap of a Turkish private, and was leaning on an infantry rifle. Its face was invisible — probably a very hollow-cheeked face, against which its cigarette had begun to glow. Gabriel hailed the ghost. It did not more, even at his second and third call.
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He drew his army revolver and snapped the catch with a loud click. It was sheer formality, since he felt quite certain that the man had no intention of molesting him. It hesitated a while before it moved, and then a queer, long-drawn, in- different laugh came rattling out of it. The cigaretteend vanished, the ghost with it. Gabriel shook Kristaphor awake. “There arc one or two people hanging round. Deserters, I think.”
The steward did not seem in the least surprised. “Oh, yes, there’ll be some deserters. The poor lads must be having a bad time.”
“I saw only one.”
“That may have been Sarkis Kihkian.”
“Who’s Sarkis Kilikian?”
“Asdvaz iml Merciful God I” Kristaphor in a vague, help- less gesture indicated that really it was impossible to say exactly who Sarkis Kilikian was. But Bagradian ordered out his men, by now all awake; “Go out and find this Kihkian. Take him something to eat. The chap looked hungry.”
Kristaphor and Missak set out, with tins of food and a lantern, but came back in the end without havmg found him. Apparently they had ended by fcchng scared.
The evening had been anxious, the mormng was decepuve. The world looked vaporous. They all felt restless. Sunrise was quite invisible. All the same they climbed one of the treeless knolls, from which they could scan the sea and sur- rounding coimtry emerging gradually through the haze.
Bagradian turned. “One could manage to hold out here for a few weeks.” He said it as though in defence of the maligned beauties of Musa Dagh.
Gonzague Mans seemed to have passed a better mght than anyone else, he looked so fresh and full of life. He pointed out the big spirit factory near Suedia, its chimneys just starting to belch forth smoke. This factory, so he told them, was owned
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by a foreign company. Its manager was a trreek, whom he had got to know in Alexandretta. He had seen him only the other day and heard some rather interesting rumours. First, a combined peace effort by the American president and the Pope was well under way. The second concerned the Arme- nian transportations. These were only intended to affect the Armenian vilayets, not Syria. He, Gonzague, could not tell how much all that was to be relied on, but this factory-owner was considered a most reliable sort of man and had private interviews every month with the Wall of Aleppo on army supplies. Gabriel was filled for a few seconds with the con- vicuon that all danger was past, and what had seemed so near was already retreating into the distance. It felt as if he himself had beaten back fate.
He burst forth, in gratitude: “Just look! Isn’t it lovely here?”
Juliette was impatient to get back home. She hated being seen in the early morning, by men especially. In the morning, she insisted, only ugly women look their best, and no ladies exist at 6 a.m. Besides, she wanted at least half an hour’s rest before mass. When she had got engaged to Gabriel, she had obliged him by ceasing to be a Roman Catholic and entering the Armenian Orthodox Church. This had been one of the many sacrifices which she never forgot to mention when they quarrelled. She picked holes, as her habit was. The Armenian rite was not nearly ornate enough to please her. But what shocked Juliette most was that Armenian priests should all wear beards, and usually long ones. She could not abide a bearded man. Their way back was down the shorter path, which led through the ilex grove to Yoghonoluk. Krikor, Ga- briel, and Shatakhian went ahead. Avakian stayed. He took this chance of making a few improvements on his maps. Bagradian had given orders not to strike the tents for the time being. Some of the stable-boys were to stay up on the Dam- layik to guard them. Perhaps they would soon be having an- other picnic. One reason for this was Gabriel’s superstitious
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fancy that such preparedness might help to break the power of fate. The wretched donkey-track lost itself here and there in shrubs and undergrowth. Juliette in thin shoes, and with pam- pered feet, kept voicing her horror of such impediments. Then Gonzague would assist her, with a resolute gri^. They had begun a vague and often interrupted conversauon:
“I can never stop lemembering, Madame, that we’re the only two foreigners here.”
Juliette anxiously tested the earth she trod. “You at least are a Greek. . . . That’s not quite so foreign.”
Gonzague let her surmount her difficulties unaided. “What? ... I was brought up in America. . . . But you’ve been a long time married to an Armenian."
“Yes. I’ve got some reason for living here. . . . But you?”
“Usually I find my reasons afterwards.”
A steep place had set them running. Juliette paused to get her breath. “I’ve never really understood what you want here.
. . .You aren’t very frank about it, you know. . . . What can an American who’s not trading in lambskins or cotton or gallnuts find to do in Alexandretta?" . . .
“Though I may not be frank — careful just here, please — I’m perfectly willing to tell you that. ... I was engaged as accompanist by a touring vaudeville troupe . . . not much of a job . . . even though my host Knkor seems to think so highly of It. . . .”
“I see. ... So you left all your actress friends in the lurch.
. . . And where’s the vaudeville troupe now, then?”
“It had contracts for Aleppo, Damascus, Beirut. . . .”
“And you simply left them?”
“Quite right. ... I just ran away. . . . It’s one of my foibles.”
“Ran away? ... A young man like you? . . . Well, you must have had some good reason. . . .”
“I’m not so very young as you seem to think.”
"Mon Dicu, this road I . . . My shoe’s full of stones.
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• • •
Please give me your hand. . . . Thanks.” With her left hand she kept a firm hold on Gonzaguc. With her right she shook out the shoe.
He, however, stuck to his question: “How old do you think I am^ . . . Guess."
“I’m really not m the mood for guessing just now.”
Gonzague, serious, as if conscience-stricken: “Thirty-two."
Juliette, with a short laugh: “For a man! . . .”
“I’m sure I’ve seen more of the world than you, Madame. When one gets pushed about as I have, one comes to see the truth. . . .”
“Heaven only knows where all the others are. . . . Hullo . . . I do think they might answer us.”
“We’re getting on all right. . .
Juliette stopped again, as the road became steep and full of shrubs.
“I’m not used to climbing about like this — my legs ache. Let’s stop a minute.”
“There’s nothing here for us to sit on.”
“I tell you, Gonzague, you’d far better get away from Yoghonoluk. . . . What can they do to you.? You’re an American citizen. . . . And you don’t look the least bit Armenian. . . .”
“But? French?”
“Oh, you needn’t go and imagine that’”
The little stream that flowed through the ilex gorge lay across their path. Not so much as a tree-trunk to cross by. Gonzague lifted Juliette over, big as she was, with an easy swing. His narrow shoulders had not looked as though he could do It. She felt his cool fingers around her hips, but they did not stir her. The path was becoming less steep, and they quickened their pace.
Gonzague broached the essential question: “And Gabriel Bagradian? What makes him stay on? Hasn’t he any chance to get out of Turkey?”
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“In war-time? . . . Where'’ . . . We’re Turkish subjects. . . . Gabriel is liable for service. . . . They’ve taken our pass- ports. . . . Who can make out these savages? . .
“But, really, Juliette, you look sufficiently French. . . . No, really, you look more like an Englishwoman.”
“French? English? . . . Why, what do you mean?”
“Well, with a little courage you — I mean you especially — could get anywhere.”
“I’m a wife and mother.”
Juliette was walking so fast that Gonzague had to keep a little behind her. She seemed to feel the breath of his words: “Life is life.”
She turned abruptly. “If that’s your way of looking at it, why do you stop in Asia?”
“I? It’s war-time now for all the men in the world.”
Juliette’s haste increased again. “It’s easy for you, Gonzague. If only we had your American passport ... You could easily follow your troupe to Damascus or Beirut. Why waste your time in this God-forsaken hole?”
“Why?” By now Gonzague could keep close up behind Juliette.
“Why? If I really knew that, perhaps you’d be the last person I could say it to, Juhettc.”
Truly the .spirit had guided Gabriel to stage his eleventh- hour “dress rehearsal ” In the hall of the villa the pock-marked All Nassif awaited him. “Please, Sir, I’ve come for those medjidjehs you promised me when you gave me something on account.”
Gabriel drew forth a Turkish pound and with a steady hand gave It to All, as though, now, all were in order, and he could hear what he had paid for without impatience.
The old saptieh took the money cautiously. “I’m going clean against my orders. But you won’t give me away, Effendi?”
“You’ve taken your money. Say what you have to say.”
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AH Nassif blinked around dubiously. “In three days the mudir and the police chief will come to the villages.”
Bagradian leaned his stick in a corner and freed himself from the field-glass slung over his shoulders. “I see. And what good news will the mudir and police chief have to brmg us?”
The pohceman rubbed his stubbled chin. “You’ll be having to leave here, Effendi. The Wah and the Kaimakam have commanded it. The saptiehs arc to collect you and your peo- ple from Suedia and Antakiya and lead you eastwards. But I can tell you you won’t be allowed to halt in Aleppo. That’s because of the consuls.”
“And you — will you be one of the saptiehs, Ah Nassif?”
The pock-marked Ah protested noisily: “Inshallahl I thank God I Nol Haven’t I been living twelve years among you? As commandant of the whole district? And there’s never once been any trouble. Yes, I’ve kept order day and night. And now, because of you. I’m losing my good job. Oh, ingratitudel Our post is being disbanded altogether.”
And Bagradian, to comfort the poor fellow, pressed a few cigarettes into his hand. “Now tell me. Ah Nassif, when is your post to be disbanded?”
“I have orders to march to Antakiya this very day. The mudir will come here with a whole company.”
Meanwhile Juliette, Iskuhi, and Stephan had reached the house. The sight of AH Nassif aroused no suspicion in them. Gabriel shepherded the saptieh out of the hallway and into the gravelled square in front of the house. “According to what you’ve been saying. Ah Nassif, the viUages will be left without police supervision for three days.”
Gabriel seemed to consider that suspicious. The saptieh anxiously lowered his voice. “Oh, Effendi, if you give me away, I shall be put to death, and worse. I shaU have a scroll pinned on my chest with the inscripuon, ‘Traitor.’ . . . All the same I’U t^ you everything. For three whole days there won’t be
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a single saptieh in the villages, because the post is being re- conditioned in Antakiya. And then you’ll all be given a few days to pack up in. . .
Gabriel glanced at the windows of the house, as though fearful that Juliette might be looking out of them. ‘Have you had to send in lists of inhabitants. All Nassif?”
The pock-marked face blinked with sly fidelity at Gabriel: “Hope nothing for yourself, Effendi. They’re going to be particularly hard on the rich and learned. They say: ‘What use is It to us that poor, hard-working Armenians should die off, if the effendis, the money-bags and lawyers, stay on in our country.^ There’s a special bad mark against your name. You’ve been reported at headquarters, Effendi. They’ve talked of you again and again. And don’t go and imagine they’ll spare your family. You’re to be taken together as far as Antakiya, but after that they mean to separate you.”
Bagradian eyed the poheeman almost joyously. “You seem to be one of the great and initiated. Has the mudir opened his heart to you, Ali Nassif?”
Ali nodded solemnly. “Only for your sake, Sir, did I labour so. I stood in the offices of the Hukumet and, remembering you, I strained my ears. Oh, Effendi, in spite of your miserable paper pound, I have earned a great reward in the hereafter. What is a paper pound worth today ^ Even if they will change it in the bazaar for you, they cheat you. And see, my suc- cessors will have more than a hundred gold pounds, and all the medjidjehs they find in the villages. Your house will be theirs alone, with all that is in it. You can take nothing with you. And your horses also will be theirs. And your garden, and all its fruits. . . .”
Bagradian stopped this flowery enumeration: “May they have joy of it.”
He drew himself up. But Ali Nassif would not stir from his disconsolate place. “Now I have sold you ali this for a scrap of paper.”
And so, to get rid of him, Bagradian emptied all the piastres out of his pockets.
When Gabriel entered the presbytery, he saw to his great sur- prise that Ter Haigasun must have known of the catastrophe several hours before Ah Nassif brought him the news. Thomas Kebussyan was with him, together with the six other mukh- tars, two married village priests, and Pastor Nokhudian from Bitias. Grey and waxen faces. This thunderbolt had not cleared away that cloud of morbid coma m which for weeks these people had been creeping about their business; it had only thickened it. They stood leaning against the walls, seeming to grow against them like plants. Only Ter Haigasun was seated. His face was bent back, almost m shadow, but his hands, rest- ing quietly before him on the desk, flamed white, in a rigid shaft of sunlight. When anyone spoke, it was in a scarcely audible whisper, not moving his lips. Even Ter Haigasun only whispered, as now he turned to greet Bagradian:
“I’ve told these mukhtars to call their people together, the instant they get back to their villages. This very day, and as soon as possible, all the grown-ups, from Wakef to Kebussiye, must come together here in Yoghonoluk. We shall hold a big meeting to decide what’s best to be done.”
Pastor Nokhudian’s tremulous voice came out of a corner: “There’s nothing to be done. . . .”
The mukhtar of Bitias came a few steps out into the room.
“Whether it’s any use or not, the people must come to- gether to hear speeches and speak themselves. It’ll make it easier.”
Ter Haigasun let these interruptions pass as he sat there frowning. He went on to tell Gabriel of his decisions: “In this general assembly the peoples are to choose delegates whom they trust and who will take over the leadership. Disciphne is the only weapon left us. If we keep law and order, even out there, perhaps we shan’t die.”
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As he said “out there,” Ter Haigasun opened his half-shut eyes to glance searchingly at Gabriel.
Thomas Kebussyan wagged his bald head. “We can’t hold a meeting in the church square. Nor in the church. There arc the saptiehs. . . . And others, too. God knows who wouldn’t creep in and listen, and then betray us. And besides the church is too small for all of us. So where?”
“Where? That’s very simple.” Bagradian spoke for the first time. “My garden has a high wall all round it. The wall has three doors which you can bolt. There’s enough room for ten thousand people. It’s as good as a strong fortress.”
This suggestion of Gabriel’s decided it. Those who, from despair or will-less passivity, longed to let themselves be destroyed without any irksome show of resistance — and those who made heavy weather of everything — could raise no objec- tions. And what serious objection could they have had against the proposal that folk of this Armeman valley should get together, in this death-agony of their race, and choose leaders — even leaders as helpless as they? This place of assembly was secure, they need fear no intensification of punishment. Per- haps what contributed to this feeling was the superstition that Bagradian had powerful connexions, which he might use in behalf of the seven villages. With dead movements and dragging steps, the mukhtars left to assemble their communes. Since Yoghonoluk was the central village, the last stragglers would be in Bagradian’s garden by four that afternoon. The mukhtars themselves were to undertake to guard the entrances, so that no outsider should be let m. Ter Haigasun stood up. The bells were already ringing. He would have to get ready to vest for mass.
Of all the masses used by Christian sects the Armenian takes longest. The time from the Introit to the priest’s last agn of the cross may easily be an hour and a half. No instru- ments, only tinkling bells and cymbals, accompany the choirs, which, on any impatient Sunday, increase their tempo to
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hurry the priest. But today the choirs were not successful Ter Haigasun took longer than ever before over each sacred paragraph and act. Was he striving to hitch his prayer to the miracle of some incomprehensible rescue? Did he want to put oif as long as possible the mstant at which this flash of lightmng would strike down on his unwitting flock? All too soon came the last blessing and the words: “Go in peace, and the Lord be with you.” The benches began to rusde with departure. But Ter Haigasun came down to the edge of the chancel steps, spread his arms, and called:
“What we have all been fcarmg has happened.”
Then, in a quiet voice, in a few words, he explained. No- body must get unnecessarily excited, or let himself be carried away. The deathly silence of this instant must remain un- broken through the next days. No confusion, no losing of heads, no weeping or wailing, was of any use. It would only make thmgs worse than they were already. Unity, resolution, disciphne. They were the only means of avoiding the worst. There was still time to think out every step. Ter Haigasun in- vited the communes to the great assembly in Bagradian’s garden. No healthy adult of sound mind, man or woman, should stay away.
In this assembly it would be for the seven communes not only to decide collectively what line it was best to take, but to elect leaders to represent the people before the authorities no matter what happened. This time the usual show of hands at parish elections would not be enough. So let everyone brmg pencil and paper to record his vote in proper form.
“But now go quietly home,” the priest implored them. “No standing about. Don’t make disturbances. Perhaps they’ve sent spies to watch you. The saptiehs mustn’t notice that you’re warned. Don’t forget to bring voting papers. Quiet, above all.”
He need not have given his second warmng. Like dead people, or people already touched by death, they silendy groped their way out into the daylight as if they had never known it
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No man knows himself until he is tested. Gabriel’s biography till that day: The son of a well-to-do family; brought up in comfortable surroundmgs; his hfc that of a leisured “intel- lectual” spent here and there in Europe, in Paris. Long since absolved from any ties which bind a man to his family, to the State, from any sense of commumty with the masses; a sheltered, an abstract human being. Very few angles to bark bis shins on. An elder brother — an invisible, imperceptible benefactor — ^who, as head of the house, provided for every need. Then, strangely enough, the first interruption of this thoughtful, sensitive, introverted life — ^the episode of the mili- tary training-school and war. That patriotic idealism with which the contemplative suddenly found himself imbued is not so easy to account for. The general poliucal fraternization of Turkish and Armenian youth could not be a sufficient explanation. Perhaps something more was involved then: some secret rcsdcssncss, the attempt to get away from his own, all too well-ordered, easy-going life. And during that short campaign Gabriel Bagradian had discovered unsus- pected capacities in himself. He was not only, as till then he had supposed, a man whose eyes were exclusively set on in- visible worlds. He showed himself surprisingly equal to de- mands made on his powers of action, presence of mind, fore- sight, courage, and to a far higher degree than most of his Oriental comrades. He was promoted quickly, several times mentioned in dispatches, praised in commanders’ reports. True that in the days which followed all that had seemed a thing of the past, an dmost illogical memory, since his earlier nature resumed its sway, more mature, far more balanced than pre- viously. But today — ^it was the twenty-fourth of July — ^made all the years of his hfe seem a pale preliminary.
Samuel Avakian was amazed when he saw how the artificial foibles of weeks, the hobbies of a bored idler, dovetailed to- gether into one stardingly vivid plan of defensive action. They
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sat in Bagradian’s study behind locked doors, which were opened to no one. The mysterious strokes, crosses, dotted lines, on the three maps, at which the student had smiled as at a dreamy testing of his patience revealed themselves now as a unified, precisely thought-out system. The thick blue line along the northern saddle meant a long trench set back against the stone barricades (indicated in brown) of the rocky side. The thinner blue line behind denoted a reserve trench; the little squares to the sides of these trenchest, flank-protection or outposts. Those figures, too, from two to eleven, which filled up the side of the Damlayik facing the valley, ceased to be meaningless numbers and became well-thought-out sectors of the defence. So, too, did various inscriptions take on a mean- ing: “Town Enclosure,” “Dish Terrace,” “Headquarters Peak,” “Observers I, II, III,” “South Bastion.” The last was the best inspiration of the whole scheme. A garrison of two dozen men posted here ought to be enough to hold off any number of assailants. Even women might be able to hold it.
Gabriel’s face was aglow with eagerness. It had never looked so like the young face of his son Stephan. “I’m starting to feel very hopeful.” He measured out a distance with Stephan’s compasses. “I know what Turkish soldiers are like. And all their best troops are at the front. The sort of territorial off- scourings they’ll have mustered up from Antioch, with saptiehs and the irregulars in the barracks, are only good for a httle safe looting.”
Suddenly confronted with this strange new military work, Samuel Avakian’s high, recedmg forehead took on a dull white look in contrast to the oalour in Gabriel’s cheeks. “But at best we can only count on a thousand men. I don’t know how many rifles and munitions they’ve got. And there are regulars in every Turkish town — ^not only in Antakiya, but everywhere. . . .”
“We have a population of about five thousand five hundred,”
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interrupted Bagradian. “We need expect no mercy, only slow death. But Musa Dagh isn’t so easy to surround.”
Avakian stared goggle-eyed through the window. “But will these five thousand all want the same thing as you do, Effendi?”
“If they don’t, they all deserve to perish together in Mesopo- tamian dust. . . . But I don’t want to hve. I don’t want to be rescued. I want to fight! ... I want to kill as many Turks as we have cartridges. And, if necessary. I’ll stay on alone on the Damlayik. With the deserters!”
It was not preasely hate. It was a kind of sacred, and at the same time exultant, wrath that glittered in Bagradian’s eyes. It was as though he rejoiced at the thought of standing out single-handed against Enver Pasha’s army, a million strong. It lifted him out of his seat and urged him up and down the room, like a madman. “I don’t want to live, I want to have some value!”
The crumpled Avakian still refused to be talked round. “Very good. We can defend ourselves for a time. And then . . .?”
Gabriel halted his excited pacing and quietly sat down to his work again. “Anyway, within the next twenty-four hours we’ve got to solve all sorts of problems. Which would be the best place for the stockyard, the munition dump, the hospital? And what kind of shelters can we raise? There are enough springs, but what will be the best way to economize water? Here are some rough notes in which I sketched out the routine for the armed troops. Make a fair copy, will you, Avakian? We shall need them. In fact, get all these notes here into shape. I don’t think there’s much I haven’t thought of. For the present it’s all still theoretical, but I’m convinced that most of It can be worked out. We Armenians arc always priding ourselves on superior brains. That’s one of the things that’s riled them so. Now it’s fpr us to prove that we really are so much cleverer.”
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Avakian felt profoundly disturbed. More even than by this general catastrophe was he confused by irresistible waves of strength which now seemed to emanate from Gabriel. There was about him not a shining atmosphere so much as a hot, glowing one. The less he spoke, the more quietly he worked, the more overpov/ering it became. Avakian felt this influence so strong on him chat he could not concentrate his thoughts, could find no more words to express his doubts, had to keep on staring at Gabriel’s face, deeply engrossed over war maps. In this silent paralysis he even failed to hear Bagradian’s next order, and had to have it impatiently repeated:
“Go downstairs now, Avakian. Say I shan’t be coming in to lunch. Ask them to send Missak up with something. I can’t waste a second. And — I’ll see no one before the meeting. You understand? Not even my wife.”
By one o’clock the people had begun to arrive. The mukhtars, according to arrangements, personally supervised the doors of the park wall, to test the credentials of every member of the assembly. This precautionary measure proved superfluous, since All Nassif and his gendarmes had already set out for Antakiya without having cared to say good-bye to acquaint- ances of many years’ standing. Nor had cither the Turkish postman’s family or any of the Moslem inhabitants of nearby villages secretly joined the throngs on the roads to Yoghono- luk. Long before the time given out, the last groups had been filtered through the sieve. Then the main entrance gates were closed, and finally the garden doors. The people massed on the wide empty space in front of the house. About three thou- sand men and women. There was a big stable-yard just be- yond the left wing, but at Ter Haigasun’s request this was roped off with clothes lines and kept free of people. The no- tables had assembled on the raised terrace before the house. The few steps leading up to it formed an excellent tribune for speech-making. The village clerk of Yoghonoluk had placed
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his little scrivening-table at the foot of these steps, to take down any important resolutions.
Gabriel Bagradian stayed as long as possible in his room, the windows of which were turned away from the crowd. He was anxious not to fritter away the plenitude of emouon which possessed him in haphazard talks. He came out of the house only when Ter Haigasun sent for him. Sallow, despondent faces stared up at his, not three thousand, but one face only. It was the helpless face of exile, here as in hundreds of other places at this hour. The mass, without needing to do so, stood there so painfully jammed together that it looked far smaller than It was. Some way beyond it, where ancient trees bounded the open space, there lay or squatted a few stragglers, cut off from the rest as though their lives had ceased to matter.
As Gabriel scanned this people, his own people, a sudden horror began to invade him. His scared heart missed a beat. Once again reality looked quite different from any concept which he had formed of it. These people here were not the tame as those he had seen day by day in the villages, the ob- ject of all his daring calculation. A deathly severity and bitter- ness stared at him from wide-open eyes. Such massed faces looked like shrivelled fruits Even the cheeks of the young were drawn and wrinkled-looking. He had sat in these peas- ants’ workshops and parlours but had seen as little of the truth as a traveller driving through a village. For the first time now, in this instant of overwhelming attention, was a deep contact re-established between this uprooted “European” and his own. All he had thought and worked out in his room was losing validity — so alien, so uncanny, the sight of these whom he wanted to impel his way. Women still in their Sunday clothes, with silk head-scarves, strings of coins round their necks, and clattering bracelets on their wrists. Many were wearing Turk- ish dress. Their legs were in wide trousers, and they had drawn the feredjeh round their foreheads, although they were devout Christians. Proximity made such assimilations inevitable, espe*
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dally in the border villages such as Wakef and Kebussiye. Gabriel stared at the men in their dark entaris, on their bearded heads fezes or fur caps. It was hot, and some had pulled their shirts open. The flesh under their tanned and crowsfooted faces looked strangely white. The white, prophetic heads of blind beggars, here and there m the mass, stood out hke searching assessments of guilt at a Last Judgment. In the very front stood Kevork, the sunflower-dancer. Even this half-wit no longer wore an expression of slobbering eagerness to be useful, but of reproach, which included this and the other world. Gabriel passed an ice-cold hand down the English tweed of his jacket It felt as though he were stroking nettles. And the question rose in his mind: “Why me, of all people? How shall I speak to them?” The responsibility he was shoul- dering chilled him, like a sudden eclipse — a shadow of bats' wings. The shameful thought: “Get clear of all this. At once, today. . . . No matter where. . . Ter Haigasun had begun slowly hammering his first words into the crowd. They sounded clearer and clearer m Gabriel’s ear. Words and sen- tences took a meaning. The echpse had passed across his sky.
Ter Haigasun stood motionless on the top step. Only his lips and the cross on his breast moved very slightly as he was speaking. The pointed hood shadowed his waxen face; his black beard, with its streaks of grey, stood out from deeply furrowed cheeks. His eyes, which he kept half shut, formed mysterious shadows. It looked not as though he were experi- enang at that moment the first stirrings of infimte thoughts, but as though he had already lived through them, had weighed and pondered, and now, arrived at his conclusion, was at last able to seek repose. Although, hke all Eastern languages, Ar- menian lends itself to tropes and images, he spoke in curt, almost and sentences.
They must see exactly what the government meant to do. There could scarcely be any among the elder people present who had not had a taste of the earlier massacres, if not in their
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own persons, then at least through the deaths and sufkrii^ of their kindred over in Anatoha. Christ had watched over Musa Dagh with undeserved mercy. For many long and blessed years the villages had been 1^ in peace while Arme- nians in Adana and other places were being killed ofi in their tens of thousands. But they must clearly distinguish between massacre and exile. The first lasted four or five days, perhaps a week. A brave man had almost always the chance to sell his life dearly. It was easy to find a place in which women and children could hide. The blood-lust of excited soldiers soon died down again. Even the most bestial saptieh sickened at the thought, once it was over. Though the government had always arranged such massacres, it had never admitted having done so. They were born of disorder, and vanished in disorder again. But disorder had been the best part of such rascally business, and the worst to fear from it had been death. Banish- ment was a very different story. Anyone might think himself lucky who was released from it by death, even the cruellest Banishment did not pass, like an earthquake, which always spares a certain number of people and houses. Banishment would go on till the last Armenian had either been slaught- ered, died of hunger on the roads, of thirst in the desert, or been carried off by spotted typhus or cholera. This time it was not a case of unbridled, haphazard methods, of whipped- up blood-lust, but of something far more terrible — an ordered attack. It was all to go according to a plan worked out in the government offices of Istanbul. He, Ter Haigasun, had known of such a plan for months, even long before the misfortune of Zeitun. He also knew that not all the efforts of the Cath- oiicos, of patriarchs and bishops, all the threats of ambassadors and consuls, had availed. The only thing that he, a village priest, had been able to do had been to keep silence, no matter how hard it had seemed to do so, so that the last happy days of his poor flock might not be destroyed. That time was over at last. Now they must look thmgs squarely in the face. No-
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body, in these discussions, need make the futile suggestion of sending petitions and delegations to the authorities. All that would be a waste of time. “Human compassion is at an end. Christ crucified demands of us that we follow Him in his passion. There is nothing left us but to die. . .
Here Ter Haigasun paused for a scarcely perceptible instant, before concluding; on a new note: “The one question is — how?”
“How?” shouted Pastor Aram Tomasian, and pushed his way quickly out beside the priest. “I know how I mean to die — not like a defenceless sheep, not on the road to Dcir ez-Zor, not in the filth of a concentration camp, not of hunger, and not of the stinking plague — ^nol 1 mean to die on the threshold of my own house, with a gun in my hand. Christ will help me to It, Whose word I preach. And my wife shall die with me, and the unborn child in her womb. . . .”
This outburst had almost broken Aram’s chest. He pressed his hands on his midriff, to get his breath again. Then, more quietly, he began to tell them what life had been in the con* voy, what he himself had had to suffer, though only in the mildest form, for a very short time.
“No one can possibly know what it’s like, beforehand. One only begins to realize at the last minute, as the officer gives the order to move off, as the church and houses, when you look back on them, get smaller and smaller, till they van- ish. . .
Aram described the eternal route, from stage to stag^ with one’s feet getting worse every day, one’s body swelling — ^with fainting people left to die on the roads, with people who dragged themselves along^ till gradually they got to be hke beasts, with people who perished one by one, under daily thrashings from the saptiehs. His words themselves descended on the crowd like cudgel-blows. . . . Yet, strangely, not a cry had risen from the agonized aouls these thousands^ not one wild outburst. They stood, «rill staring up at the nnall group
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of people round the house door, as they might have at a group of tragic actors playing what did not directly concern them. These vine- and fruit-growers, wood-carvers, comb-makers, bee-keepers, silkworm-breeders, who had felt so long that this would happen, could not grasp it with their minds, now it was here. The haggard faces still looked puzzled and concen- trated. The life-force in them was still struggling to pierce the sick chrysalis stage of the last few weeks.
Aram Tomasian shouted: “Blessed are the dead, for with them it is all over.”
Here, for the first time, an indescribable moan passed through the listeners. It was not an outcry, but a long, sighing, groaning breath, a huge, swellmg sigh, as though not human beings were sighing, but the suffering earth itself.
Aram’s voice sharply capped this threnody: “We, too, want to get death over as fast as possible. Therefore we must defend our homes, so that all of us, men, women, children, may find a quick death.”
“Why death?”
This had come from Gabriel Bagradian. A light, somewhere deep down in his consciousness, seemed to ask him, even as he heard himself; “Is that P” His heart beat quiedy. The strained vacillation was past and gone — for ever. Great cer- tainty possessed him. All the muscles of his body were re- laxed. He knew with his whole being: “For this one second it’s worth while to have lived.” Always, when talking to these villagers, his Armenian had seemed laboured and embarrassed. But now It was not he who spoke to them — ^and this knowl- edge brought him complete peace— it was the force which had brought him here, down the long, winding road of cen- turies, the short, twisted path of his own life. He listened in amazement to this power, as it found the words in him so naturally.
“My brothers and sisters, I haven’t lived among you. . . . That’s true. ... I was a stranger to my home and no longer
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knew you. . . . And then ... no doubt because of this, God sent me back from the big cities of the West to this old villa, which was my grandfather’s. . . . And so now I’m no longer the guest, almost the stranger, I was among you, for my fate will be exactly the same as yours. . . . With you I shall either live or die. . . . The government means to spare me less than any of you, I know that. . . . They hate and persecute my kind worst of all. . . . I’m forced, just like all of you, to pro- tect the hves of my wife and family. . . . And so, for weeks now. I’ve been carefully thinking out what possible ways we have of defending ourselves. . . . Listen here, I was terribly scared at first, but I’m not now, any longer. . . . I’m fid! of hope. ... With God’s help, we aren’t going to die. . . . I’m not telling you this as a vain fool, but as a man who’s seen what war is, as an officer. . . .”
His thoughts found clearer and clearer words. The intense, concentrated labour of the last few weeks was coming in use- ful. The number of fully thought-out problems gave him more and more inner certainty. This certainty of systematic thought —thought, as he had learned it m Europe— raised him far above these dully resigned prisoners of fate. This same sensa- tion of playful mastery had been his as a young man when at examinations he found that he could answer some question with an exhaustive knowledge, which at the same time selected Its own method of answering. He disposed of Aram’s desperate speech without once mentioning it directly. It would be a senseless attempt, to defy the saptichs in the streets, at house doors. It might perhaps be surprisingly successful for a few hours, but would only lead all the more inevitably, not to a quick death, but to a slow one, by torture, with the rape and bcfoulment of all the women. He, Bagradian, also wanted resistance. To the last drop of their blood. But there were better places to fight in than the valley, the village streets. He pointed in the direction of Musa Dagh, whose peaks, tower- ing behind the roof, seemed to look down and take part in the
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great assembly. They probably all remembered the old stories in which the Damlayik had offered help and protection to escaping Armenians. “And it would need a very big force really to surround and storm the Damlayik. Jemal Pasha needs every man he can get. He has something more important to do than turn out a few thousand Armenians. We shall easily finish off the saptiehs. A few hundred determined men with, rifles are all we need to defend the mountain. We have the men, and the rifles too.”
He raised his hand, as though for an oath. “I engage my- self, here, before you all, to lead that defence in such a way that our women and children will live longer than they would on a convoy. We can hold out for several weeks, maybe for months. Who knows? Perhaps by then God will grant that the war may be over. Then we’re certain to be relieved. And» even if peace doesn’t come, we’ve still always got the sea be- hind us. Cyprus, with its French and English battleships, is near. Mayn’t we hope that one day one of those ships will come down the coast, and that we shall reach it with our signals, and get help? But, even if there’s no such good fortune in store for us, there’ll still be plenty of time for dying. And then at least we shan’t need to despise ourselves as defenceless sheep.”
The effect of this speech was by no means clear. It looked as though now, for the first time, these people were being roused out of their torpor to the full consciousness of their fate. Gabriel thought at first that cither they had not under- stood him or were rejecting his scheme with howls of rage. This solid mass fell apart. Women screamed. An impact of hoarse, masculine oaths. A lurching, this way and that. Where were the furrowed and resigned gricf-stricken peasant faces, and where the veils of deathly quiet? A savage brawl seemed to begin. The men yelled at one another, they shouted and tugged at each other’s clothes, each other’s beards even. Yet all this was far less disputation than it was a wild unburdening,
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a blowing sky-high o£ the rigid impotence, the stealthy con- sciousness of death — ^violently released by these first words of trust and energy.
Whdt? Among these thousands, who now bellowed and raved m this unchained torrent of desperation, had there not been one to conceive this very simple thought in the long days of suspense allowed them.'* A thought so close to them by tradition? Had it needed a “gentleman from Europe,” a “strong man,” to come and speak it? Yes, the same thought had occurred to many among these thousands, but only as an idle day-dream. Nor, in their most secret conversations had it ever forced its way to utterance. Till a few hours before they had all still told themselves, lost in their artificial stupor, that this nemesis might draw in its claws and drift away across Musa Dagh. After all, what were they? Wretched villagers, a persecuted race on a beleaguered island, without a city at their backs. There were few Armenians in Antioch, and such as lived there were money-changers, bazaar merchants, specu- lators in gram, and so by no means the right sort of agitators and allies. And again, m Alexandretta there was only a very small, rich colony — ^bankers and war contractors — who lived in ornate villas, just as they did in Beirut. Such anxious magnates had not even a thought for the petty mountaineers of Musa Dagh. There was not one such individual as old Avetis Ba- gradian among them. They bolted the shutters of their villas and crept into the darkest corner to hide. Two or three, to save their lives and property, had gone over to Islam, sub- mitted themselves to the blunt, circumcising knife of the mul- lah. Oh, those people m the far north-east had an easy time of it — those citizens of Van and Urfa. Van and Urfa were the two big Armenian towns, full of weapons and traditional defiance. There were clever people there, the deputies of the Dashnakzagan. There it was easy to talk of resistance and to organize it. But who would dare speak such impious thoughts in wretched Yoghonoluk? Armed resistance to the civil and
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military powers? Everyone born in these parts felt in his bones a respect, mingled with terror, of the state. The state, the hereditary enemy. The state — that is to say, the saptieh, who could arrest or thrash you for no reason; the state — that is to say the filthy government office, with its picture of the Sultan, its text from the Koran, its spittle-covered tiles, where one paid one’s bedel. The state meant huge, forbidding barrack squares, where one served as a private under the fists of the chaush, the onbashi, and where a special form of bastinado had been devised to punish Armenians. So that therefore it is more than comprehensible that — apart from Pastor Tomasian’s futile out- burst— it should have been a stranger, a freed man, not a na- tive, who hurled down the first systematic thought of resist- ance into this crowd. Only such an emancipated foreigner had the necessary freedom from guilty feelings to enable him to speak out such a thought. And the people was still far from feeling at home in it. It looked as if this brawl would never end. It kept increasing Voices snarled, and fists were shaken, in a fashion altogether incongruous to these usually shy women and grave men. Naturally, too, the children, whose mothers were either nursing them or carrying them pickaback, sharp- ened the general hubbub with their wails No doubt even they could sense in their souls the peril of this moment and with shrill sobs struggled against impending death. Gabriel looked down silently into the whirlpool. Ter Haigasun came towards him. He touched Bagradian’s shoulders with all ten finger-tips. \\. vias attempt, at an enteiace, a gettMte at. onte
of blessing and abnegation. Gabriel may perhaps have read in the depths of those resolute, humble eyes: “So we’ve joined forces then, without saymg a word to each other.’’ This at- tempt at an embrace at once embarrassed and held Gabriel rigid. Ter Haigasun’s emaciated fingers slipped down off his shoulders.
Meanwhile Pastor Harutiun Nokhudian was doing his best tQ subdue the crowd. The small, spare man had to struggle
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with his wife as he was doing it, who thrust herself against him and did her best to prevent his saying anything impru- dent. He could only manage to make himself heard by de- grees. His reedy voice had to strain itself to its highest pitch: “Christ strictly enjoins us not to withstand authority. Christ strictly enjoins us not to resist evil. My office is the gospel. As the shepherd of my flock, I must disapprove of all recalci- trance.”
This pastor, whom Bagradian always considered as an ail- ing, tinud little man, showed great resolution in defending his own point of view. He described the consequences of armed resistance as he foresaw them. Such a revolt would at last give the government its right to change an infamous de- cree into a ruthlessly vindictive extermination. And then death would have ceased to be a meritorious discipleship to Christ’s passion. It would have become the lawful punishment of rebels. Not only would the souls of all these here assembled be cursed by God for impious rebellion, but its last effects would inevitably be felt by the whole people— it would be used against all Armenian sons and daughters. They would have given their masters the welcome pretext to brand the Armenian millet before the whole world as disturbers of the common peace — as traitors. A good woman, even if her hus- band ill-treats her, has no right to surrender her house to strangers. Such was the view of Harutiun Nokhudian — whose own domestic arrangements did not go very far to bear out his contention, since the wife of his bosom was his tyrant, and not only in what concerned his health. His strained v<Ka/ cords nearly gave out.
“And which of us shall say for certain that our banishment wust necessarily end as Ter Haigasun and Aram Tomasian prophesy? Are not God’s decrees insautable for them aiso? Has He not the power to send help from all sides ^ Are there not human beings everywhere, who can pity, even among Turks, Kurds, Arabs? If We keep our trust in God, shall we
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not find food and shelter everywhere? Even among strangers? Is it not possible even now, while we despair, that help may be on Its way? If it does not reach us here, at least it may reach us in Aleppo. If not in Aleppo, at least we may hope for the next halung-place. Our bodies may have to suffer bitterly, but our souls will be free. If we have to choose be- tween sinful and innocent death, why should we choose to die in sin?”
Nokhudian could not finish his speech, for his thin voice was thrust out of the way by the deep, decisive tones of a woman. Could this bellicose matron in black really be httle mother Antaram, the doctor’s wife? Was it really Mairik Antaram, the helpful, the succouring, the little mother of vil- lage mothers, from whom the very people she helped and ad- vised scarcely ever heard a long speech? She was so exated that her hlack lace shawl had slipped half off her hair, not yet entirely grey and parted down the centre. Her bold nose jutted imperiously from her flushed face. That vigorous torso, spring- ing up from between wide hips, held high her erect head. The clear blue eyes were netted in a thousand belligerent wrinkles. And yet Antaram Altouni’s magnificent wrath made her look young again.
“I’m a woman.” The full voice, by its sheer challenge, got absolute quiet with its first sounds. “I’m a woman, and I speak for all the women here. Many of us have suffered. My heart has failed me again and again. It’s a long time since I’ve cared whether I die or not. I don’t mmd how soon I do die. But I’m not going to die like a cur on the highroad. I’m not going to he out rotting in the fields. Not I! Nor do I mean to go on living in a concentration camp, among all those rascally murderers, and the poor women they’ve befouled. None of us women means to do it — no, not one of us I And if you men are so cowardly that you’d rather stay on here and be slaught- ered, we women alone will arm ourselves and go up on Musa INgh with Gabriel Bagradian.”
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This spirited appeal raised a far noisier tumult than the last It looked as though at any minute now these madmen might whip out knives against each other and so anticipate Turkish blood-letting. The schoolteachers, headed by Shatakhian, were already preparing to rush the crowd and act as police — Ter Haigasun quietly beckoned them back. He knew his people better than all these teachers and mukhtars. Such vociferations were not vindictive. Empty excitement. The mind of these thousands had still not really digested the thought of bamsh- ment. Now it had slowly to assimilate the challenging voices of the speech-makers. A glance from the priest said: “Just leave them alone.” He watched the tumult with patient eyes. Women’s voices, roused by Antaram, were more and more gainmg the upper hand. Ter Haigasun also prevented would- be orators — Oskanian, the teacher, for instance — ^from saying more. He was right. The din, with nothing there to fodder It, died down, sooner than was expected. In a few minutes this tumult had stifled itself, and only grunts and sobs were left over. Now was Ter Haigasun’s chance to clear things up and bring them speedily to a head. He waved his right hand to get them quiet.
“It’s all quite simple.” He did not use too much of his voice but scanned each syllabic very sharply, so that his words bored their way into the dull comprehension of the mass. “Two pro- posals have been made to you. Those are the only two ways we can go. There’s no other way for us except these two. The one. Pastor Nokhudian’s way, takes you eastwards with the sapuehs. The other, Gabriel Bagradian’s way, leads us up, with our own weapons, on to the Damlayik. Each of you is perfectly free to choose for himself which way to go, as his will and understanding may dictate to him. There’s nothing more to say about that, since ail that’s been said already. I want to make the decision very easy for you. Pastor Nokhud- ian will be so good as to stand over there in the empty yard, on the other side of those ropes. Let everyone who agrees with
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the pastor, and would rather go into exile, go across and stand with him. Those on the side of Gagrid Bagradian, stay here, where he is. No need to hurry. There’s plenty of time.”
Sudden, deep silence. Only Madame Nokhudian’s rapid, almost yelping sobs became audible. The old pastor bowed his head, in its little cloth cap. A heavy load of thoughts seemed to bow his shoulders, drag him to earth. He remained a very long while in this thoughtful posture. And then his legs began to move. He trotted, in hesitant steps, to the place to which Ter Haigasun had assigned him. He lifted the clothes hne with a dumsy movement over his head. The stable-yard reached almost to the villa. Only a stretch of grass, with a wall of magnolia bushes, lay in between. The big yard was com- pletely empty. Stable-boys and house servants had both crowded to the meeting. Nokhudian’s short little legs made the most of this way of decision; they needed quite a while to reach the magnolia bushes, where he took up his position, his back to the crowd His wife, shaken with sobs, came after him. Another, still longer, emptier pause, with not a word in it. Only then did one or two people free themselves from the centre of the crowd, force a way out of it, and, measuring out the intervening space with the same gentle, thoughtful steps, take up their stand beside Pastor Nokhudian.
At first there were only a few— -the elders of the Protestant congregation of Bitias, with their wives. But, little by little, the number of those who had chosen exile increased, until at last the pastor had almost his whole congregation, young and old. A few more joined them, from other villages; but these were old and burdened people, whose strength to resist had already failed them, or who, at the very end of their lives, really feared to set heaven against themselves. With their hands over their breasts as if in prayer, they took the first steps of the road to Calvary. All this happened so deliberately, in so gently introverted a manner, that it looked less like a de- cision pregnant with consequences than a religious ceremony.
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It was as though these people were stepping modestly, slowly, into the grave, without first havmg stretched themselves out to die. One. And then another. A couple. And then several. Then another couple. Nokhudian’s disciples at last increased to something hke four hundred souls, not counting those of the Protestant congregation who, from sickness or some other cause, had had to stop away from the meeting. With him the pastor took a fair proportion of the inhabitants of Bitias, the second largest commune of the valley. The mass of people watched with fascinated eyes the hesitant steps of these others, resolved for obedience. Not a word of comment. Until, last of all, very late in joining Nokhudian’s band, came a httle, shrivelled-up man, lurching over his stick like a drunkard, and talking to himself. This figure of fun, well known to all the people of Kebussiye, who did not really seem to know what was happening, provoked a cry of arrogant hatred in the crowd. At first it was no more than the sight of a half-wit producing the usual mahee. Then came the arrogance: Here were the brave, and there the cowards. Here the strong, the men of sterling worth, and there the cripples. It was only that one young man had bawled something derisive, and that a gust of laughter shook the crowd. But Ter Haigasun was al- ready pushing his way into the densely packed mass, which he thrust away from him with both arms, as though he would reach to very heart of this baseness, pounce on the giber, drag him out, and thrash him. His face looked dark with anger. His hood fell back off his close-cropped, iron-grey hair. Mur- der was glinting in his eyes: “What cur dared? What brutes are laughing?”
Vehemently he beat upon his breast, again and again, to punish at least himself for the mocker and still his rage. Then, in the resumed stillness, he went across to Harutiun Nokhud- ian and his band, stopped a little distance away from them, bowed very low, and said in his resonant, priestly voice: “To us you will always be holy. May we be holy to you.”
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Bagradian was thinking feverishly. An unstemmed rush of new ideas swept him along. The great work of defence went ardently forward in his mind. Ever since the decision had fallen, he had been only half listening to what happened. His whippcd-up thoughts noted and reflected simultaneously. What a giant of inspiration this Ter Haigasun had shown himself to be' “It’s invaluable,” the thought flashed through him, “that I should have this authority rooted in the soil behind me.” And It seemed a further stroke of fortune that the good No- khudian, and a few hundred more non-combatants, should have chosen otherwise. “They’ll be useful in keeping our move- ments anil decisions from the saptiehs till the very last minute. Ihc villages mustn’t be empty. The Turks mustn’t begin to suspect belore we’re ready for them.” Gabriel’s plan went on unfolding itself His forbears’ calculating intelligence, all the shrewdness of grandfather Avetis, were uppermost now in this, their other-worldly grandson, that simple idealist at whom his more distant relations, hard-headed merchants, had always smiled From eveiy considered actuality there spun forth its inevitable senes of ghostly threads of future consequence, and not one thread was inessential. An impetuous ambition took hold of Bagradian. So, according to Ah Nassif’s report, the mudir would arrive with his escort three days after this pres- ent Sunday. By Wednesday, therefore, all the foundations would have to be laid, from which to build in the days that followed. Now was the moment to test what he had always believed, that mind must triumph over matter, even in its highest, most intense manifestations — force and chance.
No wonder that, held fast by his scheming thoughts, intoxi- cated with self-reliance, he should have forgotten even his wife, been scaicely conscious of all the bustle surrounding him. All this was sheer waste of time. A few village speech-makers were still talking. But what, now that the great die was cast, did their clumsy, empty words matter to him ^ They were all equally bellicose — not a single voice in opposiuon. Ter Hai-
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gasun gave the people plenty of breathing-space for this spirit of valiant resolution to take deep anchorage in their midst, so that the hesitant and timid might be drawn in. But, before the first wave of exhaustion threatened, he stepped forward, in- terrupting the speaker, and decreed that they should at once choose representatives. The village clerk of Yoghonoluk went round with a basket, collecting voting-papers. The school- teachers, helped by Avakian, lost no time in beginning the count inside the villa.
It goes without saying that the majority of votes went to Ter Haigasun. Immediately after him came the doctor. Then the seven mukhtars and three village priests, with the votes of their congregations. Then, with a considerable gap, Apothe- cary Krikor, and some of the schoolteachers, among whom, of course, were Shatakhian and Oskaman. Gabriel got about the same number of votes as Pastor Aram Tomasian. Among the non-official villagers old Tomasian and Chaush Nurhan, the ex-regular sergeant, were elected to leadership. One woman, Mairik Antaram, received a large number of votes — in these parts a decided innovation. She energetically refused to accept. Shatakhian read out the results. Those selected retired into the house to draw up their rules as a corpoiate body. Gabriel had told Kristaphor and Missak to have everything ready for a sitting in the big selamlik — cold food, wine, and coffee. The crowd — even those mothers with small childien at home to be looked after— remained m the grounds, encamped here and there in the big garden. Comestibles were sent for, from Yo- ghonoluk. The master of the house sent out a ration of water, wine, fruit, and tobacco. Soon gossip, mingled with cigarette smoke and the bubbling of comfortable chibuks, rose in the evening air, as though nothing had happened. Pastor Nokhud- ian’s adherents left with their leader to go home to Bitias. It was a quiet and dreary setting forth. A few of the younger of this band turned back at the garden door and joined the main encamped body of the people, whose zest for life, after
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weeks of coma, seemed for the first time now to have returned. Now m this short, fugitive interval between everyday routine and the unknown, incomprehensible pleasure invaded their souls. Why? Because more than mere suffering lay before them, because, though they suffered, m and above their pain there would be action.
Thb night of Musa Dagh quickly absorbed the July twilight Eastward, a horizontal half-moon pushed off from the ragged peaks of the Amanus and sailed into open sky. The doors of Villa Bagradian stood wide open. The inquisitive might go in and out unhindered. The leaders of the people had gathered in the big sclamlik. This counal of leaders, a group of thirty, seemed to itself at first very helpless. The mayors of the other villages, the priests and schoolteachers, who were in this house for the first time, sat or stood about in awkward sdences. Some may only now have become aware of the full audacity of this step to which the unexpected, impetuous course of the great assembly had committed them. Gabriel instantly sensed an acrid stink of flickering courage, given off by certain of the chosen. The lukewarm must on no account be allowed to “come to their senses’’; no fundamental “if’s” or “but’s" must be spoken. The people had taken its lawful decision; there could be no vacillations now; these fires of defensive resolution should be fanned into a towering flame. It was Bagradian’s ]ob as master of the house to put an end to this shapeless hanging about of tepid men, to get the people’s coun- al under way, and to have fruitful tasks ready for all. Every advantage of his Western education must make itself felt. He did the only thing that was to be done. He turned with solemnity to Ter Haigasun.
“Ter Haigasun, it was more than the people outside that elected you. I speak for all here, when I say this: We beg you to be the supreme head of our struggle. In peace-time you held an office of leadership and, as spiritual head of the communes^
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you have done your duty with the greatest self-sacriHce till today. It is God’s will, by the cruelty of men, to extend your powers. We all want to make you the solemn promise that, in every decision we may make, m every precautionary measure on which we decide, we will submit to your final veto without a murmur. Not until you have endorsed them, shall the resolu> tions of this council of leaders become valid and so be given the power of laws, binding on our whole people.”
This little speech brought its self-evident result. Nobody else but Ter Haigasun could possibly have been chosen supreme head. Not even Mr. Schoolmaster Hrand Oskanian would have ventured a secret sneer at this established fact. And Ga- briel’s words sounded agreeably in the ears of his listeners, especially of those to whom he was still a mistrusted foreigner. Two trains of thought brought this soothing effect: Many had been expecting that “the Frenchman” would snatch the leader- ship on the strength of his Western superiority. And then — an even deeper reason — Bagradian’s speech, its solemn form as well as Its legal content, prepared the ground on which all future decisions could be built up. These few words had quite imperceptibly laid down the fundamental law for this newly constituted entity about to form itself. Ter Haigasun made the sign of the cross in silence, to show that he consented to take office, with all its heavy responsibility. From this moment there were two legal powers — the Council of Leaders and the Supreme Head of the People, who, though he presided over the counal, had alone the power to make its resolutions legally valid. Every member came up to Ter Haigasun to kiss his hand, according to custom, and took the oath. Only when this ceremony was over, did a wide circle take form along several tables set end to end. Gabriel Bagradian had war maps and complete data in front of him. Samuel Avakian stood behind him, ready to be consulted. When Gabriel, with a look, had asked for silence, he stood up.
“My friends, the sun went down two hours ago, and it will
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have risen again in another six. We have only about six hours to get through the whole of our thinking. When we go out tomorrow morning, to face the people again, there must be no more uncertainty. Our will must be clear and unanimous.
“But this IS the most necessary measure. In the very first hours of tomorrow morning all who are young and strong enough must go up to the Damlayik and begin to build the fortifications. I beg you, therefore, to save time. It is an ad- vantage to all of us that some time ago I worked out all the details of our plan of defence. I can give you my suggestions at once. I think that in these sittings it will be best to work by the same rules as those at our communal meetings. I ask Ter Haigasun’s leave to explain my plan. . .
Ter Haigasun, as his habit was, half shut his eyes, giving his face a tired and agonized look. “Let us hear Gabriel Ba- gradian.”
Gabriel spread out the best of Avakian’s three maps. “We shall have a thousand minor tasks to perform, but, if once we look at the thing correctly, we find that they all come under two mam headings. The first and most important is our actual method of defence. Even our second, the way we organize our life together, must serve that struggle above all. I’U begin with it. . .
Pastor Aram Tomasian raised a hand to interrupt. “We all know that Gabriel Bagradian, as an officer, knows most about military matters. The fighting leadership goes to him. . . .”
All hands went up in assent to this. But Pastor Aram had not done yet: “For some ume Gabriel Bagradian has been concentrating his whole mind on the plan of defence. It would be best to leave him to arrange our resistance. I therefore sug- gest that we postpone all discussion of his tactical scheme tdl we’ve a clear idea how, and for how long, five thousand peo- ple, cut off from the rest of the world, can live on the Dam- layik.”
Gabriel, who had been in full spate, sighed and let his maps
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tall back on the table. “My arrangements included that prob- lem. I’ve made notes on these maps for everything necessary to maintain hfe. But, if Pastor Tomasian likes, I’m perfectly ready to put off explaining my scheme of defence.”
Bedros Altouni, the doctor, had not long managed to sit quietly in his parliamentary seat. He wandered, growlmg, about the room, to suggest that, at this moment of urgent peril, debates, with a show of hands and speeches, seemed to him ridiculous frivolity. His growlmg impatience was in sharp contrast to the dignified impassivity of Krikor, who sat im- mobile, in an attitude which seemed to ask: “When shall I be free to escape in peace from this barbarous encroachment on the one thing in life which beseems me or makes it worth living?” The doctor, fidgeting round the room, made a sudden remark, which had nothing whatever to do with present busi- ness; “Five thousand people are five thousand people, and the heat of the sun’s the heat of the sun. And cloudbursts are cloudbursts.”
Gabriel, to whom these problems of housing, of the town enclosure, the care of the children, had caused so many sleep- less nights, took up this remark of the doctor. “It would be best for our protection to keep all the children between the ages of two and seven m one shelter.”
The hitherto silent Ter Haigasun rejected this suggestion most decisively. “What Gabriel Bagradian has just advised would mean the beginning of very dangerous disorders. We must not sunder what God and time have bound together. On the contrary, it seems to me highly essential that single parishes, and in fact, single families, should not be separated more than is absolutely necessary. Relations ought all to have their own separate encampment, every village its camping- ground. The mukhtars to be responsible to their own people, as usual. We ought to change the relationships to which we are accustomed down here as little as possible.”
Emphatic, unanimous assent, which implied a minor fail-
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ure for Bagradian. Ter Haigasun had guaranteed them as close an approximation as possible to their normal life. The pros- pect had a very soothing effect. For, to peasants, the worst, most cruel thing that can befall them is expressed in the one word — change. But Gabriel would not give way so easily. He sent round the map, with his drawing of the town enclosure. Everyone recognized the wide meadow pasturage of the com- munal flocks. It began to dawn on them that this big, stone- less expanse of grass was the only possible camping-ground. There would have been room enough for two thousand fam- ilies, let alone one thousand, on it Gabriel skilfully compro- mised with Ter Haigasun. The allotment of family and com- munal camping-grounds could easily be arranged as the priest desired. And he found himself agreeing with Ter Haigasun. On the other hand, they would have to admit that the thou- sand families could not possibly run separate establishments; that It would never work if the common resources were not pooled. They need only work out the saving in food and fuel, the gain in free labour power. Apart from this, there would really be no possibility of holding out for a long time if it were not arranged that beasts must be slaughtered, bread and grain distributed, goat’s milk allotted to children and invahds, only according to strictly determined regulations. Whatever else might be done to classify people according to family, the ticklish question of private ownership could not be got round. Since he, Bagradian, was willing to place his whole posses- sions, in so far as they were obtainable and divisible, at the disposal of the common defence — all the cattle on his farm, all the supplies in his house and cellar — everyone else must contribute his share. These circumstances imperatively de- manded the communal distribution of goods. It would be quite impossible for each individual family to slaughter its own sheep. Milk must go to those who needed it, and not, for instance, to any strong, well-fed people who happened to own a couple of goats. The notion, which some perhaps still cher-
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ishcd, that up on the Damlayik it would still be possible to buy certain privileges for money, was a childish dream. From the instant the communes arrived in camp, money would cease to have the remotest value. And all barter would have to be strictly forbidden, since from that day on all goods would be the goods of the people, to be used to defend their lives in battle. No one who had clearly perceived that exile meant the loss of all he possessed would surely think the demands of Musa Dagh worth another second’s hesitation.
But at once it was plain that in making these just demands Gabriel had erred most sadly. It had not so much as entered these peasant minds — ^though a few hours back they had known with such inevitable certainty that they stood face to face with exile and death — that now their own would cease to belong to them. It was more than the mere loss that pro- duced their obstinacy — it was the disciplined inevitability, the “European,” in Gabriel’s words. This led on to a time-wasting argument, which was fruitless, if for no other reason than that the most determined peasant skull could conceive no alterna- tive. A bandying of words which only served to vent disgrun- tlcment. Ter Haigasun waited a certain time. A short, warning glance across to Gabriel: “It’s necessary to be rather careful in making these people see the obvious.” Then he interrupted their empty chatter:
“We are going up to the mountain and shall have to live there. Many things will arrange themselves which we needn’t bother our heads discussing at present. It would be better if you mukhtars would begin to think out the most urgent mat- ters: Will It be possible to have enough supplies taken up there? For how many weeks do you think they’ll be likely to last? Is there any possible means of supplementing them?”
And here Pastor Tomasian had another, very feasible sug- gestion. It was the mukhtars’ business to get together and work out their own estimate of provisions, and scheme for the com- imssariat. And this not oiily applied to the commissariat, but
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to all other matters to be discussed. This general council was unwieldy. They were not here to talk and argue, but to work. He, Aram Tomasian, therefore proposed that the various departments should get together, and each form a separate committee. Each of these committees to be presided over by a head, named by Ter Haigasun. The heads to form a closer, separate council which should have in its hands the actual management of affairs. There would be five departments: First, Defence; second. Legislation, which concerned Ter Haigasun alone; then came Internal Order; then all that con- cerned Public Health and Sickness; and lastly the special af- fairs of single communes, as against those of the whole com- munity. Gabiiel enthusiastically welcomed the young pastor’s inspiration, and for the first time Dr. Altouni also gave some signs of assent. No one demurred. Ter Haigasun, to whom the inevitable chatter of a big council was as uncongenial as to Aram, at once endorsed this legislative arrangement. Chaush Nurhan, the teacher Shatakhian, and two younger men, whom he selected, were assigned as a military committee to assist Gabriel. Aram Tomasian also made one of this Committee of Defence. In the same way Gabriel was himself a member of the Committee of Internal Order, led by the pastor. This committee made itself responsible for everything connected with the obtaining and rauoning of supplies Therefore, Thomas Kebiissyan and the other mukhtars were members. The elder Tomasian, the builder, found himself solely en- trusted with the business of erecting huts It need scarcely be said that Dr. Altouni and the detached apothecary, Krikor, had to form the Committee of Public Health. With that they had all achieved a rough and ready division of labour. In the next few hours these isolated groups were to make what pro- vision they could for their departments So that then, in the early morning, a short sitting of the General Council would be enough to estimate results. The mukhtars went outside to get du'cctly from their villagers a possible estimate of supplies.
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Gabriel was to follow them later and, with their help, to muster the youngest, strongest men, who, early next day, were to begin digging-operations on the main line of trenches be- tween the north peaks. Meanwhile, map in hand, he eagerly explained his plan of defence to Ter Haigasun, Aram Tomas- ian, and the rest. Even Krikor began to be curious and came across to listen.
Only one person stood aside, with inscrutably folded arms — Hrand Oskanian, naturally. That sombre schoolteacher had met with yet another rebuff. No leading role had been allotted him — no, not even a fairly respectable second. While his col- league Shatakhian had been given a seat on the Committee of Defence, Ter Haigasun, in his deep hatred of the other, silent pedagogue, had condemned him to go on “teaching school" and keeping the children in order. That was the priest’s revenge for the fact that at the communal elections Hrand Oskanian, the poet of Musa Dagh, had been elected by hundreds of votes. Icily reserved, Oskanian was already wondering whether or not to leave the assembly and go home. Then he grew proudly conscious of the fact that the many by whom he had been chosen looked up to him with trustful eyes and that, moreover, the priest would be more riled by his presence than by his absence.
Shortly after midnight the council was suddenly suspended- As often happens in such cases, it had occurred to no one to make sure of that on which the whole future would depend. Fifty Mausers and two hundred and fifty Greek service-rifles still lay buried in a grave in the cemetery. They must be dug up instantly and carried up the Damlayik before morning, with the munitions. Though Gabriel did not mistrust ^ Nassif’s report, there was still always the possibility that in the course of the next twenty-four hours fresh saptiehs might come to the villages, to make a sudden search for arms. A deputation of six went off, post-haste, to the churchyard of Yoghonoluk, situated beyond the village on the road to Habibli. The two
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grave-diggers came last. The rifles, thanks to Nurhan the armourer's foresight, had been laid in bricked graves. They awaited their glorious resurrection enveloped in rags, in air- Ught coffins, bedded in straw. Only four weeks previously Chaush Nurhan had inspected them summarily by torchhght and found them in perfect condition Scarcely one breech-lock had rusted. Nor had the cartridges suffered in any way. That night these heavy chests, fifteen in all, were hauled up for ever out of the graves. It was hard work. Since not many hands were there to do it, Ter Haigasun, who had flung off his cas- sock, did a muscular share. Later a couple of the strong shaggy donkeys of the district were fetched, so that at last, towards morning, led by Chaush Nurhan, a secret caravan set out for the northern mountain pass through the deserted villages of Azir and Bitias.
Not till an hour before sunrise could Ter Haigasun get back to the selamlik of Villa Bagradian. The garden looked like a corpse-strewn batdeficld. Not even the people of Yog- honoluk had gone home. Ter Haigasun, like a general among the dead, had to step across the motionless sleepers.
Thanks to the energy of Bagradian — who kept urging them on — the members of the subcommittees had done some very useful work. The main hncs of the conditions of defence and rationing had been laid down. A muster of the fighters had been drawn up and approxunatc calculations made of the amounts and kinds of obtainable foodstuffs. Provision had also been made for the building of a colony of huts, a hospital shelter, and a larger government barrack. With Ter Haigasun’s return the General Council reassembled. Gabriel briefly re- ported decisions taken to the chief. With Aram Tomasian’s energetic support he had managed to get nearly all his sug- gestions accepted. Ter Haigasim gave his assent to every- thing, with an absent-looking face and half-closed eyes, as though he did not believe that this new life would be tna/li- subjea to resolutions. Both lights and men were on the wane,
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yet their eyes still showed more excitement than fatigue. A glorious morning began to ghtter, deep silence descended on them all. The men stared out of the window at the gentle light of this bud of dawn, unfolding petal by petal. The pupils of their eyes shone, strangely dilated. No sound in this selamlik of the night watch save the scraping of two pencils — Avakian’s and the communal clerk’s — engaged in drafting a protocol of the most important resolutions.
When the sun shone full and golden into the room, Gabriel put an end to this comatose dreaming. “I think we’ve all done our duty tonight, and that nothing’s forgotten.”
“No. We’ve forgotten one thing — the most essential thing.” Ter Haigasun remained seated as he spoke, but his resonant voice brought all who had risen back to the table. The priest raised deep, signihcant eyes. He stressed each syllable;
“The altar.”
Then added with calm mattcr-of-factness that a great wooden altar must be set up, in the centre of the camp, as the holy place for prayer, the service of God.
Towards five o’clock — the sun was high by now — Gabriel came into Juliette’s room on the top story. He found there a number of people who had sat up all night with Madame Ba- gradian. Stephan, for all his mother’s commands and entreaties, had not gone to bed. Now he lay on the sofa, fast asleep. Juliette had spread out a rug over him. She was standing lean- ing out of the window, with her back to the people in the room. Everyone here gave the impression of being alone, apart from the others. Iskuhi stiffly sat by the sleeping Stephan. Hovsannah, Pastor Tomasian’s wife, whose fears towards morning had driven her to the villa, sat sunk in an armchair, staring out at nothing. Mairik Antaram, less affected than any of the others by this night of alarums and excursions, listened at the open door to the buzz of voices from the council-room. But a man was also in the room. Monsieur Gonzague Maris
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had been keeping the ladies company all night and, although at the moment nobody noticed hun, he seemed to be the only person present who was not lost in his own thoughts. His beautifully brushed hair shone in the sunlight, unruffled by either his vigil or these events. His observant, indeed alert, velvet eyes, under the blunt angle of their brows, strayed here and there among the women. He seemed to be reading every wish, as It passed across these haggard faces, in order, gal- lantly, to fulfil It.
Gabriel came a few steps nearer Juliette, but stopped and stared at Gonzague. “It’s a fact, isn’t it, that you have an American passport?’’
A mocking, rather scornful twist crept across the lips of the young Greek. “Would you care to look at it. Monsieur? Or my registration papers as a journalist?”
His cool, slender fingers strayed to his pockets. Gabriel had ceased to notice him. He had hold of Juliette’s hand. The hand was not cold, but the life had gone out of it, it was shamming dead. All the more vivaaous, therefore, the eyes. There was in them a va et vient, an ebb and flow, as always at moments of conflict. Her nostrils quivered a little— a sign of resistance well known to Gabriel. For the first time in twenty-four hours a cloud of fatigue began to descend on him. He hesitated. Within him, hollowness and the void. They watched each other’s eyes in a long scrutiny, man and woman. Where was Gabriel’s wife? He could still feel her hand in his, hke an object, like unyielding porcelain — but she herself had slipped away from him. How many days’ marches and sea journeys away? But this time-devounng distance, longer and longer every second, not only increased from her to him, but from him to her. Here stood Juliette’s tall and beautiful body, so near, so entirely a part of his. Every inch of it must remember his kisses, the long neck, the shotdders, the breasts, the knees and shins, the very toes. This body had born Ste- phan, had endured for the future of the Bagradians. And now?
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He could scarcely recognize it. He had lost the image of its nakedness. It was like having forgotten one’s name. But bad enough as it was to find some French lady standing here, with whom one had once had a haison — ^this lady had become an enemy, she was on the other side, had a seat on the extermi- nators’ councils, although she was herself an Armenian mother. Gabriel felt something huge and hard rise in his throat, without really noticing it. Only in the last half-second did he free himself of this choking sensation.
“No . . . that isn’t possible . . . Juliette.”
She put her head slyly on one side. “What isn’t possible? What do you mean?”
He stared at the vivid colours outside the window, could distinguish no shapes. For several hours he had been making Armenian speeches, and French now crept back into his mind, outraged. He began, in a hesitant voice, in a hard, unusual accent, wh.ch seemed to set Juhette’s nerves still more on edge; “I mean . . . you’re right, I think . . . you mustn’t be dragged into this. . . . Why should you? ... You remember our talk that night? . . . You must get away. . . . You and Stephan.”
She seemed to be weighing her words: “I remember exactly what we said . . . that time. . . . Unheard of as it is. I’m in this with you. ... I said so, then.” She had never used such a tone before, but that was a matter of indifference. She threw a reproachful glance at Hovsannah and Iskuhi, as though in them she recognized the responsible parties.
Gabriel passed his hand twice across his eyes. He was again the man and leader of last night. “There’s a way out for you and Stephan. Not a safe or easy one. . . . But you’ve got a very strong will, Juliette.”
A sharp, testing look came into her eyes. Roused wild beasts have such a look before they spring, in one long bound, away past a man or a danger into freedom. Perhaps, now, every impulse to flight was crouched, ready to spring, in Juliette.
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But scarcely did Gabriel begin speaking when the glowering tension left her face; she became uncertain, dismayed, and sly.
“Gonzague Maris will be leaving us today or tomorrow,” said Bagradian with the unanswerable decision of a leader. "He has an American passport. It’s invaluable in circum- stances like these. I’m sure, Maris, you won’t refuse to get my wife and son into safety. You can take the hunting-trap. It’s summer, and the roads in the valley are still passable. And I’ll give you reserve wheels and all four horses. Kristaphor will go with you, as well as the coachman; those two can get away as your servants. Via Sandcran and El-Maghara it’s only five or six hours to Arsus. I reckon you’ll have to walk the horses most of the way. The fifteen English miles to the coast, from Arsus to Alexandretta, are a trifle, because you can trot for hours along the sandy beach. In Arsus, I believe, there’s a small garrison. It won’t be hard for Mans to frighten the onbashi there with his passport.”
Kristaphor had come in to ask his master for orders. Gabriel turned to him sharply. “Kristaphor, is it possible to get to Arsus, via Alexandretta, in ten hours with the hunting-trap?”
The steward opened his eyes wide. “Eficndi, that depends on the Turks.”
Bagradian’s voice grew sharper still. “I didn’t ask you that, Kristaphor. What I really mean is: Would you trust yourself to get the hanum, my son, and this American gentleman to Alexandretta?”
Sweat stood out on the steward’s forehead. He looked like an old man, although he was only forty. It was not quite clear what It was that moved him — ^fcar of a hazardous adventure, or the sudden prospect of saving himself. His eyes strayed from Bagradian to Gonzague. At last a furtive look of wild joy came into them. But this he controlled at once, either out of respect for Bagradian or so as not to give himself away. “I could do it, Effendi. If the gendeman has a passport, the saptiehs won’t be able to touch us.”
ajo
After this explanation Gabnel sent Kristaphor back to the kitchen to prepare a copious breakfast for everyone. He con- tinued his instructions to Maris. Unluckily there was no American consul in Alexandretta, only German and Austro- Hungarian vice-consuls. He had made inquiries some time previously about these two. The German was called Hoff- mann, the Austrian, Belfante; they were both well-disposed European business men, who might be expected to do all they could to help. But since they were both Turkish alhes, it would be necessary to use the greatest discretion.
“You’ll have to make up some story . . . Juhette is a Swiss, who has lost her passport in a travelling accident. . . . The vice<onsuls must get you a railway passport from the local military authorities. ... In the next few days they’ll be open- ing the branch line to Toprak Kaleh. . . . Hoffmann and Belfante will be sure to know whether the commandant can be bribed. If so, it’ll be all right. . . .”
Gabriel had passed a great many sleepless nights thinking out these directions for escape — rejecting, altering, taking up again. There were various alternatives one in the Aleppo direction, another to Beirut. Yet now his jerky indications sounded as though he had only just thought of them. Juliette stared; she seemed not to be understanding a single word he said.
“You must think out some plausible tale, Mans. ... It won’t be so easy to make them believe in the accident and the lost passport. . . . But that isn’t the mam thing. . . . Juliette . . . the mam thing is that you, an obvious European, won’t be suspected of belonging to us. And that m itself is enough to save you. . . . You’ll be taken for an adventuress, or at worst for a spy- . . . There’s certainly the danger of that. . . .You may be subjected to inconveniences and even perhaps have to suffer. But, after all, compared to what we’re suffering here — it’s scarcely worth mentiomng. . . . You must keep the one main object before your eyes — a way out of this. Free yourself
- 31
from this people under a curse, with whom you’ve got involved through no fault of your own.”
With these words, which he brought out in a loud staccato, Gabriel’s face suddenly lost its look of desperate stram. Juhette bent the upper half of her body a little backwards, an invol- untary movement, which seemed to suggest that she was ready to do her husband’s will. Gonzague Mans came a few steps nearer the couple — ^perhaps to suggest that, though he was ready, he did not want to force any decisions. All the others seemed to accentuate the suff lifelcssness of their attitudes, as if to mitigate their inconvenient presence at such a scene. Ga- biiel had regained his self-control.
“Troop trains arc the only ones still running. You’ll have to bribe the commandant of every section of the line. . . . They’re usually old people, who’ve stuck to the old ways, and have nothing to do with Ittihad. . . . Once you’re in the train, you’ll have gained a good deal. . . . The hindrances will be frightful. . . . But every mile nearer Istanbul will improve matters. . . . And you’ll get to Istanbul even if it takes you weeks. . . . Juliette, there you must go straight to Mr. Mor- genthau. ... You still remember him? . . . The American ambassador.”
Gabriel felt in his pocket and drew out an envelope bearing a legal seal. This, too, his last will, he had for weeks been keeping ready for Juliette without her knowledge. He held it out, silently. But slowly she drew back her hands and put them away behind her back. Gabriel, with a slight tilt of his head, pointed through the window at Musa Dagh, which stood as though molten in the strong morning sunlight. “I must go up there. The work’s beginmng. . . . I’m afraid I shan’t be able to get back today.”
The outstretched hand, with its sealed letter, sank to his side. What kind of tears were these? , . . “And Juliette can’t control them,” marvelled Gabnel. “Is she crying about herself? Or about me? Is she saying good-bye?” He sensed her grief,
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out could not recognize it He glanced round quickly at the others, those silent ones, still scarcely venturing to breathe lest perhaps they influence this decision. Gabriel longed for Juliette, who was standing only a few paces away from him. He spoke clearly and urgently, like a man who must talk to the woman he loves, across foreign countries, into a telephone; “I’ve al- ways known it would come, Juliette. . . . And yet I’ve never known it would come hkc this . . . between you and me.”
Her answer came obscurely, drawn up out of depths, out- raged, and not torn by any sob. “And so that’s what you really thought of me!”
>fobody knew how long Stephan had been awake, nor how mach he had clearly heard and understood of this conversa- tion between his parents. Only Iskuhi suddenly stood up, in a startled movement. Juliette knew, and had often marvelled at the fact, that between Gabriel and her son there was a rela tionship as shy as it was profound. Stephan, usually eager and voluble, was mostly silent in Gabriel’s presence, and Gabriel’s ma>iner with Stephan was also peculiarly reserved, serious, and spaiing of words Their long stay in Europe had obscured Asia, and yet not stifled it, in the souls of the two Bagradians. (In every house of the seven villages sons, no matter what their age, kissed their fathers’ hands every morning and evening. There were even a few strict houses in which, at meals, the father was not waited on by his women, but by his eldest son. And, on his side, the father honoured his eldest in a fashion tenderly severe, in accordance with a very ancient tradition, since a son is the next step on the shimmering stair- case of eternity ) True that, in the case of Stephan and Gabriel, this relationship had ceased to express itself in the ancient rituals prescribed; but it remained in a shyness which bound and separated them. Gabriel’s attitude to his own father had been the same. He, too, in his father’s presence, had always felt this constraint, this solemn shyness, so that he never dared 8 tender word or a caress. All the more shattering, therefore^
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the effect of the cry uttered now by Gabriel’s son, as he real- ized that separation threatened them. He flung off the rug xvshed across to his father, and clung to him.
“No, no . . . Father . . . You mustn’t send us away. I want io stay . . . stay with you!”
What was it that looked at the father out of his son’s al- mond-shaped eyes? This was no longer a child whose life one arranges, but an adult impelled by his will and blood, a destiny fully shaped, no longer susceptible to moulding. He had grown and developed so much in the last few weeks. And yet this new perception did not exhaust the thing which his father encountered in Stephan’s eyes. He dissuaded feebly: “What’s coming, Stephan, won’t be child’s play.”
Stephan’s cry of alarm changed to a defiant challenge: “I want to stay with you, Father ... I won’t go away.”
I, I, F Jealous rage had hold of Juliette. Oh, these Arme- nians! How they stuck together! She herself had ceased to be there. Her child belonged to her, as much as to him! She wasn’t going to lose him. Yet, if she stood up for her rights, she’d lose Stephan. She came a decisive, almost an enraged, step nearer father and son. She caught Stephan’s hand to pull him towards her. But Gabriel knew only that Juliette had come to them “And so that’s what you really thought of me?” In that malicious question there had sail lurked a hint of in- decision. But this angry step was decisive for Gabriel. He drew Wife and child within his embrace.
“May Jesus Christ be our help* Perhaps it’s better this way.” As he strove to calm himself with these words, he was invaded with a kind of dull horror, as though the Saviour he invoked had caused some door to shut against Stephan and Juliette. Before their embrace had achieved any real warmth and life, he let fall his arms, turned away, and left them. He stopped again in the doorway. “It goes without saying, Maris, you can have one of my horses for your journey.”
Gonzague deepened his attentive smile. “I should accept your
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kindness most gratefully if I didn’t have another request. I want you to allow me to share your life up on Musa Dagh. I’ve already talked it over with Krikor. He’s been asking Ter Haigasun’s permission for me, and he hasn’t refused.”
Bagradian considered this. “I suppose you realize that later on the best American passport won’t help you in the least.”
“I’ve lived here so long, Gabriel Bagradian, that I shouldn’t find it easy to leave you all. And, besides. I’m a journalist, you know. I may never get another chance like this.”
Something in Gonzague gave Bagradian a sense of hostility, repelled him even. He tried to think how to refuse the young man. “The only question i^ will you ever get the chance of making any use of what you write?”
Gonzague answered not only Gabriel, but all the people in the room: “I’ve often found that I could rely on my intuition. And I feel almost certain that things will turn out all right for you in the end. It’s only a feeling. But it’s the kind of feeling I can trust.” His alert velvet eyes glanced from Hovsannah to Iskuhi, from Iskuhi to Juliette, on whose face they rested. And Gonzague’s eyes seemed to be asking Madame Bagradian if she didn’t find his reasons convincing enough.
7
The Funeral of the Bdls
For two days and nights Gabriel stayed up on the Damlayik. Even on the first evening he had to send Juliette word not to expect him. A variety of circumstances forced him to remain so long on this mountain ridge. Suddenly the Damlayik had ceased to be that idylhc mountain slope familiar to Gabriel, first as a place on which to dream, intimate in spite of its ruggedness, then as a strategic possibility. For the first time it showed him its true, unvarnished face. Everything on earth, not man alone, shows its reality only when we make demands on It. So too the Damlayik. Ttot after-glow of Paradise, those solitudes whose laughing well-springs made them alive, had vanished now off its wrinkled, forbidding aspect. The defence terrain chosen by Gabriel comprised a surface area of several square kilometres. This surface, as far as the fairly level town enclosure, was a diHicult up-and-down of hills, depressions, knolls, and gullies, which roughly made one aware of its in- equalities once It was neeessary to visit its various points many times a day. Gabriel wanted to avoid the waste of time and energy entailed in any not absolutely necessary descent into the valley. All the same, he had never felt so toughly vigorous in his whole life. His body, too, now that unsparing demands were being made on it, showed him both what he was and of what he was capable. By comparison the weeks he had spent as a front-line soldier in the Balkan war seemed slack and boring. In those days one had been mere human material, to be pushed forward under Sre, seemingly by some natural
force, or to drift back in the same constant danger, with the same will-icss passivity. In the last few years Gabriel had often suAered from stomach trouble and palpitauons. These derangements of a pampered body were now as though blown away by a single breath of necessity. He no longer knew that he had a heart or a stomach, and simply did not notice the fact that three hours’ sleep on, or under, a blanket fully suf- ficed him, that a roll and some kind of tinned food stilled his hunger for the whole day. But, even though he thought very little about it, this proof that he was really a strong man filled him with a glow of pride. It was the pride which tingles through our substance only when our minds have defeated it
His was occupied with much else. Most of those men m- tended as fighters had already forgathered on the mountain, together with a few of the stronger women and a few half- grown boys to be used as workers. All the rest had been shiewdly kept in the valley. There daily life was to seem to be going on quietly as usual, so that no rumour should spread of deserted villages. And these villagers had undertaken the task of getting as many stores as possible up the mountain in the dead of night. These could not all be loaded on to mules. The long beams and struts of old Tomasian’s workshop, for instance, had to be earned up on their own shoulders by his apprentices. This wood was to bmld the altar, the government hut, and the hospital. The younger of the people’s representa- tives, above all Pastor Tomasian and the teachers, were needed by Gabriel on the Damlayik, while the General Council, under Ter Haigasun, continued its business in the valley.
At that time there were about five hundred men encamped on the Damlayik. With the shock troops and elite, it was a question not only of spurring on this work to the exhaustion point, but of fanning to higher and higher flame the passionate fighting-spirit already in them. When at night with exhausted bodies they gathered round the fires in the town enclosure. Pastor Aram, in long exhortations — which had, however,
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little of the sermon m them — would explain the real meaning of this resistance. He proclaimed the divine right of self' defence, spoke of the mysterious way of blood which Arme- nians have trodden all through the ages — of the value of this one brave attempt, as an example which might fire their whole people to resist and so save itself. He described all the cruelty of the convoys, all he had himself seen or heard described, giving such atrocities as an instance of the way in which these thousands of villagers would have been certain to perish in the end, and, with equal conviction, he kept assuring them that the great deed in which they were united was a certain way to freedom and victory. To be sure, he was never very explicit as to how they were to gain their victorious liberty. Nor did anyone ask him. The very sound of his stormy words was enough to fire the blood of the young men; the meanings behind them mattered less.
Sometimes Gabriel spoke instead of the pastor. He was less rhetorical, more exact. They must never, he urged them, waste a second, cat one unnecessary mouthful; must concentrate every pulse-beat on the one aim. Let them think less of m- evitablc misfortune than of the sorry pain and degradation with which the Turks were befouhng their Armenian sub- jects. “If once we manage to drive them down off the moun- tain, we shan’t have merely wiped off this insult, we <bail have humbled and dishonoured the Turks for ever. Because we’re the weak, and they’re the strong. They despise us as a set of merchants and always boast of being soldiers. If we them once, we shall have poisoned their self-esteem and given them a lesson they’ll never get over.”
Whatever Gabriel and Aram may really have been thrnk* ing at this time, they insisted again and again on the glorious outcome of resistance, hammering fanatical belief and, more important still, fanatical discipline, into young, impressionable minds.
No more than Gabriel had ever been aware that he possessed
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ai) iron constitution, had he suspected his gifts as an organizer. In the milieux in which he had so far hved “sound practical sense” had always connoted hmited and acquisitive thinking. Therefore he had striven all too successfully to be on the side of the unpractical. But now, thanks to prdimmary work, he succeeded in the first few hours in building up the most feasible division of his army into skeleton “cadres,” into which rein- forcements from the valley could very easily be incorporated. He built up three main divisions: a fighting-formation; a big reserve; and a cohort of youth, for all half-grown lads of from thirteen to fifteen, only to be used as a last resort in case of very heavy losses on a harassed front, but otherwise to act as scouts, observation corps, and liaison runners. The full strength of this front line of defence worked out at eight hundred and sixty men. This, not including the less fit, the totally unfit, and a certain number of the most indispensable “experts," comprised all the men from sixteen to sixty. All others, elderly men stdl able to work and a certain proportion of girb and women, were lumped together as reserve — so that his second strength was somewhere between a thousand and eleven hun- dred. The third branch, the scouting-bngade of his cohort of youth, the cavalry of the Damlayik, consisted of over three hundred boys. On the second day Gabriel sent his adjutant Avakian down to the valley to fetch Stephan. He was not certain that juhette would let him go so easily. But the student punctually returned with a radiant Stephan at his heels, to be enrolled at once as a scout by his father. Of tlie eight hun- dred and sixty men of his main defence, it is true that not more than three hundred could be armed with what infantry rifles they had. Most, unfortunately, had either ordinary hunting-guns or the romantic flint-locks to be found in nearly every house in the villages.
Gabriel had ordered every gun from his brother’s chests that was in any sort of working order, to be distributed. Luckily most of the men, not only those who had served as Turkish
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conscripts, knew how to handle a rifle. Yet, for all that, the main defence was lamentably armed. Four platoons of regular infantry, even without the usual machine-gun, would have been a far superior force. The most essential part of the de- fence had naturally not been thought of as one vaguely uni- form mass; Gabriel had split it up strategically into definite sections of ten men each, that is to say, minute battahons^ which could be moved and disposed independently. He had also taken care that each of these decads should be composed of men of the same village, if possible of the same family, so that comradeship might be as strongly cemented as possible.
The command presented greater difficulties, since one in each of these ten must be given authority, just as the bigger units must have their commanders. Gabriel chose these leaders from among men of various ages who had seen service. Th< invaluable Chaush Nurhan undertook the business of genera], chief ordnance officer, fortress engineer, and sergeant-major all in one. The twisted ends of his grey, wiry moustache bristled, the huge Adam’s apple on his stringy throat worked up and down Nurhan seemed heartily grateful to the Turks for having arranged a few deportauons and so provided his opportunity, so passionate was the zeal with which he hurled himself on military duties so long forgone. For hours he drilled those men who were not at work, without once rest- ing or letting them rest. He had the notion, with the help of Armenian quick-wittedness, of working in a few days through the whole Turkish drill-book, as laid down for an infantry- training of several years. His main preoccupations wer< fighting-manoeuvres, heads “up” and “down,” quick entrench ments, the use of terrain, and storm attack. He was disgusted with Bagradian for having forbidden any rifle practice, even though It was most understandable, and not merely tc save munitions. Elderly as Nurhan was, he raced from one drilhng company to the next, mstructing each platoon in- structor, shouting and raving in the bluest of barrack-rooir
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Turkish. Armed to the teeth with sword, army revolver, rifle, cartridge-belt, he had also slung on the infantry bugle, scrounged from a quartermaster’s store, and used its kicking, strutting bugle-calls at any instant to rally his men. A startled Gabriel hurried the whole long way from the north ridge to the drilling-ground to put a firm stop to these reckless tootmgs. Was it absolutely necessary, he asked, to give the saptiehs and Mohammedan villages of the neighbourhood strident warn* iugs of manceuvres on the Daralayik^
During the first day all the deserters on Musa D:igh had begun to join forces with the garrison. In the couriC of the next few days their number increased to the very respectable figure of sixty. Nurhan’s bugle seemed to have i allied these lads from the hills around, from Ahmer Dagh an 1 the barren Jebel el Akra. To Gabriel, although they were well armed, they were welcome, yet unwelcome, reinforcements. There could be no doubt that this pitiful mob contained not only the usual recalcitrants — cowards, bulbed men, haters of discipline — but sinister elements, fellows with as much to fear from the civil authorities as the military. There were crooks among them, who spuriously assumed the deserter’s halo, whose real profession was that of foot-pad, who seemed to have come, not from any barracks in Antakiya, Aleppo, or Alexandretta, but from the jail at Payas. It was hard to distinguish sheep from goats in this reinforcement of sixty-odd, since all looked equally scared, shy, famished. It was not surprising that they should, since day and night they had had to keep a look-out for gendarmes and could never venture down into the vil- lages before two or three in the morning to beg a crust from their scared compatriots. The skeletons of these deserters — they could scarcely any longer be said to have bodies — were hung with the rags of desert-hued uniforms. What still was visible of their faces, imder a matted growth of hair and bristle, was tanned almost black with sun and dirt. Their Armenian eyes expressed not only the general pain, but with
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it a peculiar agony, the sullen pain of the shady outcast slowly unking back to the level of beasts. The pack looked as though humanity had cut it off. Only fo the deserter Sarkis Kilikian, whom they called “the Russian,” was this inapplicable, out- wardly at least, though he of them all seemed the most irrev- ocably cut off from the safety of the human family. Gabriel recognized him at once as the ghost which had risen that night in “Three-Tent Square.” The problem of enrolling these sixty vagrants without imperilling the gradually forming dis- cipline of the rest was one that could not be solved immedi- ately. For the present, in spite of their disillusioned grimaces, they were sent to drill under the iron supervision of Chaush Nurhan, who made them sweat for their keep through the very same drill-book, to avoid which they had escaped More essential even than Nurhan’s drilling was the other task of these wildly industrious days — the building and digging of fortifications The blue and brown lines marked by Gabriel on Avakian’s map were being changed into realities. Since for the time being the Damlayik had more hands than spades, shifts of diggers were formed. Bagradian’s eventual aim was to use only ihe reserve for labour — that is to say, the eleven hundred men and women who would not be at their posts unless there was fighting, and whose task would otherwise be all the neeessary work of the camp. But these people were still down in the villages.
By G.'ibriel’s reckoning there were thirteen different points at which the Damlayik could be threatened. The most open point of attack was in the north, that narrow indentation he called the North Saddle, which separated the Damlayik from the other portions of Musa Dagh which lay dispersed in the Bcilan direction. The second, but far more vulnerable, spot was the wide path above Yoghonoluk up through the ilex grove. Further danger zones on the western extremities of the mountain resembled this in a lesser degree, wherever, in fact, the slopes became less steep, and where Hocks and herds-
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men had trodden out a natural track. The only points of differentiation were the strong, towering rocks to the south, the “South Bastion” of the map, which dominated the broad, stony slopes rising out of the plain of the Orontes in abrupt, terraced ridges. Down in the plain stood the remnants of a fallen human world, the fields of Roman ruins of Seleucia. These stony leavings of a civihzation crashed to earth aped the southern dank of the mountain, with its tier upon tier of heaps of stone. Under Samuel Avakian’s supervision and Bagradian’s precise directions two fairly high walls composed of great blocks of stone had been put up, not only on this rocky incline itself, but right and left of it. The student marvelled that such complete walls should be thought neces- sary for the mere purposes of cover. H:s strategic insight was still very imperfect in those days, and he seldom understood his master’s intentions. But the hardest work was that de- manded in the north, the most vulnerable point of the de- fence. Gabriel Bagradian himself worked at the long trench — several hundred paces long — with all its chevrons and supports. In the west it was backed by the rocky confusion of the side overlooking the sea, which, with all its obstacles, natural entrenchments, caverns, formed a labyrinthine fortress. East- wards Bagradian strengthened his entrenchments with out- posts and tree-entanglements. It was lucky that the greater part of this terrain should have been composed of soft soil. Yet the spades kept jarring against big blocks of limestone and dolomites, which impeded the progress of the work so that they could scarcely hope to complete these trenches in less than four working days. While muscular diggers, aided by a few peasant women, turned up the soil, boys with sickles and knives felled the scrubby undergrowth at certain points in front of the trench, that the fire-zones might be unimpeded. Bagradian stayed there all day, supervising. He kept running up to the indentation and the counter-slope of the saddle to make sure, from every conceivable angle, that the trench was
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being properly dug. He gave orders that the thrown-up earth was always to be flattened into the soil again. His whole aim was to assure himself that this wide groove should be fully camouflaged, that the thick-shrubbed slope along which it ran should seem to be still untouched by human hands. When it IS remembered that, aside from the reserve trench in the next wave of ground, there were still to be completed twelve smaller positions, Bagradian’s stubborn concentration here must have filled every intelligent observer with anxiety.
It was evening. Gabriel lay on the earth exhausted, staring at the uncompleted altar-frame, which looked to him dis- proportionately high. Then, in his half-sleep, he noticed that he himself was being stared at. Sarkis Kilikian, the deserter I The man was probably his junior, perhaps scarcely thirty years old. Yet he had the sharp, emaciated look of a man of fifty. The skin of his face, livid for all its tan, seemed to be tightly, thinly stretched over a sardonic skull. His features appeared less to be hollowed out by endurance than by life Itself, lived to its very last dregs. Sated— satiated with life that was the word’ Though his uniform was just as tattered as those of the other deserters, it gave an impression of ele- gance run wild, or of elegant wildness. This was mainly due to the fact that he alone of them all was clean-shaven, and shaven freshly and closely. Gabriel felt a chill and sat up. He thrust a cigarette at the man Kihkian took it without a word, pulled out some kind of barbarous tinder-box, struck sparks which, after many vain attempts, at last set light to a strip of tow, and began to smoke with a jaded indifference which seemed to suggest that Bagradian’s expensive cigarette was his usual brand Now they were both staring in silence again, Gabriel with increasing discomfort. The Russian never turned his indifferent, and yet scornful, eyes away from Bagradian’s white hands.
Gabriel at last could bear it no longer. He stormed: “Well, what do you want
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Sarkis Kilikian blew out a thick cloud of smoke, not chang- ing one nuance of his expression. The worst of it was that he still kept his eyes on Gabriel’s hands. He seemed lost in profound reflections upon a world in which such white, un- damaged hands could exist. At last he opened his hpless mouth, disclosing decayed, blackened teeth. His deep voice had less hate in it than his words: “Not the thing for such a fine gentleman.”
Bagradian sprang to his feet. He tried to think of a sharp, effective answer. To his deep discomfort he could not And one. The Russian, slowly turning his back on him, said, half to himself, with a fairly good French accent: “On verra ce quon pouira durer.”
'fhat night, round the campfire, Gabriel made several in- quiries about Sarkis Kilikian. The man had been well known for several months in the whole district round Musa Dagh. He was not one of the local deserters, and yet the saptiehs seemed especially eager to track him down. In this connexion Shatakhian told Gabriel the Russian’s history. Since, as a general thing, the schoolmasters in the seven villages were a highly imaginative set, Bagradian almost suspected that Shatakhian was piling up horrors of his own invention to spice his story. But Chaush Nurhan was sitting beside bun, nodding grave assent to every detail. Chaush Nurhan was in bad odour in the neighbourhood, as a special patron of deserters and the intimate knower of then ways. And he at least was not suspiciously imaginative.
Sarkis Kilikian had been born in Doit Yol, a large village in the plain of Issus, north of Alexandretta. Before he had quite completed his eleventh year, massacres on the classic pattern arranged by Abdul Hamid had broken out in Anatolia and Cilicia. They fell out of a cloudless sky. Kilikian’s father had been a watchmaker and goldsmith, a quiet little man who set great store by civilized living and on having his five chil-
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drca well brought up. Since he was well-to-do, he intended Sarkis, his eldest, for a priest, and would have sent him to one of the seminaries. On that black day for Dort Yol, Watch- maker Kilikian shut his shop early, at midday. But that did not help him since, scarcely had he sat down to dinner, when a band of roughs came thundering on the shop door. Madame Kilikian, a tall, yellow-haired woman from the Caucasus, had just brought on the dishes when her white-faced husband left the table to unlock his shop again. The few minutes of time- less experience that followed this will still be part of Sarkis Kihkian’s being for as long as a created soul must remam Itself through all migrauons and metamorphoses within the umverse. He ran out after his father into the shop, which by now was crowded with men. A picturesque storm troop of His Majesty the Sultan’s Hamidiyehs. The leader of this band of storm troopers was a young man with a rosy face, the son of a minor official. The most noticeable things about tins rather portly young Turk were the many strange medals and dccora- uons strewn here and there about his tunic. Whereas the solemn, matter-of-fact Kurds at once proceeded to get down to business, carefully emptying out the contents of drawers into their bags, this spruce and daundess son of a petty official seemed to view his mission in its purely political aspect. His loutishly juvenile face glowed with conviction as he bellowed at the watchmaker: “You are a usurer and a money-lender. All Armenian swine arc usurers and money-lenders. You un- clean giaours arc responsible for the wretchedness of our people.”
Master Kilikian pointed quietly to his work-table, with its magnifying-glass, pincers, htdc wheels, and springs. “Why do you call me a money-lender?”
“All this here is lies which you use to hide your blood- sucking.”
Their discussion did not get any further, since shots cracked out m the low, narrow room. For the first time in his life little
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SarJds smelt the narcotic reek of gunpowder. He did not at first m the least understand what had happened as he saw his father, bendmg over his table to his work, pull it down on to the floor with him. Without a word Sarkis flitted back to the parlour. His yellow-haired mother stood drawn up, with her back to the wall, not darmg to breathe. Her hands, right and left, were clutching her small daughters, two and four years old. Her eyes were fixed on the basket-cradle contaimng her baby. The seven-year-old Mesrop was scaring greedily at the appetizing mutton kebab, which still stood peacefully smoking on the table. But when the armed men came crowd- ing in on them, Sarkis had already seized the dish and hurled it, steaming, in one desperate jerk, straight into the leader’s plump, rosy face. That dauntless youth ducked with a howl of pain, as though he had been hit by a hand-grenade. Brown gravy streamed all down his resplendent tunic. The big, clay pitcher followed this first hit, with still better effect. The leader’s nose had begun to bleed, but this did not prevent his urging on his men in an anguished bellow. Little Sarkis, armed with a carving-knife, stood in front of his mother to protect her. This imscrable weapon in the hands of a boy of eleven was enough to deadc the dauntless Hamidiyehs not to let It get as far as a hand-to-hand battle. One of them flung himself, swift and cowardly, on to the cradle, snatched out the screaming baby, and cracked its skull against the wall. Sarkis pressed his face into his mother’s stiffening body. Strange, whispering sounds kept forcing their way through her tight- pressed lips. And then began the deafening crack and ratde of many revolver bullets, all emptied into a woman and four children, a salvo which should have been enough to set a whole regiment in retreat. The room was thick with fumes, the brutes aimed badly. It was of course predestined that not one of these bullets should hit Sarkis. The first to die was the seven-year-old Mesrop. The bodies of the two little girls hung limp in the hands of their mother, who did not let go of
^7
them. Her full, round face was rigid and motionless, A bullet hit her right arm. Sarkis felt, through his back, the short, convulsive movement which she gave. Two more shot* pierced her shoulders. She stood erect, still not letting go of her children. Only when two more had blown half her face away, did she topple forwards, bend over Sarkis, who still wanted to keep fast hold of her, pour out her mother’s blood upon his hair, and bury him under her body. He lay still, under the warm, heavily breathing load of his mother, and never stirred. Only four more shots bespattered the wall.
The pudgy-faced leader felt he had done his duty. “Turkey for the Turks! ’’ he crowed, though no one echoed his cry of victory.
While Sarkis lay protected, as in a womb, his senses were strangely alert. He could hear voices which made him con- clude that the leader was behaving repulsively in a corner.
“Why arc you doing that’’” someone reproved. “There arc dead people here.”
But this fighter for the national pr.nciple refused to let him- self be so balked. “Even as corpses they’ve still got to know that we’re the masters, and they’re dirt.”
A profound quiet had been established before Sarkis, cov- ered in blood, dared to creep out from under his mother. This movement seemed to bring Madame Kihkian back to consciousness. She had no recognizable face left. But the voice was hers, and so quiet: ‘Tctch me water, my child.” The pitcher was broken. Sarkis stole out with a glass to the court- yard fountain. When he got back, she was still breathing but could neither drink nor speak again.
The boy was sent to live with some rich '■elations in Alexandretta. In twelve months he seemed to have got over it all, though he scarcely ate, and though nobody, not even these kindly foster-parents, could get him to say more than the most indispensable words. Teacher Shatakhian had precise informa- tion about all this, because this same Alexandretta family had
paid for hu own stay in Switzerland. Later they sent Sark» to Ejmiadzin, in Russia, the largest theological college the Armenian nation. Pupils of this famous establishment could aspire to the very highest offices of the Gregorian church. The intellectual drill to which these students had to submit was on the whole not so very rigorous. And yet, before the end of his third school year, Sarkis. Kihkian, in whom a savage^ a diseased, longing for freedom had slowly developed, ran away from the seminary. He was almost eighteen when he wandered the dirty lanes of Baku, possessed of only his shabby seminary cassock and the appetite of several days. It did not occur to him to apply to his foster-parents for funds. From the day of his flight from Ejmiadzin, these good people lost all track of their proteg^. Sarkis Kilikian had now no choice but to look for work. He got the only work of which there was plenty in Baku, servitude in the huge oil-fields along the bare coasts of the Caspian Sea. There, in a very few months, through the effects of oil and natural gases, his skin turned yellow and shrivelled-looking. His body dried up, like a dead tree. Considering his nature and his-hook-learnmg, it is not surprising that he should have become involved in the social- revolutionary movement, which in those days was beginning to take hold of the workers of the Russian Near East: Geor- gians, Armenians^ Tatars, Turkomans, and Persians. Though the Tsar’s government did its best to egg on these various peoples against each other, it did not succeed in breaking their solidarity against the oil kings. From year to year strikes became more widespread and successful. In one of them Cos- sack provocation led to fearful bloodshed. The reply to this was the assassination of the district governor, a Prince Galitzin, come on a tour of inspection. Among those accused of conspir- ing this was Sarkis IGlikian. Almost nothing could be proved against him judicially. He had neither made speeches nor “worked underground.” No one could give definite evidence against him. But “escaped seminarists” were a class apart— it
SMF the most stubborn agitators. That alooe trai Sjdhu strayed, for Mt, into the convict |>rison of Baku.
He would certainly have died off soon enough in that d^ of filth and disease, had fate not had more cunning benefits in store for him. The murdered Gahtzm was succeeded by a Prince Vorontsov. This new, unmarried governor was later joined by his sister, also celibate^ in the government residence at Baku. Princess Vorontsova bore her virginity with iron self- abnegation. Energetic and full of the best intentions, she was in the habit of instituting in every government district to which her brother was appointed a unique mission of reform. Those who are relentless with themselves are apt to be equally so with others, and so in time this exalted lady had developed into a veritable sadist of neighbourly love. Her devout eye, wherever she might happen to be, was first directed upon the prisons. The greatest poets of the Russian land had taught that the nearest thing to the kingdom of God is often a den of thieves. In the prisons it was usually the young “intellectuals" and “pohticals” who aroused her zeal. Along with other selected convicts Sarkis Kilikian was now marched off every morning to an empty barracks where, in accordance with Irene Vorontsova’s curriculum, and under her active cooperation, his spiritual healing was briskly attempted. Partly it mn sis rwl in strenuous gymnastic exercises, partly in a series of moral lectures. The prjpcess saw in this young Armenian the attrac- tive child of Satan himself. It was worth while fighting fi>r such a soul! So that she herself took a hand in disciplining him. When that dried-up satanic body had been broken in by several hours of exhausting drill to the bndle-rdn of salvation, the soul was led out to grass. To her great delight she was soon able to note the amazmg pace at which Kilikian eame cantering down the paths of virtue. Her luiurs with this taciturn Lucifer produced i{i her, too, a feeling of divine illumination. At nights she dreamed of the next &w pages of die catechism. And, of course, so apt a pupil must 1^ re-
350
mtfdtlii Isim most aad more fecial piivOiq^
It began by their taking bun out of irotas and ended by bis being moved from prison into a small, emj^y room in bar- racks, Unfortunately he did not long make use of his privil^es. By the third morning after his removal he had disappeared— arid so, by one more bitter experience, ennched Princess Vorontsova’s knowledge of how hard it is to light the devil.
But where can one escape to from the Russian Caucasus? To the Turkish Caucasus. It was not a month before Kilikian had to admit that he had acted rashly m exchanging Paradise for hell. When, half famished, he tried to find a job in Erzerum, the police soon had him in charge. Since he had neither come up for mspection nor paid his bedel, the local magistrate soon condemned him to three years’ hard labour as a deserter. Scarcely had a Russian jail released him when a Turkish one offered him hospitality. In the jail of Erzerum the inscrutable moulder of our destimes put his last touch upon Kilikian. He was invested there with that enigmatic indifference, sensed by Bagradian in the ghost outside “Three- Tent Square,” an “indifference” which the word itself can only suggest, without expressing it. They let him out in the last months before war was declared. Though the army doctor marked him unfit for service, Kilikian was promptly enrolled among the recruits of an Erzerum infantry regiment. The life he led in it bore some remote resemblance to a human life. It also proved that his outwardly weedy body had reserves of inexhaustible toughness. And army life, in spite of all its restraints, seemed in a way to suit Kihkian. His regiment in that first winter of the war did its share in Enver Pasha’s memorable Caucasus campaign, in the course of which that pretty war god not only used up a whole army corps, but was himself almost taken by the Russians. The division which covered the staff’s retreat, and so saved Enver’s hberty and life, was composed almost entirely of Armenians. It w^s an Armenian who bore that Supreme Commander on his bade
351 '
out of the line. (When Sfaatakhian placed Sarkis among these Armenians, Gabriel, who suspected him of embellish- ment, glanced inquiringly at Chaush Nurhan; but the old man n^ded with measured seriousness.) But, whether or no Kihkian fought with these brave men, Enver Pasha’s gratitude, at least to the whole nation to which Kilikian belonged, had soon expressed itself. Scarcely had Private Kilikian’s frost- bites begun to heal — scarcely, that is to say, had he moved his army blanket from the brick floor of a very congested hospital to the brick floor of an equally congested barrack- room — when the War Minister’s order was read out to them. It thrust all Armenians out of their companies in disgrace, disarmed them, degraded them to the rank of inshaat taburi, the despised labour battalions. They were herded together from every hole and corner, their rifles taken, and they them- selves sent in wretched droves south-west, to the hilly neigh- bourhood of Urfa. There, starved, and threatened at every turn with the bastinado, they were set to work heaving blocks of stones for a road that was being built in the Aleppo direc- tion. A special order forbade them to protect themselves with carrying-wads against the jagged edges of their loads, though in the very first grilling hours of work their necks and shoulders streamed with blood. Whereas all the rest groaned and complained, Sarkis went stumbling in silence from quarry to road, road to quarry, as though his body had long ago forgotten what pain meant. One day the captain summoned all the men of the mshaat taburi, among whom, by chance or as a punishment, there happened to be a few Mo hammedans . They were told off from the rest. But this unarmed herd of Armenians was marched under the escort of an officer about an hour’s distance from its quarters into a pleasant valley, tapering between two low hills. “Those are the hills of Charmelik,’’ an innocent happened to remark, who came from these parts and was thankfiil for the day’s freedom. But on tihe gentle slopes of this valley more awaited them than thyme
35a
snd rosemary, orchids and pimpernels and melissa— strangely enough, they found themselves facing an armed platoon. They suspected nothing. They were ordered to form up in one long rank along the hillside— and still did not suspect. Then, sud- denly, without ceremony or preparation of any kind, the platoon on their right wing opened fire. Cries filled the air, less of fear than boundless amazement. (A woman among the listeners here interrupted Teacher Shatakhian: “Can God, among His angels, forget those screams?” She began to sob and only with difficulty controlled herself.) Sarkis Kilikian was clever enough to fall with the others. The bullets zipped over him. For the second time he escaped a Turkish death. He lay on, among corpses and helplessly dying men, till it should be dark. But, long before dusk this flowery valley, consecrated to the practical application of Enver Pasha's national policy, was visited a second time. The corpse dis- mantlers of the neighbourhood were anxious not to waste any government property still worn by these “executed” men. They had a special eye on sound pairs of army boots. As they quietly worked they kept grunting out one of those songs inspired by the recent decree of banishment. It began with the onomatopoeic line; “Kessc kessc surur yarlara.” — ^“Killing, killing, we rout them out.” They came to Kilikian’s boots. He kept his legs stiff, almost to cracking-point, to imitate rigor mortis. The pilferers tugged — cursed — ^if it had been a little harder than it was, they might easily have hacked off his feet to save themselves trouble. But at last even these in- dustrious fellows departed, with another song on their lips: “Hep gitdi, hep bitdil” — ^“All away, all away!” In that night Kilikian began his monstrous wanderings. His days were spent in many hiding-places; at night he strayed along unknown paths, over steppes and marshy ground. He lived on nothing, that is to say, on what grew everywhere out of the earth. Very seldom did he venture into a hamlet to knock in' the dark at the door of an Armenian house. Truly it was proved
253
dondit that Sarkis had a devil’s body, suptthhi^Mi^ ittong. 'Ihe skeleton cased in leather diat he was maju^lfed not to perish on the roads but reached Dort Yol in the first days of April. Without caring about the danger Kilikian went straight to his father’s house, out of which weeping people had led him twenty years ago. The house had remained faithfid to his father’s trade; a watchmaker and goldsmith was living in it. The well-known sounds of filing and tapping came from the shop. Sarkis went in. The frightened watchmaker was already trying to hustle hiiri out when he gave his name, whereupon the new owner consulted his family. The deserter got a bed in the same parlour where the horror had been. After twenty years there were still bullet-marks on the wall. Kihkian stayed two days in this place of refuge. Meanwhile the watchmaker had procured hun a rifle and some cartridges. When they asked if there was anything else they could do for him, he begged only to be given a razor, before vanishing through the dark again. A few mghts later he met two other deserters, in the village of Gomaidan. They seemed reliable imd experienced in the ways of life. They recommended Musa Dagh as a good and safe place on which to hide.
That is the story of Sarkis Kilikian, “the Russian,’’ as it emerged from Teacher Shatakhian’s account, Chaush Nur- han’s assenting silences, and the occasional comments and ad- ditions of other listeners, and as it was formed and reflected in Bagradian’s sensitive mind. The European could Only marvel and be aghast at the fateful burden of such a destiny and at the strength which had not broken down under it. But this respect was tinged with horror and the desire to see as little as possible of this victim of jails and barrack-squares. That night, after long consultation with Chaush Nurhan, Gabriel decided to assign the Rusrian and the other deserters to the defence of the “South Bastion.” It was the strongest part of his whole defence, and also the farthest from camjh
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Om aorfiiag dl tveoc badcto tlie Otdjr
a few idepdidable sentries staj^ on the Damlayik with the stores and munitions. Ter Haigasun himself had given the order. The saptiehs, come to look for arms, must find no empty or half-empty houses. Any noticeable absence of young men could have masked neither by Pastor Nokhudian’s band of the devout in Bitias nor by a part of the people left in the valley for that purpose. Bagradian had expected the priest to give this order. Perhaps it had also an educational intention concealed in it. The young men of Musa Dagh, who so far knew of atroaties only by hearsay, must now come face to face with the living reality; their subsequent fight must be to the last point of desperation.
At the exact hour foretold by Ah Nassif the saptiehs entered Yoghonoluk, about a hundred strong. There was obvious con- tempt in this. The authorities had sent a handful of men to clear a considerable district. The Armenian sheep would be cert ain not to put up a fight when led to the slaughter. The few instances to the contrary, so welcome to the government, proved nothing. How could a weak, mercantile people hope to stand up to the warrior race? The answer to this question was the hundred gendarmes detailed for Yoghonoluk. But these were no longer stout assassins in the genre of Abdul Hamid. No more trusty, pock-marked faces, whose loyally menacing wink had often indicated that a quid pro quo would make them easier to deal with. Now it was plain, in- human cruelty — quite single-minded. These saptiehs did not, like their predecessors, wear lousy lambskin bonnets, nor the trumped-up uniforms, composed of a tunic and nondescript mufti, of the good old days. They were all clothed in the same yellowish-brown field uniform rccendy issued. Round their heads, in the manner of bedouins, they had bound the long^ trailing sun- and sweat-doths, which gave them an unmistakable aspect of Egyptian sphinxes. They arrived in regular formation, not marching perhaps with the true
255
mechanical step of the West, but still, no longer in the un> even xoU of the East. Ittihad had exercised its power even on these Antioch saptiehs, so far from Istanbul. The sporadic flames of religious hatred and fanaticism had been skilfully fanned to the cold, steady flare of nationahsm. The deportation squad was commanded by the muafin, the pohcc chief of Antioch. The young mudir with the pink, lashlcss eyes and freckled hands came with it. The men, whose arrival had long been heralded, came swmging at midday into the church square of Yoghonoluk. Strident Turkish bugle-calls resounded, and drums were tapped. But in spite of these commanding admonitions, the Armemans still remained indoors. Ter Haigasun had issued the strictest orders to all seven villages that people must show themselves as little as possible, must avoid all crowding together, and walk into no provocative traps. The mudir read out his long decree of banishment to a public consisting of saptiehs, a number of stragglers with the troops, and the closed windows of the church square. This order was at the same time posted up in several places on the church walls, on the council house, and on the school building. After which administrative measure the saptieh^ since now it was dinner-time, encamped where they stood, lit Arcs, and began to cook up their kettles of fuhl, broad beans with mutton fat. Then, squatung and chewing, as with flat cakes of bread they scooped up their portion of the stew, they looked round them idly. What well-built houses* And all made of stone, with firm roofs and carved wooden veran- das! Rich people, these Armenians — rich everywhere! At home in their own villages they were thankful when the roofs of their hovels, black with age, did not give way under the many storks’ nests. And the church of these unclean pigs was as massive and imposing as a fort — ^with all its angles and buttresses. Ah, well, Allah was about to pay them back something for their pride! They’ve had a finger in everything, haven’t they— governed in Istanbul, raked in the money like
256
a harvest. Other people had had to put up with anything; till at last even the sleepiest patience gave out. Not even the mudir and the muahn could conceal their interest in the splendours of this village square. Perhaps, for the space of half a second the police chief felt the insecurity of a barbarian con&onted with a superior civilization. But then he boiled with redoubled hatred, remembering Talaat Bey’s famous words, quoted again by the Kaimakam as they mustered to set out: “Either they disappear, or we do.”
The quiet, which m spite of many soldiers lay over this square, was odd and unnatural. Nor was it broken perceptibly by the presence of a certain number of roughs, who had joined the saptiehs on their way. The off-scourings of Antakiya and the bigger villages on its outskirts poured their dregs into the valley of seven villages. On bare, dirt<aked feet the scum came pattering— ffom Mengulye, Hamblas, and Bostan. From Tumama, Shahsini, Ain Yerab, and, further still, from Bded es Sheikh. Eyes of unbridled covetousness darted up and down the houses. Arab peasants from the EUAkra mountains in the south waited, quietly squatung on their heels, on the fat event. Even a little group of Ansariyes had come along — ^the lowest pariahs of the prophet, nationless half-Arab mobs of underhngs, waiting to make the most of this rare chance of feeling superior to somebody. There were also a few Mohajirs, even now; war refugees sent by the government to the interior and invited cordially to indemnify themselves with Armenian property. And, with such simple plebeians, strange to relate, a ring of heavily veiled ladies, in a half-circle of glowing timid- ity. There could be no doubt that they came of the better classes It could be seen by a glance at the costly material of the cloaks drawn down over their faces, the texture of their veils, the tiny mules or lacquered slippers which embellished their braceleted feet. These women were the avid clients of the bargain sale about to begin, and they waited impatiently. For weeks the whisper had gone the rounds of the women’s
- 57
quartets t>£ Suedia aad ^ Eskel: liaveaV you
Tliese Christians have the most miUreUous things in riirir houses, things we’ve never so much as heard of— far too ex- pensive to buy.” — ^“Have you ever been inside an Armenian 'house, dear?”— “I? No. But the m ..lah’s wife has been telling me all about it. You’ll find cupboards and cabmets with litde towers on the top of them and pillars and crowns. And you’ll find very few sleeping-mats of the kind you lock away in the daytime;, but lots of real beds with carved fioivers and for- bidden carved children’s heads on them, beds for husband and wife as big as a wall’s carriage. You’ll find clocks with gold eagles sittmg on them, or cuckoos jumping out of their insides and caUing.” — ^“WcU, there’s another proof that they’re traitors, otherwise how could they ever get furniture from Europe?” But it was just such household gear as this that so powerfully attracted these ladies, to whom beautifully wrought brass dishes, woven carpets, and copper braziers meant nothing.
The weird stilbess was suddenly broken. The police chi^ for some time eager for a victim, had tbown himself on a villager imprudent enough to come to his house door. The man was ^ust bto the middle of the square. This police constable’s face was characterized by two entirely different eyes. His right eye was large and staring, the left little and nearly closed up. His military moustache might threaten as fieredy as it liked, bs dun protrude itself as murderously — his unequal eyes condemned this police chief to a role of ferodous comicality, of comic ferocity. Since he was always consdous of this defect, his fear of making himself ridicubus caused him to exaggerate the authoritative side of bs person- aUty. Therefore, though already by nature a bully, he had also to play the bully’s part His staring eye did its best to roll, as he bellowed at the captured villager:
“What’s your priest called? What’s the name of your mukhtar?”
The villager whispered an answer. The next mmute a hon-
asS
dtedinicei vnne shoadsg acTOM (lie aqtu^
Ccane out o£ your himjog'placel Q^e on out,
Out with you, Haigasun and Kd>ussyanl*'
Ter Haigasun had awaited the sununons inside the church. "Afier the holiday mass, without having taken off his vestments^ he had remain^ before the altar with his deacons.
He intended to face the saptiehs in the glamour and sublimity of his ofSce. This intention was entirely characteristic. There was more in it than an empty gesture of ceremony, there was a keenly psychological object. Every Oriental is filled with sensations of holy awe by ceremonious pageantry and the splendour of religious vestments. Ter Haigasun reckoned that his appearance as a fully vested priest would mitigate the saptiehs’ brutality. Slowly, in purple and gold, he emerged from the doorway of his church. On his head sparkled the tall Gregorian mitre, in his right hand he bore the doctor’s wand of the Armenian rite. And in fact this consecrated figure served to dampen the spirits of the police chief, whose brutal voice lost some of its certainty.
“You’re the priest. You’ll be answerable to me for everything that happens. Everything! You understand?”
Ter Haigasun inclined his bloodless face in answer. In the strong sunlight it looked hke carved amber. He bowed his head and did not answer. The head constable felt himself in danger of being polite— that is to say, of becoming slack. His left, swollen eye had started to twitch. These two sensations filled him with rising irritation. It was high time to remind the mudir, his saptiehs, and this priest of his own pulverizing authority. So with clenched fists be bore down on Ter Haiga> sun but found that he had to halt in an uneasy posture of respect. All the more, therefore, did his voice fed obliged to spread consternation, the due efiect of his own authoritative person.
“You’ll ddiver up all your weapons— all of them! You understand? You can look like a bazaar juggler all you want,
359
but you're personally responsible £i» every kni£e there is in the
ymage.”
“Wc have no weapons in the village.”
This was perfectly true. Ter Haigasun spoke very quiedy and steadily. Meanwhile, in the dark hallway of the mukhtar’s house, there was in progress a minor tragi-comedy, which ended when the old village clerk with the sly goatee came fly- ing out of the door, which quickly slammed after him. In this primitive fashion did Mukhtar Kebussyan, at this, the most difficult juncture of his mayoralty, appoint his clerk to represent him. The luckless pseudo-mukhtar, white as chalk, came stumbhng into the arms of the saptiehs, who thrust him forwards to their leader.
The clerk babbled an echo of Ter Haigasun: “We’ve got no weapons in the village.”
The head constable was greatly relieved by the sight of this trembling, stuttering mukhtar. It fully re-established his own thunderous divinity. He snatched a leather whip out of the hand of the nearest saptieh and swished the air with it. “All the worse for you if you’ve got no weapons.”
Here, for the first time, the red-haired mudu* took a hand. This young man from Salomka was anxious to show the Chris- tian priest what a world of difference there existed between his hke and a loutish police chief of the worst provincial variety. Ittihad did not stand for out-of-date massacres. Ittihad’s methods were of the subdest. Ittihad, with iron resoludon, gave irresistible effect to the necessary raison d’6tat, while en- deavouring, in so far as this could be managed, to avoid superfluous harshness. Ituhad was so modern. It disliked the crude blood-baths of former days; it was in fact quite proud of possessing “nerves.” All of which inspired the young mudir to a glance at his beaudfully red-dnged finger-nails b^re he turned towards Ter Haigasun, full of that dangerous amia- bility which all official persons invested with the powers of Ufe and death know how to use so tellingly.
ado
Tou know what we’ve decided to do with you?”
'The priest looked him steadily in the fac^ sdH not answering.
The mudir, a trifle disconcerted, waved at a placard. “The government has decided to migrate you. You’re to be allotted other territory.”
“And where is the other territory situated?”
“That’s neither your affair nor mine. My only business it to collect you, and yours is simply to march.”
“And when must we leave?”
“It will depend on how you behave how much time I give you to get your belongings into order and make yourselves ready to march according to exact stipulations.”
The village clerk had by now managed to control himself. He asked in a voice of expectant humility: “And what are we allowed to take with us, Effendi?”
“Only what each individual can carry for himself on his back, or in his hand. All the rest, your fields, gardens, landed property, your houses, with all such movable and immovable furniture as belongs to them, goes to the state, by ministerial decree of the fifteenth of Nisan of the present year. The Migra- tion Law of Mayis the fifth provides that you be allotted fresh holdings of ground in exchange for what you have vacated. Every holder to produce the registered extent of his property, to obtain a legal substitute from the government. Such a docu- ment must bear 'stamps to the value of five piastres. These stamps are obtainable at the district police headquarters.”
This official chant came forth so mildly and melodiously from the lips of this young, carroty mudir that it sounded like some regulation for fruit-growers. The benevolent mudir raised his forefinger. “It will be best for you all to create as little disturbance as possible — ^not to destroy any property, but to hand it over entire, just as it is, to the state.”
Ter Haigasun opened his hands and spread them out towards the diplomatic young man from Salonika. “We don’t
261
keep aoydung; Mudir. Wkat good traold it be Take whatever you find. Our doors are open.”
The mudir’s smooth tone had begun to rile the head coo* stable. It was undermining his authority. After aS, in the last resort, he was the head of this expedition, and this quiU-driver a mere accessory person sent by the Kaimakam. If he let this mealy-mouthed clerk go on much longer, everyone would cease to believe that he was chief of police of the town of Antaluya. He opened the staring eye a little wider, with bloodshot, buffalo ferocity, came two steps nearer Ter Haiga- sun, and seized him by the thickly embroidered stole. “Now you’ll get together six hundred rifles and have them piled up here h^ore me!”
Ter Haigasun stared a long while at the place where the rifles were to be stacked. Suddenly he took a step backwards, with a violent jerk which almost overturned the head con> stable. "I’ve already told you that there aren’t any rifles in the villages.’’
The miidir smiled. It was his turn now to get what they wanted, without any shouting and rolling of eyes, by sheer astute political methods. His voice had a kind, thoughtful note in it, as though he were trying to give the Armenian his excuse. “How long have you been head-priest in the village, if you’ll forgive my question. Ter Haigasun?”
The vague benevolence of this put Ter Haigasun on the alert. He answered sofdy: “About fifteen years next autumn, after the vintage.”
“Fifteen years? Wait. So, in the year of the great revolution, you’d been just right years in Yoghonoluk. Now try and remember. Didn’t you receive some chests of ilfles in that year, allotted you to do your share in the struggle against the old government?”
The mudir asked this by sheer intuition; he had only been in ofiBce since the war broke out. He supposed inductively that Mhad would have sought the same allies in Syria as in
261
Macedai^ am) AiettoGa. Hs £4 a&t len>w be lik tlie maik. Ter Haigasua turned his head to bis acolyte^ who bad ttiU not dared to come down the church steps, lliis quick movem^ beckoned the other priest as witness. Terhisps your priests may have to do with weapons, Mudir. That is not the case with us.”
At this dangerotis juncture the village clerk began to whine: "But we’ve always lived here in peace. This has been our country for thousands of years.”
Ter Haigasua stared ahuntly at the mudir. He seemed to be trying hard to remember. “You’re right, Mudir! The new government did distnbute arms at about that time, in various places all over the empire — even to Armenians. If you’re old enough, you’ll also recollect that all communes receiving them had to give a written acknowledgment when they arrived. The Kaimakam, who was a miidir like yourself in those days, organized the distribution. He’ll be sure to have kept all die receipts—one doesn’t throw away an important dorament of that kind. Well, I don’t suppose if there’d been any weapons in the villages, he’d have sent you to us without the receipt for them.”
This was undeniable. And it was true that in the last few days the Record Office of Antakiya had been turned upside down to find such receipts. Most of the nahiyehs had de> livered them — only the Nahiyeh of Suedia and the surround- ing district seemed really to have been sent no weapons in 1908. The Kaimakam certainly declared that he seemed to remember the contrary but could give no proof of it. So that Ter Haigasun had quietly found ^e right way out.
The conviction he displayed envenomed the pleasantly dip* lomatic smiles of the mudir, whose voice became “What’s a written receipt? A mere scribble. What does that prove, after all these years?”
Ter Haigasun waved an indiffierent hand. “If you don’t be* fieve us, look and see for yourselves.”
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The pohce chief, eager to put an end to this long, superfluous discussion, brought down his whip with a swish on the priest’s shoulders. “Yes, we’ll look all right, you son of a bitch. But you two are under arrest, you and the mukhtar. I can do what 1 like with you. Your lives are at my sole discretion. If we find any weapons, you’ll be nailed up on the door of your church. If we don’t. I’ll have you roasted over a fire.”
The saptiehs bound Ter Haigasun and the clerk. The mudir took out a little nail file and got busy on his exquisite fingers. This scraping and polishing worked like a gesture of regret at the necessary harshness of government measures, the indi- cation that he, a civil servant, had nothing at all to do with the armed executive. That, however, did not prevent his giving a bored hint to the policeman.
“Don’t forget the churchyard. That’s a very favourite hiding-place for munitions.”
Having said so much, he turned off for a httle constitutional, down the village street, leaving all the rest to the skew-eyed muafin. At a word from that ferocious commander the saptiehs split up into httle groups. A few remained to guard the prisoners. Ter Haigasun was made to sit on the church steps in his heavily embroidered vestments. Meanwhile, with wild vociferations, the saptiehs began to invade surrounding houses. From behind the walls came the instant dm of crack- ing furniture, splintering glass; windows flew open. Rugs, blankets, cushions, mats, straw chairs, icons, and all the numerous other articles of household gear came whizzing down — ^to be surrounded at once by the looting populace. More fragile objects came out after them — oil-lamps, looking- glasses, shades, pitchers, jugs, crockery, which smashed under a chorus of regretful yammering from the eager bargain- basement ladies. All the same they grabbed up the fragments and bundled them together in their charshaffes. This din and devastation crept round the square, from house to house, before it continued along the village street. For three horrible
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hours the two bound men crouched on the steps, before the saptiehs returned from their expedition. Its results were worse than disappointmg— two old blunderbusses, five rusty sabres, thirty-seven sheathed knives, which really were no more than prumng-kmves or large-sized penknives. The saptiehs, either because they had no spades, or were too lazy to have used them, had refrained from desecrating the churchyard. The police chief bellowed and raved. This cunning swme of a pnest had cheated him of a report which ought to have bristled with arms. What a setback for the Antakiya police! Ter Haiga- sun was jerked to his feet again. The staring and the swollen eye both glowered on him. The breath that came puffing in his face stank of hate and ill-digested mutton fat. He turned his head, with a Lttle grimace of disgust. In the next mstant two blows with the hard hutt of a leather whip had caught him full across the check.
For a few seconds the priest lost consciousness, swayed, came awake agam, stood amazed, waiting for the blood to flow. At last it gushed out of his nose and moutL A strange almost blissful sensauon possessed him as he stood there, bend- ing his head far forward, that his poor blood might not stain the garment of Christ’s priest, ^me distant angehc voice seemed to say in his mind: “This blood is good blood.”
And it was, in effect, good blood, since the sight of it made a certain impression on the young mudir from Salonika, just back from his afternoon siesta. He was a fiery advocate of extermination but did not like to have to witness it personally. Ittihad, in this mudir, had by no means its most relentless exponent. He struck a balance, avoiding any display of senti- mentality. Time pressed. There were six more villages to visit. And, since even the muafin had stilled the itch to assert his position and prove his authority, he waved magnanimously. The priest and clerk were set free. They were sent home. So that, in Yoghonoluk, the day had passed off smoothly enough, far more smoothly than sudi days usually did, in these towns
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And Tillages. Only two men, wbo made soma abtOW Ot muttag' domiciliary inspection, were shot in the process— only two young girls got raped by die saptiehs.
Gabriel Bagradian had to wait a full twenty-four hours be^ fore it became the turn of himself and his house. Once again they sat up all ni^t. Exhaustion forced its way through their limbs, like a soft mass, stiffening slowly. The many inhabitants of the villa— Juliette, Iskuhi, Hovsannah, Gonzague Maris, who had recendy taken up his quarters there — ^kept dropping ofE to sleep for minutes together, where they sat. This vigil was entirely aimless, since the saptiehs* visit was not expected before next morning, nor indeed even before midday. Yet no- body thought of leaving the others and lying down. Bed — that soft kingdom of pillows, that cool security protected by its draped mosquito-net, that loving mother, protector of the civilized human being— how remote it seemed, even now! They had lost their right to such oblivion. When, early next mormng, the cook Hovhannes sent fresh coffee, eggs, cold chicken, on fine porcelain dishes, into the dining-room, they were almost uneasy in spite of their hunger and thirst. They ate quickly, as if the house might fall about their ears before they had finished. Had they still any right to eat up such good things m the old way, without a thought? Surely it was un- wise to encroach on the provisions of the Damlayik. All their thoughts were centred on Musa Dagh. Gabriel had on bis Turkish officer’s uniform. He was wearing his sword and medals. He would receive these saptiehs as their superior.
Gonzague Maris advised most strongly against it: ‘Tour nulitary fancy dress will only get on their nerves. I don’t think it’ll be to your advantage.”
Gabriel was unmoved: ‘Tm an Ottoman officer. I’ve duly reported at my regiment, and so far no one has degraded me.”
‘That’ll be done soon enough.”
So Maris spoke, but his thought added: ‘‘There’s nothing
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. CMi do iar tisese Armeoiaas. Thcy^te soIcttiti bmaticr-^ ilways wiQ be.”
At .about eleven that morning Iskuhi suddenly cdlapsed. First a brief faint, then uncontrollable shivering. She dragged herself out of the room, insistently refusing any help. Juliette wanted to go after her, but Hovsannah rais^ a warning hand.
"Let her be. . . . It’s Zeitun. . . . She’s terrified. . . . She wants to hide. We’re having to go through it all a second time.” And the pastor’s young wife hid her face in her hands, her heavy body shaken with sobs.
This was about the moment at which the police squad, the muafin and the mudir turned into the grounds of Villa Ba* gradian. The sentries posted by Gabriel came breathlessly scurrying to announce them. Six saptiehs were placed outside the doors of the garden wall, six more in the garden, six in the stable-yard. The mudir, the muafin, and four men came into the house. The Turks looked fagged. In the last twenty-four hours they had played havoc in the villages, looting and breaking up the insides of houses, arresting men and dhrash- ing them till they bled, they had done a little rapmg, and so in part actually realized the festive programme arranged for them by the government. Luckily, therefore, their thirst for action was somewhat slaked. This huge Bagradian family mansion, with its thick walls, cool rooms, full of strange- looking furniture, its silencing carpets, acted no doubt as a kind of restraint. The red window curtains of the selamlik had been drawn. Intruders into the rich dusk of the room found themselves in the midst of what looked like an august gather- ing of European ladies and gendemen, respectfully surrounded by their servants. This impressive company waited stiffly and never moved. Juliette kept fast hold of Stephan’s hand. Only Gonzague lit a cigarette. Gabriel came a step nearer the committee his sword caught up, in prescribed officer’s fanbinn, in his left hand.The field-uniform, which he had had in Beirut before he left, made him look taller. He was certainly
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the foremost maa ia the room, and this quite apart from his inches. Gonzague seemed to have been wrong. The uniform was having its effect. The policx chief glanced uneasily at this officer with the row of medals on his tunic. The fierce eye clouded with melancholy, the half-shut one closed up alto- gether. Nor did the freckled mudir seem altogether happy in his part. It had been far easier to be a convincingly watch- ful providence in the stuffy rooms of wood<arvcrs, silk- weavers. Here in these civihzed surroundings the delicate nerves of Salonika were proving a handicap. Instead of striding pitilessly on to take possession of this cursed house in the name of his race, of Ittihad, of the state, the young gentleman nodded and clutched at his fez. He began uncomfortably to remember a certain talk with Bagradian in his office. His moral conflict caused delay and prevented his finding the right opemng. Gabriel watched him with such contemptuous gravity that really the tables seemed almost turned — ^it was as though a tall, war-like Armenia were facing a red-haired, cringing, half-breed Turkey. Bagradian seemed to grow and grow, as the mudir suffered under his dwarfishness, which so inadequately embodied the heroic quality of his race. In the end he could manage to do nothing but produce a vast official document, against which, so to speak, to steady himself, and rap out his business as brusquely as possible.
“Gabriel Bagradian, born Yoghonoluk? You are the owner of this house, the head of this family? As an Ottoman subject you are liable to the decrees and enactments of the Kaima- kam of Antioch. You, together with the rest of the population of this nahiyeh, from Suedia to Musa Dagh, are ordered to set out eastwards, on a day shortly to be specified. Your entire family to go with you. You have no right to raise objections of any kind against the general order of migration— -neither as concerns your own person, nor those of your wife and children, nor for any other member of your establish- ment. . . .”
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The mudir so far had behaved as though he were reading an incantation; now he squinted up, over the document. “I am to draw your attention to the fact that your name is on the hst of political suspects. You are closely connected with the Dashnakzagan party. Therefore, even on the convoy, you are to be subjected to dose daily inspection. Any attempt at escape, any insubordination against government or executive orders, or infrmgement of transport discipline, will render, not only you, but your relauves, liable to instant execuuon.”
Gabriel seemed about to reply. The mudir refused to let him speak. His stilted and involved official phrasing, in such contrast to the usual floweriness of the East, seemed to inflate him with satisfaction.
“By extraordinary edict of His Excellency, the Wall of Aleppo: Armemans on the march are not permitted to make use of such conveyances, sumpter or saddle animals as they may think flt. In certain exceptional cases leave may be ob- tained to make use of any customary vehicle of the country- side, or of an ass, for the weak and aihng. Have you any requests for such special treatment?”
Gabriel pressed his sword-hilt against his thigh. The words dropped like stones from his lips: “I shall go the way of my whole people.”
By now the mudir had entirely shed his first embarrassment. He could put some suave concern into his tone. “So as not to expose you to the dangerous temptation of either trying to absent yourself, or, later, of leaving the convoy— I hereby take possession of your horses, your carriage, and all other beasts of transport.”
Then came the usual procedure, but slightly modified. The police chief was still not quite sure how to d^ with the uni- form, sword, and medals of this prospective deportee. He growled out the usual question about arms. Gabriel sent Kris- taphor and Missak to fetch in the long-barrelled Bedouin flint- locks hung up as ornament in his h^. (This had of course
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teea furaoged; all die useful weapons in die house wcste-hjl now safely on the Damlayik.) Scornful laughter buUiled'aoc of the police chief, as out of a ketde on the boil.
The mudir thoughtfully tapped these romandc flintlodcs. Tou surely aren’t going to tell me, Effendi, that you live here in this solitude without weapons?”
Gabriel Bagradian sought ^e lashless stare of the mudir and held it steadily. “Why not? This is the first time my house has been broken into since it was built in 1870.”
The freckled one shrugged regretful shoulders. Such recal- citrance made it impossible to do anything to mitigate Bagrad- ian’s fate. And so, much against his will, he was forced to leave the field clear for the sharper process of armed authority. The house to be searched for arms! The muafin metaphorically rolled up his sleeves, though the officer’s uniform worn 1^ this outcast still troubled his sergeant-major’s mind, filling him with a puzzled irritation. The staring right eye could not do* tach itself from the medals on Bagradian’s chest; apparently the chap had served with distinction. It was quite impossiUe to deade how this deportee ought to be handled by an Im- perial Ottoman employee. To hide these irritable doubts he conducted the search with as much din and pother as he could — ^went stumping at the head of his sapti^s, with the mudir close upon their heels yet still refusing to be involved. Gabriel, Avakian, and Kristaphor followed, llie Turks nosed in every corner, knocked on the walls, overturned the furni- ture, smashed whatever was breakable. Yet it was easy to see that this vandalism, perpetrated as a matter of course^ as if by mistake, hurt their self-esteem. They were used to making a straight, clean job of it. But now their method of smashing bottles in the cdlar, with their rifle-butts, was most perfunctory. Nor was there any real brio in their method of dealing wi^ whatever flasks, jugs, dishes, wine-jars they found. (The most important provisions had all been removed.) And these dis- illusioned saptiehs had expected a better cellar in such a palace.
these sme all they codd find, they took away a coi^k o£ empty petrol-tins, on which glittering toys the Oriental sets great store. Then, sweating and disgruntled, the warriors took the staircase by assault and began to rummage the upper story. Here they did most in Juliette’s bedroom and dressing- room, the scents of which had attracted them so sharply from a distance that the other rooms were entirely forgotten. The big wardrobe was prised open. Dirty brown fists snatched last year’s Paris models off their pegs— frocks like the softest petals, which now lay strewn in crumpled twists and heaps about the floor. A particularly evil-looking gendarme' pawed them with both feet, like a stolidly rampaging bull, as though set on stamping these European reptiles into earth. Night-dresses, batiste underwear, shifts, and stockings met the same fate. The sight of these intimate garments was too much for the police chief. He plunged both hands into the white and rose- coloured foam and buried his punchinello face in it. The rniidir, to indicate the fact that the legislature had nothing in common with the executive, went dreamily over to the win- dow to look at the garden. An especially zealous saptieh had flung himself on the untouched bed and was engaged, since he could think of no other method, in tearing open the pillows with his teeth. Perhaps there was a bomb among the feathers. There was always so much talk of Armenian bombs. Another swung his club over the washing-stand. Crystal flasks, bowls, powder boxes, saucers, came smashing down, giving out wave on wave of heady perfume.
Gabriel equably watched this desecration. Poor Juliette. . . . But what was this by comparison with the next hours, dajrs, weeks? He felt deeply troubled. He remembered Iskuhi, creep- ing away to hide in her bed. She was nothing to him— and yet he pitied her most of all. These beasts had crippled her, and she had to face this horror a second time. Bagradian tried to diink of a method for getting the muafin and saptiehs part Iskuhi's door.
ayi
And, indeed, heaven seemed well disposed. Iskuhi, who had crept under the sheets, heard the trampling steps and rumbling voices of the worst of all deaths come closer and closer. She stretched herself out stiff and covered her lap with her right hand, while she ceased to breathe, and the ravaged, kaleido- scopic face bent nearer and nearer over hers. But this ravager only snuiHed her for a second and vanished. Outside, the steps clumped on past her door, the voices rumbled farther and far- ther off; they seemed to be going downstairs again. Then she heard them dimly on the ground floor. Sudden, perfect quiet. Had they gone.^ Iskuhi sprang out of bed. To the door on her stocking feet. She pushed open a chink of it. Christ Saviour, were they really gone? She almost fell back into the room again as she heard the cracking of a lash. . . . Voices — men’s voices raised. She recognized Gabriel’s among them. Holding her lame arm tight, that it might not hinder her, she dashed to the staircase. Below, the following had occurred.
Thinking that now the worst was over, Gabriel had point- edly stopped in the hall. He had said to the mudu: “You see, we’ve got nothing hidden. Anything else?”
That freckled political idealist had done his duty. He had seen to it that the Armenian effendi and his family should at least not escape the Turkish government. The Kaimakam’s special instructions concerning Bagradian had been to the effect that he was to march with the first convoy, under drastic supervision, to Antakiya, where that district authority in per- son, as he himself put it, would “take a squint at them.” In the mudir’s view this ended official proceedings. Such illustrious victims ought not to be goaded too soon to desperation. Far better to give them a certain confidence in the government’s inscrutable designs, while intensifying, little by httle, the sharpness of what they would have to experience. Today ought to be mild — preliminary. So again the mudir hesitated, trying to think out effective exits, scrutinizing his beautiful finger- nails. Unluckily he had reckoned without the police chief.
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That troubled mind was still unreconciled to the feet tnat this insolent giaour should be strutting about in a padishah uni- form, with padishah medals and sword. But he still did not quite know what to do about it. Nor had he managed to diake off his ignoble embarrassment. Since nothing more ef- feaive occurred to him, he tried to roll the staring eye. He planted himself, corpulent and challenging, before Bagradian.
“We haven’t seen everything yet. . . . Up there. . . . There were several doors we didn’t open.’’
If Gabriel had managed to control himself, all would no doubt have ended happily. But he sprang on to the lowest step of the staircase, spread his arms out wide, and shouted: “That’s enoughl”
Now, at last, the muahn had his case. He bore down with obvious pleasure on Bagradian, to hold a hst up under his nose. “What’s enough, you pig of an Armenian? Say that again. What’s enough, you unclean swine?’’
That second, in Bagradian’s mind, completed one of those highly complicated mental processes which engender our fates. It was an instant of the sheerest reflection. Gabriel realized clearly that his life, and not only his, was now in the balance. “Give in,” he thought, “and step aside. Let them go up again, and up there bribe the animal with ten pounds....” While his reason debated all this with impressive clarity, he himself was shouting, as never before: “Step back, gendarme. I’m a front-line officer.”
This brought the muafin to the very centre of his aim. “An officer, are you? For me you aren’t even a stinking dead dog.” And with a quick tug he wrenched the silver medals off Gabriel’s tunic.
Later Bagradian asserted that his hand had never touched his sword. The fact was that, in less than a second, he found himself sprawling on the ground. The sword splintered against tho wall. One sapueh was kneeling on Gabriel’s chest, the rest were tearing off his uniform, Gonzague and the women rushed
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fuyt nf thi> ytlamlilc. StqiKan’g thnnte ming l e d with the grunts o£ hit father. It was not a minute bdEoie Gidviel |a/ dtere stripped to his boots. He was bleeding from a few fieira woimds. His life would not have been worth a para, had Gonzague Maris not saved him from instant slaughter by turning all the attention to lumsdL Though his gesture was careless, it told with the sharpest effea. His voice had that im> pressive note in it which obtains the iciest quiet in the midst of commotion. He had pulled out his papers and stood holding them high above his head. This gesture caught everyone’s eyes. The mudir stared at him, perturbed. The police chief turned in his direction; even the saptiehs let go of Gabriel.
Gonzague unfolded his documents with all the calm of a secret agent sent by Ittihad to keep a sharp eye on the conduct of local authorities. “Here you are. Passport of the United States of America, with a visa from the General Consulate in Istanbul.” He stressed these insignificant words in such an authoritative staccato that he might have been apprising them all of some secret diplomatic mission of decisive importance to Turkey. “Here— teskere for the interior, autographed by His Excellency in person. You understand me, Effendi?”
It was not this empty flourish with a passport that had saved Bagradian’s life — it was the desperate tnck which made them forget him. For some minutes it confused the mudir. In the various instructions issued for the guidance of deportation authorities, it was indicated over and over again that the methods of applying this measure must be kept as unobtrusive as possible in the presence of Allied and neutral consuls. For an instant the mudir really imagined that he must be dealing with a confidential agent of the American embassy. A glance at the papers, however, assured him that this person was harm' less. But he was really glad that the foreigner’s interference had prevented bloodshed. He returned Gonzague his papers, with mocking ceremony.
“What do your passports matter to me? You’d better ma1t«»
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K»SQc m$ tooa a p^Ue— or Ffi Inve you arrested.*
- Tht ccmstable’s conftmon abated more slowly. Blood im-
pressed him far less than paper. In the course of his career documents had often been inconvenient. You were never siue what they might not do to you in the end. He decided to let Bagradian go on living, at least for the present. The thing could be done just as well on a highroad, without witnesses who held American passports. The muafin put his revolver, already primed, back in its case, took another swollen and staring glance at this naked officer, spat a huge gobbet, and gave his saptiehs the curt order: “Gtt along now for those horses and mules.”
- The mudir had missed his elective exit. He had to content himself by following the armed executive in as thoughtful and detached a manner as oossibl^ leaving no resonant echo of personality.
Gabriel, breathing hard, had scrambled up. Shame, and no other sensation, possessed his mind. Juliette had had to witness this horror— she and Stephan. His eyes sought his wife, who stood there rigid, her face averted. Gabriel tottered, then con- trolled himself. Behind his back he felt something tremble— Iskuhi. Then his few scratches began to burn. They were not worth mentiomng. Iskuhi, silent, on stocking feet, crept close. Her imploring eyes sought Samuel Avakian. The student came with a coat to cover Gabriel’s sweat-streaked body.
A FAVOURABLE tum of evcnts. The mudir, the poUce chief, and the saptiehs left the villages that same day to turn their at- tention to Armenians in Suedia and £1 Eskel. It was one of the best-considered nuances of the Turkish government’s mi- gration policy that it never specified the exact day and hour of a given march. Since the deportation was officially a war- time measure of military necessity, and since also it was semi- officially punitive, the “moment of surprise” which gave ban- ishment its peculiar poignancy, must not be neglected in either
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of these interpretations. But Pas^r Harutiun Nokhudian had managed by heavy bribes to elicit the fact that the first convoy had been fixed to leave on July 31. Between then and now a hundred extra saptiehs would reinforce the first contingent. The thirty-first would be a Saturday. Counting today, Thurs- day, that was two days. The Council of Leaders decided on the night of Friday to Saturday to move their populations up to the Damlayik. They had good reasons for their decision. Fri- day was the Turkish day of rest. Past experience made it ex- tremely probable that saptiehs in the Christian villages would vacate them on Friday for the Turkish and Arab villages in the plain, in which there were mosques, relations, amusements, and women. And, with the sapti^s, the plundering riff-raff would also probably vanish for the day, since they felt with a certain amount of justice that, once there was no saptieh to interfere, the Armenians, in spite of being unarmed, would make quick work of them with scythes, axes, and hammers.
These special circumstances, therefore, exaedy predeter- mined the choice of time. The Council of Leaders reckoned on the following developments: The returning saptiehs, arriv- ing on the morning of Saturday, would find, mstead of the whole people, only Pastor Nokhudian with his five hundred Protestants m Bitias. The pastor — ^this ruse came from Gabriel —was to tell the mudir a long story of how, notwithstandmg his supplications, all the people had packed their belongings in the night and set out of their own accord into exile. Their reason for this had been their terror of the saptiehs, and of the police chief especially. He could not say exaedy which roads they had taken, since people had set out in small groups in every conceivable direction: one group towards Arsus and Alexandretta, another southwards, but all with the intendon of avoiding inhabited places. The largest group had certainly meant to find its way to Aleppo, to take shdtcr in the big town. Pastor Nokhudian, whose mildness and Chrisdau spirit of obedience had caused many to mistake him for a coward,
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revealed his heroism. This deception which he undertook to practise meant at the least death, as far as he was concerned. The instant the Turks discovered the stratagem, it would be all over with him. He shrugged his shoulders. Where was there no danger of death? The fighters on the mountain had to gain time. This feint would postpone discovery several days and give them su/haent grace to complete the defences.
The Council met in Ter Haigasun’s presbytery. The priest was very disfigured from the blow of the constable’s whip. His right eye and cheek were swollen; a violet weal striped his whole face and half-way up his forehead. He had lost two teeth, and it was easy to sec he was in great pain. Gabriel’s scratches, on the other hand, could scarcely be felt under Altoum’s plaster. The physical brutality he had suffered — the first, in all his sheltered, remote existence — ^had drawn him even closer to all the rest. At this sitting the Council discussed a very disquicung, adverse cucumstance, which unluckily it was already too late to remedy. In peaceful years the villagers had been in the habit of buying grain in July, after the harvest, from Turkish and Arab peasants in the plains. They them- selves scarcely grew any grain. This year, dazed with the threat overhanging, they had put off buying their usual pro- visions against the winter. This delay was now a serious mat- ter. The villagers had flour, potatoes, and maize, but in very insufficient quantities. To hold out with these for any time would necessitate the greatest economy. And since Armenians were used to much bread and httle meat, this lack of it was a terrible problem for the leaders. Added to which, for the first few days there would be no chance on the Damlayik of bak- ing, since the brick ovens would have to be dug into the earth. Pastor Aram therefore decreed that, till Friday evening, every tonir must be kept alight in the villages, so that as many flat cakes as possible might be ready before they left the valley.
Ter Haigasun concluded the session with the announce- ment of a solemn mass of petition for the following mornings
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Friday.- After mass the bells were to be taken out of towety carried to the churchyard in solemn procession, smd buried. There the whole people should take leave o£ them , praying before the graves of its fathers. Ter Haigasun further aimounced that he intended to take several barrel-loads of consecrated earth up to the Damlayik. Those who died up there, in the camp or in battle should not have to lie quite abandoned in the merciless wasteland, but should be given a han dful of their ancient, consecrated ground on which, at least, to rest their heads.
On the Friday morning the saptiehs did in fact take their departure, to the last man, into Mohammedan country. Mudir and muahn had ridden to Antioch. The Church of die Ever- Increasing Angelic Powers was fuller, long before the ap- pointed time, than it ever had been since it was consecrated. The atrium and the square nave over which rose the tall cen- tral cupola, the two side aisles, and even the platform upon which rose the high altar could scarcely hold the congregation. Since the church, according to very old custom, had no win- dows, sharp amber blades of sunlight, like the eyes of the Trinity, pierced the oblong slits in the wall, shaped like arrow- slits in a fortress. But these crossed shafts of light did not illuminate; they merely served to dim the candles and cast a network of curious shadows upon the crowd. Today there were not only hundreds of faithful, come to Yoghonoluk to mass from the smaller villages, but also all the priests and choir-singers, to assist at this last high mass “on solid ground." Never yet had the choir sung its choral, announcing at the foot of the altar the vesting of the priest in the sacristy, in so full a voice:
"Deep secret, incomprehensible, without beginningl Thou hast adorned with glory The host of the beings of fire."
Never had Ter Haigasun bowed more deeply, nor made more complete and shuddering an a dm ission of sin before
die people. Under his gdd mitre die weal of the viHbip stood out on his face. And never before had the secret of the kiss of peace, the reunion of the community in Christ, bound the souls of these faithful in holier ties. At other masses, when after the sacrificial prayer the deacon, at the words: “Greet ye one another with the holy kiss,” had held the thurible up to the lip^ of the chief singer (Teacher Asayan) — ^when this singer had kissed the one next to Him, so that the embrace might continue through the choir and from the choir through the people — ^it had usually been in a series of quick litde touches, mere slack formality. But today they held each other close and really kissed on cheeks or mouth. Many were in tears. When after the communion the assistant priests, at a sign from Ter Haigasun, began stripping the altar, a wild, un- expected pain Rung the whole congregation on its knees. Un- controllable grief, groans, wailings, rose above the glimmering play of shadows, above the crossed, flaming seraphim swords of the sun, up into the tall, dun cupola. Each of the holy ves- sels was held up high before it disappeared in a straw-plaited basket: chalice, paten, dborium, and the great book of the Gospels. The sacristan packed the censers, the silver candle- sticks and crucifixes, into another box. At last there was only the lace altar-cloth. Ter Haigasun crossed himself for the last tim^ let his hands — their hue that of yellowish church tapers — ^hover for a while over the altar-cloth till, with a sudden jerk, he lifted it. The unveiled stone stood bare, which had once been hewn out of the grey rock of Musa Dagh. In the same instant old Tomasian’s workmen were letting down the bells, the big one and the smaller one, by pulleys from the campanile. It needed all their strength to raise the heavy metal on to the two biers, each of which were to be carried by eight men..
Acolytes bearing the tall Greek cross headed the procession. Then, with their bells, the stumbling coffin-bearers. After them. Ter Haigasim'and the other priests. It took a consider-
able time for this funeral cortege to reach the graveyard of Yoghonoluk. The train of mourners really seemed to be escort- ing an honoured body to the grave. The heat was deadening. Only at the rarest intervals did a breath from the Mediter- ranean find its way across Musa Dagh to mitigate the Syrian summer. Swirling dust-clouds ran before the procession, like spectral dancers before the Ark, a thin, degenerate variety of the sacred pillars of cloud which went before the Israelites in the wilderness. The churchyard lay far along the road to Habibli, the wood-carvers’ village. Like most graveyards in the East, it crept up the slope of a hill and was not surrounded by any wall. This, together with its gravestones, either fallen or slanting deep in the sod, their weatherbeaten limestone crudely chiselled with inscription and cross, gave it almost the look of a Turkish or Jewish burial-ground in the Near East. As the procession turned into it, there was a grey, bat-hke fluttering and scurrying, hither and thither, between cairns and monuments. These were old women, whose flimsy garments were held together only by their substratum of dirt and dust. Old women everywhere feel drawn to cemeteries. In the West also, we know these pensioners of death, tomb-dwellers, keen- ing wives, guardians of corruption, whose begging is often only their second trade. But here in Yoghonoluk this was a recog- nized class, a close corporation of nestlers in churchyard mould, wailing women and helpers at a birth, who, according to the tradition of these villages, had to live on the outskirts of each community. One or two old beggar-men, with biblical, prophetic heads, were among them, and a few cripples, fan- tastically deformed, such as only the East engenders. The peo- ple protected itself against the dross of its own loins by banish- ing It, in the absence of any institutions or homes for the aged poor, into Its cemetery, a place both sacred and unclean. So that now nobody felt scared when two mad women rushed to hide, with heart-rending shneks, up the graveyard hill. This churchyard and its neighbourhood formed the alms-house^
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hosfAtal, and mad-house of Yoghonoluk. It was even more; it was the place to which sorcery had been relegated. The torch enlightenment, in the hands of Altouni, l^ikor, Shatakh* ian, and their predecessors, had driven magic beyond the con- fines of the villages and yet not killed it. These keening spey- wives, under the leadersUp of Nunik, Vartuk, Manushak, had fled so far before the hatred of the doctor, but no farther. Here they awaited their chents, to be summoned not only for death vigils and corpse-washings, but far more often to an ob- stinate illness or a child-birth, since many trusted less in Al- touni’s science than in the herb-potions, magic formulas, and prayers for health of Nunik, Vartuk, Manushak. In this ancient quarrel science did not always come out best. That was un- deniable. Superstition had an incalculable advantage in the variety of its potions and old wives* cures. And Altouni had no bedside manner. Once he had given up a case, he sharply refused to raise false hopes. A creature like Nunik, on the other hand, could never get to the end of her stored-up knowl- edge, nor would she bow before death. If a patient died on her, he had only himself to blame for havmg sent, in a moment of weakness, for Altouni, and so brought all her skill to naught. Nunik was the living emblem of her art. The village women told each other how, m the days of the first Avetis, she had been seventy, just as she was today. The enlightened per- secuted these spey-wivcs, and chased them from among the living. But that did not prevent their creeping at night from their haunt of death to go about their secret business in all seven villages. Now, however, they were all collected in the churchyard, to take their share of alms with the blind and the halt. Sato had left the cortege and run on ahead. She had long had many cronies among the grave-folk. These border people attracted her borderline soul. They were so easy to live withl It was so hard to live with the Bagradians! Though gifts of clothes from the great hanum might feed Sato’s vanity, in reality she felt as uncomfortable in them, in shoes, stock-
aSz
i&g% in a dean room, as a wild dog in a collar. With and 5|)ey>wives, and with mad people^ Sato could give fixe rdn to her thoughts, in words that had no special meaniiig.
how delightEul to kick oS the speech- of the great, like a tight shoc^ and talk with bare feet! Nunik, Vartuk, M a n u sh a k , had secrets to tell her which made her whole soul shiver in unison, as though she too had brought them into this world with her, from the life of her ancestors. Then she would sit sdll and listen for hours, while the blind beggars beside her fumbled over her thin child’s body with alert, sensitive fingers. Had there been no Iskuhi, Sato might have let the others go up to the Damlayik, while she lived at ease among the grave- folk. These happy souls were not to be taken into the narrow confines of the mountain camp. The leaders had passed the resolution, with one dissentient, Bagradian. He, though as commander he saw clearly that every superfluous mouth would enfeeble resistance, had not wanted to exclude any A rmenian. But these outcasts seemed neither unhappy at this decision nor especially scared. They stretched out hands and snouts to their compatriots with all the usual beggars’ litany.
The sky was so scorchingly empty that the very notion of a cloud might have seemed a story-teller’s fable. This inexorable blue seemed never to have known a drop of rain since the Deluge. The people crowded about the open grave to take leave of the bells of Yoghonoluk. In peaceful days their sound had scarcely been noticed. But this was like the silencing of their own lives. The mother bell and her daughter were low- ered into earth amid breathless quiet. The muted ring of scat- tered clods upon the metal was like a prophecy to these people that now there could be no more going bade home and no resurrection from the dead. After a short prayer said by Ter Haigasun, the communes dispersed among their graves, si- lently, and the separate families went to take a last look at their fathers’ resting-place. Gabriel and Stephan did the <mm#» and wandered to dbe Bagradian mausoleum. It was a small,
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low lioiis^ under a cupcda, shaped like dbe mounds in which Turks biiry duir worthies and saintly men. Grandfather Avetis had built it for hims elf and his old wife. The founder of aU their splendour lay, by Arm enian tradition, without a cefiSn, in his shroud, under stone slabs, slanted against each other like praying hands. Apart from him and his wife, there was only one other Bagradian buried h e re— Avetis the brother, faithful to Yoghonoluk, not long a dead man. "There wouldn’t have been room for any more of us,” reflected Gabriel, who oddly did not feel in the least serious, but rather amused. Stephan, bored, shifted from foot to foot. He felt so many sons away from death.
Surrounded by a litde knot of people Ter Haigasun stood at the top of the slope on the last outskirts of the dead land. Some diggers had shovelled out a wide spare pit, like a fosse commune. Five barrels were filled with the earth they dug, and when these were ready. Ter Haigasun went from one to the other and made the sign of the cross over each. He stopped before the last and bent down over it. This was not bhek loam, but poor and crumbling earth. Ter Haigasun dipped into the barrel and laid a handful of consecrated ground against his face, like a peasant testing the soil.
“May It suffice,” he said to himself. Then in surprised cogita> tion he stood looking down over the graveyard, already almost deserted. Most of the villagers had long since set out for home. It was getting on towards midday. In the larger villages such as Bitias and Habibli, similar ceremonies were being per- formed. But the Council had appointed the hour after sunset for setting out.
Gabriel made the most considerate arrangements for Juliette. Drawn into this Armenian gulf, she should miss her own world as little as circumstances could possibly allow. True that this European world of hers was also engaged in a dog-fight, compared to which all dse of the kind seemed a poindess,
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liaphazard brawL But there the dog'*iight was being conducted with all modern conveniences, according to the most advanced scientific principles, not with the innocent blood-lust of the beast of passion, but with the mathematical thoroughness and precision of the beast of intellect. If we were still in Paris — Gabriel might, for instance, have told himself — ^we should not, it is true, have to sleep on the stony earth of a Syrian moun- tain, we should still have a bathroom and W.C. But, for all that, we should be liable at any hour of the day or night to leave these comforts for the dark cellar, to hide from aerial bombs. So that, even in Paris, Stephan and Juliette would still be exposed to a certain risk. None of which reflections oc- curred to Gabriel, for the simple reason that for months he had seen no European newspapers, and knew next to nothing about the war.
On the previous night he had sent Avakian and Kristaphor, with all his household servants, up to the Damlayik, so that Juhette’s quarters might be got ready. They were prepared with the very greatest care. “Three-Tent Square” must have its own kitchen and scullery, with every usual arrangement. Gabriel had ordered that Juliette should have all three tents at her disposal. She was to say which she would hke to hve in. With endless labour, carpets, braziers, divans, tables, arm- chairs, had been dragged up the Damlayik, and an astonish- ing collection of smart luggage — ^wardrobe-trunks, shiny leather suitcases, baskets for crockery and silver, a whole col- lection of medicine bottles and toilet articles, hot-water bottles, thermos flasks. Gabriel wanted Juliette to take comfort from the sight of these European conveniences. She was to live like an adventurous princess, travelling for a whim, surrounded with toys. And for just this reason his own hfe, in the eyes of the people, must seem tvnee as Spartan. He had made up his mind not to sleep in a tent, nor eat food cooked in “Three- Tent Square.”
Back from their graves the Yoghonoluk villagers took a last
look at houses^ no longer theirs. Each of them had a huge corded bundle heavier than his strength, to carry up him. Dazed and unhappy, iidgding and straying about their rooms, they awaited the night. Here was the mat one had had to leave, here stood a lamp, and there, Christ Saviourl stood the bed. The expensive bed, saved up for through hard work- ing years, so tha( one might become a better man by the possession of this fortress of himily Lfe. And now the bed must be left standing, mere loot for Tiurk and Arab scum. The hours dragged on. And in these homes everything was unpacked and packed again, to see if room could not be made for this or that unnecessary object in the bundle. Even in the craziest tumble-down hovels there took place these poignant separations from the household gear that envelops the human being in his illusions and in his love.
Gabriel, like all the rest, went straying late that afternoon through the rooms of his house. They were dead and empty. Juliette, with Gonzague Mans and her establishment, had set out hours ago for the mountain. Since the day was intolerably hot, she had longed for the coolness she expected to find-thcrc. Nor had she wanted to be caught in crowds of villagers on the move. Gabriel, who could feel some passing regret at leav- ing the most casually slept-in hotel bedroom (since everywhere one leaves a bit of oneself, a beloved departed), was quite un- moved. This house of his fathers, the place where he had been a child, had lived through these last decisive months, had nothing to say to him. He marvelled at this lack of all emotion, but it was so. The only things he regretted even a little were his antiques, those colleaor’s joys of the first happy weeks in Yoghonoluk. He kept turning from Artemis and Apollo to the glorious Mithras, stroking the faces of gods with a tender hand. Then, at the selamlik door, he turned sharply away and gave up the house, its lares and penates, for ever.
In an innyard, l^twards from the villa, an unusual scene was being played. Those dregs of Yoghonoluk not permitted to
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l(dlow odKn into camp had gathered togeth^ there. The keening women, the beggars with prophetic faeeds» «feif stray brats escaped horn thdr parents, formed an excited group. That Sato, the orphan of Zeitun, should have been with them is not to be wondered at. One personality stood out from them, whose impressive power even Gabriel could ntt manage to ignore. This was old Nunik, chieftainess of magic healers and conjuring women. The dark face of this female Wandering Jew, whose origins were lost in the grey of ages, was distinguished by more than a nose half eaten away. It was informed with the feroaous energy by which Nunik had raised herself to the invincible leadership of her caste. The story that she was well over a hundred might be mere fraud, a rumour set going by Nunik for advertisement, and yet her very appearance of timeless age seemed almost the indestructi' ble guarantee of the worth of her cures and of the healing quality in the rough life she led. Numk held between her hard, stringy thighs a black laipb, no doubt strayed from the herds^ and she was slitting its throat open from underneath. It seemed a very workmanlike slit, done with the quietest of hands, while her lips parted under the horrible, lupus<eatea nose from over a gleaming set of magnificently youthful teeth. It gave her such a look of grinning relish that Bagradian bst his temper at the sight.
"What are you all doing here, you set of low thieves?”
A prophet tapped his way to the front, to inform bitn vdth unapproachable dignity: “It’s the blood-test, Effendi, and it’s being done on your behalf.”
Bagradian nearly flung himself'on the rabble. “Where did you steal that lamb from? Don’t you know that anyone who touches the people’s property can be shot or hanged?”
The prophet seemed not to notice the base aspersions. "Better watch, Effendi, to see which way the blood will flow. Towards the mountain or towards the house.”
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Os^d saw how die landi’s ctadc blood came tfarobbiag out of k, collected oa die £at, smooth place bebw it into a thick pool, which rose and rose in a growing drde until the last drops &11, Still the puddle seemed undecided, as though it had some secret injunction to obtain. At last, three little tongues edged charily forwards, but stopped at once, till sud- dcnly an impetuous rill wound itself out, wriggling quickly on — towards the house. The mob went mad with excitement.
"Koh yem! The blood goes to the house!”
Nunik bent down dose over the blood-pool — as though from its nature and the tempo of its course she could tell with the greatest preasion something of importance. As she raised her head, Gabriel saw that the twisted grin which had so roused him was the usual look of her ravaged face. But she spoke in a curiously soft, old voice that did not seem to be her own: “Ellendi, those on the mountam will be saved.”
In that instant Gabriel remembered the coins given him by the Agha, and left forgotten m the villa. “I’ll have those at least," he thought; “it’d be a pity . . .” He went back. At the door of the villa he hesitated. Should one ever turn back again from a journey? Then he hurried on, in long quick strides, to his bedroom, and took the coins from their case. He hdd the gold one up to the light; Ashod Bagrathuni’s head stood out from it in the finest chiselling. The Greek inscription round the edge of the silver coin ran, without divisions into words, into an almost unreadable circle of letters;
“To the inexplicable, in us and above us.”
Gabriel put them in his pocket. He left the garden through the west door in the park wall without turning back to look at the villa. A few step farther, he stopped to look at his watch, still absurdly set to European time. The sun was al- ready above the Damlayik. Gabriel Bagradian noted care- fully the hour and minute at which his new life had begun.
Soon after sundown the people of the seven villages, heavily laden, had moved out in groups or families to toil up the steeps by all the most available paths.
A dense moon, incredibly metaUic, rose behind the jagged grey peaks of the Amanus, in the north-east. It sailed on visibly dirough the sky, nearer and nearer. It was no longer some- thing flat stuck against the vault of heaven. The black depths behind it grew more and more distinct. Nor was the earth, for Gabriel, the usual stable abiding-place, but the little vehicle through the cosmos that it is in reahty. And this stereoscopic cosmos not only extended beyond the plastic moon, but forced itself down into the valley to bathe in coolness every pore of Gabriel’s resting body. The moon was already half-way over the sky, and the panting groups still toiled on past him. It was always the same silhouette. In front, grimly prodding the ground with his stick, the father, loaded with baggage. A gruif call, a lamenting answer. The women stumbled under loads which bowed them almost to the earth. In spite of these, they had to keep a sharp look-out, to sec that the goats were not straying. And yet, now and again, under these burdens, there came a little spurt of young girl’s laughter, an eye sparkling encouragement. Gabriel started out of a half-sleep. Innumer- able children were lifting up their voices to weep. Hundreds of squalling children — as though they had all at the same in- stant discovered that their parents had gotie away. And in the midst of this the short grunting voices and shrill reproofs of many grandmothers. But no — they were not abandoned in- fants, only the cats of Yoghonoluk, Azir, and Bitias. Cats have seven lives and as many souls, and each soul its own voice. Therefore, to kill a cat, you must kill him seven times (Sato had long had this wisdom from Nunik). In real truth their masters’ absence did not move the cats of Yoghonoluk, Azir, and Bitias in the least, for cats serve only the house with their seven lives, not its human beings. Perhaps they were even squalling for joy in their new, imbridled lease of life. The
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^>g8 really ..suffered. Even the wild dog of Syrian villages never quite gets away from men. He can never find his way back to himself, to fox, jackal, wolf. He may have been wild for countless generations, he is, and remains, the dismissed employee of avilization. He souffles longingly round houses not merely for a bone, but to get himself taken back into slavery, to be set to the tasks he has forgotten. The wild dogs of the villages knew all this. Already they had nosed out the camp on the Damlayik. But they also knew that this camp, unlike the village street, was strictly forbidden them. Madly they scurried up the forbidden mountain, grovelled their way through brushwood, rusdcd hke snakes under myrde and arbutus bushes. Not one of them got the bright idea of going off to Moslem neighbourhoods, to beg bones in Chalikhan or Ain Ycrab. They still adored this faithless people which had now abandoned its common dwelling-place. Their souls seemed to perish in wild grief, yet few of them dared to utter their monosyllabic bark, which has long since lost the exten- sive, much inflected, civilized vocabulary of European house dogs. These dogs’ whole grief was in their eyes. Everywhere round him in the dark Gabriel caught glints of the green fire of these eyes, rapturously curious, which dared not venture nearer forbidden ground.
The moon had vanished behind the back of Musa Dagh. A faint wind had cqpie into being. “They’re all up there by now,” reflected Gabriel, past whom, over an hour before, the last group had plodded its way. And yer, either from weariness or the sheer need to be alone, he could still not tear him«pif loose from this dark observation post. How could he tell that this might not be the last time in his life at which he would be able to be alone? And had not this power to be alone al- ways seemed to him God’s best gift? He granted himself an- other half-hour of this extra-rnundane, peace — then he would have to push on up to the north defences to superintend and hurry on the trench-digging. He leaned back against the oak
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bdiiod lum anci smoked Out dt the darkoett came a rexj tistdy strag^er indeed Gabriel heard the dip-clop of hodEi^ and stones rolling away. He saw a lantern, thra a man with a donkey, both piled up with towering burdens. Each stqp the donkey took was almost a faU. Yet the man dragged a mon- strous sack, which every few minutes he set down, panting and gasping. Gabrid recognized the apothecary only when Krikor’s sack came thudding at his feet Krikor’s {ace looked distorted; the impassive mandarin’s countenance had become the mask of some furious warrior divinity. Sweat streamed over the polished checks into the long goatee, which jerked up and down for want of breath. He seemed in great pain, and hunched his shoidders, bending far forward.
Gabrid revealed himself; “You ought to have given your drug-sack to my people, instead of trying to drag your whole chemist’s shop alone.”
Krikor still strove to get his breath. Yet, even so, he could put a certain aloofness into his answer: “None of this has anything to do with my drugs. I sent those up several hours ago.
Gabrid had by now observed that both the chemist and his ass were laden exdusively with books. For some vague reason this annoyed him and inspired him with the wish to mnrk “Forgive my mistake. Apothecary. Are these the only pro- visions you’ve managed to bring?” ,
Krikor’s face was again impassive. He eyed Gabriel with all his usual detachment: “Yes, Bagradian, these are my pro- visions— unluckily not the whole of them.” A coughing-fit shook him. He sat down and mopped his sweat with a mon- strous handkerchief. The starlight twinkled. The donkey stood with its heavy load and mdancholy knock-knees on the pathway. Minutes elapsed. Gabrid regretted his unkind im- pi^. But Krikor’s voice had regained all its old superiority.
“Gabrid Bagradian, you, as a Paris savant, have had very difleroit chances from mine, the Yoghonoluk Yet
ago
one or two thii^ have escaped yoa, whidi I have perceived. Posi&ljr you never heard tlw saying oi the sublime Gr^ry Nazianzen, nor the answer he recdved &cmi the pagan TertuUian.’'
No wonder Gabriel was unacquainted with St. Gregory Nazianzen’s saying, since Krikor was the only man who had heard it. He related it in his usual lo£ty voice, with supreme, lordly detachment— though, to be sure, his confusion (d Ter- tullian, the Church Father, with a pagan of the same name was a sign that Jove can nod.
“Once the sublime Gregory Namnzen was invited to dinner by the august pagan, Tertulhan.— Have no fear, Bagradian, the story is as short as it is profound. They spoke of the good harvest and the fine white bread which they were breaking together. A sunbeam lay across the table. Gregory Nazianzen lifted up his bread in his hands and said to Tertullian: ‘My friend, we must thank God for His great mercy— for see, this bread which tastes so delicious is notldng else than this golden sunbeam which, out in the fields, has dianged itself into wheat for us.’ Tertullian, however, stood up from table and drew down a work of the poet Vergil from his shelves. He said to Gregory: ‘My friend and guest — if we praise God for a mere slice of bread, how much more, then, must we not praise Him for this book. For sec, this book is the transformed sun- beam of a far higher sun than that whose beams we can watch with our eyes across the table.’ ”
After a while Gabriel asked in melancholy sympathy: “And your whole library, Krikor? This can be only a sample of it. Have you buried the books?”
Krikor rose as stiffly as a wounded hero: “I did not bury them. Books perish in the ground. I left them, just as they were."
Gabriel took up the lantern which the apothecary had for- gotten. It was getting lighter, and Krikor could not hide the fact that tears ran down his inscrutable parchment cheeks.
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Bagradian shouldered the old man’s sadc: "Do you really think, Apothecary,” he said, "that I was only born for service* rifles, cartridge bdts, and trench-digging?”
Though iGikor protested again and again, Gabriel carried hit heavy sack to the North Saddle;
BOOK TWO
THE STRUGGLE OF THE WEAK
“And the winepress was trodden, vdthout the city . .
RxvsLAnoM xiv, 20
1
Life on the Mountain
Musa Dagb! Mountain of Moses! At its summit, in the grey dawn-light, a whole population set up its camp. The mountain top, the windy air, the sea surge, put such new life into this people that the toil of the night seemed dispersed and for- gotten. No more strained and exhausted faces, but only excited-looking ones. In and around the Town Enclosure they ran past one another, shouting. No consciousness what ever of the underlying reality of it all, only a pugnacious stir , Like .a spring torrent, small and overwhelming urgencies swept away aU thoughts of the whole. Even Ter Haigasun, deebng the wooden altar at the centre of the camp, and so engaged in getting things ship-shape for eternity, was shouting impatiently at the men who helped him in the work.
Gabriel had climbed die point selected by him as observa- tion post. From one of the rocky knolls of the Damlayik, it oifer^ a clear look-out to sea, across the Orontes plain and those undulations of the mountain which ebbed away towards Antioch. You could see the valley itself from Kheder Beg as far as Bitias. The outlying villages were hidden by bends in the road. Of course, besides this chief observation post, there were ten or twdve thrust-out spying-points, from wUch single sections of the valley could be closely observed. But here, well shielded by ridges of rock, he bad a clear view of the general outlines. Perhaps because, &om his position, he stood above the general scurry of the camp, Bagradian found himself suddenly, sharply con&onted, pierced to the quidc, by its
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reality. There in the north, the east, the south, as far as Antakiya — no, as far as Mosul and Dcir ez-Zor— destruction, not to be evadedi Hundreds of thousands of Moslems, who would soon have only one objective — ^the smoking out of this insolent wasps’ nest on Musa Dagh. On the farther side an indifferent Mediterranean, sleepily surging round the sharp declivities of the mountain. No matter how close Cyprus might be, what French or English cruiser would take the least interest in this and length of Syrian coast quite out of the war zone? Certainly the fleets only put out in threatened directions, towards Suez and the North African coast, always sailing away from the dead Gulf of Alexandretta. Bagradian, looking over the desert sea, realized how impossibly — demagogically — he had behaved both towards himself and his hearers, when he tried, at the general assembly, to raise hopes of a rescuing gunboat. The scornfully empty horizon crushed his argu- ments. All round them, incalculable death, with not the nar- rowest cranny of escape — such was the truth. A huddled, piteous crowd of villagers, inescapably menaced on every side. And even that was not the whole truth. For should death from without — ^though not even a madman would have sup- posed it — ^remain benevolently inactive; though no attack should come, not one shot be fired — even so, another death, from within, would rise in their midst, to destroy them all. They might scrape and spare as much as they pleased, herds and supplies could not be renewed and, within measurable time, they would be exhausted.
Down in the valley the thought of the Damlayik had seemed a release, since in bitter need the prospect of any kind of change works as an assuagement and a cure. But now they were firmly ensconced, the healing thought no longer sus- tained Gabriel. He had the sensation of having been hurled out of space and time. No doubt he could keep the inevitable at arm’s length for a few seconds, yet in exchange he had had to sacrifice the hundred cracks and loop-holes which chance
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pttsents. Had not HarutiuniNokhudian made a waer decision £ot his dock? An icy compulsion had hold of GabrieL What an unforgivable sin against St^han and Juliettel Over and over again he had let slip the moment of escape, nor once seriously tried to shake Juliette out of her fool’s paradise, though he had known, even on that March Sunday, that the trap was closed. Violent giddmess, sudden emptiness in his head, succeeded this incredible fcelmg of guilt. The two hori- zons, land and sea, had begun to swirl. The whole earth was a twirling ring, and Musa Dagh its dead, fixed focus. But the true centre of that focus was Gabriel’s body, which, high though It stood, was in reahty the lowest point of rigidity above which swung this inescapable vortex. All we ask is to keep alive, he reflected horror-stricken. Instantly there followed the still thought: “But — why?”
Gabriel rushed down to the Town Enclosure. The separate committees of the Council were sitting already, since the myriad tasks of the first day were not yet apportioned. He in- sisted that every active person, man or woman, should set to work instandy on the trenches and outposts already begun. This whole line of defences must be as good as complete by tomorrow evening. Who could tell whether the first Turkish assault might not be delivered within two days? He had to keep on urging again and again that defence, and all that appertained to it — the sharpest fighting disciphne — must take precedence of all other things. Since they had chosen Him to lead their resistance, it followed as the inevitable consequence that he must be given a free hand, not only over the front- line fighters, but the reserve— that is to say, over fighters and workers — ^the whole camp. Pastor Aram, who was unfortu- nately very touchy, kept saying that it was equally urgent to control the inner life of the community. At present it was all chaos— each family jealous of the living-space assigned to ei^ other, and the separate commimes equally di ssa risfi ed with their camping-ground. Bagradian seized on the pastor's
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worsts. Tljere must be no such thing ai diasi^a&ctkWl, ^ was a state of acute emergency. Grousers must be dealt wltli out of hand, and ruthlessly punished. Kebussyan and the mukhtars at once began siding with the pastor. £ven Dr. Bedros Altouni obstinately insisted that the bodily needs of the people were the first t^ng to be considered, that work on the hospital-hut must be started at once, so that the sick might not get any worse. Then, one after another, teachers and mukhtars made rambling speeches— each on the particular urgency of his own particular job. Gabriel perceived with terror how hard it is to get a deliberating body to pass the most essential and obvious measure. But the constitution he had given them soon proved its efficacy. Ter Haigasun had the necessary authority to determine undecided cases. He made such skilful and unobtrusive use of it that their counsels had soon ceased to be troubled with dangerous and confusing suggestions. Gabriel was perfectly right. Everything else must give way to the work of defence. The rules of disaplme laid down several days ago by the counal must be read out in- stantly to the decads and, as from that moment, come into force. Everyone owed unconditional obedience to the chief. He had the definite advantage over all the other representa- tives of having learned to know war as a front-line officer. The Council ther^ore must give him complete authority in all which might concern defence, fighting preparations, and camp disciphne. Gabriel Bagradian and the members of his Defence Committee were in no way bound to submit their decisions to the General Council. Pastor Aram Tomasian had been given a seat on that committee, and Gabriel on the Committee for Internal Discipline, so that unnecessary friction might be avoided. And naturally the commander must have his own powers to inflict punishment. He must be able to deprive recalcitrants and lazy people of their rations, have them put in irons, punished with the bastinado, mild or severe^ as he might see fit. Only one punishment— death— remained at the
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^ Coaodl havu^ luuid^ iQMi%^(^^8e4.k. -STory’ iahafaitant of, the camp must be i Pfiairife to realize from this &8t hour, the seriousness of a war situadoa. Ihe chief tadcs of the Camp Committee would be to provide for strict law and order, to make these difficult orcumstances seem natural, and to direct every effiort towards ^ development of a normal, ordinary daily routine, just as much up here as down in the valley. Ter Haigasun kept stress- ing the words "normaT’ and “everyday.” On these unobtrusive powers, more than on any deed of heroism, would depend the strength and duration of their resistance. So that not one pair of hands must be left idle. Not even children must be without their regular work. No holiday wildness should encroach on this life-or-death struggle. School must still be taught in a place assigned to it, and in as disdphned and serbus a man- ner as ever. Teachers, as they came off duty, must take their turns in holding classes. Only unremitting work, concluded the priest, would enable people to sustain this life of depnva- tions. “So get to work. Let’s waste as little time as possible on talk.”
The mukhtars assembled their communes on the big square before the altar, already marked out as the Town Enclosure. Bagradian ordered Chaush Nurhan to form up the eighty-six de^s of his first defence. That tyrant of recruits soon had them drawn up in front of the still unconsccrated altar, in neat square formation. Ter Haigasun climbed the altar tribune, a broad space raised fairly high above the square. He asked Bagradian, but no other leader, to stand beside him. Then he turned to the men and in a resonant voice read out the rules, as taken down by Avakian. These he supplemented with a few threatenmg words of his own. Anyone who disobeyed, or set himself up against, his chief would bring down instant punish- ment on himself. Let all newcomers from Turkish barradcs take that to heart. It was not an understood thing that they should be taken into camp and fed out of commund supplies.
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-It was an aa of brodierly kindness by the conununes, wUch they would have to show themselves worthy. Ter Haigasoa took up the silver crucifix from the altar and came down into the ranks, along with GabrieL Slowly he administered the oath. The men had to repeat, with uplifted hands:
“I swear before God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost that I will defend this encamped people to the last drop of my blood; that I subordinate myself to my commander and all Im edicts, in blind obedience; that I acknowledge the authority of the elected Council of Leaders; that I will never leave the mountain for my own purposes — as God the Father shall help me to my salvation.”
After this oath had been administered, the front-line men marched behind the altar. The eleven hundred reservists, men and women, divided into twenty-two groups, took a shorter oath of obedience and willingness to work. This reserve shouldered the mam burden of entrenchment and camp- building. It had nothing with which to ward off an attack but those scythes, pitchforks, and hammers which it had earned up with it from the valley. Lastly the three hundred adolescents, the “light cavalry,” marched forward. Ter Haiga- sun made them a short speech of admomshment, and Gabriel explained their duties as scouts, signallers, and liaison-runners. He divided these youngsters up into three secuons, by “picking them out.” The first were to garrison the observation posts and concealed look-outs, and send a report every two hours to headquarters. The hundred oldest and most reliable boys were chosen for this very important duty. It would also be their job to post sentries, day and night, on the “Dish Terrace,” to use their sharp young eyes to keep a look-out for the smoke (vain hope!) of passing ships. The second section were to do orderly work. This hundred must always be somewhere about around headquarters, to take the commander’s orders in any direction, and keep him in touch with the various sectors of the defence. Samuel Avakian was put in command of this corps of orderlies
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and Ste|>han enrolled in it. Finally, the third hundred were to be at Pastor Aram’s disposal, for general use about the camp and, for instance, to carry rations out to the line.
This dividing up of the villagers by Bagradian instantly re- vealed its advantages. The martial self-importance which swelled the breasts of the various decads, the pricking itch to command, with which lower officers were at once infected, the childish delight in forming ranks and playing soldiers — all these human traits served to veil completely, in the beneficent ardour of a game, any deeply uneasy sense of the inevitable. As, soon after this, the ranks marched off to trench-building, there arose here and there, shyly yet stubbornly, the old workers’ song of the valley:
“Days of misfortune pass and are gone,
Like the days of winter, they come and they go;
The sorrows of men do not last very long,
Like the buyers in shops, they come and go.’’
Gabriel summoned Chaush Nurhan and the heads of the most important decads. But meanwhile Ter Haigasun had left the altar square for that of the Three Tents, near a great well- spring. Sheltered on three sides by fern-grown rocks and myrtle bushes, its beauty was a signal proof of how carefully Juliette was looked after. Ter Haigasun asked to speak to the hanum Juliette Bagradian. Since Kristaphor, Missak, Hov- hannes, and the other servants were all engaged in setting up the adjacent “kitchen square,’’ the priest found only Gonzague Marts to take his message. That young man was pacing rapidly up and down, as passengers walk for exercise up and down the narrow deck of a liner. The Greek-went to Juliette’s canvas tent and struck the litde gong which hung at the entrance. But the hanum kept them waiting a very long time. When at last she appeared, she asked Maris to bring out a chair for Ter Haigasun. He refused to sit down, regretted that he had no time to spare. He let his hands slip out of sight into his wide
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tkeves, and caat down his eyts. Wliat be sud, in bis idiS French, was diarged with £ormaiity. Madame’s kindness was known to everybody. He therefore begged Madame to honour his people by undertaking a speaal duty. It was necessary that a very large white banner, with a red cross, should be set up on the ledge of rock jutting out to sea, on the steep side behind the mouivtain, to give any ships which God, in His mercy, might choose to send them knowledge of their desperate plight. Therefore the banner must bear an inscription in French and English: “Christians in need. Help!” Ter Haiga* sun bowed as he asked Juliette whether, with the help of some other women, she would be willing to get this banner prepared. She promised; but tepidly, indifferently. It was queer •^e Frenchwoman seemed to have no inkling of the honour Ter Haigasun was paying her, as much by his visit as this request, which he framed with all possible courtesy. She had grown indifferent again to all things Armenian. But when Ter Haigasun qiuckly left her, with nothing more than a curt nod, she suddenly became very restless, and herself sought out two big linen sheets, to be sewn together on the machme.
Gabriel insisted again, to Chaush Nurhan and the othei‘ platoon leaders, on the need for the very strictest discipline. From now on let no one leave his post without permission. Nor must any man in the front line be allowed to sleep in the Town Enclosure with his family. Nights must be spent in the trenches unless special leave were given by the commander! Bagradian also set up his headquarters at a place where all could easily reach him. There, every day, two hours before sunset, he would hold a session, which every section and group commander must attend. He would be ready to hear requests, complaints, and denunciations, arrange for reinforcements, and give out the following day’s orders. That completed the broad I outlines of military organization. Now it would all depend on
VJ2
'noil utd eoduraopfr to get tl^ags ^ng. Gaimel, map in hand, discussed the disposal of his thirtc^ sections defence. Three of these required larger garrisons— the others were mainly strong observation posts, for which, provisionally, one or faa^ a decad sufficed. To the trenches and rock barricades of the North Saddle, on the other hand, Gabriel assigned a skeleton force of forty decads, with two hundred -rifles in good, repair. He himself was to command this important sector.
immediate subordmate was Chaush Nurhan, to whom the command of the positions above the ilex gully and the task of geaerA inspection were entrusted. His responsible duties comprised espeaally the renewal of munitions and sup- plies and ^e proper care of rifles. Chaush Nurhan had the invaluable faculty of being in ten places at once, and had indeed made all his preparations for a workshop and cartridge factory. All the necessary tools and material had been carried up from his secret store in Yoghonoluk. All that now re- mained was the question who should command the South Bastion. The garrison of this most distant sector would be composed of fifteen decads. For reasons already stated, de- serters, both authentic and bogus, had been detailed off to make up this force — a very large one, considering the fortress strength of the point. Provisionally these men were being commanded by a reliable native of feeder Beg. But Bagradian pursued a definite object. Sarkis Kilikian was, after all, a gal- lant soldier, with very recent trench experience in the Caucasus. He was both intelligent and educated. He had suffered unheard-of cruelties from the Turks and, if he still had any- thing like a soul in him, it must be parched with an inhiiman thirst for revenge. Gabriel therefore intended to keep a sharp, provisional eye on Kilikian, and entrust him with this com- mand if he proved satisfactory. He hoped that this might not only release a valuable force, but give him full power over the deserters, unreliable people in the main. So, when the decads marched offi, he had kept back the Russian. All this
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while Kiiikiaa had stood scrutinizing Gabriel, with a hind oi rigid detachment that seemed too bored even for insolence. This figure, emaciated by slavery in the oil fields, by jails, by a hundr^ gruesome adventures, clothed as it was in earthy rags, and the face like a young death’s-head stretched with tanned hide, looked aristocratic, imposing, in spite of everything. Since he never once turned his light, contemptuous, observant eyes away from Bagradian, he may have sensed a kind of respect even in this pampered, well-dressed “boss.” Perhaps he mistook for simple fear what in reahty was the tribute to his own in- describable fate and the strength that had managed to sur- mount it. But his very inkling of a fear, in conjunction with the appearance of this bourgeois, who could never in all his life have known a second’s real want, degradation, terror, aroused all the malice in Kilikian. Bagradian called sharply, like an officer, to him:
“Sarkis Kilikian, report to me in two hours, in the north trenches. I’ve got a job for you.”
The Russian’s eyes (he had sull not turned them away from Bagradian) took on the dull shimmer of an agate. He re- plied with a jerky laugh: “I may come, and agam I mayn’t. I really don’t know what I’d care to do.”
Gabriel knew that everything would depend on his reply. He must make quite sure of his rank. His authority would be gone for ever if he struck the wrong note, or fate went against him. They were all listening eagerly; many a hidden, unholy joy flared up. Gabriel had made for himself a uniform, out of a hunting-kit, scarcely worn, which had belonged to Avetis. With It he wore leggings and a sun-helmet. This he put on before bearing down, in slow, swinging steps, upon the Russian. The helmet made him taller by half a head. He struck at his leggings with a cane.
“Listen to me, Sarkis KiUkian — and keep your ears wide open.”
His approach had been so direct that it forced the Russian a
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scq> bade. Bagradian paused. His heart was thudding; he could feel that his voice was not quite steady. This good luck he conceded his opponent. He waited, therefore, never taking his eyes oil this death’s-head, till he could fill to overflowing with clear, cold will-power.
"I myself give you leave, Kilikian, to do whatever you think you must. But bdore you leave here, you'll have to have made up your mind. . . . You’re free. You can go to the devil, no one’s keeping you. People of your sort are the very last we need in this camp.”
Gabriel paused, as though expecting Sarkis Kilikian to avail himself immediately of this permission and slouch off in his usual slow, contemptuous way without another glance at the Damlayik. But the Russian stood rooted. An inquisitive glint had found its way into the dead, agate shimmer of his eyes.
Bagradian’s voice became coldly pitying: “I intended to dis- tinguish you, who’ve been a soldier, from your comrades, by entrusting you with a post of leadership, since I know you’ve had more to bear from the Turks than most of us. You might have taken bloody revenge on your own behalf, and on theirs. . . . But — since you really don’t know whether you’ll care to — since you’re really nothing but a skulking coward of a de- serter, who can’t even see his duty to his own people, after having taken a solemn oath — get outi We don’t need a slacker, an insolent hound, eating the food of our wives and children. If you ever dare show yourself here again. I’ll have you shot. Go over to the Turks. Their regiments will soon be here. They’re expecting you.”
For such a man as the Russian there should really have been nothing left after this but to rush on this “capitalist” and bash his face in. But Sarkis Kihkian never moved. His eyes lost their staring calm and strayed from man to man in search of supporters.
Gabriel let five seconds elapse, seconds which raised his
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authority like a wave heknfic bdOowing wtdt uxueatrsuneii harshness: "You seem to have made up your mind. Wcfl~ quick march. Get along.”
It was curious how this sudden cracking of the whip could transform the Russian into the old jail-bird he was. His head sagged down between his shoulders, his sulky eyes gbwered up at Gabriel, now much the taller of the two. Kihkian’s whole weakness lay in the clarity with which he could estimate his position. He was fully conscious that this was a moment of nauseating defeat — ^yet all violence depends on a spirit so drunk with hate that the will is not lamed by a previous calcu- lation of consequences. For months he had lived secure on Musa Dagh. He had begged enough to eat in the villages. This general migration on to the heights came as an unforeseen improvement in his condition. But, should he get turned out of camp, his last chance of finding human sustenance would have vanished. He would not dare show himself in the valley, while even the surrounding hill-country would be invested, in a hand’s turn, by the Turks. Death, which had so often passed by him carelessly, might snap him up. The least he could expect from the Turks would be to be flayed alive, killed by inches. All this had flashed, in the fracuon of a second, upon Kilikian, and neither his pride, his hate, nor his defiance prevailed against such certain consciousness. He attempted another laugh, but could manage only a piteously degraded sneer.
Gabriel did not budge an inch: “Well? What arc you still hanging about for?”
Sarkis Kilikian’s face, the cowering face of an old convict^ turned. “I want . . .”
“Well . . .?”
The Russian looked up, but with different eyes, no longer of a pale untroubled agate, but the eyes of a hesitating school- boy. Gabriel had to remember the boy of eleven, with a carving-kmfe in his hand, shielding his mother. It was some
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- se li^lare ib smtoaocc faff-tkEnt;}
want to «tajr." '
Gabriel refiected. Would it not be as well to force this re^citrant to his knees, make him whine out his petition be- fore the assembled decads, and oblige him to take a more rigorous oath? He decided against it, not merely out of pity (his vision of the boy of eleven) but because his deepest in- sinct forbade. It would have been beneath any leader’s dignity to make too much of this puny victory, and unwise to burden his own defence with the hate of a profoundly humbled enemy. He allowed a tinge of kindness to creep into his cheer’s growl: “This time I don’t mind letting you oil, Kilik- jan, and rU watch your behaviour for a bit. But you aren’t worth the slightest responsibdity. Look outi You’ll be under surveillance. Dismiss!”
So the South Bastion was to be manned only half by de- setters. As Kilikian’s insolence had shown, they needed a martinet in command of them. A poisoned thorn would have to be driven into their flesh. Bagradian felt certain that in Oskanian, the self-opinionated dwarf, he had found the right kind of commander. So he offered that sombre little school- master the leadership of the South Bastion. He was to enforce impeccable service, the sharpest discipline— was, above all,* instantly to report the most trifling slackness or sabotage.
Hrand Oskanian puckered his low forehead, so- that his thick, black eyebrows formed a single line above his nose. He appeared to be magnanimously considering whether this half pedagogic, half punitive pb was beneath so considerable a man. At last he stated his conditions: “If I’m to take charge of the South Bastion, I must be very well armed, Bagradian EfEendL The fellows’ll have to see I’m not to be trifled with.”
So Teacher Oskanian arranged with Chaush Nurhan that he was to be given, not only a rifle with a double belt of five cartridges, but a huge holster-pistol and a luge^ broad-bladed fascine-knife. Thus, armed-to the teeth, he hurried o& to Three-
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Tent Square, where he advanced ponqt&usly on Juliette t» announce his rank. He did not deign a glance at Gonzague Maris, convinced that this smooth-tongued weakling would vanish at the sight of him— the warrior.
During this first day on Musa Dagh work on the trenches ad- vanced so well that there was every hope of completing all the essential defences before sunset. This fever of Industry so enthralled them that past and future ahke were forgotten in laughter and songs.
The morale of the Town Enclosure turned out to be far less satisfactory. Ter Haigasun and Pastor Aram had their work cut out to deal with the crop of problems that arose. Gabriel’s suggested solution, at the first sitting of the council, of that major problem, private property, had already displeased the mukhtars and the rich. But now these hard-headed peasants saw for themselves that no life would be possible on the Damlayik without communal ownership of the herds. So and so many sheep must be slaughtered daily, by precise regulation of supplies, and therefore it would be quite impossible to consider individual owners of flocks. Every reasoning person could also see that the slaughtering must be done by com- munal butchers on ground set apart; that the delegates of the Council of Leaders must superintend the daily distribution of meat to decads and families, unless there were to be injustice, and so, dangerous discontent. Since one thing leads to an- other, the mukhtars had at last been got to consent even to a communal kitchen. And this was still not enoughi Their duty demanded that not only should they provide these com- mon necessities, but should supervise their distribution, and make them palatable. Such recent converts found it no easy matter to struggle to establish a social order whose ingrained opponents they were themselves. The housing question was solved more easily. Ter Haigasun had always insisti-H rhar too rigid and constricting a community, from which thwig
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could be no escape^ would seem imnatural, and be bound sooner or later to bring its own nemesis. To adapt oneself with the minimum of friction to a new day-to-day life — such was the formula which he championed. So that living- quarters were to be made as extensive as possible. Even to- morrow, as soon as hands and tools could be spared from trench-building, Tomasian senior was to start work on the new settlement of huts, 'to be built of branches as designed by Aram. There were about a thousand families on the Damlayik, so that a thousand of such huts were intended, planned according to the numbers each must contain. There was abundant wood, to be cut down. Gabriel, even today, had released a certain number of men for tree-felling.
All this was hard, but the real difhculties only began with bread and flour. Here, in view of the urgent necessity to econ- omize, Ter Haigasun was implacably communist. Every sack of grain which single famdies still possessed — oats, bulgur, maize, potatoes — all that they had baked in their own ovens and laboured to carry up the mountain must be surrendered without mercy. Out of this communal store, at the mormng distribution of meat, each family would receive a minute ra- tion. And not only flour was to be sequestered, but salt, coffee, tobacco, rice, spices — all the precious things which careful housewives, with the greatest labour and wisest foresight, had got together for their own use. Opposition to this drastic decree continued for hours. At last Aram Tomasian and the mukhtars, by prayers and curses, had got so far that a few of the more virtuous fathers of families reluctantly set out for the depot, with their bread and flour, their coffee and tobacco. These confiscated goods of the people were classified and ar ranged there for distribution. Sudi exemplary self-sacrifice brought imitators, till, little by httle, spurred on by shame (since the open camp afforded no means of concealment), the majority followed. Sacks of flour and maize were pil^ up one beside the other. Old Tomasian was commissioned to
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b)i^, early next morning, a roof for protection owt tbeae stores. Five armed guards were posted round the depot Ter Haigasun chose these five from the poorest families in the villages.
Ter Haigasun, Gabriel, and the Council had planned, with* out self-deceiving optimism, against the annihilation of Musa Dag^ from all four quarters of the globe. But one danger- spot had so far escaped their calculations. And so, shortly be- fore sunset on the following day, it was just this quarter that delivered an irreparable onslaught the effects of which were never to be made good. That day the work was going better and better, if only because the sun was overcast. It refrained from slanting its grilling rays across the bent backs of these poor robots, and no one was forced to seek shelter. But al- though the sun was covered, there was not a cloud in the whole sky, nor was it any cooler than yesterday. The air was saturated in some composition of dreary mist some hog-wash rinsings of the universe, surrounding the world like an un- clean conscience; instead of the blazing heat sultriness lay mountainous over all things. The sea was glassy; from time to time a hot puff of wind came from the west, without ever rippling its firm surface. Yet, for all its heavy immobility, from midday onwards surf kept leaping upon the rocks, widi more strength, more suppressed anger, each minute. The work- ers, their minds fast set on their own care and labour, had paid no heed to the evil squintings of the sky. So that the sud- den deluge fully achieved its aim. Four, five gusts of rattling wind, like a short ultimatum of war. The whole Damlayik— every rock, every tree, every myrtle and rhododendron busl^ became alert with terror. A terrific thunder-clap — ^war waa declared! And already this southern storm, bristling with flashes, and itself as swift as any lightning, swept on to the attack, enveloping all things in its stifling thicknesses of dust. Mats, coverlets, beds, cushions, white sheets, headkerchiefs, pots and jugs, lamps, heavy things, lig^t things, clattered and
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nniicd port oite aocMlier, were upset, catig^ up^ and swept away^-llK peo^ lifting up their voices, phased malevcdendy fugitive gear, ran into one another’s arms, trod one another’s goods into the soil. This noise of assault drowned the wailing voices of many babes, who had all seemed to sense the deeper meaning of this celestial thrashing on their first day. Almost at once this mad chase of vanishing possessions was cast to earth by such a hailstorm as few among these mountaineers could remember. After vain efforts to stand up to it; many lay down flat on the steaming earth, offering their backs to the bastinadoing skies. They bit the ground. They longed to perish. A sudden shout— the munition dumpl But luckily Gabriel Bagradian had had the cartridges moved into the sheikh’s tent, while Chaush Nurhan had found means for keeping the loose gunpowder dry. Provisions! came the second thought. The men rushed shouting to the grain depot. Too late! The flat cakes were reduced to a sticky mass, the loaves to eviscerated sponges. All the meal-sacks steamed hke slaking lime. This destruction was a very serious matter. Most of the salt had melted into the ground. Many began to think of that ageold threat, that on Judgment Day a man shall pick up with his eyelids whatever salt he has spilt during his life. This disaster made them cease to struggle. Drenched to their skins, whipped with hailstones, they huddled on the marshy earth, indifferent to the deluging clouds which poured down swathes an inch thick. Not even their women complained and yammered. Everyone wrapped himself up in brooding soli' tude, nursing unutterable wrath against Ter Haigasun and the Council, who had this food depot on their consciences, this thrice-accursed order to give up stores. Nothing so much re- lieves the pent-up breast of a human being as to make indi- viduals responsible for a natural disaster and heap reproaches. Ncm: did ^e glowering folk on the Damlayik consider, till long after this, that disaster was in no way the result of Ter Haigasun’s command to deliver supplies, since in private hands
it would have been just as impossible to rescue them. In the minds of these peasants Heaven seemed, by this punishment^ to make manifest its wrathful dislike of communal ownership, its championship of private property. The converted mukhtars, with squinting Thomas Kebussyan at their head, relapsed at once to their first persuasion. They mingled their growls with the reproaches which now assailed the priest from every side.
Ter Haigasun, as the rain ceased, stood with bent head, confronting their fierce hostility, his cassock clinging to his body, the drops pouring off his beard. Bread and Hour were utterly spoiled. The priest could not escape the terrible question why God, within the space of ten minutes, should have thought fit to confound the human reckonings of innocent and persecuted men. And this before the end of their first day on Musa Dagh! The sun sank in )agged mountains of crimson, obhvious of the whole incident. Birds sang on till the last in- stant of light, as though they were making up for lost time. All the humans had been struck dumb. Men, women, chil- dren, wandered half naked past one another. Housewives tied ropes between the trees and hung up the dripping clothes to dry. Nobody wanted to sit on the ground, though, before the moon was up, this thirsty soil had sucked in its last gout of moisture. None the less the campfire would not burn, since thick drops still clung to the logs and faggots. Single families squatted, bunched together, turning ill-tempered backs on their next-door neighbours. They must manage to sleep on the bare earth, since mattresses, coverlets, cushions could not pos- sibly be dry till tomorrow night. But they slept in heaps. In misfortune one body needed another to touch, each grief tc make quite certain of its neighbour.
Pastor Aram Tomasian sat in an observation post which th< scouts’ division had set up in the branches of a very wide and shady oak. From this point one could get a clear view of thi church square and village street of the large village of Bitiai
Tlte pastor had borrowed Bagradian's field-glass, so that the dust-swept square and road were clearly visible. Nokhudian’s band of Protestants stood in marching order, outside the church. There seemed a surprising number of them; many of his co-religionists must secretly have gone over to Nokhudian. Surprise at finding every nest of Armenians empty as far as Bitias may have caused the mudirand the police chief to hold back their convoy from Saturday to this present Sunday. Saptiehs were scurrying in and out, brandishing their truncheons or guns. Impossible to. make out exactly which. A distant zigzag of tiny shapes. Perhaps the gendarmes were al- ready striking right and left But no sounds of pain or rage drifted so far. Distance had toned down any horror to a framed, faintly animated miniature. Tomasian had to make a conscious efiort to realize that this was not a puppet-show which he watched so detachedly through the round end of his glass, but his own destiny. He might tell himself again and again that he had escaped from among the outcasts who down there m the dust-clouds of the valley were setting forth on their road to death, only to prolong his own earthly life by a few days. Up here, among oak leaves, the shade was so pleasant. Rest and comfort filled him from top to toe. The reality of that horror below him was being dispersed in tiny movements, which teased the eye, but left the heart more indifferent than any dream. Pastor Tomasian started, as he realized his own cold-hearted guilt. Down there was his place, and not up here! He thought of the mission house in Marash. The Reverend Mr. Woodley, sent him by God to test his heart, posed again his enigmatic quesuon: “Can you help those children by dying with them?” The trap was set. But later, over there in Bitias, he had let slip his chance a second time, of adding to the pains by which he must bear witness to Christ.
It was a long, a painfully long while, before the convoy, with his old, yet so much juster brother in God, Nokhudian, began to move ofi. And the freckled mudir seemed c<;rtainly to have
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tnade a few concessions. A line of sumpter mules walked in the train, the rear of which was even facing followed by two carts, their high wheels jolting through the dust-cloud. Pastor Aram saw what he had seen so often in those last seven days in Zeitun: a sick, worming line of human beings, feeble to the point of extinction; a blackish caterpillar, with tremulous feelers, bristles, and tiny feet, winding its piteous length through the landscape, without ever seeming to advance. This mortally wounded, forsaken insect seemed to seek in vain for a place to hide in, among the open windings of the valley. Its peristaltic back thrust forward the foremost sections of its body, drawing the rear ones painfully after it. So that deep notches kept bemg formed, and often the creeping insect got split up into several parts which, urged by scarcely visible tor- menters, grew jaggedly together, as best they might, to break once more when the join had scarcely healed. It was not the wriggle, it was the twitching death throes, of a worm, a last, writhing, stretching, convulsive shudder, as though already carrion flies were creeping up to the open wound.
It seemed almost to be a miracle that, httle by little, a gap should form between this worm and the last houses of the village, through which it dragged so unbearably slow a way, “They have several pregnant women,” Aram reflected. The m- stant thought of Hovsannah weighed on his heart. By various signs it was apparent that his wife was very near her time. Nothing had been done, or could have been done, to help her. So that his first child would be born as roughly as any beast on Musa Dagh. Bad as this was, a deep presentiment burdened Tomasian still more heavily — a fear lest this child in its mother’s womb should have to suffer for his sin. He lowered his field-glass and, suddenly giddy, clung with both arms to the solid prongs of the fork within which he was sitting. When, after a while, he looked again, the mimature in the telescope had changed. Now the worm was wrigg ling on through Azir, the silk village. And a party of saptiehs had de-
tached itsdf and was marching north-east, away firom Bhias, towards Kebussiye. Pastor Aram sent instant warning to head* quarters. The danger soon passed. The saptiehs did not whed in the direction of the Nor^ Saddle of the Damlayik, but dis* appeared up the rising ground at the foot of the valley. They were on the wrong track, thanks to Nokhudian. The country lay quiet. A few hundred Moslems were prowling the squares and streets of empty villages — ^mohajirs from the north*west^ brought by the scent of booty, and the native riffraff of the plain. This scum still seemed not to have possession of the houses. Perhaps some government order had dulled its ap* petite. These gentry buzzed, hke indolent horseflies, along the streets. The saptieh detachment was lost to sight, eastwards, down a side valley, before it bad come as far as Kebussiye-* another proof of how it had been outwitted. The sudden hope — ^perhaps we'll be left in peace for days . . . perhaps the Turks will leave Musa Dagh on their left for ever.
Pastor Aram jumped down from his spying-post. Wood- cutters’ hatchets rang out on every side, in the dark groves. If he had not been able to prove himself God’s priest, let him at least prove himself God’s soldier. He almost ran the whole way bade into camp, in his haste not to miss an instant’s duty.
The camp looked incredibly industrious. Long lines of bur- dened donkeys, piled high with heavy loads of oak branches, ' nodded past young Tomasian. Great stones for laying founda- tions were being trundled by on wheelbarrows. Father Tomas- ian’s assistants were measuring out streets with lines of cord and marking off the spaces for the huts. Already, here and there, there had arisen the vague scaffolding of a hutment. Families competed in speed. Children, and even the very old, worked beside the strongest men and women. The “pub- lic buildings” were already surprisingly far advanced — the hospital-tent, under Bedros Altouni’s supervision, and the big granary. But Father Tomasian in person supervised the gov-
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BrffflMsnt barrack, a work, on which he had set his heart. It covered a wide space, with two side-cabins, provided with doors that could lx locked.
Meanwhile Juliette had installed herself in Three-Tent Square. Gabriel had expressly begged her to think of nothing and of nobody but herself, not even of him. He had brought up the matter for discussion at a Council sitting: “My wife has the right to lead her own life, even up here, on the Dam- layik. She must live here just as she chooses. We others are of the same blood and so arc subject to laws on which we’ve all of us decided. But she remains outside our laws. She’s French —the child of a more fortunate people, although she’s com- pelled by fate to share our dangers. And therefore she has the right to our most generous hospitality.”
All the members of the Council of Leaders had responded to Bagradian’s appeal. The three tents exclusively reserved for Juliette, the heaps of luggage, her special kitchen and separate household, her tinned food, her two Dutch cows, bought by Avetis the younger— all these exceptional posses- sions and special privileges would have to be made acceptable to the people. Gabriel had indeed given orders that most of the milk was to be distributed among the children of the camp, with whatever else could be spared from Juliette’s kitchen. But these were very minor concessions, which left her still a highly privileged person.
Enemies, or ill-disposed friend^ to demonstrate the gap be- tween precept and practice, needed only to point to Juliette’s luxury when Gabrid urged the necessity for a careful shanng- out of supplies. They could not have denied that their leader did not sleep in a tent, but at his post; that he drew the samr; rations as all his men; that his property had gone into the general pool and been of the greatest advantage to the com- munity— however, it remained equally undeniable rbat, for Juliette’s sake, he withheld a great many luxuries from the common stock. This discrepancy might foster dangerous con-
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fficts. But at present none of the leaders seemed to be thinking anything of the kmd.
And yet, not an hour before, the mayor of Yoghonoluk had had to submit to an acid lecture from his wife on the subjea of Three-Tent Square. Wasn’t sh^ the pupil of the Missionary Sisters at Marash, as much a lady as this Frenchwoman? Was she so very much beneath her that she had to live, just like all the common village women, in a wretched hut made of branches^ And was he, her husband, Thomas Kebussyan, really such a poor httle worm that now there was no differ- ence between him and any beggarly Dikran or Mikael, whereas the difference was so immense between him and that inflated Bagradian? These wifely exhortations ended m Kebussyan’s slyly contriving that he and his family should not have to live in a draughty hut, but in a spacious log-house, especially built for them, close to the altar. That no bad blood might be caused by this stately edifice, the mukhtar had made up his mind to hang out a sign over the door, with the inscription “Town Hall.” So that, remembering his intended ruse, he nodded approvingly to Bagradian’s appeal on behalf of Juhette.
Ter Haigasun looked Gabnel full in the face before lower- ing his eyes, as he always did when he was speaking: “Gabriel Bagradian, we ail hope your wife may escape, even if sooner or later the rest of us perish. May she say a good word for ^ us to the French.”
Juliette lived in one of the two hunting-tents. She had asked Hovsannah and Iskuhi to share the second. Hovsannah, in sombre anxiety, awaited her child. In the sheikh-pavilion, half of which was used for stores and luggage, there were three beds. Stephan slept in one, the second belonged to Samuel Avakian, who, however, as staff-officer and adjutant, always passed his nights within reach of Bagradian. Smee the latter had curtly renounced all comfortable living, Juhette placed the third bed in the sheikh-tent at Gonzague Maris’s disposal She < under some obligation to that young man h>r the very
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discreet homage with which he surrounded her, especisdly in these last, trying days. He had saved Gabriel’s h&. Also he was the one European, besides herself, on the Damlayik. There were many moments when this bond between them grew so intense that they eyed each other like conspirators, prisoners in the same jail. Jidiette felt a dangerous inclination to slack- ness. Gonzague was still dressed out of a bandbox. She came upon him sometimes unawares, brushmg a suit, with scru- pulous care, outside the tent, sewing on a button, pohshing shoes. His nails were always clean, his hands well cared for; he shaved, in contrast to Gabriel, every day. Yet this scrupu- lous care of himself suggested no particular vanity, seemed rather to be an active dislike of whatever was soiled or ill defined. A spot on his clothes, mud on his shoes, would cause Gonzague real unhappiness. It was as though by nature he could not tolerate anything fusty or half unconscious, as though, if he were to live at all, it must all be raised into the light of a clear purpose of his own. This meticulous approach to life, which refused to give way before any circumstance, impressed Juliette. All the less intelligible, therefore, Gon- zague’s plaad decision to share the death of a set of foreigners.
Once, when he had not been near her all day, she routed him out: “Have you begun to write your descriptive articles?”
He watched her, surprised, and yet half quizzical. “I never take notes. My memory is my only real asset. I shan’t need to save a few smudged papers.”
The young man’s cocksureness annoyed her. “It remains to be seen if you’ll manage to save your head — ^memory and all.”
He answered with a short laugh; really he was expressing a deep conviction: “You don’t surely imagine, Juliette, that Turkish soldiers, or anything else, could prevent my leaving this if I really wanted to?”
Both this and the tone in which he said it displeased Juliette. This decisive biding of his time which Gonzague so often let her see in him rep^ed her. But there were other moments at
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which he could seem as lost as a stray child. Then a motherly pity would well up in her. And it did her good.
Near Three-Tent Square, beyond the beeches, Kristaphor and Missak had set up a table with benches. This nook was as charmi ngly peaceful as though it had been the remote corner of a garden with alleys all round it, not part of an inaccessible mountain camp. Here of an afternoon sat Juliette, with Iskuhi and Hovsannah, receiving her guests.
Usually these callers were the same as those who had fre- quented Villa Bagradian. Krikor was a regular visitor, and the teachers, whenever they happened to be off duty. Hapeth Shatakhian did his uttermost, as he expressed it, “to delight Madame by the purity of his French conversation.” But Oskan- lan had ceased to appear as the maestro of poetry and callig- raphy; he was now a fierce and impassioned warrior. For “afternoon calls” he still always wore his grey “milord’s” morning-coat; under it he had slung his trench-knife to a belt, out of which the butt of a saddle-pistol fearsomely lowered. He would neither lay aside his weapons nor remove his martial lambskin kepi.
Juliette “received” not only gentlemen; the wives of the notables also frequented her. Mairik Antaram, the doctor’s lady, came in whenever she had the time; the mukhtar’s wife, Madame Kebussyan, less frequently, though when she did her alert curiosity was insatiable. Madame Kebussyan insisted onr seeing all there was to see. Almost vuth tears in her eyes she begged Juliette to show her the inside of the sheikh’s pavilion — the rubber tubs, the dinner-sets, the furniture which could be taken to bits, the expensive cabin-trunks. With the deepest, most prescient emotion, she stuck her nose into chests of sup- plies, airing her opinions on sardine-tins, patent foods, soap, and sugar. Juliette could manage to rid herself of this worthy lady, whose quick, mouse eyes ferreted in and out of every corner, only by offering her gifts out of the stores, a tin of food, a cake of chocolate. Then Madame Kebussyan’s thanks, and
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promises of fiddity to her £ri£hd, exceeded even hei^ praise of all these good things.
Mairik Antaram, on the other hand, never came without bringing a small gift, a pot of honey, a cake of “apricot- leatbtf,” that reddish brown fruit preserve, indispensable to the Armenian breakfast table. She bestowed her gift secretly. “When they’re gone, djanik, little soul— you eat this. It’s good. You shan’t have to go without things while you’re with us.”
But often Mairik Antaram would look very sadly at Juliette, through her fearless, and never self-pitying, eyes: “If only you’d stayed at home, my prettyl”
IsKUHi Tomasian saw less of Juliette on the Damlayik than she had in the villa in Yoghonoluk. She had asked Ter Haig- asun to use her as assistant schoolteacher, and the priest had welcomed the suggesuon.
Juliette scorned this resolve: “Why, my dear, when we’d just begun to make you really well again, do you want to go off and work yourself to shreds? Whatever for? Placed as we are, it seems ridiculous.”
Juliette was still in the strangest relationship to Iskuhi. She seemed, by dint of the many acts of kindness which she had shown her from the very first, to have conquered, one after the other, both that stubborn shyness and eagerness to be of use, behind which the real Iskuhi was hiding. Iskuhi had even shown signs of shyly returning this affection. When they said good-morning or good-night, she would put her arms round this elder friend. But Juliette could feel distincdy that these tendresses were mere imitations, adjustments, just as in speak- ing a foreign language we may offen use its idioms without really knowing their shade of meamng. Iskuhi’s hardness, the centre crystal of her being, that whi^ was for ever strange in her, remained untouched by all endearments. And it cannot be denied that Juliette suffered at this soul’s impregnability, since every wound inflicted on her sense of power seemed to
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infect her whole estimate of herself. Even this business of ‘^teaching school” meant a defeat for her.
Now Iskuhi spent many hours a day on what was known as the “School Slope," far removed from Three-Tent Square. There was a big blackboard, an abacus, a map of the Ottoman empire, and quantities of spelling books and readers. Several hundred benches. A whole army squatted, sat, or lay in the shade of a clearing, filling the air with shrill sparrow chirrup- ings. Since usually the whole male teaching-staff was on duty in the trenches or in camp, Iskuhi would often be left for hours at the mercy of rampaging brats. To keep order, or even establish peace, among four- to twelve-year-old savages was impossible. Iskuhi had not the strength to take up the struggle. Soon she would cease to hear her own voice and wait, resigned, for the arrival of some trusty male pedagogue, say Oskaman, to scare the little devils to wan submission. That teacher, iron militarist that he was, strode in among them rifle in hand, since by military law he had now the right to shoot them all for insubordination in the field. The switch he carried, in addition to ail his other accoutrements, swished round the shoulders of guilty and innocent indiscriminately. One unlucky group was put to kneel on pointed stones, an- other to stand for fifteen minutes with heavy objects held above its heads. After which Oskanian would leave his female sub-/ ordinate to enjoy the fruits of his pedagogic method — a deathly silence.
Juliette saw at once that these strenuous efforts were very bad for Iskuhi’s looks. Her checks had begun to lose their colour, her face was peaked, her eyes as huge as when she had first emerged from the hell of the convoy. And Juliette strove with all her might to rid Iskuhi’s heart of its zeal for duty. She only managed to shock and puzzle her. How, in this crisis of her whole people, could she shirk so absurdly easy a task? On the contraryl She wanted more work for the af^- noons. Juliette turned her back on her.
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At present Juliette spent half the day lying on her bed. The narrow tent stifled her. Two pestering sunbeams forced their way through chinks in the canvas door. She had not the energy to get up and cover them. “I shall be ill,” she hoped. “Oh, if I were only ill already.” Her pounding heart threat- ened to burst, with unassuageablc longings — ^longings for Ga- briel. But not for the present Gabriel — no! For Gabriel the — Paristen, that sensitive, gentle, and considerate Gabriel, whose tact had always made her forget the things which are not to be bridged over. She longed for the Gabriel of the Avenue Kleber, in their sunny flat, sitting down good-temperedly to lunch. Her distant world enveloped her in its sounds: its hoot- ing cars, the subterranean rattle of the Metro, its delicious, chattering bustle; the scents of its familiar shops. She buried her face in the pillow, as though it were the one thing left, the one handsbreadth of home that remained to her. She was seeking herself in its odorous softness, striving with all her senses to hold fast to these fugitive memories of Paris. But she did not succeed. Rotating splotches of sunbeam forced them- selves in, between closed lids. Coloured disks with, in the centre of each, a piercing eye — eyes that reproached and suf- fered, forcing themselves in on her from all sides; Gabriel’s and Stephan’s Armenian eyes, which would not let go of her. When she looked up, the eyes were really bending over her, in the wildly bearded face of a strange man. She stared in alarm at Gabriel. He seemed remote, his nights all spent out of doors, the reek of damp earth clinging to him. His voice was the hurried voice of a man between two urgent duties.
“Arc you all right, cherie.? Nothing you want.? I’ve just looked in to see how you’re getting on.”
“I’m all right — thank you.”
She offered him a dream-enveloped hand. For a while he sat next her, saying nothing, as though there was nothing they could discuss. Then he stood up.
But she sat up irritably. “Do you really think me so empty,
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so materialist, that you only ever need worry about externals?”
He did not und^and at once. She sobbed: “I can’t go on living like this.”
He turned back with a very serious face. “I quite see you can’t bve like this, Juliette. One just can’t live in a commu- nity, when one puts oneself entirely apart from it. You ought to do something. Go into the camp, try to help. Be humanl”
“It’s not my community.”
“Nor mine as much as you seem to imagine, Juliette. We belong far less to what we’ve come from than to what we’re doing our best to reach.”
“Or not to reach,” she wept.
When he had gone, Juliette pulled herself together. Perhaps he was right. It really couldn’t go on like this. She begged Mairik Antaram to ask the doaor to let her work in the hos- pital hut. The thought that a thousand Frenchwomen were doing the same, at that very minute, for their wounded, helped her to come to this decision. At first the old doctor jibbed, then he accepted her. Juliette, that very same day, made her first appearance in the hut (it was still in process of being built) suitably attired in coif and apron. There were luckily very few cases of serious illness on the Damlayik. One or two fever patients swathed in rags lay on mats and cushions, still stiff with damp from the recent storm. They were mostly very old people. Grey, mysterious faces, already half out of th^ world. “Not my sort,” felt Juhettc, with a certain pity, a vast repugnance. She could see how unsuited she was to such works of mercy. It was as though she had been lifted above herself. She had all the available bedding brought from the tents— anything she could possibly spare.
Till midday, the fourth of August passed like the days that had preceded it. When in the early morning Gabriel scanned the vall^ with his field-glass, the villages looked quiet and deserted. It seemed almost a permissible thought that every-
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would 'work oat smoothly, world peace be siguedi, aa4 die return to normal life secured for them. So th a t, he left hb <d)servatioa post in quite a hopeful frame of mind, and went on from sector to sector on a surprise inspection of the work and discipline of the decads. Towards midday, entirely satis* fled, he returned to his own headquarters. A few minutes later scouts came running in from all sides. Report: a big dust-cloud on the road from Antioch to Suedia — ^lots and lots of soldiers —in four detachments— behind them sapdehs and a big crowd of peoplel . . . They were just turmng into the valley and already marching through Wakef, the first village. Gabriel dashed to the nearest observadon post and established the fol- lowing: the column of march of an infantry company at war strength was on its way down the village street. He recog- nized them at once as regulars, from the mounted captain who led them, and the fact that they were marching in four pla- toons, which seemed almost able to keep in step. They came swaying onwards. They must therefore be trained, and perhaps even front-line troops, garrisoned in the barracks of Antakiya, part of Jemal Pasha’s newly conditioned army. About two hundred sapdehs dribbled along, far behind the company, while the scum of the plains, the human dregs of Antioch, raised its dust on either side of this column of march. The advance of so war-like a condngent of nearly four hundred rifles, including the saptiehs, was carried out in such God- forsaken indifierence to exposure through this open country that Gabriel was inchned for a tune to think that these troops had another objeedve. Only when the column, after a short pause and oflicers’ consultadon, moved forward north-west, behind Bitias, into the mountains, was it quite certain that this was a campaign against the villagers. The Turks seemed to imagine that they were doing policemen’s work, less dan- gerous even than the usual hunt for deserters— that all they would have to do would be to surround an unarmed encamp- ment of miserable villagers, smoke them out, and herd them
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into the valley. For such a task they must have felt super]** tively strong, as indeed they wne, when one considers that the Armenians only had a hundred good rifles, scarcely any muni- tions, and few trained men. By the time they were in Yog- hpnoluk, Gabriel had sounded the major shtm, practised daily with his decads and the camp. The munadirs, the drum- mers, gathered together the Town Enclosure. The orderly group of the cohort of youth went darting all over the moun- tain plateau with orders to the section-leaders. A few of these lads even ventured down into the valley, to find out the forma- tion and movements of the eiumy. Ter Haigasun, the seven mukhtars, the elder members of die council, stayed with the people, in the centre of the camp, as had been arranged. No one dared to breathe. Even babes m arms seemed to stifle their wailings. Reservists, armed with axes, mattocks, and spades, encircled the camp in a wide nng, to be ready in case they were wanted. Gabriel stood with Chaush Nurhan and the other leaders. The whole event had been foreseen.
But, since this was a first enwunter, and no other point was directly menaced, he emptied his supports of all but their most necessary defenders, and threw every decad at his dis- posal into the trenches of the North Saddle. The system had four lines. First and foremost the main trench, which blocked the entrance to the Damlayik, on the uneven summit of th^, left slope of the Saddle. A few hundred yards behind it th2 sebond trench, dug along very uneven ground. On the frontal side of slope, beyond the trenches, flank-protection, with thrust out sniping-posts. Finally, on the side facing the sea, the bar- ricades, luckily too high to see across, of jagged limestone rock.
-About two hundred, armed with the best rifles and, it was to be hoped, the best of the fighters, manned the front-line trench. Bagradian himself was to lead them. Nor had he allowed Sarkis Kilikian, or any other deserter, into this garri- son. Men from carefully picked decads were placed under
Chaus^ Nurhan, in the lodc barricades. Another two hun«dred stood in the second trench, ready in case things should go badly. Every Rghter received three sets of five cartridges — only fifteen bullets apiece.
Bagradian insisted: “Not one unnecessary bullet. Even if the fighting lasts three days, you’ve all got to make your three cartridge-clips do. Save— or we’re done for. And— listen care- fully — this is the most important thing of all. No one to open fire without my orders. All keep your eye on me. We must let the Turks, who won’t even know we’re there, come on, till they’re ten paces off us. And then — aim steadily at the head, and fire steadily. And now, keep thinking of all the horrible things they’ve done to us. And of nothing else.”
Gabriel’s heart, as he said it, beat so hard that his voice shook. He had to pull himself together to prevent their notic- ing. It was more than any excitement of coming battle; it was the clear knowledge of this crazy, monstrous defiance of the forces of a world-army by a handful of half-trained men. There was not a trace in him of hatred. He awaited an impersonal enemy, no longer the Turk, no longer Enver, Talaat, the police chief, the mudir— simply “the enemy,” whom one slaughters without hate.
And, as Bagradian felt, so did ail the rest. Tension seemed to have stopped their very heartbeats when the boys came crawl- ing back out of the thickets and, with wild gestures, an- nounced the near approach of the Turks. This excitement froze at once to a glacial calm as the sound of infantry boots came nearer, over crackhng twigs, with bursts of most im- prudent noise, without any presacnce of danger in it. Little by little, puffing from the climb, their column of march broken up, the Turkish soldiers approached the Saddle. The captain in charge seemed quite persuaded that this was a job for the police. Otherwise he would surely not have neglected the most obvious precautionary measures, the basic tactical prin- ciples for a force in enemy country. Unshielded by any patrols,
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advance guard, flank or rear protection, a disordered swarm of laughing, gossiping, smoking infantrymen had come strag> gling up, to collect on the ridge, and get their breaths after the climb.
Chaush Nurhan crawled to Bagradian, down the trench, and tried, in a sharp, loud whisper, to persuade him to at- tack, surround the Turks, and cut them oif. But Gabriel, clenching his teeth, merely put a hand over Nurhan’s mouth, and pushed him away. Their captain, a stout, good-looking man, had taken oif his lambskin kepi, with the half-moon, and was dabbing up the sweat that streamed down his forehead. His heutenants collected round him. They stood disputing over a sketch-map, all arguing^ in rather unsoldierly fashion, as to the probable hiding-place of the wasps’ nest. Fiery eter- nities for Bagradian. The puffing captain would not so much as take the trouble to chmb the highest point and survey the terrain. At last he ordered his bugler to sound the “faU-in,” in several strident repetmons, no doubt in order to put the fear of Allah into cringing Armenians. The four lines formed up two deep, in extended order, as if on a barrack-square. The corporals dashed in front of the men and reported to the officers. A lieutenant drew his sword to report to the captain.
Gabriel took a good look at this captain’s face. It was not an unpleasant one. It was a broad, friendly face, in gold- rimmed pince-nez, planted well up the nose. Now the cap^ tain, too, was drawing his sword and, in a high, weak voic^ giving his order: "Fix bayonets.” A clatter of nfles. The cap- tain twirled his sword once round his head, before thrusting its point towards the ridge of the Armenian Saddle. “First and second platoons, in extended order— follow me.” The senior lieutenant pointed his sword in the opposite direction: “Third and fourth platoons, in extended order— follow me.” So that |he Turks were not even certam whether the fugitives had en- camped on the Damlayik or the northern heights of Musa Dagh. The Armenians stood breast-high in their trenches.
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The throwa*up escaipe ia frcmt ^ them, ia the cloti «£ wihii^ thejr rested guns, had been fully camouflaged, as had also the lines of visibility, hewn out in the undergitmth and knee-high grass which strewed the inchne. In ragged extended order the unwitung Turks toiled up the height The first-line trench was so brilliandy masked that it would have been per- ceptible only from a much higher observation point; a point winch, however, did not exist except in the tallest tree-tops of the counter-slope. Gabriel raised his hand, and drew all eyes in his direction.
I The Turks were making slow progress through the under- growth. The captain had ht a fresh cigarette. Suddenly he started and stopped. What was the meaning of that turned-up soil, over there? It was still a few seconds before it flashed upon him — that’s a trench. And it still seemed to him so incredible that again he delayed, before he shouted: “Get downi Take cover!’’ Too late. The first shot was already fired, and indeed before Bagradian’s hand had dropped for it. The Armenians fired reflectively, one after another, without exatement. They had time to aim. Each of them knew that not one cartridge must be wasted. And since their victims, rigid with surprise, were suU only .a few paces off them, not one bullet missed its mark. The stout captain with the good-natured face shouted again: “Down! Take cover.” Then he looked up in amaze- ment at the sky, and sat on the ground. His glasses tumbled off, before he sank over on his side. Disciphne suddenly broke in the Turkish ranks. The men, shouting wildly, ran down the sbpe again, leaving dead and wounded, among whom were the captain, a corporal, and -three onbashis. Gabriel did not fire. Suddenly he felt raised sJjove the earth. Reality around him had grown as unreal as it always is, in its truest essence.
The Turks took a long time to collect themselves. Their officers and non-coms had a hard job to hold up the retreat. They had to chivvy back their protesting men with blows from the flats of their swords and rifle-butte. Meanwhile, the two
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tanks bad tsdEca no &mvere advanced. But, instead of first discovering a practical line of attack, these riflemen sought thdr cover haphazard, behind bushes and blocks of stone, without the vaguest inkling of an Armenian trench almost under their rifles. A mad shower of spattering bullets was released from behind bushes and dwarf shrubs, which did the trench not the slightest damage. Only now and again did a stray shot ping over the heads of the defenders.
Gabriel sent an order down the trench: “Don’t shoot. Take good cover. Wait till they come back.”
At the same time he sent word to his flank positions; anyone daring to fire a shot, or even so much as show his face, would be punished as a traitor. No Turk must have the smallest sus- picion of the presence of any flank protection. The Armenian slope seemed as dead and empty as ever. It looked as though all its defenders had succumbed to the fierce peppering of the Turks. After an hour of this savage wasting of munitions, the company, four madly daring extended lines of it, attempted a fresh assault. The Armenians, now surer than ever of them- selves, again allowed them to come up close before they again opened fire: a fire far worse, far bloodier, than the last. Now the non-commissioned officers found it impossible to keep control of a wild retreat. In an instant the whole Saddle was swept clear. Only the cursing of wounded came out of the bushes. A few Armenians were about to climb out of their trenches when Gabriel shouted to them that no one had had orders to leave his post.
After a while some Turkish stretcher-bearers gingerly ad- vanced between the trees and began to wave a red-moon flag. Gabriel sent Chaush Nurhan a few steps out to them. He beckoned them nearer; then he bellowed: “You can take away your dead and wounded. Rifles, munitions, packs, cartridge- belts, bread-rations, uniforms, and boots to be left here.”
Upon which, under the threat of barrels turned on them, the stretcher-bearers were forced to undress each corpse, and
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leave all this, in untidy heaps. Then, when they had cleared away these victims— it took a long time, because they had always to keep coming back — all the fighters, including Chaush Nurhan, were o£ opinion that the attack had been routed, and that no further attempt need be feared. Gabriel did not heed these deceptive voices. He ordered Avakian to collect the nimblest lads among the scouts and some of his own group of orderlies. These were sent out to collect the plundered stores and scramble back behind the line with them. He picked out the slipperiest of his spies. They were to follow the com- panies and watch their movements very closely. Even before the orderlies finished collecting, Haik, a youngster not much older than Stephan, was already back with his report. Some of the Turks were climbing the mountain, farther north, at a place where there was nothing for them to find.
This could only be an attempt at envelopment from the coast side. So much was clear not only to Gabriel, but to Chaush Nurhan and aU the rest. Gabriel deputed his command to his most reliable decad commander, and left the trench, taking Nurhan with him. They clrnibed up to the men posted among the rocks and itching to fight. The natives of Musa Dagh knew every stone, every jutting ledge, every grotto, bush, and aloe of this bare, indented, hmestone promontory, below which, three or four hundred feet to the sea, the jagged cliff fell sheer, or in ledges. This knowledge was of incal- culable advantage against troops who could not find their way here, no matter how much the stronger these might be. Bagradian left it to his mountaineers to dispose themselves so cunningly in the crevices and behind rocks that communica- tion was kept intact and there would be no danger of one re- ceiving the other’s fire. Their task was the same as that of the others — ^to lure the enemy on to destruction by means o£ complete invisibility and absolute quiet.
But this time the enemy was more alert. He advanced his main force slowly along the counter-slope, facing the Saddle
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and opened fire at the very edge of the wood, well-protected by trees. It was a fire at once vehement and nervous, directed against the main .trench, but, as before, not answered by its defenders. And, during this, announced by scouts, a patrol of four men advanced, very gingerly indeed, among the rocks. It was evident that these were not mountain-dwellers. They came stumbling on across the stones, ducking their way from cover to cover. They reconnoitred very carefully, looked into every hole, behind every ledge. The Armenians saw with relish that they were saptiehs. The soldiers were strangers. But the saptiehsi Now was the moment to pay back in some of its own coin this lowest -by-product of militarism, these bestial skunks, valiant in their dealings with old women, scared of a man, until they had disarmed him three times. Gabriel noticed a crazy ghnt in many eyes.
The onbashi of the saptiehs must have imagined that he was already past the line of entrenchments, and so in the rear of the Armenians. Noiselessly he sent back one of his men, who began to signal with a red flag. It was sull some time before this enveloping force came slowly on, at a stumbling, ever-retreating pace, as though they were advancing through boiling water. This group was half infantrymen, half saptiehs. Urged by its officers, it reached the place to which the onbashi had already reconnoitred the ground. Then, at a moment when most of them were without cover, the Armenians opened fire, from all sides. They leapt about in scurrying confusion. They forgot their rifles. The Turk, the Anatolian especially, is a good soldier. But this attack seemed to come from nowhere. Not even the brave knew how to defend themselves. By the time the Armenians dashed out from their hiding holes and among their rocks, the air was thick with groans and yelps of pain. With Chaush Nurhan at their head they at once drove in a wedge between saptiehs and infantry. Of the first a num- ber were cut off, and driven outwards, towards the clifk. They got lost among the inexorable rocks, and cringed help-
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les^y against the stone waiting for a huH^ or remained det* perately caught, clinging to the thorny acanthus plants. Many began to shp, turned head over heels, and bounced from rock to rock, like balls, before they went hurthng into the sea. But the main body of the Turks tried to escape from amid this rocky confusion by the shortest cut, and leapt, stumbled, rushed towards the Saddle, chased by the mountaineers.
These were no longer sane. Unintclhgible, throaty growls came out of them as they tracked this enemy. Gabrid himself had long since lost the clear-headedness of a leader, was the wild prey of some intoxication, a crazy rhythm come suddenly to life in his blood that had slumbered a thousand years. He, too, let out these short, slavering sounds, a savage speech which, if he had been conscious, would have horrified him. Now the world was a hundred times more impalpable. It was nothing I Less solid than the humming of a dragonfly. It was a reddish, skipping ballet, in which the dancer could feel no pain. Pastor Aram Tomasian, who had been one of the fight- ers among the rocks, was swept along by the same madness. He, like a crusader brandishing a crucifix, howled: “Christ^ Christ!” But the warrior-Christ of his battle-cry had very httlc indeed in common with that stern, suffering Lord, by whose Testament the pastor as a rule strove to guide his days. Oddly, these shouts of “Christ” brought Gabriel back to his senses with a jerk. He began to observe the fight, but as though he himself were not engaged in it, much less its commander.
This noise of a battle among the rocks was the signal for the Turkish firing-line, on the edge of the wood along the counter-slope, to advance in a frontal attack. They came out in extended hnes, shooung at nothing, threw themselves tin the ground, shot in the air again, sprang up again, ran on a few steps, and then ducked down. At just this minute the last of the routed, would-be envelopers had been driven out from among the rocks. Therefore their pursuers’ fire took the at- tacking lines in the fl ank .
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Oabrid stood on a todc, but did not shoot He watched one et the Turkish lieutenants intercept a disordered group to rally a delence around it The line was already flinging its^ down to open fire. But Chaush Nurhan sprang at the Turkish offi- cer, and felled him with a crack of his rifle-butt The Turks threw away their guns, as though they had just seen the devil, and indeed the old sergeant was not unhke him. He let them see what a perfect soldier the Turkish infantry had lost His face was purple. His huge grey moustache bristled wildly. He had not even a hoarse crow left in his throat. He did not seem in the least to realize that he must take cover or be shot down. Sometimes he stopped, to raise his bugle and force out of it a long, jerky call, whose ferocity had its effect on both friend and enemy.
When Bagradian saw that the Turks were trying to turn their front towards the rocks, he swung his rifle round his head, to give the men in the long trench the galloping-signal. Their decad commanders had had their work cut out to hold them. They came rushing with a bellow over the top, spatter- ing the new Turkish flank with bullets, without throwing themselves down, or any longer trying to save supphes. So that the company was helplessly caught between the two blades of a shears. With more presence of mind and experience, Ba- gradian might have wiped them out or taken them prisoner. As it was, by a wild scurry, they could escape, though both flank-protecting dccads blocked their way, and then shot after them. This wild Turkish scurry down the mountain did not even halt at the foot of the Damlayik, but only in the church square of Biuas, where at last they ralhed.
Nine soldiers, seven saptiehs, and one young officer had fallen into the hands of the defenders. These, as a matter of course, and with the most frigid ferocity, set to work to demon- strate to their prisoners exactly what it feels hke to die in an Armenian massacre. Two of the saptiehs Gabriel could no longer rescue. But he. Pastor Aram, and a few more of the
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elder men threw themsdves before the other prisoners — though Chaush Nurhan, and with him the overwhelming majority, could not in the least understand such mercy shown to ^e butchering tyrants of si hundred thousand of their race. It was very hard for Bagradian to make the disappointed men see reason.
“We shan’t get anything out of kilhng them, nor out of keeping them here as hostages. They’ll sacrifice their own without thinking twice about it. And then we should have to feed them. But it would be to our advantage to send them with a message to Antakiya.”
He turned to the white-faced lieutenant, who could scarcely manage to stand upright. “Well, you’ve seen how easily we can deal with you. And you can send us regiments instead of companies — ^it’s all the same to us. Look up at the sky. The sun’s not down yet. And, if we’d really wanted it to happen, not one of you would still be alive. Go and say that to your commandant in Antakiya. Tell him how much more mildly than you deserved we’ve handled you. Tell him, in my name, he’d better keep his regiments and companies for war against the enemies of Turkey — not against her peaceful citizens. We want to be let live up here in peace. That’s all we want. Don’t molest us in future, unless you’d hke some even worse ex- periences.”
The swaggering undertones of this, the certainty with which he seemed to be threatemng, the pitiful fear these prisoners showed of being slaughtered — all this assuaged the blood-lust of the decads. They forced the Turks not only to leave behind their arms, their boots and uniforms, but to strip to the slcin. In this miserable state they were released, and had besides to drag their dead and wounded down the mule-track of the Damlayik. That day’s booty was considerable: ninety-three Mauser lifies, abundant munitions, bayonets. Of the sixty-five decads not fully armed, about ten could now be armed com- pletely. Tlus did most of all to raise morale. Sudi success had
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been gained without one loss — the Armenians had only six wounded, and none of them seriously.
It is not surprising that so stupendous a victory should have been very much overrated, both by the decads and the people. A few poor, exiled villagers, insufficiently clad and scarcely housed, nesting on the summit of their hill, had — as it were with their bare fists — with the certainty of death in their souls, routed a company at war-strength, a hundred Turkish regulars, trained for months and armed with the very latest rifles. And not only routed, but almost finished them. This fierce but easy struggle had not lasted four hours. It had all been accomplished in a hand’s turn, without a casualty worth the name, thanks to a well-considered plan, a magnificent system of defences.
But Gabriel had no joy in it all, only a kind of weary em- barrassment. Nor did he feel he had rendered any extraor- dinary service. Any other officer who knew war could have put the Damlayik in just the same state of defence. It was not unusual acumen, it was the natural advantage of the mountain, that had given them their victory. The grey heads of the mukhtars swayed before his eyes, since even these uncon- genial peasants, who had always behaved so pawkily towards “the foreigner,” were now clutching at his hand to kiss it as though he had been their father. This hand-kissing filled him with dismay. His right hand struggled against it desperately. He longed to thrust it into his pocket. Slowly he forged a way through the dense crowd. He looked round for help, for a face that meant something, and at last he discovered Iskuhi. She had followed him all this time, but always keeping behind his back. Now, as he drew her hand towards him, he seemed to feel that her fragile body could give support.
“Juliette’s waiting; she’s got everything ready,” Iskuhi whis- pered.
He did not heed her words; he heeded her touch. Iskuhi
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walked at his side, as though leading the blind. Suddenljr be felt astonished that all this blood and death should not have moved her.
At last, in the tent, he could wash all over, luxuriously, after a village barber had shaved him. Juliette waited on him. She had heated up the water in kettles, poured it into the rubber bath, laid out the towels and the pyjama-suit which she knew to be his favourite. She stayed outside the tent until he had dried himself. Never, in their long married life, had they lost the last vestige of shame before each othen It took him a long time to get clean. He scrubbed with a hard brush, till his slcm was red. But, the more attention he gave to this, the more impatiently he strove to get this day scrubbed well out of him, the farther away he seemed to be from himself. Into this marvellous cleanness in which he revelled the “abstract man” refused to return— the “individual,” the man he had brought with him from Paris. He saw the same face in Juliette’s looking-glass, flanked by its candles. And yet, deep in his soul, there was something wrong. He could not make it out.
Her voice outside softly reminded: “Are you ready, Gabriel?
. . . We’ll carry the bath-water outside,” she was saying zeal- ously, not having called in one of the servants. They bore the rubber tub out between them, to empty it behind the tent. Gabriel sensed a yielding readmess in Juliette. She had suffered no other hand to serve, had come more than half-way to meet him, with deep emotion. Perhaps the hour had arrived in which the stranger in her would melt away, submit, as he, over there in Paris, had submitted his to her alien self.
“How much longer?” he thought. For now, after today’s fighting, he had no more hope that they would survive. He laced up the entrance to the tent. Gendy he drew Juhette to the bed.
They lay very close, but could say nothing. She displayed a new, and reverent tenderness. Her eyes made no effort to
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keep 1»ck teats as, tremulottsly, she kqit repeating: “I’ve been so terrified:dx>ut you."
He stared as absently at her as though her grief were incom- prehensible. Strive as he might, his thoughts were savagely swept away by fierce powers to his trenches. “If only the sen- tries weren’t slack tonight, didn’t go to sleep, weren’t late in reheving each other. . . . Who could tell that the Turks might not be planning a night-attack.” Gabriel had ceased to belong to Juliette — and to himself. For the first time in their married life he could not manage to show he loved her.
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2
The Exploits of the Boys
This devastating rout of a front-line infantry company on Musa Dagh came as a painful surprise to the Hukumet in Antioch. It was a lasting stain on the Turkish escutcheon. The power of any warrior race is dependent on magic belief in in- vinability, and the morale engendered by it. So that, for those who take the sword, every value totters with a defeat, and their very foundations seem to crumble when a race of puny intellectuals succeeds in routing professional soldiers in success- ful, so to speak, amateur competition. This had undeniably been the case in the sortie of August 4.
And what — Allah is great! — ^was to be written and read about Musa Dagh! Politically it was far less significant than the news of It was hkely to prove dangerous. It would need only a few more Bagradians here and there to get Turkey into serious difficulties. Since every Armenian was in actual fact condemned to death, since some still had weapons at their disposal, such complications would have to be reckoned with.
The worthy atizens of Antioch, from whom this humilia- tion was being provisionally withheld, saw lights at a very late hour in the windows of their Kaimakam’s council-chamber and feared the worst. That distnet councillor presided over the major provincial assembly, usually composed of fourteen members. At the moment his bloated body seemed to long, with every breath it drew, to shove away the conference table. The Kaimakam’s hverish face, with its dark-brown pouches under the eyes, looked sallower than ever in the discreet il*
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liuninatioa of an oil-lamp. Councillors became more and more verbose. He, however, sat silent and full of cares. His loose, well-shaven cheeks sagged over the wide stick-up collar; the fez had been pushed askew on his left temple, a sign of evil- tempered drowsiness. On his right the commandant of An- tioch, a grey-bearded colonel, with small eyes and rosy, inno- cent cheeks, a bimbashi of the good old school, who would, it was obvious, stand out to the last drop of heroic blood in defence of his own peace and quiet. His deputy sat beside him, a younger yus-bashi, a major of barely forty-two, his antithesis, as so frequently happens in military double harness. This major was wiry, hatchet-faced, with very determined features; his deep-set eyes glinted with suppressed ire. They seemed to proclaim to all and sundry: “It’s my misfortune to be yoked to this unconscionable old dug-out. You all of you know me, you know I’m keen enough for anything, and always do whatever I set out to do. I belong to the Ittihad genera- tion!”
A lieutenant of the routed company, the sole commissioned survivor of August 4, he who had been sent naked to Antakiya with Gabriel Bagradian’s message, stood giving his report to these superiors. He could scarcely be blamed for doing his best to make disaster seem more palatable by the wildest exag- gerations of Armenian strength. There must be quite ten — or even twenty— thousand of them on Musa Dagh, hidden within the strongest defences. And there could be no doubt that for years they had been collecting munitions and supplies, enough to hold out, up there, indefinitely. He, the midasim, with his own eyes had seen two machme-gun emplacements. It was machine-guns which, apart from their ten-fi>ld out- numbermg, had decided the unfortunate event.
The Kaimakam said nothing. He rested his heavy head on his right hand and stared down at the map of the Ottoman empire spread over the table. Though such high matters con- cerned none of them, the Hukiimet officials found it delight-
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fill to stick in little flag-pins along the fronts. But, for ati their loyal manipulations, the future of the war seemed not of the rosiest. The httle pins kept pricking further and further back, into Turkish flesL These fronts perhaps scarcely justified Enver Pasha’s glittering reputation. His Caucasus army, his best material, strewed, as a field of unburied skeletons, the passes and slopes of those pitiless highlands. And already the Russians stood on the boundaries of Persia, their faces set to- wards Mosul, driving Djevded Pasha, Enver’s cousin and a general renowned for his massacres, further and further into retreat. The English, with their Gurkhas and Hindus, threat- ened Mesopotamia. Jemal’s grandiose Suez expedition had literally melted away m sand. Men and stores lay covered by the desert. All this time, on the Galhpoli peninsula, the Allies with their big naval guns had been battering on the gates of Istanbul. Huge stores of arms and war material had already been wasted on all these occasions. And Turkey had no, or next to no, war industry. She depended on the bounty of Krupp in Essen, Skoda m Pilsen. These production centres of destruction could scarcely keep pace with the huge demands of immediate clients. Only a small percentage of that huge output of new cannon, howitzers, mortars, machine-guns, hand- and gas-grenades came through to Turkey, and had to be hurried straight to the various fronts.
The old, good-tempered bimbashi with the rosy cheeks put on his glasses, although there was nothing for him to read. He may simply have wanted to point out that he was the most far-sighted man in the room. He nodded severely at the mulasim. “This misfortune is the direct result of your stupid- ity and carelessness. It’s down in regulations that you’ve got to reconnoitre any enemy position before advancing on it. But, row that it’s got so far, I ask the Kaimakam: What’s to be done about it.? Must we sacrifice even more of our men? Or shall we leave these cursed swine in peace, to starve on their mountain? What harm do they do us? This deportation
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is yout busiaess, not ours. Why don't you civilians get on with it? If they really have got ten thousand rifles . . .
The red-haired tnudir raised his hand to speak. “They haven’t five hundred, not even three— I ought to know, since I’m in charge of that nahiyeh, and went to the villages.’’
The bimbashi took oH his glasses, as purposelessly as he had put them on. “I think it would be best to suppress the inci- dent. They’ve deported themselves. What more do we want? You’ve got all sorts of people along the coast, Greeks and Arabs. . . . Am I to be asked to make myself ridiculous by waging a litdc war under their noses? If I sweep up every detached unit in the kazah, I shan’t get together four regular companies. And the Chettehs, the Kurds, and whatever other scum I could lay hands on wouldn’t only go for the Arme- nians — they’d go for us I Believe me, it’s far wiser to say no more about it.”
The morose yus-bashi witLthe deep-set eyes had for an hour lit one cigarette from the last He had not said a word. Now he stood up, and respectfully fronted his superior. “Bimbashi Eifcndi, will you allow me please to express my most respect- ful surprise at what you’ve just said? How can we possibly hush this matter up when a company commander, three offi- cers, and a hundred men have all been slaughtered? Even now I suggest it’s unforgivably slack of us to have delayed so long with our report. The instant this conference is over, I shall have to draw it up, at your orders, to be sent on to GJf.Q.”
The bimbashi collapsed. His cheeks turned rosier still; first because the major was right— he always was — and second be- cause he was a Satan.
Now at last the Kaimakam seemed to rouse himself from his long, impersonal meditations: “I shall liquidate this afiair within my own province.”
This was his astute bureaucratic way of proclaiming a highly involved decision, to which fear of the Wali of Aleppo mainly contributed. Sharp daily instructions kept demanding that the
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deportation order should be enforced with an almost apoplec* tic zeal. The resistance of these seven villages might break the Kaimakam, since it implied slack surveillance and incom- plete disarmament. Should the Wah receive a plain unvar- nished tale of the affair, the Kaimakam might look for the worst from him and from Ittihad. His avil report would have to be most delicately phrased.
The old bimbashi remarked obtusely: “How can you liqui- date It, when your saptiehs are all on convoy duty, and your soldiers all at the front?” He blinked, and glowered at the major. “As for you, Yus-Bashi, I order you, in your report to G.H.Q. to ask for four battalions and field artillery. We can’t surround a huge great mountain of that sort without troops, and without guns.”
The yus-bashi did not seem to notice the old man’s rage. “Bimbashi Effendi, I quite understand your order. His Excel- lency General Jemal Pasha has all such matters personally explained to him. I think you may be certain he’ll back you up. These Armenian deportations arc, after all, the work of his friends. He certainly won’t let a few lousy Christian peas- ants play about with you.”
The Kaimakam, who meanwhile seemed to have fallen asleep again, had already decided his course of action. He must ally himself with the strongest man in the room, the major, and, to that end, throw the old bimbashi to the wolves. So the Kaimakam nearly yawned his head off, and rapped the table with the ivory handle of his cane: “I dismiss this session, and would request a few minutes’ private conversa- tion with the yus-bashi, to decide on our joint report to the civil and mihtary authorities. Bimbashi Effendi, I’ll submit mmc to you for endorsement.”
Next day two long and involved accounts left Antioch, The very severe acknowledgments took five more days in which to arrive. Musa Dagh, so these orders ran, must be taken with what material was to hand, and instantly cleared, whatever
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happened. The only concession to the himbashi was the loan of a couple of lo cm. howitzers, already on their way to Aleppo from Hama, and now to be diverted to Antakiya. It was seven days before this artillery arrived. A very callow young lieutenant, three corporals, twelve old reservist artillery- men, and a few filthy privates for dragging purposes, com- posed the crew. It would be almost impossible to use howitzers of this pattern in the mountains.
In a sense Stephan had a more difficult time of it than his father, whose earliest memories linked him to Musa Dagh. Yet Stephan, in this short time, seemed to have forgotten his previous life, his fourteen years of Europe. He had sunk, if one is to call it sinking, back into his race. But not so Gabriel. Gabriel’s very marriage had placed him between two blood- streams. At first he had even felt it rather tacdess that he, a foreigner, should force a plan to save them upon these na- tives. Perhaps that was the deepest reason for those solemn, yet disconsolate emotions which invaded him on the night of August 4.
Stephan was different. Though two blood-streams ran in his veins, his mother’s seemed to have lost all influence. He had become what all the others he mixed with were — an oriental schoolboy. Why? He could not have asserted himself among them otherwise. These pompously conceited, apishly phant schoolboys were not in the least impressed by the well- brought-up young Stephan’s western attainments. The most fluent written and spoken French was no use here. When he told them of European cities, they only ragged him. Howls of derision greeted his habit of carrymg school books under his arm instead of on his head as they did. What other way could you possibly carry books? Had Stephan been soft, he would at once have gone running to his father and begged to be taken away from school. As it was, he took up the challenge. He had had to quarrel for several days with his mother to get
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permission to wear Armenian dress. In his new clothes Ste> phan, who was a handsome boy, looked like the young prince on a Persian miniature. This Juliette could fed, but she felt more strongly that this prince had nothing to do with Ste> phan, her boy. So they struck a bargain. Stephan might go to school in “fancy dress,” but must wear ordmary clothes at home. Since after the flight to the Damlayik there was no longer any “home” to be normal in, the contract fell through.
Yes, Stephan was completely changed. But no one knew what efforts it had cost him to go back, in this fashion, to the primitive. He could wear the same clothes as the others. But at first they were disastrously clean, and without one rent in them. This cleanness was a serious drawback — ^and he ad- mitted that he had only himself to thank. He still found it hard not to dislike himself for having dirty hands and feet, thick black nails, and uncombed hair. When one day, still in Yoghonoluk, he had managed to get lice in his head, so that Maman, with squeamish hands, tied a napkin soaked in petrol round his hair, he had felt thoroughly miserable. Stephan had permanent disadvantages, as compared to the other village boys. His feet, for instance, no matter how much trouble he might take with them, dabble them as he would in shme and dust — to how many dangerous climbs had he not exposed them.? — ^remained white and pampered. He could achieve no more than tan, blisters, kibes, which, besides being very pain- ful, gave Maman her pretext for keeping him in the house. How he envied the other boys their impervious feet; brown, shrunken claws, vastly superior to his. Stephan had really to suffer before he could establish his position. The village boys let him feel he was not their equal, that not all the splendours of Villa Bagradian, including Avakian and the household staff, impressed them enough to make him accept- able. What assets had Stephan to strengthen him in this curious struggle? Ambition, energy, which he usually turned against his own body, and one other quality which these village boys
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did not posses. Even Haik, already past fourteen, muscular, tall, and well set up, the undisputed head of the gang, could not boast the purposeful concentration, the planned logical thought, which Stephan had brought with him from Europe. As a rule these Orientals forgot a scheme before they had half carried it through; they were swirled about by their short- lived notions, instinctive urges, like leaves in the wind. Any- one watching them after school might have fancied them a pack of excited young animals, rushing here and there to no end, impelled by one vague impulse after another. When, like a swarm of birds, they ahghted on some wide, unguarded orchard, this might be considered a purposeful enterprise — but far more often they would all go darting off into mountain thickets, urged on by demons, or cluster about a stagnant pond, or rush through the fields, to twirl and wallow in their sensations. Such excursions often ended in a religious, or better, a kind of pagan ritual, but of this they themselves were, of course, unaware. It began by their forming a ring, clasping each other, humming faintly, till their heads began to loll, till their voices, their swaying rythm, rose and rose, till at last they all burst forth in a howling tumult, beyond descripuon. On many this rite was of such potency that their eyes turned up, and foam stood out on their lips. They, in their simplicity, only practised the ancient, well-known attempt of certain dervishes to get into secret touch with rhe primal force of the universe, by means of such epileptic self-conquest. They had seen no grown-up do anything like it, but their need for such exultant self-conquest was in the very air of this countryside. Naturally Stephan, the European, was the puzzled, hopeless spectator of these ecstasies. He, of necessity, lacked one strength — ^the very faculty most predominant in the lives of all these other boys — a kind of clear-sighted rapport with nature, im- possible to put into words. Just as a good swimmer can lie, sit, stand, walk, or dance, entirely “m his element,” in the waves, with a physical ease that is indescribable, so were these
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children of Musa Dagh indescribably “in their element,” in the country that lay around it. They were interwoven with the very nature in which they lived. Their hills ware as much a part of them as thar flesh, so that to differentiate between out- ward and inward became impossible.* Every leaf that stirred, every fruit that dropped, the rustling of a lizard, the faint plash of a far-off waterfall — these myriad stirrings had ceased to be mirrored by their senses; they formed the very heart of those senses themselves, as though each child were himself a little Musa Dagh, creating it all with his own body. These bodies were like carncr-pigeons, whose inhuman sense of di- rection can never err. They were like slender, pliant dowsing- rods; their twitchings proclaimed the hidden treasures of the earth. Young Stephan, who for far too long had had his feet upon dead pavements, had, it is true, an adroit and active, but a numbed, body by comparison.
But when the villages set up their camp on the Damlayik, when these aimless rovings came to an end, and disciplme and purposeful activity were required of schoolboys, Stephan’s prestige increased by leaps and bounds. The reflected glory of bis father’s leadership contributed. This cohort of half-grown boys ranged from ten to fifteen years of age. Of the few girls none were older than eleven, since girls of twelve in eastern villages are already considered to be ripe. And Ter Haigasun had given orders that even the elder among the boys must go to school in their hours off duty. They seldom managed it, since either their masters were in the trenches, or shirked classes, which they considered entirely unnecssary. Hapeth Shatakhian led the scouts’ group, Avakian set the orderlies their tasks, but, apart from these, the three hundred or more boys of the “cavalry” were left to their own devices most of the day. They strayed about the Damlayik plateau, making every knoll, crevice, gully insecure. They would even dare to play in the trenches and embitter the lives of the decads, drill- ing under Nurhan’s scourge, by inquisitive and sardonic hang-
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ing about. These aimless wanderings were forbidden. Then they grew impudent, and began to break the bounds of the camp, strayed oif on to the heights beyond the Saddle, which faced the valley, or into the rocks and stream-beds of the coast side. It was stricdy forbidden on the Damlayik to go outside the Town Enclosure. But the gang managed never to be caught. Stephan and Haik, of course, were involved. Sato, too, had slipped in among them, and now she was not to be got rid of. Although the Bagradian family had given shelter to this strange bastard, the villagers still objected to having her in contact with their children. So that Sato depended en- tirely on the good, or bad, temper of the gang. One day they thrashed her, the next they let her come along. She lived on the verge, here as everywhere. She scurried over sticks and stones with them, never close behind the rest, but always a good way to the side. When the gang squatted together in the ilex gully, or in any other place out of bounds, bragging, think- ing vaguely of new schemes, or only, as its habit was, intensi- fying the quahty of existence by wild, collective swayings of the body, Sato’s thirsty eyes would stare across from out of her sohtude. Then the eternal, gabbling pariah mingled her voice with that of the choir and, still aoart, gave imitations of their wild swayings.
There was another doubtful member besides Sato. His name was Hagop, and Stephan protected him. Hagop’s right foot had been amputated a few years previously by the army doctor m Aleppo. Now this boy hopped on a rough crutch; it was only a stick with a wooden cross-piece. But, in spite of this rickety support, Hagop could move with a ceruin vehement eagerness, the wild nimbleness of gait often to be seen in cripples. He was refusing to let these two-legged boys get the better of him, and when he followed their stormy chase there was not a hand’s breadth between him and the last of them. Hagop’s parents were well-to-do, and he was related to Tomasian. He had thoughtful eyes and, what was very
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rare among the villagers, dark yellow hair. He read avidfy whatever he could lay hands on, stories in almanacs and so forth. But he did not want to be a scholar. He wanted to run, play, climb, and swagger and, since this was war-time, do the same scout duty as all the rest. Stephan, already attracted by his light hair, protected him, and not merely out of pity. But Haik toughly opposed all Hagop’s ambitions. Without the slightest sentimental compunction he made him feel that cripples are not worth considering.
Haik was a case apart. At fourteen and a half he was already fully representative of that dour being, the Armenian moun- taineer. His deliberate slouch, muscular slimness, the huge hands which swung so heavily at his sides, expressed all the overweening pride of this firmly self-sufficient race — a physique which set him well apart from the othgr members of the gang, with their rippling, eastern restlessness of body. The Arme- nian living in the cities of his diaspora may have all the phancy of Ulysses — it is not for nothing that the Odyssey makes cunnmg and homelessness go together in its protagonist— -the Armenian mountaineer, the pick and core of the whole race, is arrogant and impatient. These very exasperating traits he opposes, together with unremimng industry, to the lazy dig- nity of the Turk. Such a clash of fundamentals explains a good deal.
Haik’s family came from the north, from the Dokhus- Bunar mountains. His mother, the widow Shushik, a blue-eyed giantess, was by no means popular in her village, indeed peo- ple shunned her almost in terror. Though she had hved for years under Musa Dagh, she still counted as a stranger. The story went that once Widow Shushik had throttled with her bare hands an impudent assailant of her virtue. Whether this was true or false, her boy Haik had in any case inherited both her muscular body and flinty, arrogant disposition. Arrogant people always diminish others’ self-esteem. Haik did this con- stantly to Stephan. It was because of him that the young Ba-
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gradian forced himself to one exploit after another, to m^e quite certain he was genuine. This urge to convince the dour, sceptical Haik took, as it always does in ardent natures at such an age, the most poignantly self-lacerating forms. Samuel Avakian, as his tutor, kept an eye constantly on Stephan, anxious lest he should get into dangerous mischief. This fussy carefulness of his elders shamed young Stephan in his own eyes, and in Haik's degraded him to the levd of a pampered, sheltered mother’s darling. Haik refused to be convinced, in spite of Stephan’s constant, strenuous efforts, that Bagradian’s son could really be “all right.” The worst of it all Vas that any preference shown to Stephan made Hade a little more cocksure, since Widow Shushik’s son had a searching eye, not to be taken in by mere externals. When Stephan, as often happened about that time, lay tossing from side to side in his tent, kept awake by his own doubts and questionings, his rest- less mind burned with the one question: “Oh, God, what can I do to show Haik something!” But this fight for Haik’s esteem was only one front in a war waged for its own renown by the ambitious soul of the young Bagradian.
At about this time — ^it was now the ninth day on Musa Dagh — ^the camp began, at first without really knowing it, to suffer from its unmixed diet of meat, the almost total lack of fruit and vegetables. A drastic order had already restricted the milk ration so that only invalids, hospital patients, and children under ten now drew their share of the thin goat’s milk still available, leaving over a very small quantity for cheese and butter-making. Everyone growled at having to pool supplies, and m fact, by some incomprehensible law, that summary measure seemed to have worsened the general stock and di- minidied rather than evenly distributed it. Though Juliette, now that she worked with Dr. Altouni, had placed at the dis- posal of his hospital more than a fair share of her supplies, her tinned food, her sugar, her tea and ric^ she still had enough
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cake and biscuits to enable her, and those who lived with her, to supplement this diminishing bread ration. Stephan had not yet suffered the least privation. Haik, on the other hand, was already beginning to growl at the eternal, stringy mutton he had to gulp down. It was not even hung, it was half raw. There was nothing to go with it. “Oh, if we’d only got a few ffgs or apricots.” Stephan had a vision of the wide orchards around the foot of Musa Dagh. But he still said nothing.
The cohort was continually on duty. A group of orderlies had always to be within call of the thirteen teachers; others around the numerous observation posts. Teacher Shatakhian inspected his scouts every day, and gave unexpected practice- alarms. So that a major, unoffiaal enterprise could only be car- ried out in the sheltering dark, when the boys were off duty and not being supervised. In the course of this same day on Musa Dagh, Stephan was already explaining his scheme to the cver-unapproachable Haik. How miraculous that a for- eigner should have thought of it, not a real Armeman* Since the villages moved up on to Musa Dagh one or two daring people had already ventured down into the valley, in the hope of completing supplies. Always they had come back empty- handed, since strong patrols of saptiehs paraded the villages, day and night. Stephan’s plan was that the cohorts should replenish the diminishing common stock by a night raid into the orchards. Haik eyed his ambitious rival thoughtfully, as a finished artist might an amateur, who has no idea of the real difficulties. Then he at once began to organize this secret rally and pick out raiders. Stephan was naturally afraid lest his father should get to hear of the scheme and curtail his hberty. He admitted his fears. But Haik, who seemed to have for- gotten that the whole suggestion had come from Stephan, answered in the insufferable voice which he knew so per- fectly how to use;
“You’d better stay up here if you’re scared. I think that’s the best thing you could do.”
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These words pierced Stephan to the quick and made him resolve not to give his parents’ anxiety another thought. About ninety boys stole sacks, barrows, baskets, all they could find. At ten m the evening, when the campfires were all extin> guished, they crept in twos and threes past the sentries and over the barrier. In long lines they raced down the mountain and had reached the oudying ordiards within three quarters of an hour. Till one in the morning, by the soft light of a sickle moon, they picked like mad — ^apricots, oranges, figs. Here was a chance for Stephan to show his strength, though he had never done such work before. Haik the leader had managed to untether three donkeys and bring them along. They were loaded up at furious speed. And each of the boys had a heavy burden. But they managed to be back in camp by close on sunrise.
These vagrants, who had risked their lives for a trifle, with- out really knowing the danger, were received with scoldings, even blows, and yet with pride. Stephan darted away from the rest before they got to the Town Enclosure, and slipped into the shakh’s tent, which he shared with Gonzaguc Maris. Gabriel and Juliette never heard of this escapade. Its results were scarcely worth mentioning in a population of five thou- sand. All the same it gave Pastor Aram Tomasian the notion of going down, three evenings later, with a hundred reservists, guarded by decads, to make a similar attempt. Unluckily the., yield was small. Mohammedan peasants m the neighbourhood had meanwhile raided all the orchards, stripping away the good fruit harvest, and leaving only unripe and rotting wind- falls.
Gabriel had made the most of the grace allowed him hy the Turks. By now his defence-works could really be described as completed. The men of the decads, the workers of the reserve, had had to sweat as hard during this week as even before August 4. By now these trenches had all been lengthened and
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deepened down, and the foreground areas stroigtheaed wlh encumbrances. Connecting trenches linked up with the sec- ond line, as well as with the advanced sniping-points, which were well camouflaged with branches, to enable the hardiest defenders to snipe an attack in the rear, or shoot down strag- glers. Gabriel was for ever racking his brains to invent new methods of defence, snares, entanglements, and feints. He wanted to make the issue of an attack depend less and less on the human factor. His casual training in the ofBcers’ school at Istanbul, his experience in the artillery battles at Bulair, helped him less than an old infantry manual, issued by the French War Office, bought, in sheer, idle curiosity, at a second- hand stall along the Pans quays. The sight of this book, now so unexpectedly a treasure, produced a strange philosophical sensation in Gabriel. It was too vague to be called a thought.
“I bought this book without ever knowing I should use it, simply because I liked the look of the title-page, or because the unknown subject vaguely attracted me, though in those days military science didn’t attract me in the least. And yet, at the instant in which I bought it, quite independently of my will, my fate was predetermimng itself. Really one would almost think that my kismet is mapped out from A to Z. Since in 1910 it made me stop at that second-hand stall on the Quai Voltaire simply because it needed this book for its future purposes.”
This was the first meditation to which Gabriel had suc- cumbed for many weeks. He shook it off as an encumbrance. Even in Yoghonoluk, at the time when he was preparing his defence, he had noticed how his sense of reality dimmed, the instant he let himself give way to his natural, meditative bent. He came to the instant conclusion that the true man of action (which he was not) must, of necessity, be mindless. As to this technical handbook, it furnished him with numerous warn- ings, hints, diagrams, calculations, which he could use on a small scale in any circumstances. Chaush Nurhan (they had
oai&ed him ^TUeoa,” the Lion, as a reward for his feats on August 4) drilled the decads to exhaustion-point all day. Gabriel set innumerable tactical exercises, so that every man might know the ground by inches, and be fully armed against all possible methods of assault. The alarm signals, too, had been perfected to the uttermost. In just an hour, notwithstand- ing the considerable distances, each point could now be occu- pied and surrounded, and the movements of troops, on their largest scale, be carried through.
The camp itself was not merely divided into communes, its huts were arranged in lines of “streets,” all leading towards the big Altar Square. This Town Enclosure was built over rocky, uneven ground, but these settlement streets were so disposed that the ups and downs had been fairly mitigated. The Altar Square, the central point of this primitive but crowded encampment, made an almost magnificent impres- sion. When the mukhtar, Thomas Kebussyan, succeeded in getung his special wooden “town hall,” his six colleagues, no less in dignity, would not be pacified till they too had obtained the right to have similar huts around the altar. But Father Tomasian’s masterpiece was, and remained, the big govern- ment building, which had not only real doors and windows but a shingle roof, supplied from his stock. That solid struaure stood as a kind of symbol for the bold hopes inspiring these defenders. It had three rooms; a big centre room, the session- room, and two little cabins at the sides. The right side-room was separated off from the session-room by a thick wall. This large-sized kennel was intended as the communal jail, in case there should be serious crime to deal with. Ter Haigasun was convinced it would never be used. The left-hand kennel had been assigned to Krikor, who meanwhile, between himself and pohtics, had erected a solid wail of books, behind which, stood his bed. He passed in and out through a narrow gap in it. His decorative jars, retorts, and vases had been set up on
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shelves against the wall, while, to his deep personal satisfaction, petroleum tins, bales of tobacco, and ironmongery had all been impounded by the commune. So that the government barrack had not only the character of a Ministry and parlia- ment house, but also of a court of justice and even a uni- versity and state library. For here Krikor received his disciples, the teachers.
This tiny sample of humanity, the five thousand souls en- camped on Musa Dagh, had therefore caught up again, in one bound, with civilization. A small store of petrol, a few candles, only the most essential tools — such was their entire cultural heritage. The first hailstorm had almost ruined their wretched provision of mats, covers, bedding, the only re- maining comforts they possessed. And yet, not the lowest human necessity had sufficed to extinguish in their souls those higher needs, for reli^on and order, for reason and intellectual growth. Ter Haigasun said mass as usual on Sundays and feast-days. School was taught on the school slope. The seventy- year-old Bedros Altouni, and Mairik Antaram, had succeeded m setting up a model hospital, and bickered with all the other leaders for the best food to give their patients. Compared to what was usual in the valley, the general standards had even risen. These worn, pale faces even expressed a certain peace.
The long August days were not long enough to get through all the work that had to be done. It began at four in the morning, when the milkmaids gathered in the square, where the shepherds had already herded the ewes and she-goats of the Hock. Then the milk was carried m big tubs down to the northern side of the Town Enclosure, where already Mairik Antaram awaited it, to dole it out to the mukhtars, the hospital, the cheese-makers. At the same time a long hne of women and girls were on their way to the nearby streams to fill their tall clay pitchers with fresh spring water, \/hich remained cold as ice in these receptacles, even in the grilling midday sun. The many springs of clear icy water on Musa Dagh were one
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of its greatest natural benefits. The seven mukhtars, as the lines of water-bearers returned, were already on thdr way to the pasturage, to pick out the beasts for the next day’s killing from among the flocks. As to the supply it was now evident that the position would soon have b^me threatening. A fat sheep in these parts, in spite of its almost double weight when alive, gave less than thirty-six pounds of eatable meat. But ance five thousand people, many of whom had the hardest manual labour to perform, had to live almost exclusively on this meat, it was necessary to kill about sixty-five sheep a day, if the decads and the reserve were to be fed properly. How long would life be possible on the mountain if the stock diminished at this appalling rate? Everyone could do the sum for himself. Ter Haigasun and Pastor Aram Tomasian, on the very first Sunday, gave stringent orders that no part of the sheep, not even the entrails, was to be wasted. At the same time the daily number of victims was reduced to twenty-five sheep and twelve goats. And none of this did anything to mitigate the many dangers besetting the herds. Much pasturage had been used up in the Town Enclosure and the camp- buildings surrounding it, not least by the various entrench- ments. In the very first days on Musa Dagh these flocks were already beginning to lose weight, yet no one dared to send out the herdsmen into the meadows, beyond the North Saddle. The stockyard was near a little wood, a good distance away^ from the Town Enclosure. This d.d not prevent terrified bleatings from sounding every morning through the camp. At first the slaughtermen suspended their discmbowcU^ wethers on the trees, to hang for two days. But this was the hottest time of year, and the meat was very quickly spoiled. Therefore, after the first unpleasant experience, they buried it, since it kept in the earth, and was better Masoned. As, in the earliest morning, one deuchment of slaughtermen finished its work, to march straight back into the decads, the next b^;an to get busy. On long tables, fashioned of tree-trunks dung to*
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gether, the meat was dumped into equal parts. Frexn thcie (he women on duty as cooks carried it away to the campfires. 'Ihere, on ten bricked open hearths^ the huge logs and brush- wood crackled already. Gargantuan pots were swinging on tall tripods above the flames. But the meat was roasted on long spits, or poles, at the open fire. Food was distributed once a day, by each mukhtar, to his commune imder the super- vision of Pastor Aram. The portions assigned to the separate villages were again set out on the long log-tables, where each family’s share was divided up. So that a hundred and twelve housewives came marching, single file, to their village table, and each, from the hands of her mukhtar, received her exactly proportioned share. An offiaal person, usually the village priest or teacher, checked the number of recipients from his list, and ticked off each meal as it was distributed. Naturally all this took time, and seldom happened without recrimina- tions. Nature had, alas, not designed her sheep, or indeed her goats, with sufficient accuracy. The claims of absolute justice were never satisfied. The more morose among the vromen saw in the injustice of fate the evil machinations of hostile men, meanly directed against themselves. It needed all Aram Tomasian’s tact to appease and convince these chiding matrons that, though Madame Yeranik or Madame Kohar had been scurvily treated by fate today, yesterday she had been fortune’s favourite. Usually Madame Yeranik and Madame Kohar were quite incapable of such logic.
Before this distribution to civilians, the army had already received the best, carried down into its trenches by the young orderlies. But the whole camp had to be satisfied with a meal a day, since in the evenings only water boiled in the big cauldrons on the square. Some kind of roois had been throvm into It and the net result christened “tea,” for the sake of caUing it something.
Pastor Aram had also organized a police force. Twelve armed men kept order in the Town Enclosure. They went on
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thcff rounds day and night with the threatening tread of a constabulary. As they walk^ down the lines of huts, they*' made the inhabitants feel that this was war-time and everyone must be on his best behaviour. They were responsible for the samtary measures on which Bagradian, Bedros Altouni, Shatakhian, and other “European fanatics” had insisted as a major problem. Much that had been usual m the villages was forbidden on Musa Dagh. No leavings to be thrown outside the tents, no dirty water emptied into the “street”; above all the dictates of nature to be obeyed only in the places designed for obedience to them. One of Bagradian’s first measures had been the digging out of big latrines. Anyone caught infring- ing this law of hygiene was punished with a day’s fast; his daily ration was not served out to him.
That, in its broadest outline^ is the life this people led on Musa Dagh for the first fortnight of its encampment. The germs of everything which makes up the general life of humanity were already there. This people dwelt in a wilder- ness, exposed to every peril of the void. Death so inescapably surrounded them that only the most sentimental optimist could still hope to avoid it altogether. The commune’s short history worked itself out according to the law of least re- sistance. This law had imposed communal forms, to wliich it submitted with as good or ill a grace as it could muster, though* all would far rather have felt free to fend for themselves, just as they chose. But the rich especially, the owners of expropri- ated herds, deeply resented this nationalization of private property. Their clear perception that, in a convoy, they would by now most probably have lost not only their property, but their lives, did not in the least assuage the bitterness of having been “pauperized.” Even now, when what was left to them of life seemed likely to be a matter of days, they did all they could to distinguish themselves from plebeians by at least “keeping up appearances.”
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In the centre of the camp rose the altar. When, at about the hour of the last night-watch, one hour before the greying of the skie^ the Milky Way, grown fainter, moved on above it, as though it were the centre and heart of all things. Ter Haigasun, the priest, would sometimes kned on the highest step, leaning his head on his open missal. Ter Haigasun knew the world and was a sceptic. For that very reason he strove so passionately to draw into himself the strength of prayer. When everyone else had ceased to believe in any rescue, he, the last of them all, would have to be permeated with the sure sense of impending miracle. Certainty that they were not to be lost, the faith that can move mountains, raise from the dead! Ter Haigasun’s soul struggled, in shy, solitary petition, after this mountain-removing faith in a paradox, which his mind refused when confronted with surrounding reahties.
Juliette had pulled herself together. She was leading an en- urely different life. Now she would be up just after sunrise, and dressed so quickly that she managed to help Maink An- taram with her morning distribution of milk. From there, as fast as possible to the hospital. After all, it was the only thing she could do. Gabriel had been perfectly right. No one can go on living indefinitely as a "distinguished foreigner” — in a void.
A superficial observer would find Juliette easy enough to criticize. What did this snob really expect? What had she, who resisted her husband’s world after fifteen years of married life, really got of her own to be so proud of? Were there not in Turkey, at that very minute, many other European women heroically engaged in efforts to help the slaughtered, outraged Armenian people? Was there not Karen Jeppe in Urfa, who hid refugees and kept back the saptiehs, with her arms spread out across her door, till they took themselves off, ginri» after all they dared not kill a Danish woman? Had not German and American missionaries found their way with consid-
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erable hardship as far even as Deir eZ'Zor, and into the desert, bringing such help as they could muster to the lost and famished children and widows of murdered men? None of these had married an Armeman, none had borne an Arme- nian son. Such strictures might sound extremely just, and yet they would be unjust to Juliette. She alone on Musa Dagh suffered with far more than the general suffering; she suffered worst of all from herself. Juliette was too miserable to be snob- bish. Being French, she had a certain natural rigidity. Latins, for all their surface pliancy, arc set and rigid within them- selves. Their form is a perfection. They have perfected it. Northerners may still have something of the vagueness and infinite plasticity of cloud-shapes; the French as a rule hate nothing so much as to have to leave their country, get out of their skin. Juliette shared in a high degree this set quality of her race. She lacked that power of intuitive sympathy which usually goes with formless uncertainties. Had Gabriel, from the first days of their marriage, been firmly resolved to guide her gently in the direcuon of his own people, perhaps it would all have worked out differently. But Gabriel himself had been "parisicn” — one of that race of assimilators who, when they thought of Armema, thought of her as a classical exemplar, but as not quite real. What little he had managed to see of Armenians, the exated pohtical contacts he had made in the year of the Turkish revolution, his engagement of Avakian to teach Stephan — ^nonc of all that had been enough to give Juliette the right perspective, far less to bring her over to his side. For fifteen years she had really only been aware that she had married an Ottoman subject What it really means to be Armenian, the duties and destiny it entails, she had had to discover a few weeks previously, with appalling suddenness. So that really Gabriel himself was largely to blame for Juliette’s attitude.
In these days she felt indescribably alone. She, the glittering; the dominant, the eternally vivid, who had never once failed
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to be admired, was now merely put up with—worse still, not even noticed! She was sure she was getting ugher every day, surrounded by such general disapprobation. And out of all this was born a fresh agony— France! Whatever war-news had managed to find its way to Musa Dagh had its source only in Turkish newspapers. It was weeks — ^months — out of date. Juliette knew only of French defeats, knew that foreign armies were on French soil. She, who had never troubled her head with politics, to whom the general fate had been a bore, whose own affairs had appeared supreme to her, was now suddenly overwhelmed with devouring fears for “la patrie.” Her mother, with whom she did not get on, her sisters, with whom she had almost quarrelled, came infimtely close to her in her dreams. School friends appeared, who cut Juliette, although she kept going down on her knees to them. Now and again she en- countered her dead father— frock<oated, and distinguished, with the little red ribbon in his buttonhole. He stared in some amazement at juhette, and kept repeating his pet expression; "C«choses ne se font pas."
But, though her mghts got worse and worse, Juliette was always punctual on duty. She had no desire to be “human,” in the way Gabriel had advised. All she wanted was to over- come her solitude, her lost dismay. She served with the greatest devotion. Conquermg her olfaaory sense, Juliette would kneel down beside the patients, those half-unconscious old people^ on the rough mats; strip their feverish bodies, wash ofi the dirt, bathe their crumpled faces in toilet water, whatever was left of It. In those days she sacrificed much. She gave up most of her own underwear, let them use her sheets to make cradles for suckhng babes, hammocks for the sick. For herself she only kept “the striedy necessary.” But, no matter how Juliette might exert herself, there was no gratitude in the dull fish- eyes of the fever patients, the hostile eyes of those in health; they would acknowledge nothing from her— the foreigner. Even Gabriel had not a word of praise^ he who ten days ago
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Jiad acemed «o dtivalrous. Was ^ a dead encumbrance even to him?
And Gabriel and Stephan, the only beings close to her in the world, were near, and yet as far away from her as though an ocean lay between. They scarce^ bothered even to think of her. They eyed her with thinly veiled animosity. Neither could manage to seem affectionate. They did not love her.
And all the rest? The people hated her. Juliette felt the hate in their staring faces, their sudden silence, the instant she was seen in camp. The women’s dislike of her scorched her back as she went along past the staring groups.
Here, forsaken of all, she would have to die; more alonr and wretched than the wretchedest person on Musa Dagh.
At such welling moments of self-pity Juliette was careful not to admit to herself that perhaps she was not really so alone. Gonzague never left her side, having perceived the misery in her eyes. When and wherever he could, he redoubled his attentive services. Now more than ever he had become to Juliette the son of a French mother, a “civilized being,’’ akin to her, almost her relation. But for the last few days some- thing had seemed to impenl their good understanding — some- thing not only from him, but from her as well. He had not overstepped one limit. But for the first time, without shedding an atom of his respect, he had made her perceive in him a desire. This feeling of being on the brink, this close proximity without contact, brought fresh confusion on Juliette. She had to think often of Gonzague. Added to which, in spite of his French mother, he still “made her feel queer.” People who are always in perfect control of themselves, who can wait for ever, are lincanny. Gonzague was one of those who in anger turn white, but never crimson.
This change in Gonzague had begun by his losing every day a litde more of the reticence which she had never uiider- stood. He began telling her things about his life.
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Every morning Juliette spent three or four hours in the hospital'hut, usually till the patients had got their dinners. As a rule, at about that time, C^nzague Mans came in to fetch her. If she was still not ready, he waited. His vratchful eyes fol- lowed her movements. She fdt herself assaulted by those eyes, as mdeed she was. For when, not without some vague intention, she hngcred over hospital tasks, he would come straight up to her, and whisper: “That’s enough I Leave it for now, Juhctte. You’re far too good for work of this sort.”
Then, with soft resolution, he would force her away from the hospital-hut. She was glad he did so. Since Gonzague had no dudes in camp, and had not applied for any to the Coun- cil, he had spent his time in the discovery of some very charm- ing natural paths, places in which to rest and look out to sea, along the coast side of the Damlayik. They were every bit as beautiful, he declared, as the views along the Riviera.
Now Juhette and Gonzague sat every day side by side, at odd hours, in cool nooks or sheltered clearings or on the closely wooded promontories, of this “Riviera,” which, cut off from the plateau by a wide belt of myrde, rhododendron, or arbutus bushes, extends in a long up and down hne, on the edge of those gigantic walls which drop sheer into the sea. They both felt profoundly isolated. Who would ever miss them — ^the two foreigners?
On that day, August 14, the fifteenth day on Musa Dagh, Gonzague seemed entirely changed. Juliette had never yet seen him so sad, so boyishly sad, so incomprehensibly overshadowed. His eyes— in which there were no distances, even when they looked at a horizon — stared out, Juhette felt, into infinity. In reality he stared at a definite point, though to be sure, a jutting bend of the mountain hid it from view. His thoughts were on the plain at the mouth of the Orontes, where a big alcohol factory ghttered in sunlight. Juliette’s question, which expressed her sensations, not his, was therefore quite beside the point: “Are you homesick, Gonzague?”
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He laughed shortly, and she, ashamed, perceived how pain- fully empty her question was. She thought of the life which Gonzague had rdated bit by bit, lightly discounting it, as ironical as though it half concerned him, were in faa the least important part of himself.
His father, a banker in Athens, had seduced his mother, a French governess. When the child was still not four, there had come a crash. Papa had vanished to America, leavmg Maman with her baby, but nothing else. But she had been fond enough of her deserter to contrive, with the uttermost diffi- culty, to cross the Atlantic in pursuit of him, taking little Gonzague with her. There, though she never succeeded in gettmg on the tracks of the right man, she had, in the course of pursuit, found another. He was an elderly umbrella manu- facturer from Detroit, who had married Maman and adopted Gonzague.
“So you see,” Gonzague had said, “I’ve a perfect right to use two names. But, with my kind of appearance, I feel that it’d be all wrong to call myself Gonzague MacWaverly, so I stick to Maris.”
He had given her very serious reasons for this. Gonzague’s unfortunate mother had not been happy with her umbrella- maker. They separated. She had to leave the house in Detroit, and Gonzague wandered from boarding-school to boarding- school, till the age of fifteen. At about that time, by chance, he had learned the name of his real father, who meanwhile had managed to recoup himself. The old man was becoming conscience-stricken, since Gonzague’s mother bad died in the pauper ward of a New York hospital. He had sent the boy, with a litde money, back to Athens, to some relations. Of the following years (^nzague had spoken very shordy. They had been neither good nor bad, and certainly not in the least interesdng. Not till very late, after a Wretched childhood and seedy youth, had he managed, in Paris, to find his bent— that is to say he had discovered that he possessed a few mediocre
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and very ordinary abilities, useful enough at least to esodlki him to push his way through the world. For some years he had lived in Turkey, since the help of his father’s Athens relatives had taken him to Istanbul and Smyrna. In Istanbul he had acted as correspondent for American papers, which he supplied both with news and articles, describing life in the interior. This he had supplemented, whenever things were at their seediest, by rehearsing the choruses of fifth-rate Italian and Viennese touring companies. In the end he had man- aged to get attached to a cabaret manager from Pera, as accompanist, to tour through darkest Turkey with a troupe of very tawdry dancers and singers.
All this sounded perfectly genuine. What, after all, could have been left out, or embelhshed, in such sordid and likely little incidents? These meagre excerpts from his life had been given as carelessly, by Gonzague, as though they were be- neath his notice — ^the base prelimmaries to a real life, of which his eyes spoke as they rested on Juliette. She believed he was telling her the truth, yet his truth seemed to cancel itself out. For a second she suspected that Gonzague had another, equally colourless life in reserve for every woman he met.
“How many women,” she investigated, “were there in that concert party which you toured with as far as Alexandretta?"
The thought of his troupe seemed so to annoy him that he almost answered her with a growl. “About eighteen to twenty, I imagine.”
“Well, there arc sure to have been some young and pretty ones. Didn’t you care for any of them, Gonzague?”
He shook off such a suggestion in amazement. “Actresses have a very thin and difficult time. And professionals take love as part of then job, and refuse to do overtime.”
Juliette’s curiosity was not so easily dispelled. “But you lived some months in Alexandretta. A filthy httle port. . .
“Alexandretta isn’t nearly so bad as you seem to think, Juliette. There are a number of quite civilized Ar menian
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bn^es living there, with delightful houses and big gardens.”
“Oh, I see. So it was one of those families made you stay so long.”
Gonzague did not deny that a certain young lady in Alex- andretta had caused him to break his contract with the cabaret manager. His vague descriptions oddly suggested Iskuhi to Juliette— a painted, bedizened Iskuhi, hung with cheap jewel- lery, which, however, seemed out of keeping with her image. Gonzague refrained from any further description of his ac- perience, declared the whole thmg to have been a mistake — wiped out and forgotten. It had only had this about it, that it had brought him, via Beilan, to Yoghonoluk, and shown him the way to Villa Bagradian.
Juliette reflected on Gonzague’s position in the world and began to feel less cruelly lonely. Could there be a more ulu- mate method of belonging nowhere than his? He had re- solved to take a reticent share in Juliette’s fate, in her probable death, without winking an eyelash, for no thanks, as though it were not worth mentioning, as though it were bang done out of sheer politeness I And besides Gonzague had a hundred diousand times less to gain here than Juliette. The word "nostalgie” which she had uttered a little while ago — ^how it troubled her now I Those eyes had only emptiness to look out on. Npw Juhette saw that this young man, who boasted a microscopic memory, seemed to have no memories to fall back on, or only such as cancelled out. This young man who, with tense reserve, had shown ha such devoted considaation, had never himself recaved any love. He sat like a boy beside ha, on a smooth rock, almost against ha, from shoulda to knee. But he did not touch ha, still left the suggestion of empty space between them. This blade-like space, composed of virtue and self-conquest, scorched ha almost. Gonzague said nothing. In Juliette’s heart a very perilous, deheious pity was welling up.
“Gonzague?” she asked, and was startled by ha own nng-
3 ^
«ng voice. Slowly he turned to her. It was like a sunbeam Softly she took his hand. Only to stroke it. Then— there was nothing else to be done I — ^her face, her mouth advanced a little. And Gonzaguc’s eyes flickered and died. The last ex- pectant alertness was extinguished in them. He let Juliette come close, before, with a sudden jerk, pulling her to him. She whimpered sofdy under his kiss. Her youth had slipped away from this faithful wife, without her ever once having discovered of what vagrant desire she could be capable. Yet instantly she grew conscious of a pain, which seemed as though it would split her head. It was the same, almost hypnotic, headache which she had felt in the reception-room of the villa, that night Gonzague had played the piano so morosely. She thrust the man away, to collect her whole force of resistance. A thought shot up in her: “He didn’t take my hand. It was I who took his.” And, behind that thought, a second towered: “For weeks he’s been deliberately leading me on, so that 7 might begin it, and not he.” In the next instant, since Gonzague tighdy clasped and kissed her again, her powers of resistance seemed all to melt. The pain was an in- tolerable ecstasy. A crimson darkness with, far down in her, a last, thin glint of terror; “I’m lost!”
For only now, in these, his kisses, did this so reticent young man, this tenderly gallant escort, become the real Gonzague. No longer the adroit child of nothing, but a force, of which she had had no inkling, which might make her either supremely happy or miserable. His mouth, entrancing and revengeful, drew out of her secrets she had not known.
He only let her go when a terrific dm suddenly startled them. They leapt away from one another. Juliette’s heart beat so, she could scarcely breathe. “My hair’s all rumpled,” she thought, and found it as hard to lift her hands as though they had been heavy implements. What is it? The Gre^ sup- ported her. They sought out the infernal din. In a few steps he knew what it was.
“It’s the camp donkeys. They’ve all gone madl’’
And, indeed, as they came to the nearby tethering-ground, a kind of nightmare met their eyes. These honest donkeys seemed transmogrified mto a set of wildly fabulous beasts. They tugged at halters, reared, danced on hind-legs, lashed out on all sides. Foam dribbled out of their soft lips, their eyes looked glassy with fright. The long sounds that came shivering out of them sounded more like trilling neighs than the harmless up and down of a donkey’s speech. Some craz- ing phantom seemed to have started up before them. It was not a phantom. Their animal, premonitory instinct had sensed a reality, in the very second before it happened. Far away, beyond the North Saddle, a broad rumbling — almost in the same instant the sound seemed to have come a little closer. There followed a short, sharp crash and, south of the Town Enclosure, fairly high up, a snowy smoke-cloud. Suddenly the donkeys ceased their din. Soft brayings and fiutings melted gently into silence. People were runmng out of their huts. Very few realized what was happening, or that the dainty cloudlet above the mountain was a shrapnel-burst.
It had also roused Gabriel in the camp. He was tired, having scarcely slept on the night before. Disquieting messages kept coming in from the forward positions. There could be no doubt that Turkish spies had been around the trenches these last two mghts, trying to slip in past the sentries. For tonight, therefore, Gabriel had sounded the great alarm, and placed standing patrols. As, towards midday, he sat on the bench at his headquarters, trying to snatch a few minutes’ rest, he was set upon by an agomzed day-dream. Juliette lay dead, on the wide bed of their Paris bedroom. She lay across it. She was worse than dead, she was frozen stiff, one single block of faintly flesh-coloured ice. He would have to lie beside her, to melt her corpse. . . .
Heavily, he shook off this nightmare. It was clear; he was
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behaving badly to Juliette. Cowardice had been making him avoid her, the Lord knew how long. Even though his present life and duties left him without a second to spare, that was no reason to satisfy his consaence. He decided therefore, until tonight, to hand over the command to Nurhan and spend that afternoon with Juliette.
She was not in the tent. Iskuhi was just coming out of hers. Brother Aram was with Hovsannah. She did not want to disturb that married pair. Gabriel begged Iskuhi to stay with him, till Juliette should have come home. They sat down to- gether, on the short-cropped grass of Three-Tent Square. Gabriel made an effort to discover what it was had chan^xl Iskuhi so remarkably. Yes, of course— today she was not wearing one of the dresses Juliette had given her, but a wide flowered gown, made of some flowing, flimsy material, high at the neck, and with puffed sleeves. It made her look very old- fashioned, and yet it was unlike Armenian dress. Iskuhi’s fragile shape had often seemed to him meagre and wasted- looking. But this scolloped, bunched robe lent her a gende, hovering fullness, and hid her lame arm. Never before had her serious little face been so well framed, so Gabriel thought, as it was by the wide silk shawl, which she had flung over her head, to keep the sun off. He noted, in surprise, that Iskiihi’s lips were full and sensuous. “She ought to be wearing a red veil,” It occurred to him. And, since this was his hour of fatigue and drowsiness, pictures from his remotest days of life came up in his mind;
Yoghonoluk, grandfather’s house. A wide, damask cloth, laid out for breakfast, on the soft turf of the lawn. Everyone in respectful attendance on the arrival of old Avetis Bagradian, to this ceremonious first meal of the day. The silver kettle steams on a tripod. Baskets piled up with apricots and grapes, melons on their flat dishes. Wooden platters, with new-laid eggs, honey, and “apricot leather.” Thin cakes of bread, wait- ing under a spotless napkin to be broken by the master of the
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houses after prayers. Gabrid is dght, and wearing the same kind of entari-ldlt that Stephan wears today. If only they’d hurry up with breakfast! Then he could sally fort^ on to Musa Dagh, to hunt out great secrets. Meanwhile he looks down shyly at the damask-folds. Perhaps a big snake is hiding under them! A golden rustle announces Grandfather’s ap- proach. And, strangdy, his grandfather is himself no more than this — this golden sound; he gives it forth, he never emerges from it. His gold lorgnon on its ribbon, his white pointed beard, his black and yellow morning-robe, his red Russia-leather shoes, never come into sight; his image remains hidden, though forcefully present. On the other hand, Gabriel could clearly see all the women slowly lifting their veils above their heads, reverently turning their backs on the master, as custom ordains. Had this been a real memory, or only a dream made up of fragments pieced wrongly together? Gabriel could not be sure. But in any case, for no apparent reason, Iskuhi had managed to weave herself into this carpet of his childhood. She sat facing him on the grass. He, lost in the study of her face, took a long time to remember that he must say some thing.
"I suppose you’re fonder of your brother than you are of anyone dse m the world?” He made it almost sound as though he were blammg her.
The first Turkish shell dropped a hundred feet south of the Town Enclosure, under the foremost, jutting point of the Damlayik. He hurried there, in long, swift strides. On the way he met Dr. Altouni, ridmg a donkey. The old man had to get down. Bagradian thrashed and kicked this beast till it brought him to North Saddle at a most unusual gallop.
Tins time the Turks had prepared thdr stroke. The bimbashi- commandant of Antioch, that comfortable, boyishly rosy gen- tleman, with the htde, elderly, sleepy eyes, led the onset in person. Strangely enough, his adjutant, the hatchet-faced and
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resolute yus-bashi, had taken short leave at about this juncture, and gone to Aleppo, to be quite clear of responsibility. Since the bimbashi’s wise and peaceable suggestions had not pre- vailed in council against the Kaimakam, nothing now re- mained but to sally forth, m all possible haste, against Musa Dagh. His annoyance and rancour against his enemies lent the comfortable gentleman energy and unexpected ilan. He spent nearly the whole of one day in the telegraph office at Antakiya. Its Morse apparatus was set in motion in three direcuons, Alexandretta, Aleppo, and Eskereh, to muster up all the small local' garrisons and gendarmerie posts situated within the district frontiers. In four days the pordy colonel had drummed together a fair contingent — ^about a thousand rifles — ^to back his artillery. It was composed of the two com- panies of regulars, detached, in the Antakiya barracks; two platoons of the same regiment, from smaller towns; a big posse of saptiehs; and lastly a number of sharpshooters, chetteh ir- regulars from the mountains around Hammam. He made use of the half-battery which had recently trundled into the garrison.
Meanwhile scouts had investigated the trenches on the Damlayik, if not reliably and completely, at least in part. The- superstition was still unbroken that there were twenty thou- sand armed Armenians. So the bimbashi had enough arms and saptiehs at his disposal to make the smoking-out of this rebels’ nest a possible matter of hours. His taede would con- sist in a fully covered advance and sudden attack. That was essential. And both covered advance and sudden attack were well contrived. Every observer on Musa Dagh had been de- ceived. The colonel had split up his forces into approximately equal divisions, which were to operate independently of each other. The first marched on the night of August 13 with every possible precaution into Suedia and encamped, neatly di^ posed and concealed, in the ruins of Seleucia, under the South Bastion. The other corps, comprising the commander and
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his artillery, came along a stretch of the highroad, Antakiya> Beilan, and turned o£E it up wretched mule tracks into the mountains. But here the bimbashi’s strategic plan failed to “click.” It proved very difficult to get the two big howitzers uphill, even though two men were kept continually shoving at the spokes of either wheel, while others had to toil with the heavy barrels of unlimbered guns for fifteen miles on the irduous hiUade. The sumpter mules, in teams, had proved themselves almost useless for gun-dragging. It meant a delay of ten hours. This force, which had begun its march half a day earlier than the other, only reached those heights of Musa Dagh which extend northwards of the Saddle, towards midday on August 14, instead of m the night of the previous day. So that the double attack, timed for the first hour after sunrise, was not delivered. The captain in charge of the southern corps, who had not dared to let them show their faces outside their hiding-holes in the scorching ruins, till they got the pre- arranged signal (the first shell), was already fagged out by their long vigil in the pitiless sun. A fifteen-hour march up mountain tracks, without having rested the night before, only interrupted by three short halts, lay behind it. The colonel should have said to himself: “lH give them a rest for today, and send word to the captain at Suedia to put off the attack till early tomorrow.” And, considering how easygoing he was, any- one might have betted a hundred to one that this would be the old gentleman’s decision. Yet exactly the opposite happened. Easygoing people are often also the impatient ones. If they find themsdves entangled in something they dishke having to do, they get it over as quickly as possible. This bimbashi ordered the artillery mulasun to bring his guns at once into position, had a very hasty meal served out to the men, and, an hour later, led his companies, in long, thin skirmishing order, against the Armenian Saddle trenches, where first they kept a very respectful distance, as quiet as mice, in the gulhes, behind rocks and trees.
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The bimbashi cursed the Kaimakam, the yus4)ai^t, the general in charge of transport, who, instead of proper moutuain artillery, had sent him these huge, unwieldy howitzcrsr— above all did he curse His Excellency Jemal Pasha, for a “sour-faced, humpbacked swindler.” In his opinion all these political officers of Ittihad were nothing but a set of jumped- up traitors and scum. It was they who had conspired against the old Sultan, and were keeping the new one prisoner in his palace. Ridiculous subordinate officers, who promoted them- selves generals, Excellencies, pashas I Once fellows of that description wouldn’t have got as far as yus-bashi* And all this disgraceful pother with the Armenians was simply due to Ittihad swine. In Abdul Hamid’s golden days there might, of course, have been an occasional set on the Armenians, but never the sort of thing that such a highly placed officer as he, the bimbashi, would be asked to command. The tired and irritable old gendcman waited with his staff for the first shelL He had ordered the lieutenant in charge of the howitzers to begin by dropping a couple into the living-quarters of the Armenians. Not even the so-called war-office “maps" of these Ittihad swindlers were accurate and the shells had to be aimed at the Damlayik by the distances marked on these. The bim- bashi reckoned that shells in the camp would cause panic among the women and children, and so dimmish the men’s morale.
This calculation was shrewd enough. The howitzers, how- ever, succeeded more by accident than aim. Out of twelve shots, three fell into the Town Enclosure. These shells not only damaged some of the huts but wounded three women, an old man, and two children, luckily not very seriously. But the (hrcct hit of a shell destroyed the grain depot, set fire to, and burned up, all that was left of the cereals, together with what remained of tobacco, sugar, and rice. 'The depot crackled and blazed; it was a miracle that the (Ud not
spread to the huts, a litde way off. And the people’s mnfiisjnq
37 *
v»s eiren worse than this disaster. On the decads also the £re worked a ten-fold alarm. All who were oS duty rushed to their posts. Nurhan, “the Lion,” within ten minutes had the trenches entirely on the defensive. The orderlies and spies of the cohort of youth were soon assembled behind the lines. When Gabriel came galloping on his donkey, he found alj parts of his machine in full working order. A few minutes later the first scout came runnmg in with reports from the South Bastion. So that this Turkish raid had not quite suc- ceeded. It encountered surprised, but resolute, defenders.
This was the day of Sarkis ICilikian’s triumph, and of that of the South Bastion. In this region the enemy was still with- out experience. Turkish spies had not dared to advance too far into the wide, bare half-circle of this declivity, with its stony slopes and terraces of boulders. The captain in charge did not even know whether, behind the jagged blocks of these dominant rock-towers, there was a garrison. The Moham- medan population of the thickly peopled plain of the Orontes, the inhabitants of the market-towns of Suedia, El Eskel, and Ycdidje, excited by this war on the mountain, affirmed that^ for many days, nothing had stirred among these rocks, that . no fire was seen at night there. But the company leader was cautious, and assumed Armenian entrenchments, at any rate on the southern edge of the Damlayik, even though appear- ances might suggest none. He had long since divid^ his men into frontal attackers and a surrounding-party. The first was to be composed of regular troops, the second of chettehs and saptiehs. While the ones climbed straight up the slope, the others, directly opposite, where the half-circle of mountain verged on the sea, above the hill-nest Habaste, were to descend pn the rear of what they supposed the Armenian positions. The Turkish captain did not spread out his men in skirmish- ing order, but disposed them in long single, file, to present as narrow a surface for fire as possible. Since the temple ruins
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of Seleucia, which had given cover to the troops, stood on a wide ridge, about two hundred feet above sea-level, the attackers had only a bare heap of stones, of about the same height, to get across, to come to the edge of the strong dope crowned by the South Bastion. This slope was not unassailably steep, afforded hnng-cover on every inch of it, and was there- fore, in the opinion of the bimbashi, far better designed for attack than any of the wooded sides of the Damlayik, which behind each tree-stem gave firmg-cover to the Armenians. And besides, from the village street, visible at every point of the mountain, the advance up the hill could not have been camouflaged.
In the South Bastion the command was still very unstable, a grave defect in Bagradian’s general scheme of defence. In his view, because of the steep, barren ground below it, this part was far less menaced by attack than either the North Saddle or the ilex gully. Therefore its fairly numerous garri- son contained the undependable underworld of the Damlayik, those deserters and pseudo-deserters whom he wanted to keep as far as possible from the people. The section leader was an ex-regular from Kheder Beg. A slow, phlegmatic peasant, unable to assert his authority against these quick-tempered recalcitrants. Teacher Oskanian, the general superintendent appointed by the war committee, had made himself ridiculous on the first day by his pedagogic ruthlessness and pomposity. The exacting dwarf was quite unable to inspire in these hard- bitten men, with whom life itself had dealt so drastically, the respect he considered his due. It is therefore obvious that the strongest personality of this sector, Sarkis Kilikian, should gradually have gained the upper hand.
His humiliation by Bagradian seemed to have worked a change in the Russian. He no longer played at being a guest without obligations, consenting to live in camp for the timg being, but submitted without a murmur to its discipline. More, he busied himself in his sector as a very inventive fortress
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engineer. He strengthened and raised the loosely piled up blocks of limestone, which served as the parapet of their trench, though the work took several days of resdess inr dustry. He had also contrived a primitive but effective ma- chine, which increased to annihilation-pomt their power of re- pelling an attack. Behind each of the three walls facing the hillside, at a fair distance from one another, he had constructed rectangular, gallows-likc erections, made of oak stems. To the cross-beam of each of these gallows there hung level, fastened by strong ropes, a thick battering-ram, with at the end a kind of gigantic table-top, or iron-studded shield. The ropes which worked this mechanism could be lengthened or shortened, so that the point of impact of the battering-ram might be thrust full against the wall. When the very heavy shield-plate came hurtling, from a certain distance, pendulum- wise, against the stone-heaps, it gained a driving force that no human strength could have achieved.
At the moment when the howitzers opened fire and scouts ran in to report that Turkish rifles were beginmng to clamber up the slope from above the temple ruins of Seleuaa, the com- mandant appointed by Bagradian lost his head completely. He crouched down before a chink in his wall of stones, and stared at the slope, but could not manage to give an order. The doughty little Hrand Oskanian turned white as paper. His hands shook, so that he could not manage to pull back the lock of his carbme, to insert the first cartridge. His stomach turned, and the giddy Oskanian nearly toppled. Ten minutes ago a threatening Mars, the sombre teacher had no strength left, even to get out of the way. His voice failed. He followed Sarkis Kilikian like a puppy. So that the leader, with chat- tering teeth, stood begging orders of his subordinate. The Russian’s agate eyes were as dead as ever. Deserters, and the rest of these decads, gathered round him at once, as their natural head. No oife paid any further attention to the slow witted peasant from I^eder Beg. Kilikian said almost noth
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ing. He strode into the midst of this knot of defenders and pointed out those amongst them whom he designed to man the rock-towers, stone parapet, and supports. Platforms on high heaps of stone had been set up behind the battering-rams. Two men climbed each of these, to let the rams hurde against the walls at a sign of command. The Russian followed the same tactic as Bagradian on August 4. He waited for the crucial second. But his dead, patient impassivity was a hun- dred times steadier than Gabriel’s. As, at last, the advance- guard of the Turks appeared on the edge of the stone-slope, he took out his primitive tinder-box, to try to light a cigarette. Oskanian beside him twitched and panted: “Now, Kihkian — now! Right away.” Having striven in vain to set light to his strip of tow, Kilikian’s free hand gripped the teacher, to pre- vent his jumping up too early, to give the sign. The Turks, lulled into security by their safe clamber, and the utter quiet of the mountainside, had begun to get slack. They came into line, gossiped, and formed wide groups. Not till they were midway up the slope did Kilikian let out a long whistle. The battering-rams with their huge shield-plates came thundering down on the loosely built-up walls. The lighter stones of the uppermost layers, spurting up in a cloud of dust, whizzed down like cannonballs, while the heavy limestone blocks of the upper structure toppled slowly over, and crashed after them, in great, wild leaps, among the Turks. Even these first effects were terrible. But now the Armenian mountain itself took a hand, to complete the decimation, so cruelly that this natural landslide will not be forgotten by future generations along the Syrian coast. The defence walls had been built be- tween jagged pyramids of rock. The force of the rams shook even the natural limestone crown to its foundations, and tore huge sections of jagged rock down into the valley. The force of this indescribable, stony assault was too much for the many loose boulders which strewed the face of the incline. With all the terrific hissings and crackhngs of some never before
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experienced surge oE breakers, they began to slide, tearing down, in a monstrous deluge of lime and chalkstone, all who were still alive among the Turks. It was more than a ghastly avalanche of rock. The Damlayik itself seemed to have broken loose from its anchor, and to be sliding down. This hailstorm spattered on over the ruins of the upper town of Seleucia, overturning columns, crushing in ivy-covered walls. For ten whole minutes it stiff looked as though the mountain itself were seized with an impulse to advance on Suedia — to the very mouth of the Orontes. The western group of the Turkish coros was grazed by this avalanche, just above the village of Habastc. Half the men were lucky enough to get clear. The other half were killed or maimed, the village itself in part destroyed. In fifteen minutes a sdence, as of death, lay over everything. The avalanche stood peacefully and slyly in the glare. Dull, crackling thuds from the howitzers came from the direction of the Saddle. When every pebble had come to rest, Kilikian blew his whistle a second time. The amazed de- serters and their comrades began to advance. The whole garri- son of the South Bastion, led by the Russian, strolled down the slope and, without haste, slaughtered the Turkish wounded and stripped them bare. It was done with the most nonchalant thoroughness, without a thought for the fierce battle which their comrades in the north had to sustain. Sarkis Kilikian changed his rags. He put on a brand-new Turkish infantry uniform and, in this new kit, in spue of the smears of blood on the dead man’s tunic, piostured as though he felt himself reborn. But Hrand Oskanian, who had climbed the highest point in the line of rocks, was firing in the air hke a lunatic, to establish his personal share in this victory. It surprised him more and more, as he let off this imposing clatter, to consider what a trifle bravery is — to a brave man.
Neither Gabriel nor the bimbashi was .yet aware of the disastrous end of the south division. In the clatter of rifles
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araund them they had both only heard the long rumbk of the landslide as a faint thunder in the distance. Here, on the Ninth Saddle, the fight was by no means such an easy on^ and was going against the Armenians. Whether these how- itzers were slulfully manned or merely lucky, the fact re- mained that in one hour of slow bombardment, four direct hits had blown away part of the chief communication trench, and that several mortally wounded men were lying about. Gabriel had several umcs been nearly killed by flying splinters. His skin felt as rigid as damp leather. He could clearly per- ceive that this was not one of his good days. Ideas and de- cisions did not come automatic^y as they usually did. He might— the thought seared him— have avoided these losses. He had delayed too long in giving Chaush Nurhan orders to retreat. But at least he had had the intelligence to carry out that retreat on the rocky side. The Turks had managed to set up an observation post, in a high tree, from which they could overlook part of the trench, and correct the aim of their artillery. But the stone barricades to the right were beyond their survey. Remembering their defeat on August 4, they still feared the ste^ and pitiless chfis of Musa Dagh, and no longer dared to attempt envelopment. The defenders left their trench one by one, and went ducking, with their heads well down, past the boulders and jutting rocks of the labyrinth, till they came to their second Une of entrenchments, also dug along an indentadon. This second trench was today unoccu- pied, since Gabriel had not dared to withdraw so much as a decad from defence positions, along the edges of the moun- tain. He was fairly certain that the Turk would try to attack at a third point. His blood froze as he remembered that, if this reserve trench, too, should be lost, there would be nothing left to prevent the best-thought-out slow death of five thou- sand men and women the world had known. The Turkish observer did not seem to have nodeed their retreat. Sbfllf kept crashing down into the first trench at one-minute inter .
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vals. Since now nothing seemed to stir in it, the bimbashi con- sidered it ripe for assaults- There was an endless pause before^ in the thick woods of the counter-slope, there arose a wild drumming and blare of bugle-calls. Bellowing non-coms and officers urged forward the extended lines. Their shouts min- with the not entirely fearless shouts of the men. Most of them were recruits, snatched away from their Anatolian ploughs, who, after a few weeks of hasty training, were under fire for the first time. As, however, they saw that their attack seemed to be encountering no resistance, their courage rose to the point df valour; the wildest of all herd-emotions invaded them. They came racketing up the shrub-grown slope, strewn with impediments, and stormed the big mam trench with rollicking shouts. The colonel saw that things seemed well under way and, knowing that this youthful impulse to vic- tory must not be allowed to cool off, he left this trench in the hands of the second line of saptichs, and drove these intoxi- cated storm-troops forward agam, in clustered lines. But he did not venture to shift his howitzer-fire any farther forward, since he did not want to imperil himself and his men.
Not only Gabriel, every Armenian fighter in the second trench, knew what they risked. The mind, the life, the body of each one of them was a dark night, centred round one uB- endurably burning focus — to aim straight. Here leader and led no longer existed, only the petnfying consciousness; behind me the open camp, the women, the children, my people. And it was so. . . . They waited, as usual, dll not one bullet could miss its mark. Gabriel, too, and Aram Tomasian, fired for the first time with complete concentradon on thdr purpose, as though in a dream. What happened then happened independ- endy of them all, or of Chaush Nurhan — that is to say their will was fused into the general will. They did not reload when diey had fired their round of five cartridges. As though obey- ing one collecdve impulse, the Armenians swung out over the top. It was all quite diffierent from what it had b^ on August
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4. No blood'lust, not one shout, could force its way through tight-set bps. Heavy, benumbed, four hundred men of all ages fell upon their terrified Turkish assailants, who suddenly woke from their dream of victory. A bitter hand-to-hand encounter, man against man, swung this way and that.' What use were the long bayonets on the Mauser rifles? Soon they strewed the earth of that strip of ground. Bony Armenian fingers blindly sought the gullets of their enemies; strong teeth fastened themselves like the fangs of beasts of prey, unconsuously, m Turkish throats, to suck the blood of vengeance out of them. Step by step, the lines of the company retreated. But the saptiehs, whom the old bimbashi — no longer rosy, but now apoplectically violet in the face — wanted to throw into batde, let him down. The gendarmerie was not, their chief declared, a fighung unit. It was there to keep order, and nothing more. It was not obhged to take part in assaults against a fully armed enemy. Also it was subject to civil, not military, law. This naturally so good-tempered bimbashi shouted, like a man bereft, that he would have the police chief shot by his plice- men. Who was responsible for the whole filthy Armenian business in the first place? Officials, and their stinking curs of saptiehs, so useful against helpless women and children, otherwise good for nothing except to loot. But not all his anger helped the poor old man. The outraged saptiehs vacated the trench, and withdrew to the counter-slope. Yet even so, had not help come at just this minute, it is hard to say how this grappling fight might not have ended.
When news reached the Town Enclosure of the miraculous landslide and total destrucuon of the south division, the whole people went mad with the lust to kill. Not Ter Haigasun nor the Council could keep them back. Their souls, in blasphemous presumpuon, became certain that God was on their sidf . Meanwhile the orderlies came in, to tell them of the northern retreat. The reserve caught up its iron bars, mattocks, and pick-axes. Men and women shouted at Ter Haigasun: “To the
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North Saddle.” Today they’d show these Turkish hounds! There was nothing Ich for the priest but to place himself at the head of this bellowing horde. The freed decads also came streaming northwards. These superior, although undisciplined, numbers brought the decision within a few minutes. The Turks were hurled back, past the conquered trench, as far as their original position. Bagradian shouted to Ter Haigasun to get the reserve immediately back into camp. If once the hoW' itzers started shelling them, they might do unpredictable damage, in these dense crowds. The priest succeeded with great diiSculty in driving back his stampeding flock. Meanwhile dripping with sweat and blood, the defenders feverishly be- gan to block up gaps in their mam trench. Gabriel’s rasped nerves expected the first shell at any minute. There was still more than an hour to twilight.
The shrapnel, whose thin howl Bagradian fancied he kept hearing, still did not come, except in his mind. But another, quite unexpected thing happened. A long bugle-call. A lively stir along the wooded edge of the counter-slope, and very soon the scouts came in, to report that the Turks were in quick retreat, by the shortest way, into the valley. There was still enough light to watch them encamp on the church square at Bitias, and see their colonel riding with his staff, at a sharp canter, towards Suedia, via Yoghonoluk and the southern vil- lages. This day had been more victorious, above all, more blest, than August 4, and yet, that night, there was no festivity, not even any warm jubilation, in either the entrenchments or the Town Enclosure.
They had brought in the dead. Now they lay in a row, covered over, on the flat square of meadowland which Ter Haigasun, because of the depths of its soil, had chosen for their mountain burial ground. Since the day of encampment on Mi’sa Dagh, only three old people had so far died, whose re- cent graves were marked with the roughest limestone blocks,
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painted with three black crosses. These fresh graves must suddenly be increased to sixteen, since eight had been killed in the hand'to-hand fighting or by shellfire, and five others had in the last hours died of wounds. The relatives squatted be* side each body. There were only low whimperings, no loud cries. All round the hospital-hut lay wounded, with crumpled faces and sunken, questioning eyes. Inside, there was only room for a few. The old doctor’s hands -were full of work, to isdiich he felt himself quite unequal, either by his strength or science. Besides Maink Antaram, he had Iskuhi, Gonzague, and Juliette to help him. Juhette, on that day especially, worked with an almost frantic self-abandonment, as though, by serv- ing Its wounded, she could atone for her lack of love for this people. She had brought out her well-stocked medicine-chest, filled, before they left Paris, under the supervision of the Bagradian family doctor. Her lips were white. She kept stum- bling as if she might collapse. Then her eyes would seek out Gonzague. She did not see in him a lover, but a pitiless moni- tor, forcing her to put out more strength than she had. Apothe- cary Krikor had also, as behoved him, brought supplies. He had only two remedies for wounds — a few bandages and three large bottles of tincture of lodme. These were at least useful, because the iodine helped to keep from festering those wounds over which old Bedros Altouni was forced to growl, and leavf them to nature, to heal or not to heal Krikor dealt out his panacea with a miserly hand and, as the solution kept ditnin- ishmg, diluted his iodine with water.
Stephan, who with Haik and his gang, was straying about over the battlefields, in the graveyard, and round the hospital- hut, watched all this piteous confusion. It was his first sight of death and dying, of maimed, and of screaming or groaning wounded. These horrors made him older by years, but cahner. His ardent, immature face clouded with a new kind of hos- tility. Now, as he stared out in front of him, he had taken on the look of Haik, his rival, yet with a dash of strained, over-
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wiought excitement. When it was dark, he reported, as his duty was, to his father, in the north trench. The Leaders sat m a ring round Gabriel. He had the fuses of a grenade and a shrapnel in his hand, and was explaining the method of set- ting them off. On the grenade the ring was notched with the letter P, that is to say shell was designed for a percussion fuse. The notching on the shrapnel fuse showed the figure 3, den otin g a three-thousand-metre range, the distance between the mouth of the gun and the aiming-point. This fuse had been picked up about half a mile behmd the front-line trench. So that one might, without being too far out, calculate the howitzer emplacement as about two thousand metres- beyond the Saddle. Gabriel passed round the map of Musa Dagh. He had marked the possible point. The guns, if one thought it out, could have been set up only in the treeless gully which, even towards the north, precipitously skirted Musa Dagh. Only that narrow, but open, strip would offer a good field of fire to artillery. Everywhere else there were high trees im- peding it, which would have required an impossible elevation for the gun barrels. Stephan, Haik, and the other boys had squatted down behind the men, and were listening breathlessly. Nurhan “the Lion” suggested the possibility of attacking the battery. Gabriel rejected it at once. Either, he said, the Tufks would give up the attempt, and remove these howitzers to the valley, or they had a new plan of attack, and would shift the emplacement in the night. In either case, to attack the guns would be unnecessary, and highly dangerous, since a strong protecting force, perhaps even a whole infantry platoon, with plenty of cover, could practically wipe out the attackers. The Turks had shown what it meant to attack in the open. But he, Bagradian, refused to risk another Armenian life. Nurhan still stubbornly clung to his idea. It led to a vehement dispute, diis way and that, till Bagradian sharply closed the discus- sion:
“Chaush Nurhan, you’re fagged out, and so are we all, and
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no good for anything. That’s enough I Let’s get some sleep. In a few hours we’ll see what else we can do.”
But the boys were not fagged out; they were ready for anything. Stephan got leave to spend the night in the trenches. His father, who had already spread out his rugs, gave one to him. Gabriel had lost all desire for a bed and enclosed space in which to sleep. Tonight it was too stuffy to breathe freely even in the open. The exhausted men slept like the dead. One of them trod out the fires before they lay down. The double guard of sentries went to their posts, to keep a sharp look-out on every inlet to the Saddle. The boys, like a noiseless flight of birds, sped away among the rock-barricades. A bright August moon was already well in its second quarter. They stood in its sharp light in a close ring, among chalky boulders, chirruped and whispered. At first it was mere aimless, point- less chattering, in the bright, sharp light. But they, too, in the depths of their adventurous souls, were restless with the same itching purpose that filled young Stephan. It began in ‘mere childish curiosity — ^“to have a look at the guns.” Haik’s band comprised a few of the brightest of the scouts’ group. Couldn’t one go on a reconnoitring expedition, without having expressly been given orders by Hapeth Shatakhian or Avakian? Stephan threw out the enticing question. His first mad sally into the orchards had raised his prestige to the height of Haik’s. Haik, with the ironical indulgence of the invincibly strong, had be- gun to tolerate the rise of the Bagradian brat. Sometimes, in his mocking protection, there was even a faint suggestion of amiability. Haik signed to the rest to wait for him without getting excited. He wanted first to see what was on, up there. He, whose clear affinity with nature was far stronger than that of any among them, quietly dismissed would-be companions. He vanished soundlessly, to appear again suddenly in the swarm, not half an hour later, with the news that you could sec the guns as clear as if it were daylight. His eyes glinted as he said it. They were big, beautifully golden-looking things
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with a distance of about six paces between them. He had not counted more than twenty gunners, all asleep, and not one officer. There was only one sentry post.
Haik had counted accurately. And the fate of these howitzers was the reason why the poor, rosy-cheeked bimbashi was obhged to consider himself lucky that he could end his days as a paymaster’s official, attached to the Anatolian railway, in- stead of as a General-Pasha. He swore a hundred oaths be- fore the court martial, by Allah’s mercy, that he had posted ah the usual guards, as set down in the Sultan’s regulations; that criminal saptiehs and Chcttchs had gone lounging oif without his leave. This truth could be proved, but it did not help the poor old gentleman in the least. Had it not been his duty to post a platoon of regulars round his guns? But the bimbashi’s bad luck had not been confined to this single blunder. The artillery lieutenant, in direct contradiction of orders, without having left one decently trustworthy non- commissioned officer, had followed the infantrymen, and gone down to the valley to fetch up next day’s ordre de batadle. In addition to which, the donkeymen, pressed into service as gun-draggers, had all wandered back to their villages, having drawn the very logical conclusion that nobody could want them during the night. Such discipline in the field, nor to mention its unheard-of results, made the sentence an un- usually mild one. Strangely and fortunately enough, Jemal Pasha, “the sour-faced, humpbacked swindler,” who as a rule insisted on having everything explained to him in detail, refrained from investigating personally. This may have been due to that general’s preoccupation with Suez— or to some other reason, connected with the ugly Jemal’s attitude towards Enver, the popular idol of Istanbid.
Haik and his two best scouts crept on cats’-feet along the narrow shelf of rock on the farther side of the Saddle. Stephan followed them, rather more clumsily. The one-legged Hagop had naturally had to stay behind. This time it had been
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Stephan, his friend, who sharplf told that ambitious crqiple to stop pestering. That night no Sato hung around the e(^ of the pack. She had something better to do. Stephan and Haik earned guns and cartridges, borrowed from the piled* up arms and cartridge-belts of the decads. This day was to decide their chronic rivalry, a dispute which had gone on some time. Whenever Stephan, insisting on his excellent mark* manship, had boasted that at Bfty paces he could shoot the face out of a playing-card, Haik had displayed the coldest scorn: “Can’t ever stop bragging, can you?” Here was a chance to show the cocksure Haik that Stephan might have bragged vainly of much else, but at least not of being a good shot. And of this Stephan gave gruesome proof.
Haik guided the town-bred Stephan through rhododendron thickets to the very edge of the battery emplacement. Ten paces off them snored the sleepers. Sentries gazed vacantly up at the night sky, starless in the bright moonlight. Time and space extended infinitely, without misgivings, and full of pa* tience. First Stephan tried several branches, to get a really comfortable rest for his barrel. He aimed very long, and with- out excitement, as though the fiesh-and-blood hgures over there had been wooden dummies m the shooting-booth of a country fair. This child of European culture was impelled by only one sensation — the desire to get the human, white, moon*lit forehead of a guard before his barrel, well between the sights. He pulled die trigger without a qualm, calmly heard the report, felt the kick and, delighted with hims elf , saw the man sink down. As the sleepers stumbled to their feet, not yet quite knowing what had happened, he aimed more qui^ly, but not a jot less steadily, pulling the trigger twice, three times, four times, tugging at the breech with a quick, strong jerk. These fifteen Turks were redifs, elderly men, who scarcely knew the meaning of the campaign. They ran about in confusion. Five already lay in pools of blood. No visible enemy. These staid, respectable peasants, forced intothe
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atmy, did ast seek cover— they rushed, in the wildest peD> mell, into the wood— far, far, never to return! Haik wildly shot off his whole five bullets after them. Not one hit — as lister Stephan could note contemptuously. The howitzers, the lindier, the dragging-cart, the shell-locker, the rifles, the mules, were all abandoned. Thus did one fourteen-year-old schoolboy, with five cartridges, avenge the million-fold decimation of his race upon harmless peasants forced into arms— upon the wrong people as is always the case in war revenge.
When the outpost sentries heard shots crackle through the quiet of this moony night, they aroused their chief. But the s^oolboys, huddled among the rocks, awaiting Haik and Stephan, became panic-stricken. They felt responsible. With loud cries and waving arms, they came rushing out. But only Hagop, with all his frenzied, stubborn nimbleness, came hop- ping to Gabriel, who had started up, still dazed with alarm. The cripple pointed wildly at the counter-slope, with repeated cries: “Haik and Stephan — over there.” Gabriel did not grasp what had happened. He knew Stephan was in danger. He rushed off hke a madman, where Hagop pointed. A hundred men caught up their rifles and followed their chief. 1l3ie “Lion,” Chaush Nurhan, was naturally one of them. But when, arrived at the emplacement, Bagradian saw the dead, and Stephan unharmed, he jerked his son so roughly to him that he might have been intending to shoot him too. All the rest were dazed. No one so much as noticed the two young heroes, those capturers of guns who, with such huge, new bronze toys to amuse them, had forgotten all the reahty around, how litdc time they had to wast^ and even the welter- ing death under their feet. For an instant the Armenian men stood breathless. This incredible thing was too huge to grasp, this booty too absurdly unattainable, for any among them to find time to ask how the fight had come about Quick— get
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hold of the guns before the Turks cornel Two hundred arms got to work on it. The teams, the limbers, the munition box Were rushed up the slope, the howitzers slung to the lunbers. Every man of them pushed or tugged at the ropes, or put his shoulder to the wheds. The guns went jolting on, up the fis- sured, pathless earth of the mountain. But mght melted jutting rocks and bushes, the hard resistance of every obstacle, into soft flexibility. For a while it seemed as though the howitzers, borne on this mad strength of gripping hands, were hovering along above the earth.
It was not two hours before the guns, in spite of the in- credibly difficult terrain, had been set up where Gabriel wanted them. He had been given a short account of Stephan’s deed. But the fear still thudding in his heart would not let him speak of it. He could not praise his son. This scatter- brained daring, the escapade of a half-grown schoolboy, was, he felt, a dangerous example not only to the other boys, but to the decads as well. If everyone now began to want to be heroic, that would be the end, on the Damlayik, of the only power — unified discipline — which might, at least for a tim^ guarantee the survival of the camp. Deeper still was his anxiety for Stephan. So far his luck had been incredible. Really the boy must be off his head! And you couldn’t lock him up, on Three-Tent Square. . . . But Gabriel did not follow out these thoughts, since now his whole mind was set on the howitzers. Their type was familiar to him; the battery he had served in the Balkan war had had guns of the same calibre. They were Austro-Hungarian lo cm. howitzers, of the 1899 pattern, delivered to Turkey by the Skoda factory. The lockers in the gun-cart of the second still contained thirty shells. Gabrid found all he needed, and tried to remember exactly how to use it— the aiming-apparatus for finng from belli n A cover, a box of firing-instrucuons, and schedule, in the trail- box. He began to remember all he had learned, reckoned out the distance to Bitias, strove to get the exact position of the
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Turkish encampment, screwed at the rear-sights to determine the given field of direction, took stock of the elevation of his enplacement, raised the barrels, with the little wheel, to centre the bubble, and only then pulled out the breech, set the fuses of two shells with the key-rmg, shoved the round projectiles into the bore, and pressed m the cartridges after them. His unpractised hand took very long to do dl this, and Chaush Nurhan could do next to nothing to help him. As the sun came up, Bagradian, having retested all these aiming factors, knelt with Nurhan, as regulations directed, one on either side of the gun-carriage, watch in hand. Two short, terrific cracks, bang upon bang, rent the air to shreds. The gun kicked, em- bedding Itself deep in the ground. These shells had been badly aimed; they dropped far wide of Bagradian’s target, somewhere in the valley. But this mere gesture was enough to apprise the whole Mohammedan countryside of the new vic- tory of the Christians, the loss of Turkish artillery, the im- pregnability of the Damlayik, and the fact, now public prop- erty, that the Armenian swine had entered into a compaa with the jinn, known of old as the evil spirits of Musa Dagh. The Chettehs had all vanished in the night, and a section of sap- tiehs, not attached to this nahiyeh, along with them. Now the few survivors of the companies were convinced that eves a full division would be routed, if k assailed this devil’s moun- tain. The bimbashi could not have ordered a fresh attack without risking a mutiny from his young troops. Nor did he even consider such foolhardiness, occupied with a far more modest problem: how to get the long line of carts, full of dead and wounded, back to Antioch, unperceived, as he had given strict orders they should be. The old man’s cheeks had no more .colour in them. It was all he could do to sit his horse, after two sleepless nights and the strain of battle. His fate was sealed. The bimbashi’s very limited powers of reflection, which, even in peaceable times, were far too desultory, could con- ceive no method of pulhng down to destruction along with
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l»i«i the cursed Kaimakam and his set rascally, £azy civil sorvants who were really responsible for it all.
The two thunderclaps, almost in thdr ears, seemed to those within the Town Enclosure hkc the menacing signs of divine assistance. The toughest, dourest among these peasants em- braced, with tears m their eyes. “Perhaps Christ really means to save us, after all.” Never before had their sunrise greetings sounded so heart-felt. As to the Bagradians, their kingly rank, doubly proved, seemed for ever established. Some of the peas- ants came to Gabriel, begging his permission to confer on Stephan the title "Elleon”— “Lion.” Gabriel rather sharply re- fused. His son was still only a child, without any real notion of danger. He didn’t want him to get conceited, or stuff his head with a lot of foolery, which might only end in disaster. So that Stephan, through his father’s severity, was balked of pubhc recognition, and had to content hunself with the flat- teries which, for a few days, surrounded him on all sides. In after-years those Armenian chroniclers who described the batde on the Damlayik wrote only of “the heroic action of a young sharpshooter” without naming him. But of what use would even the most exphcit praises have been then, to Bagradian’s son?
Gabriel had long been a different man, and Stephan too had changed completely. The gently nurtured cannot do butcher’^ work unpunished, though right may be a thousand times on their side. On this boy’s delicate forehead some savage god of Musa Dagh was already setting his dark seal.
This great night of August 14 witnessed yet another, though far less memorable, event. Sato had gone creeping down through the twilight, to her friends in the valley. Thi^ must, hear the whole tale of battle, learn how sixteen corpses lay covered on the bare earth, how the shrieks of the wounded rose and rose — ^loudest of all when the stupid hekim, Altouni, dabbled brown water on their wounds. Sato, that walking
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newspaper, alike o£ mountain* and of grave-dwellers, could, tonight, revel in sensationalism, earning her soaal keep for days ahead. When Sato could satisfy her clients, and fed her- self a bdoved child, her eyes seemed to change into slits of flickering light, and her throaty jargon proclauned sensation with joyous zest. The churchyard folk rejoiced along with her— old Manushak, old Wartuk, and Nunik, the oldest of them all, or so she said. They wagged knowing heads. Deep sdf-importance possessed them. No longer superfluous out casts, they had an office to perform, incontestably theirs, through all human memory. The dead had need of them. Sixteen dead awaited them on the Damlayik. And, once they came about their business, their arch-enemy, Hekim Altouni, would have lost his power. No “enlightener” dared molest keening-women.
So Nunik, Wartuk, Manushak, and a score of other beggar- women besides, set forth, with the slow, dignified tread of functionaries, for their dens, dug in the earth-mounds of the graveyard. They dragged forth the crammed and filthy sacks upon which they laid their beggar-women's heads. What it was that rotted in these sacks, in dense and permanent cor- ruption, passes description. The miscellaneous rubbish of fifty years’ picking up off the ground. The collector’s itch o£<all old, poor women in every land, the itch to save up moth-eaten remnants, scrape together mildewed garbage— this usual, jeal- ously guarded treasure-trove of rags and rottenness, had tiJten on the dimensions of a veritable orgy of stinking uselessness. Yet behold, these old women’s sacks seemed, besides their tatters, their cloth patches, empty boxes, stony crusts and cheese-rinds, to contain the professional equipment of Nunik, Wartuk, Manushak. Each of them plunged in her hand, to draw the same out of her luckybag— a long, grey veil, a pot of greasy salve. They squatted down, and began to smear their faces, like mimes. It was a dark purple facc.stain, which they worked into their deep<ut wrinkles, changing their incredibly
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ancient faces into timeless and imponng masks. Nunik espe- cially, with the lupous nose and strong white teeth gleaming out of her dark, lipless visage, quite justified her romantic reputation as the “eternally wandering” medicine-woman. It took her a long time to make up. Suddenly they broke off their preparations and puffed out their stump of candle-end, the wick-flame, in the rancid oil cup set up before them. Hoofs and voices came scurrying past. This was the instant when the bimbashi and his staff rode away to Suedia. When the sounds had petered out in Habibli, the wood village, the women rose, enveloped their grey, matted heads in the veils, took each a long stick in her hand, and their broken, clappenng shoes set out. Their stringy, old women’s legs seemed to manage sur- prisingly long strides. Sato came after, scared at their majesty. As, plying their staves, they went on in silence under the moon, these kecning-women had almost the look of the masked leaders of a Greek chorus.
What stored-up, inexhaustible vitality, what stout hearts, the Armenian women possessed! Not one, as they emerged from the steep ilex gully on to the burying-ground of the encamp- ment, breathed a jot more quickly. These purple-faced wallers had all the strength they needed to set to work. Nunik, War- tuk, Manushak, and the others crouched round the dead. Their dirty claws uncovered the already stiffened faces. And their song, older perhaps than the oldest song of all humanity, rose to the skies. Its text was no mure than the ever-repeated names of these fresh corpses. Names, keened over and over, without a break, till the last stars faded in greemsh ether. Poor though its text, the more richly varied was its melody. Sometimes it was a long groaning monotone, sometimes a chain of howling coloratura, sometimes the empty, drooping repetition, maimed with its grief, of the same two notes; sometimes it was a shrill, greedy demand — ^yet none of this in free obedience to an impulse, but strictly conventionahzed and handed down by a long tradition. Not all the singers had Nunik’s voice or
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inherited technique. There were mediocre^ and so vain, artists among them, whose thoughts as they worked were occupied with fees and inheritance. What use were all his pounds and piastres to the richest man, up here^ Let him give lavish ofier- ings to the beggar-folk, and he would do not only a deed pleasing to God, but a useful worL The keenmg-women, the blind, the outcasts, were able to lay out chinking piastres, even in Mohammedan villages, without risk. So that Armenian money would not be wasted on them, but be of use to poor Armenian bodies, and the benefactors thus acquire celestial merit at bargain prices. Between the chants, her colleagues admonished Nunik, with all their might, to insist on this common-sense standpoint, and raise the usual fee for a corpse- watching. Through the grey hght came the relatives, bringing their long, fine-woven shrouds. These had been stored up by every family, and had to be taken with every house-moving. The shift in which a man stands up from the dead, his most festal garment, is a gift given by the members of each house- hold to one another, on the most solemn occasions in their hves. The task of weaving such a shroud is accounted a par- ticular honour. Only the worthiest women may perform it.
These women’s howls had died into a low, almost soundless, windy sigh. It went with the corpse-washing, the enshroud- ing, like cold comfort. Then the long shifts were tied under the feet in double knots. This was to keep the limbs from dis- persal, so that the last storm, which shall drive all bones to- gether, to be judged, might not find it hard to fit the right ones. Towards midday the graves stood open, and all men ready for the burials. On sixteen biers, made of strong branches lashed together, the fallen were carried twice round the altar, while Ter Haigasun chanted his funeral dirge. Afterwards, on the burial-ground, he addressed the people:
“These, our dear brethren, have been snatched away by bloody death. And yet we must devoudy thank the Blessed Trinity that they have died in battle, in freedom, and arc to
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rest here in diis earth, among their own. Yes, we have sdfi the grace of a free death, of our own choosing. And, therefore, to see aright the grace in which God lets ua live, we must think again and again of the thousands from whom such grace had been withdrawn; of those who have died in the worst bondage, who lie out unburied on the plains, in ditches along the highroads, and are being devoured by vultures and hyenas. If we climb that knoll to our left, and look out eastwards, we shall see stretching away before us the endless fields of our dead, where there is no consecrated ground, no priest, no burial, and only the hope of the Last Judgment. So let us then, in this hour in which we lower these happy ones into earth, remember what real misfortune is, and that it is not here, but out yonder.”
This short sermon drew deep groans from the villagers en- camped on Musa Dagh, who had all assembled. Ter Haigasun went to the tubs which contained their consecrated earth. Sixteen times he put in his hand, to open it over the head of a dead fighter. It moved with the slowest deliberation. They (Xiuld see how sparing he was of that precious soil.
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3
The Procession of Fire
Nunik, Waituk, Manushak— today they were in luck profes- sionaUy. Before they so much as found time to wipe their faces dean with lettuce leaves, another engagement presented itself. It was one of an exactly opposite kind. If the woman’s labour was prolonged, as they had every reason to hope it naight be, they could count on three full meals at least. And, in the very just supposition that any human event may occur at any time in a population of five thousand, they had brought all the essentials of their craft, wrapped in the crumpled folds of their garments — sevsamith, the black fennel seed, a little swallow dung, the tad hair of a chestnut horse, and other sim- ilar medicaments.
Even before the earth of the Damlayik had closed over the last of the dead, Hovsannah’s labour had begun. Only Iskohi was with her in the tent, everyone dse had gone to the burial. Iskuhi’s lame arm prevented her being of much use to her sister'in-law. There was no seat with a back to it against which the labouring mother could bear down. Cushions gave her no leverage, and the bed had only a low iron frame. Iskuhi sat with her back to Hovsannah, so that the tortured woman might press firmly against her body. But Iskuhi was too frail to hold out against Hovsannah’s heavy thrusts; chng as fast as she might to the bed-frame, she always slipped. Hovsannah let out a short scream. It came as a signal to Nunik. That wailer’s alert instinct had drawn her away from the buriaL
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These mourners’ work was done, then surprisingly high feet had been clawed together.
Iskubi was about to leave the tent in search of Mairik Antaram when the three fates, unbidden, thrust into the tent. Their rigid purple faces shone in the gloom. The two Tomas- ian women were speechless; not that die mourners themselves alarmed them— who did not know them in Yoghonoluk? — but at the sight of their funeral trappings, which they still wore. Numk, who divined at once the superstitious reason of these fears, calmed them: “Little daughter, it's good we should come like this. It keeps death behind us.”
Numk began her obstetric treatment by drawing the sis out of her garments, the thin iron poker to stir up the tonir fire. She began tracing out big crosses along the inner wall of the tent.
“Why arc you drawing crosses?” asked Iskuhi, spellbound.
Numk explained' as she worked. All the powers of the air assemble round the beds of labouring women, the evil more numerous than the good. When the child pushes into the world, in the very instant when his head pushes into life, these evil spirits hurl themselves upon it, to possess and permeate. Every human born must, of necessity, take something of them. It is because of this that madness hes asleep at the bottom of all our hearts. So that the devil has his share of all men, and only Christ Saviour was never devil-ridden. In Numk’s view the highest art of the midwife lies in her knowledge of how to cut down the devil’s share. These crosses served as prohibit- ing signals, as mystic quarantine. Iskuhi remembered her dream of the convoy, night after night. The face of kaleido- scopic evil, Satan and all his works, still hovered above her. And she, too, with her free hand, had tried to ban him by traang a great cross in the air. Oh, for how much earthly terror must Christ Saviour at every instant not be in readi- ness! This was by no means the end of Nunik’s wisdom. She explained to the startled women how all our entrails— the
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lungs, the hvcr, the heart especially — arc in sympathy with a different devil, who will strive to get entire possession of them all. The whole act of birth is no more than a wresthng-match of good and evil, for the full ownership of the child. So that a wise mother would use the old, well-tried feints and aid which Nunik gave her. If she did, her child was certain to get past its first, dangerous days.
When sudden panic had abated, the presence of these three bedizened midwives was remarkably soothing — ^lulling — in its effect. Hovsannah even dozed, and seemed not to notice how Wartuk tied up her wrists and ankles with thin, silk cords. But Nunik came close to the bed, and counselled her: “The longer your body remains closed, the longer your strength re- mains shut in. The later you open your body, the more strength will enter, and issue out of you.”
Meanwhile the little, sturdy Manushak had lighted a twig fire in front of the tent. Two smooth stones, hke flat loaves, were put to heat in it. This was a far less occult remedy, since these warm stones, wrapped into cloths, would serve to warm the exhausted body of the mother. Even Bedros Hekim might have approved of this more practical part of magic obstetrics, and of the fennel-water, which Manushak heated over her fire. None the less his remaining bans brisded with rage when he found his three arch-enemies vdth the patient. He swung his stick and, with all the nimblcness of youth, drove off the keeners. His sharp little voice pursued them with insults. “Carnon-crows” was perhaps the mildest.
We see, therefore, that Dr. Bedros Altouni was a very ardent champion indeed of western science. Had not old Avetis Ba- gradian sent him to get his education and supported him a whole five years at the University of Vienna, that he might hold aloft the torch of enhghtenment above the darkness of this people? But how were things with hipa in reality? What reward had fate given the hekim for having kept his promise
to his old patron? In all the long years through whidi* astride his patient ass, the doctor had gone jogging round the villages, and indeed been in constant request by Moslems, up and down the whole district, he had had to admit the oddest experiences. His whole scientific heart might rebel, but his eyes had had to see many cures obtained by the lousiest quacks, the filthiest nostrums, in fiat defiance of all antiseptic or hygiene. In eighty percent of these cures “evil eye” had been the diagnosis. For this the specifics were spittle, sheep’s piss, burnt horsehair, birds’ dung, and even more attractive medicaments. And yet, more than once it had happened that a patient, given up by Dr. Altouni, got a lightning cure from having swallowed a strip of paper scribbled with a verse from Bible or Koran. Altouni was not the man to credit the magic of swallowed strips, not, at least, to the point where doubts assailed him. But what use was scepticism? A cure was a cure! In Armenian villages the news of such miraculous therapy would get about from time to time, so that Altouni’s patients all forsook him, to seek out the Arab hekim in the naghbourhood, or even con- sult Nunik and her worthy sisters, the other fates. And fre- quently there would be confirmed “enlighteners” — ^this or that sdiooltcacher, for instance — who deserted the doctor for the quack. It certainly did not improve his temper.
There was another reason for Dr. Altouni’s bitter wrath. Perhaps it was the really valid one. Science! Enlightenment! Progress! All well and good. But to diffuse the light of sci- entific advancement one must oneself be scientifically ad- vanced. And who, cut off from all knowledge of recent dis- coveries, medical books, or medical journals, could advance in the shadow of Musa Dagh? Krikor’s library contained the works of many years on every conceivable subject except medi- cine, although, or perhaps b^use, he was a chemist. Bedros Altouni had only a German Handbook of Medicine published in 1875. It was a solid work; it contained the essendals. But it had one grave defect. For devouring time had not only
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a£Cected the vade mecum, but also the doctor’s memory of G^rnan. The Handbook had, as it were, been struck dumb. So now Dr. Altouni never opened it, nor even used it as amulet and fetish. All that, decades ago, he had learned the- oretically, had melted into an inconsiderable something. For the doctor there were ten to twenty diseases that could be named. Though he had seen innumerable pictures of human suffering, he crammed them all under the few headings he pos- sessed. In the depths of his sad and simple heart Altouni felt every bit as ignorant as the hekims, quacks, and keening- wives of the district, whose gruesome cures so damnably often succeeded, with a htde help from patient Nature. It was just this utter lack of conceit which, without his ever being aware of it, made of Altouni a great doctor. On the other hand it provoked these frenzied outbursts at the sight of Nunik, Wartuk, Manushak. But today these midwives did not let themselves be dismissed. They lingered on the edge of Three- Tent Square, eyemg the enemy with derinon.
Hovsannah, the pastor’s wife, was the first woman among the people to lie in childbed on the Damlayik. Even in the everyday valley a birth was a kind of public event, to which all assembled, near and distant relatives, not excepting the men. How much more solemn, therefore, and public an occa- sion, up here in camp — since now, in perhaps the most perilous situation in which that people had yet b^n placed, the first Armeman child was to be brought forth. Even the resplendent spoils of war, the two golden howitzers, shed their glory on it. The crowds which had that morning surrounded those tro- phies now jammed into Three-Tent Square, the most “select” place in this poor camp. The curtains of poor Hovsannah’s tent were lifted and she was mercilessly exposed to the sun. Her birthpangs were her own, but she was the people’s. The inquisitive came in and out. Altouni, having soon realized himself superfluous, had made way, with a. grunt, for his wife, who as a rule replaced him at a child-bed. He walked away,
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taking no notice of the deep salaams of the keening-women, towards the hospital-hut to visit his wounded.
Mairik Antaram stayed with Hovsannah. With sharp words, even with fists, she cleared the tent of its intruders. Etecisivcly she set about the duties which for many decades she had per- formed. Yet, old as Mairik was, she could still, even today, not help at a childbirth without some thoughts of the two miscarriages which dated back to her earhest youth. Iskuhi stroked her sister's forehead with hands as cool as ice, in spite of the heat She kept eyeing Mairik with shy anxiety, afraid of missing some direction. All the energy of the doctor’s wife could not keep people out of the hut; they kept on rcturmng, to give advice, encourage, ask how things were getting on. Gabriel too came in for news. Iskuhi, in the midst of all this bustle, was sail struck by the haggard paleness of his bearded face. Also she felt surprised that Juliette should remain scarcely half an hour with Hovsannah — ^they had lived together so long, in a single family. Aram, the husband, was m and out every twenty minutes. But he always went again. He was, he kept saying, more needed than ever; after yesterday’s victory over the Turks he must keep an eye on the general discipline. Really his own excitement, and worry about his wife, drove him round in circles.
The women of the people were shaking their heads over the. fact that Hovsannah Tomasian did not scream as she lay in labour. They sensed some pride behind it It was perhaps the pride of shame. Nunik, Wartuk, Manushak, had long since come back into the foreground. Nunik herseljf squatted insiHc the tent, watching all Antaram’s laborious efforts with re- flectively professional eyes, much as a world-famous surgeon might watch the work of a village barber
After more than eight hours’ labour pains Hovsannah at last brought 'forth a son. This child, who in its mother’s womb since Zeitun, had known much fear and suffering, was uncon- scious, and did not breathe. Antaram shook the any body, still
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covered with blood and afterbirth, while Iskuhi had to breathe into its mouth. But Nunik and her colleagues, who knew better, seized like lightning on the afterbirth, to pierce it with seven needles, owned by seven different families. They cast the whole into their fire. The life which, to escape its fate on earth, had taken refuge in this dead matter, must be freed by fire. A few seconds later the child gurgled; he began to breathe, and then to whimper. Mairik Antaram rubbed him all over carefully with mutton fat. The crowd, grown silent, began ap- plauding. The sun sank. Pastor Aram, with all the clumsy, rather absurd, pride of a young father, took up the little wrinkled thing, which should grow to a man, and held it out to the people. They all rejoiced and praised Tomasian, since this was a male. The broadest jokes went the rounds of the fighters. None of them could remember the real future. It re- mains uncertain which of them was the first to notice the little, round fiery birth-spot which this true son of Musa Dagh bore above his tiny heart. The women put their heads together to consult as to the meaning of this sign. But Nunik, Wartuk, Manushak, whose profession it was to decipher such omens, would say nothing, bound up their veils, took their staves, and so retraced their steps, well recompensed. Their old brown legs moved in long strides. Again they were like the mim^ of an ancient chorus as, under the rising moon, they took their way down mountain slopes towards the graves of the past.
Not more than three days and nights had passed, and scouts were already announcing incomprehensible movements in the villages. Gabriel climbed at once to his observation post. His field-glass certainly showed a most active scurry, in sharply differentiated forms. Long lines of ox-carts across the plain of the Oroiites, along the highroad between the villages, on the paths and cart-tracks leading off it. Big crowds in these villages themselves, people m fez and turban, darting in and
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out, in obvious baste. Gabrid tested every strip of ground trddi bis spy-glass, but could not make out one soldier’s uniform, and not many saptiehs. On the other hand he noticed that this time it was not the familiar populace of Antakiya, or its sub- urbs, that invaded the empty streets. Today’s incursions looked far more opulent, and seemed to have a definite object. Great stir on the church square of Yoghonoluk. Little turbaned shapes were clambering up the fire-escape of the church, and moving about in the empty bell-tower, to the side of the big cupola. The long-drawn, thread-like notes of a tiny voice grew audible, perceptible rather, sent out to the four quarters of the globe. It was the prayer-crycr of the Prophet, standing above the house of Christ, giving out of himself his plangent sing-song, which causes every Moslem heart to beat faster, and which seemed to be bringing in the faithful from every cluster of huts, village, market town, in the empty land. The fate of the Church of Ever-Increasing Angelic Powers, built by Avetis the elder, was therefore sealed. The mad desire to answer this desecration with a shell flashed into the grand- son’s mind. He checked his impulse. His basic principle — always to defend, never attack— must be broken least of all by himself. And the mountain, towering secretively over its ene- mies, as though shamming dead, threatened more effectively. Provocation could only weaken their defence, since it gave the Turks, the ruling people, their moral right to punish rebels. '
As he watched all this mysterious stir in the valley, Bagrad- ian asked himself how many more onslaughts tliey could drive back. In spite of the spoils of double victory, and Nur- han’s workshop for making cartridges, the munition supply was very limited. It made his heart stand still to remember liow the smallest shp, the most trifling failure, must lead to irre- trievable disaster. There was no middle way for those on the Damlayik; it was cither final victory, or the end. His tartiral skill was merely useful to put off that end as long as he could. To acbeve that object the capital sum of wholesome fear
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which, after two defeats, they obviously inspired in the Turks, must not be frittered away. The new population of the valley increased every minute. But this time it did not mean an at- tack, of that he was certain, after long and nunute investiga- tion. Perhaps they were only holding a demonstration, perhaps this was the solemn investiture of a Christian district by Islam. In front of the church door of Yoghonoluk he made out a small group of men in European dress. The miidir with his officials, presumed Bagradian, glad to see no officer among them, come to get the hang of the situauon. All the same he ordered that the trenches were to keep on the sharpest alert, set a double guard at every observation post, and groups of scouts at all possible approaches to the Damlayik, as far down as the vines and orchards, so that no surprise attack at night should be possible.
Gabriel had judged correctly. It was the freckled mudir who stood in the church square of Yoghonoluk. But a greater than he, the dyspeptic Kaimakam m person, had come to have a look round for himself. There was excellent reason for it. This last, disastrous defeat of a force of regulars had made things happen in Antioch— things which entailed important consequences.
Between the Kaimakam and the poor, rosy<hecked bim- bashi a life-or-death struggle had started instandy. That forth- right veteran of the simple barrack squares of former days was in no way up to the latest Ittihad finesse. Only now did he begin to get some inkling why his deputy, and keen com- petitor, the yus-bashi, had chosen this moment to go on leave. By granting it he had walked into the trap. Very soon now the major would have ceased to deputize. It began by the Kai- makam’s slyly contriving to stir up popular hatred against the bimbashi. In Antioch there was only one hospital, superin- tended by the civil authorities. Soldiers without much the matter with them were ill in barracks, but if hra^ital treat-
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ment became necessary the military command had to put in a request to the Kaimakam. The Kaimakam made skilful use of his red tape. But, in any case, he had finished the colonel. Yet the thing might have gone dragging on for weeks, with piles of reports and investigations, before they removed him from his command; and, to pursue his policy in the kazah, the Kaimakam needed dependable Ittihad collaborators, not indolent dug-outs, survivals of the days of Abdul Hamid, He and the major had judged the event with suflfident accuracy, and made their arrangements together. A few hours before the bimbashi got back to Antioch, the disconsolate herald of his own downfall, a long line ef ox-carts with dead and wounded, the victims both of guns and avalanche, had come into the town, at the dead of night. No light shone in the windows of the Hukumet. When these carts halted outside the hospital, its superintendent categorically refused to admit their occupants. He had been expressly forbidden to take in soldiers without written permission from the Kaimakam. Cunses and threats left him unmoved. The surgeon, by the light of an oil lamp, and of the moon, in the open air, put on the most necessary bandages. He, too, had neither space nor permission to admit two hundred extra patients into his wretched lazaret. In despair he sent off an assistant to the Kaimakam, to get his instructions. It took a very long time for the messenger to come back without any. The Kaimakam was so soundly asleep that nobody had succeeded in waking him. So that at last it had to be decided to take these scream- ing, or groaning, men to barracks, where at least they could have a roof over their heads. Meanwhile the sun was up, it was full daylight. An indescribable impression was made on the people of Antioch by these carts, slippery with blood. And when, at almost the same instant, the poor bimbashi, so tried by fate, rode with his staff across the Orontes bridge into the town, he was welcomed with stones, and could scarcely get back to his quarters, by devious lanes. Only now, with crowds
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thronging the market-place, did the Kaimakam, whose sleep was so deliciously long and tranquil, send necessary permis- sion to the hospital. The long line of cart-loads of wretched men Jolted slowly back there. The carts had been given care- ful orders to trundle through the Long Bazaar. This repeated sight of sallow, agonized faces, bandages stiff with blood, pro- voked an uproar. A furious crowd collected in front of the barracks, and broke all the poor bimbashi’s windows — and windows, in these parts, were valuable luxuries. Not only that! What was left of the military arm had grown so timid, so sub- dued, so scared of the mob, that it closed its barrack-gates, like any terrified little shopkeeper. In every collection of massed humanity there slumbers a primitive hatred, easily roused, against its rulers. As it heard the deathly quiet behind barrack-gates, this mob grew aware that it had triumphed, and opened fresh fire. His officers kept imploring the bimbashi to let them turn out the guard with fixed bayonets, to clear the square. But the old man, stretched on his sofa, could heed no counsel. He could only whimper: “It isn’t my fault,” again and again. Utterly worn out by this strain and hardship, he sobbed except when he fell asleep, and slept whenever he was not sobbing The garrison had to endure the further disgrace of requesting pohee and saptiehs to rid the square of its turbu- lent populace.
All this delighted the Kaimakam. He, with the manicured mudir from Salonika, had meanwhile repaired to the local telegraph office. This time these gentlemen between them com- posed a masterpiece of political acumen and tactful insight. A dispatch to His Excellency the Wah of Aleppo. This voluminous telegraphed document contained eleven hundred words, and covered ten closely written forms. A document as involved and subtle as the deed drawn up by a needy but am- bitious solicitor, as glib as the most liberal newspaper editorial. It began, with colourful emphasis, by describing the recent disastrous efforts to “liquidate”— these heavy, yet so unneces-
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sary, losses (with figures attached): stigmatized as the un- heard-of military delinquency that indeed it was, this stnr- Fcnder of insufficiently guarded howitzers to a set of rascally mutineers. The Kaimakam then dismissed the unhappy busi- ness with a resigned suggestion that any attempt on his part to influence military decisions was almost bound to be misin- terpreted. On the other hand he felt it very urgent to insist on the highly uncertain state of public feeling in this matter, so outraged, for the moment at least, as to demand, even by street demonstrations, the instant removal from his command of the present bimbashi. And he, the Kaimakam, had not a suffi- ciently strong force of militia and saptiehs at his disposal to control any really serious outbreak. Therefore the popular out- cry would have to he conceded to without delay, and would His Excellency be so kind as to remove and punish by court martial the present responsible commandant? All this, the Kaimakam continued, was merely the indirect result of dual control, smee the Syrian vilayets were subject both to their civil governors and the High Command of the Fourth Army. For so long as such dual control continued, he could guarantee neither peace in the kazah nor the so desirable compleuon of _ the enforcement of the edict of deportation against Armenians. He gave lucid legal demonstration that measures to ensure the migration of the Armenian millet were a process of the avil arm, in which even the most highly placed officers had no warrant to act independently. In their case mihtary com- petence was fully comprised in the concept “auxiliary.” But the use of such auxihary troops depended, by the text of the edict, solely on such decisions as the avil authoriaes might arrive at. The present prevailing practice was therefore illegal, since the High Command frequendy acted at its own discre- tion, in many cases withheld its auxiliary forces, acted in a manner hostile to district governors, and would even some- times commandeer the gendarmerie— a section of the civil arm —for its own objects. Such dangerous practices had resulted
anfi
in stirring up the Armenian population to a resistance which, i£ it spread, might entail unpredictable consequences to the whole empire. The Kaimakam closed this very unusual service telegram on an almost threatemng note. He could only under- take the hquidation of the armed camp on Musa Dagh on condition that he were given full control of all effectives. For that purpose he must have military auxiliaries, so armed and of such strength, at his disposal as to make possible the com- plete and thorough clearance of the whole mountain. Nor could It be a question of undertaking such punitive action with an officer unversed in the particular circumstances. He begged most urgently that the present deputy-major might be pro- moted military commandant of Antakiya, since this Arme man undertaking ought to be left entirely in his control. Other- wise — should these minimum requests not be considered pos- sible of fulfilment — he, the Kaimakam, ventured most respect- fully to suggest that the disaster above described had better be accepted as a fdt accompli, without any further counter- measures, and the rebels left to their own devices on Musa Dagh.
The Kaimakam’s report was a masterpiece of pohtical in- sight. Should he obtam only a portion of his requests, he would be the most independent district governor in Syria. A well- trained offiaal heart of the last generation would no doubt have fluttered in apprehension at the rather challenging tone of this huge dispatch. Not so the Young Turk. Such blunt de- cisiveness was attuned to the ears of the present authorities. They were on their knees before the progressive West, and so, m superstitious awe of such words as '‘iniuative” and “energy,” even though the voice that spoke them was somewhat harsh.
Simultaneously the ruined bimbashi, whose rosy cheeks had certainly faded out for ever, was scrawling a long dispatch to the base commandant, his immediate superior. It was verbose, full of prolix accusations against the Kaintakam, who had forced hun to this disastrous undertaking, without having al*
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lowed him any time to make the necessary preparations. The bimbashi’s tone was doleful, subdued, ceremonious, and conse- quently as wrong as it could be. The broken old man was re- moved within twenty-four hours and summoned to attend a court martial. He vanished through the night into obscurity, from the scene of many years’ comfortable activity, the most innocent victim of Armenian success in war.
But His Excellency the Wall of Aleppo was so impressed with the suggestions of the Kaimakam of Antioch that he had them telegraphed on to Istanbul, with a strong personal recom- mendation, to the Ministry of the Interior. This subordinate had touched, with his finger-ups, a very sore spot in his su- perior. Ever since the great Jemal Pasha, with the unrestricted powers of a Roman proconsul, had been commanding in Syria, all walls and mutessarifs had shrunk to the stature of imnor deities. Jemal Pasha treated these mighty ones as so many commissariat officials attached to his army. They were given curt orders to deliver at such and such a point so and so many thousand oka of grain, or, in a given time, to put this or that highroad in faultless repair. This general seemed to regard the whole civil population as an onerous set of unnecessary para- sites, and civil government as a quite unnecessary evil. His Excellency of Aleppo was therefore delighted with the chance to rap this iron pasha over the knuckles, and apprise the Istan- bul authorities of the wretched failure of arrogant fire-eaters.
Talaat Bey, however, read the Kaimakam’s masterpiece with mixed feelings. It was his ]ob to protect the civil arm against encroachments by the military. And to him these Armenian deportations were a matter of far greater urgency than the boring ambitions of discontented officers. He stroked his white pique waistcoat with his great paws, several times, as his habit was. At last the nimble fingers of the telegraphist, attached to these mighty paws, clipped the sheets together, scribbled, and attached the slip: “Urgently request immediate settlement.”
The dossier wandered without delay on to the desk of the
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Minister of War. It was Enver Pasha’s habit never to refuse a request of Talaat’s. That evening, when they came together at the Endjumen, the smaller cabinet meeting, Enver came straight to his friend. The young war-god smiled demurely, and blinked long lashes. “I’ve sent Jemal an urgent wire about Musa Dagh. . . .’’ And without awaiting Talaat’s thanks, with a daintilymischicvous moue: ‘I’m sure you ought all of you to thank me for having sent that mad creature to Syria — ^well out of mischiefl”
There was an Arab hotel before the Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem. Its windows looked out over the David citadel, with the tower- ing minaret. In this hotel General Jemal Pasha, the general in command of this particular army, had set up his temporary headquarters Here he read the dispatches from Enver, the Wall of Aleppo, and other functionaries, imploring him to provide for the instant quelling of this wretched Armenian revolt. (In those days it was the habit of all Young Turkish potentates to wire volumes to one another. It was more than a matter of mere urgency. It sprang from a barbaric joy in the use of talking electricity.) Jemal Pasha sat alone in the room. Neither Ah Fuad Bey nor the German, von Frankenstein, his two chiefs of staff, was with him. Only Osman, the head of the bodyguard, stood at the door, a valiant and romantic mountaineer, who gave the effect of a uniformed dummy in a war museum. Jemal’s bodyguard served two objects. Their barbaric splendour was a concession to Asiatic love of display, which could not otherwise be indulged, in the mechanized drab of modern warfare. At the same time they served to allay a fear — one which all through the ages has distmguished ic- tators from their less succe.ssful fellow-men — of assassination. Osman had orders never to leave the general alone, especially not with any caller from Istanbul. For Jemal by no means felt it to be impossible that his brethren, Enver or Talaat, might send him some highly recommended expert— in the art of
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death. The general scanned the dispatches, especially Enver’s, with close attention. Though really this seemed a trifling matter, it turned his sallow face sallower still; the lips, pouting out through the black beard, turned white with rage. The gen- eral sprang to his feet, began pacing up and down. He was as short as Enver, but stockily, not daintily, built. He hunched his left shoulder a little, so that people who did not know him well thought "him deformed. Heavy red hands hung down limp, out of the gold-striped sleeves of his general’s tunic. The mere sight of them was enough to explain the rumour that this was the grandson of a former Istanbul executioner Enver was composed of the lightest substance, Jemal of the hea\ lest. If the one was all dreamy caprice, the other was all and, pas- sionate brooding. Jemal loathed the silken favourite of the gods, with all the detestation of physical underlings. He had had to sweat for everything which dropped into Enver’s lap- martial celebrity, luck, women’s favour, Jemal ttxik up the dispatch again, and tried, through its official impersonality, to get the tones of Enver’s coquettish voice. Throughout these minutes the fate of the seven communes on Musa Dagh was more in the balance than ever previously. A chit from Jemal would have sufficed to send two full battahons of infantry, machine-guns, a mountain battery, agamst the Damlayik. That would have settled matters in an hour, in spite of all Bagrad- ian’s valour. As Jemal read the dispatch a second time, his anger seemed to simmer up to boiling-point. He snapped at the disconcerted Osman to get out, and, on pain of death, not disturb him again. Then he went across to the window, but drew back at once, fearful of showing the world his naked soul. Oh, if he could only dispose of Enverl That society beauty of the war I That inflated little drawing-rcxim pet! That climber, who never in all his hfe had done one really masculine act, who’d wangled his reputation as a general by retaking Adrianople with his cavalry — sidhng into it, when the whole business was really setded. And a Jemal had to play
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second fiddle to this vain, insignificant playboy of the Otto- man empirel That cunning sissy dared attempt to rid himself of a Jemal, by fobbing him oS with the Syrian command — Jemal’s rage against the Mars of Istanbul deepened by several fathoms of the souL An absurd trifle had released it. Enver’s telegram began with the words: “I beg you to take immediate measurei.” No thought of addressing him as “Your Excel- lency," not even with the simplest “Pasha”! And Jemal was a stickler for forms, especially when in contact with an Enver. He would use the most pedantic ceremony, even in their inti- mate conversations. Feverishly touchy, he watched lest Enver should fail in due respect or abate one jot of his martial dig- nities. This wire, with its insolent beginning, was the last drop in Jemal’s cup of hate, which was running over. Enver, for several months, had made monstrous demands on the gen- eral, who had always complied without a word. First Jemal had been commanded to send back his thud and tenth divi- sions to Istanbul, later even his twenty-fifth, and finally the whole Thirteenth Army Corps, which had been moved to Baghdad and Bitlis. At the moment the dictator of Syria com- manded no more than sixteen to eighteen shabby battalions, and this in a huge war area extending from the heights of the Taurus to the Suez canal. All that was Enver Pasha’s work— the war situation was merely a pretext. Of that the rabid Jemal was persuaded. The general-in-chief, with his usual pickpocket methods, had disarmed him, drawn his teeth, at the same time depriving him of any possibility of a victory. A hundred scurvy, treacherous details, seen with the full lucidity of hate, stood out in Jemal Pasha’s mind, all so many further proofs of the low-down way in which Enver had always treated him. He and his clique had constandy kept Jemal at arm’s length, failed to inform him of their most important resoludons, to invite him to intimate sitdngs. This reladonship, from the very first, had been a train of carefully thought-out snubs and— worst, most disgraceful of all— Jemal
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could not assert himself against Enver! The fellow’s very pres- ence and personality made him feel irretrievably second-rat^ although he knew himself far superior, both as a leader and a general. Jemal Pasha, hunching his left shoulder, still wan- dered round and round the table. He felt quite powerless. Crazy juvenile schemes flashed into his mind: Move on Istan- bul with a new army, take prisoner this insolent puppy, open the Bosporus to the Allies, make peace with the present enemy. For the third time he took up the dispatches, but at once slammed them down on the table again. What would be the most poisonous mischief he could do to Enver and his clique? Jemal knew that in the Armenian deportations they saw their most sacred patriotic mission. He himself had often referred to them as that. But he would never have endorsed that typ- ical piece of Enver amateurishness which made of Syria the cloaca for Armenian corpses. The Mmister of War had been careful not to ask him to sittings in which the deportation law was discussed. If he had, not a shred would have been left of darling httlc Enver’s pretty schemes. Another reason in that, why the soapy swindler had moved him south-east, out of the way. Now, in his wild itch for revenge, he wondered whether to bar the eastern frontier, drive the convoys back to Antioch, and so bring to nothing the whole great work.
As he was thinking this, his German chief-of-staff, Colonel von Frankenstein, knocked at tlie door. Jemal at once put to flight the larva of his heated imagination. He was again the steadily reflective, almost scrupulous general known to his entourage. Pouting Asiatic lips retreated into the meshes of the black beard. He was always particularly careful to give this German general the impression of grumpy, very objective logic. Von Frankenstein met the most stonily casual of Jemal’s commanding ofiicer’s stares. They sat down to the table. The German opened his portfolio, drew out notes, and began a report on the disposiuon of fresh troops in Syria. He noticed
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the heap of dispatches. Enver Pasha’s instructions lay on the top.
“Your Excellency has had an important courier?”
“Don’t disturb yourself, Colonel,” Jemal replied. “Nothing that really matters here depends on the Minister of War, but solely on me.” One red hand gripped Enver’s dispatch, which the other tore into minute shreds, and strewed them out of the window, as far as to the citadel of David. Gabriel Bagradian had found an involuntary ally. This touchy potentate neither answered, nor would he send one cannon, one machine-gun, to Antakiya, to smoke out Musa Dagh.
Jemal Pasha’s refusal to intervene had saved the mountain camp from sudden destruction, not from a slower, constrict- ing process. The dictator of Syria and Palestine might himself refuse to take a hand. But there were other, subordinate com- mands, with powers to act independently. The keen, hatchet- faced major reigned m Antakiya m place of the poor cashiered bimbashi. He contrived to get the general in Aleppo to detach several companies from the garrison there. The Wali also wrote to the Kaimakam, to expect the arrival of a large rein- forcement of saptiehs. So that the Kaimakam had had success from his move in the Aleppo quarter. And success stimulates ambition.
Bagradian, as he stood at his observation post, had often felt as though the Damlayik were a dead point in a wide vortex, a centre of absolute rigidity, in a swirling and very hostile world. And today, as ox-carts, loaded mules, and crowds came stream- ing into the valley, the movement round this one dead point began to take most visible form. What was the meaning of the flood? . . .
The Kaimakam, who saw the hour approach when outstand- ing pohtical services should place him in the forefront of the party, had contnved to weave a new, strong thread of destruc-
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tion into the mesh that bound the Armenian people. He had talcffn advantage of the Arab nationalist movement, which for some time past had kept Syrian officials with their hands full. Such widely extensive secret societies as El Ahd, “the Oath,” and the “Arab Brotherhood” were disseminating fiery propaganda against Istanbul with the object of uniting all Arab tribes into one independent state. Here, as everywhere else in the world, nationalism had set to work to break up the rich, indeed profoundly rehgious concepts of the state into their paltry biological components. The Caliphate is a divine idea, but Turk, Kurd, Armenian, Arab denote only terrestrial acci- dents. The pashas of former days knew well enough that their concept of all-embracing spiritual unity— the Caliphate — ^was nobler than the uneasy itch of pushful entities for “progress.” In the indolence and vice of the old empire, its laisser-dler, there lay concealed a cautious wisdom, a moderating, resigned governing principle, which entirely escaped short-sighted west- erners striving after quick results. The old pashas knew with the subtlest instinct that a noble, even if ruined palace will not bear too much renovation. But the Young Turks managed to destroy the work of centuries in a breath. They did what they, the chiefs of a state comprising several races, never should have done. Their mad jingoism aroused that of subject peo- ples. Yet let us be just to the world’s fools. It is a dull eye that; can see no author behind the play. Men want what they must. The vast, supernatural ties of empire are loosened. It only means that God has swept the chessboard clear, and begun a new game against Hims^.
In any case, Arab nanonahsm was on the march. From the south it spread through Turkey to the hne Mosul-Mersina- Adana. In the Syrian vilayets it was very much a factor to be reckoned with, since already, on the rear of the Fourth Army, or on Its flanks, that mutinous envy spread abroad which so endangers an army in the field. All the uproar against the poor bimbashi in Antioch had its secret source in this envious mood.
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Alui the Kaimakam had the inspiration to win over this-sitO' mering Arab populace at the Armenians’ expense. All Arme> nian property, by the text of the law of deportation, went to the state; that at least was how it stood on paper. In reality it was left to the discretion of provincial governors to make what use of it they pleased. On the very day after the last dis- aster on Musa Dagh, the Kaimakam had begun to send out officials into all districts with a numerous Arab population wi thin possible reach of the seven villages. In each he had caused it to be proclaimed that the most fruitful land in the whole of Syria, between Suedia and Ras el-Khanzir, with vines and orchards, silkworm and bee farms, richly treed and watered, with houses and barns, was to be freely parcelled out among all those who should arrive forty-eight hours later to setde m the Armenian valley. The mudirs slyly suggested that industrious Arab cultivators were to be given the prefer- ence over Turks.
Hence this astonishing migration. The Kaimakam had come in person for an indefinite stay in Yoghonoluk, to supervise this parcelling out of land, and ingratiate himself with the Arab notables. He took up his quarters in Villa Bagradian. In forty-eight hours the villages looked as populous as ever. Arabs and Turks, grown rich, began to fraternize. Never had they seen such houses. Palaces! It seemed almost a pity to live in them. In a trice the church had become a mosque. Allah was praised in it that same night. The mullahs thanked Him for all these new and bounteous gifts — though it is true that a shadow still lay over them, smee up there the insolent Chris- uans were still alive. It was every behever’s duty to help ex- terminate them. Only when that was accomplished, could they settle down to enjoy these blessings, as just men should. The men came out of the mosque with glittering eyes. They too were hotly eager to make quick work of those whose places they had taken so that a vaguer nagging uneasiness in their honest peasant hearts might cease to trouble them
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The men above grimly watched their houses being occupied. Blit to them it was all the same.
What had happened to time? How many eternities did a day need to creep into night? And yet how quickly the day passed in comparison to night, the snail! Where was Juliette? Had she been living long in this tent? Had she ever lived in a house? Had she lived in Europe long ago? Certainly this could not be Juliette, who now hved captive among the moun- tain folk. Certainly it could not be Juliette who awoke each morning with the same start of horrible surprise. A tired, pale creature slipped out of bed, stood on the rug, pulled off a night- gown, sat on the camp chair, at the looking-glass, to examine a pale, yet sun-scarred, face. Could it be Juliette? Could the face, with its dull eyes and brittle hair, please any young man? Juliette, for the last few days, had dismissed her maid in the early morning. She had begun, with nervous hands, as though she were committing a crime, to attempt some kind of toilette, with what was left of her many essences. Then she had dressed, tied on a big white apron and, round her hair, a napkin, like a coif. It was all she ever wore, now she worked in the hospital. Coif and apron gave moral support. They felt like a uniform. Uniforms were de rtgueur on Musa Dagh.
Before coming out of the tent Juliette would fall on her knees, and embrace her pillow, thrusting away daylight once again. At first, days (years?) ago she had merely felt bewil- dered and unhappy. But now she longed for such guildcss un- happiness. Never, since the world began, had any woman be- haved so basely — she, a true, a self-respecting wife, in whose long marriage there had been not one single “affair.” But would not a hundred affairs in Pans have been as nothing compared to this meanest, basest treachery, in the midst of a desperate struggle with certain death? Juliette knelt like a little girl, whispering, “I can’t help it,” into her pillow. What
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use was that? By magic, how she could not tell, here in this inexorable “foreignness" she had surrendered to what seemed most akin. In a very low voice, as though to summon some counter-force from herself, she cried out, “Gabriel!” But Ga- briel had vanished as much as Juhette. Less and less could she discover his true image in that album of faded photographs, her memory. And the unknown, bearded, brown Armenian who, now and then, came in to sit with her — what had he to do with Gabriel? Juliette felt scared of her own tears, wiped her eyes carefully, and waited until they looked a little less red and hideous.
Bedros Altouni had had all those patients who were not feverish dismissed and carried back to their huts. Though he gave no definite reasons for having done it, he had somewhat ticklish ones. The news of the Armenian victory of August 14 had spread like wildfire through plain and mountains. It had appealed especially to deserters in hiding in the surround- ing hills. On the very next day twenty-two of them had come to the outposts and asked to be taken into camp. Gabriel, who had to be on his guard against spies and traitors, had closely cross-questioned them. But, since losses had to be made up, since they all appeared to be Armenians, and since each had a rifie and cartridges, he took them all in. Among them was a very young man who looked bewildered, and seemed uneasy. He declared that only a few days before he had escaped from barracks at Aleppo, and that the long tramp had worn him out. But that same evening, deathly pale, the young man had come into the hospital-hut where, having mumbled something umntelligible, he had collapsed. Altoum had stripped him at once. The poor lad chattered and shook with fever. His chest was a mass of red spots, which increased considerably in the night. Bedros consulted his Handbook, a thing he had not done for a long time. Its hieroglyphics were unreadable. He asked the Frenchwoman’s advice:
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“My dear, just have a look at this on^ will you? What do you t hink?”
Juliette was not the kind of woman who gets used to the horrors of disease. Each time she entered this nightmare hut she had to make an effort not to be sick. She did her best, her share of everything, and yet her shudders of nausea increased, the longer she stayed, instead of diminishing. Yet now incom- prehensible ecstasy filled her. It was as though she could atone for her guilty betrayal— here and now. This scrubby, sour- smcihng creature at her feet, with spitde dnbbhng from his mouth, twisting and turning imconsciously in delirium, was Stephan and Gabriel in one. Juliette kndt beside him and leaned her head— as though she herself were slowly fainting — with closed eyes, on his shrunken chest.
Gonzaguc’s voice starded her awake: “What on earth are you doing, Juliette? You must be crazy.”
And the old doctor seemed as conscience-stricken as Madame Bagradian herself: “It’d really be better, my dear, if you came here less, and didn’t work so hard.”
Gonzague caught her eye secretively. She followed, obedient. In his case, too, Juliette had lost her sense of time. It was all confused. How had it happened? In which of her pasts? Since when had she followed drfenceless. whenever he called? How dense and heavy this silence and complicity, even now. But* he had not changed. The same impenetrable alertness of eyes and thoughts, and never an unguarded second. Camp life had done nothing to his appearance; his hair was as neatly brushed as ever, his coat as spodess, his body as clean, his skin as clear, his breath untainted. Was she in love with him? No; it was somethmg far more horrible. Since unhappy love, if only in a dream, can devise some path, some way of escape. This sensa- tion was pitiless. Often C^nzague seemed as remote as Gabriel. He, at first the trusted, the famihar, the pleasandy “lost” child, who aroused comradeship and pity, had changed into a crud inevitabihty, from which there could be no escape. When he
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toudied her, she felt what she had never felt. But each touch made her loathe her treachery more. Many of the embowered and wooded solitudes along these chffs had become accom* plices. Her ebbing pride cried out in Juliette: "I — ^here on the ground — I? . . .” Yet each time Gonzague seemed to contrive to efface all ugliness. Perhaps he had a genius for the mo- ment, just as there are gamblers, huntsmen, collectors, who have trained one faculty to its uttermost. At least he ahared such people’s inexhaustible patience. She had lured Gonzague on to the Damlayik; modest yet assured, he had bided his time. His concentration evoked in Juhette its opposite, inattention, and lamed her will. Often she was devoured by absent- mindedness. They sat down to rest in a quiet place, which they called “the Riviera” between themselves.
Gonzague broke a cigarette, and ht one half carefully. “I’ve still got fifty.” Then, as though to give a more cheerful torn to this sad thought of tobacco running out: “Weil, we shan’t be here so much longer.”
She stared at him without seeing he was there.
“I suggest we get out of this, you and I. It’s about time.”
She still seemed not to hear what he was saying. He ex- plained his plan with the driest precision. Only the first two hours might be a bit difficult. A day’s excursion, south, alopg, the mountain-ridge— that was all it was. One might have to do a little climbing to get down on the right from the uny village of Habaste to the Orontes plain and the road to Suedia. He’d used last night to get the he of all that ground, and, quite easily, without having met a soul, got within a square mile of the alcohol factory and into the manager’s house, who, as Juliette knew, was a Greek, and a most influential person. I( was amazing how simply it could be done.
“The manager’s entirely at our disposal. On August 26 the litde factory steamer sails with a cargo for Beirut. She’ll stop there on her way to Latakia and Tripoli, and, according to schedule, she ought to touch Beurut on the twenty-ninth. Shr.
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saik under the American dag. You se^ it’s an American firm. The manager’s certain there won’t be the slightest danger, because at that time the Cyprus fleet is putting out again. You’ll have your own cabin, Juhette! When we’re in Beirut, you’ll have won. All the rest is just a question of money. And that you’ve got . . .”
Her eyes looked blank. “And Stephan and Gabriel.?”
Gonzague was blowing ash off his coat. “Stephan and Ga- briel? They’d be taken anywhere for Armenians. But I asked the manager about them. He says he can’t do anything for Armenians. He’s so well in with the Turkish government he can’t afford to take any risks. He said so definitely. So, un- luckily, Gabriel and Stephan can’t be rescued.”
Juliette drew away from him. “And I’m to let myself be rescued. ... By you?”
Gonzague jerked his head almost imperceptibly, unable, it appeared, to feel any sympathy with the woman’s exaggerated scruples. “Well, you know how he himself wanted to send you! And with me, what’s more.”
She pressed both fists into her temples. “Yes, he wanted to send me and Stephan. . . . And I’ve done this to him. . . . And I he to him! . . .”
“You shan’t go on lying, Juliette. I’d be the last to want that of you. On the contrary I You must tell him the whole thing.. Better do it today.”
Juliette sprang up. Her face looked very red and bloated. “What? You want me to kill him? He has the lives of five thousand people m his hands. And, at a time like this. I’m to kill him!”
“You distort everything by exaggerating,” said Gonzague, still seated and very serious. “Usudly it’s strangers we kiH- One sees that every day. But someumes we’re forced to choose between our own lives and those of what we call our ‘nearest and dearest.’ Is Gabriel really your nearest and dearest? And will it really kill him if you escape, Juhette?”
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Such calm words, his self-assured eyes, brought her back to his side. Gonzague seized Juliette’s hand and lucidly ex- pounded his philosophy. Each of us has only one life. His only duty is towards this single, never to be repeated, life; towards nothing and nobody else! And what is the truest essence life.^ What does life consist in? It consists in one long chain of desires and appetites. Though often we may only imagine we want a thing, the essential is that we want it intensely. Our duty is ruthlessly to satisfy our desires and appetites. That is the one and only “meaning” of life. That is why we expose ourselves to danger, even death, for something we want, since; outside this urge to satisfaction, there can be no life. Gonzague gave himself as an instance of the only logical, straightforward way of behaving. He had not hesitated a second to accept dis- comfort and danger for something he loved. He concluded dis- dainfully: “But all that you, Juliette, mistake for love and self- sacrifice IS no more than convenient anxiety.”
Her head dropped heavily on his shoulder. She was steeped again in tormenting absent-mindedness. “You’re so tidy, Gon- zague. Don’t be so horribly clear and orderly, Gonzague. I can’t stand itl Why aren’t you the same as you used to be?”
His light hand, a miracle of tender awakenings, passed strok- ing down the length of her arm, over her breast, down to Jicr hips. She broke into babbling sobs. Gonzague comforted her:
“You’ve still got time, yet, to make up your mind. Seven long days. And, after all, who knows what may happen in the meantime . . .”
Ter Haigasun after a long interval had summoned the entire Council of Leaders. They sat on the long bench in the council- room of the government-hut. Only Apothecary Krikor, as his habit was, heard the discussion from his sleeping-apartment, without himself saying a word. The sage, it appeared, had, with the object of perfecting his inner life, almost entirely re- nounced human contacts. He spoke to scarcely anyone now
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but himself, though in the depth of night his soliloquies went on and on. Nobody hearing them would have beu in the least the wiser. For Krikor merely ranged long lines of im- posing encyclopzdic concepts in, so to speak, dreamy single file. As for instance: “Burning core of the earth — celestial axis — swarm of the Pleiades — ^fructification of blossom . . Such high-sounding concepts seemed to raise Krikor’s soul above itself, bringing it nearer the underlying cause of all things. He tossed them in the air. They hovered in swarms above his head. Out of them he fashioned a dome, set with the glimmer- ing mosaics of Science, under which he lay with the enigmatic smile of a Buddhist priest. There exists a degree of ascetic perfection too elevated to permit of its being shared, since everything exalted is also asocial. Krikor had perhaps attained it, he no longer taught. The Leaders, his former disciples, never came near him now, or even mquired for him. The days were done when, on nighdy walks with Oskaman, Shatakhian, Asayan, and other dust-<levouring mortals, Krikor had named the stars and numbered them, out of his own mind. Now these giant stars, these giant worlds, circled in silence within his bram, and the sage had ceased to feel any pricking urge to give of them enthusiastic tidings. Krikor scaredy got an hour’s sleep. A fierce pain, worse every day, cramped his joints and tendons. When, noticing he was ill, his old friend Bedros, Altouni asked medical questions, he received a triumphant Latin answer: "Rheumattsmus articulortim et musculorum” Not a word of complaint passed Krikor’s lips. He had been sent this illness to preserve the supremacy of the spirit. It had no other consequence. Everythmg around him drifted away. Reality grew buzzingly remote. So that, as, for instance today, the men sat discussing, he heard their words with the staring eyes, the uncomprehending, muttering lips, of a deaf-mute. It was as though the words which expressed such earthly neces- sity had almost ceased to have a meaning.
This time they talked for hours. Avakian and the pari«ti
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dark of Yoghonoluk sat apart, taking notes of their chief reso> lutions, to be shaped into minutes. The camp guard had been posted outside the government-hut — a personal edict of Ter Haigasun. Since then priest was not given to formal gestures, it must be supposed that he had some good and far-sighted reason for taking this protective measure. Today the guard had only the duty of shielding the Council from interrupuon, keeping unauthorized persons out of the hut. Later, more dan- gerous sittings might have to be held, on days when the Coun- cil needed protection. Ter Haigasun presided with half-shut eyes, as frostily weary-looking as ever. Pastor Aram Tomasian, as chief supervisor of the domestic economy of the camp, read out his report on the state of food supplies, which the priest had set down as the first item on the agenda. He gave an exact picture. Following on the first, disastrous hailstorm, the direct hit of the shrapnel had not only destroyed their remaining flour, but all their other precious stores: aU oil, all wine, sugar, honey, and— apart from unnecessary things like tobacco and coffee — that first of all necessiues, salt. There was only enough salt left to cure their meat for three more days. And the meat itself, which every stomach already rebelled against, was dimin- ishing at a really alarming extent. The mukhtars, who were present, had arranged a count of remaining cattle, and reck- oned that, since they had lived on Musa Dagh, the collective herds had shrunk by a third. Such economy could no longer continue, as supplies would very soon be exhausted. The pastor asked the mukhtar, Thomas Kebussyan, as an expert breeder, to explain the state of the herds. Kebussyan stood up, wagged his head. His squinting peasant’s eyes stared at all and no- body. He launched out on a string of moving complaints over the loss of his own beautiful sheep, which it had taken him so many years of industrious breeding to rear. In the gulden days before the migration, a full-grown wether had weighed any- thing from forty-five to fifty okas. Now it scarcely weight half that. The mukhtar attributed this to two special reasons.
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The first o£ these was sentimental. This cursed communal ownership — not that he did not admit that it was necessary— was bad for the sheep. He knew his sheep. They were getting thin because they belonged to nobody, because they couldn’t feel any master worrying about them, their good or bad health. His second reason was less political, more enhghtening. All the best pasture in the enclosure, which had not only to feed the sheep, but goats and donkeys into the bargain, was almost cropped down. The sheep were being badly foddered; how could they be expected to put on fat, or tender flesh even? And it wasn’t any better with the milk. You couldn’t so much as think of butter or cheese any longer, Kebussyan concluded in a whine; some other pasturage was essential if they wanted to improve the condition of the stock.
Gabriel opposed this very decisively. These weren’t the pip- ing times of peace; at best this was hfe in a Noah’s Ark, on a deluge of blood. There could be no question of allowing peo- ple or herds to stray as they pleased. Turkish spies were all round the camp enclosure. To let the herds graze outside that enclosure, especially on the northerly heights, would be more of a risk than anyone dare take on himself. Damn it I There must surely be some other pasturage, within the camp. Couldn’t they drive the herds up the steeps?
"The grass up there is short and all burnt out,” interrupted the Mukhtar of Habibli; “even camels couldn’t manage it.”
Gabriel refused to be led astray. “Better that we should have less meat than none at all'”
Ter Haigasun endorsed Bagradian’s warning and asked the pastor to finish his report. Aram went on to the lack of bread, and the consequences of unmixed meat-eating. There were a hundred reasons, besides this diminishing of the herds, for trying to find some other food besides meat. Forays into the valley were out of the question, now that all the villages were reoccupied. On the other hand Bedros Altouni would agree with him that the people’s fiealth would be bound to suffer
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in the end, unless some other food could be found. They could see for themselves how much sallower and thinner people were looking. They must all have felt it. So that a change of diet would have to be made possible at all costs.
And Pastor Tomasian had a scheme. So far they had all neg- lected the sea. At certain points along the cliffs it was possible to climb down to it in half an hour. He himself had discovered a disused mule-track which could easily be built up and made fit to use. What was the good of having skilled road-menders both among the villagers and deserters? Two days’ work, and there would be a very easy road down to the beacL They must form a group of young people, the strongest women and biggest lads of the cohort of youth, to lay out a salting-ground down in the hollow under the cliffs. A raft, knocked together out of tree trunks and a few oars, would be enough to put out to a calmer place, a few hundred yards out to sea. The women could set to work that very day making draw-nets. There was plenty of twine m the camp. And another thing! He, Aram, remembered that as a boy he had always been out stoning birds. The boys of Yoghonoluk must be much the same nowadays. Well, let them all bring out their catapults! Instead of hanging about and getting under people’s feet, the lads ought all to be out bird-killing.
The pastor’s suggestions were applauded and discussed in detail. The Council empowered him to organize these proj- ects for food supplies. Then Bedros Altouni gave his health report. Of the twenty-four wounded in the last battle all, thank God, except four, who were still feverish, were out of danger. Twenty-eight he had already sent back home, to be looked after by their families. They would soon all be ready for the line again. But what gave the doctor cause for far worse un- easiness was the strange new illness brought into camp by a young deserter from Aleppo. Since last night the boy had been on the point of death, and was probably dead by this time. But worse still, the other hospital patients had begun to show signs
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ol being infecterf by him; cases of sudden vonutmg and high fever and choking fits. So it must be a case of that epidemic of which he now remembered seeing accounts, in tbe last few months, in Aleppo newspapers. But one epidemic of this description was as dangerous to the camp as were the Turks. Early that mormng therefore he had made arrangements for the strictest isolaUon of all these cases. Far from the Town Enclosure, as everyone knew, there was a small, shady box- wood, with a stream between two high mounds. It was well out of the way of both the decads and workers. He suggested that the Council form a group of hospital attendants, out of all the least useful people m camp, who must also be kept apart from everyone else. Bedros gave Kevork, the sunflqwer- dancer, as an instance of the kmd of person he meant. He obviously would be ideal as a nurse. He turned to Gabriel.
“My friend, I must ask you particularly to beg Juhette Hanum not to come back to the hospital-tent. I shall be losing a very good assistant. But frankly her health is more important to me than her help. Even apart from any danger of infection. I’m worried about your wife, my son! We others are hardy sort of people, and scarcely a mile away from our homes. But your wife has changed a good deal smee we’ve been on the Damlayik. She sometimes gives me very queer answers, and she seems not only to suffer physically. She isn’( strong enough for this life. How could she possibly be? I advise you to look after her more. Tbe best thing for her would be to stay in bed all day, and read novels, and get her mind far away from here. Luckily Krikor could supply a whole townful of ladies with enough French novels to make them forget their troubles."
Altouni’s warning startled Gabriel into a sense of guilt. He remembered that it was almost two days since he had last spoken to Juliette.
Hapeth Shatakhian now began a vehement complaint at the undi^plined state of the boys. Impossible to make them come
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to adiooL Ever sioce St^han Bagradian and Haik had cap- tured the howitzers, the whole cohort of youth had got out of hand. They felt themselves full-grown fighters, and were constandy cheeky to the grown-ups.
The mukhtars fully endorsed the teacher’s complaint “Where are the days,” yammered he of Bitias, “when boys weren’t even allowed to speak to men, but had to use humble signs in addressing them?”
But Ter Haigasun did not feel the problem of sufScient im- mediate urgency to discuss. Suddenly he asked Bagradian: “How does our defence really stand? What’s the longest you’ll be ^ble to hold out against the Turks?”
“I can’t answer that, Ter Haigasun. Defence always depends on attack.”
Ter Haigasun turned shyly resolute eyes, the eyes of a priest, directly on Gabriel. “Gabriel Bagradian, tell us what you really think.”
“I have no reason to want to spare the Council, Ter Haiga- sun. I'm pcrfecdy sure our position is desperate.”
Then Gabriel made an important suggestion. Absurd as the hope of rescue might appear, the Council must not allow itself to await inevitable destruction in effortless indolence. To be sure the sea looked as horribly empty as though ships had never been invented. But no stone must be left unturned. And after all, God knew whether, against all probability, there might not be an Allied torpedo boat outside the Gulf of Alexan- dretta.
“It’s our duty to suppose there is, and it’s our duty to act on the supposition, and not miss a possible chance. And then what about Mr. Jackson, the American Chief Consul m Aleppo? Has he heard of these Christian fighters in need, on Musa Dagh? It’s our duty to let him know about us and demand protection from the American government.”
So Gabriel explained his plan: two groups of messengers would have to tx sent out, one to Alei^chetta, the other to
Aleppo— the best swimmers to Alexandretta, the best runners to Aleppo. The swimmers’ task would be easier, since the Gulf of Alexandretta was only thirty-five English miles to the north, and they could find their way across the summits of almost deserted mountains. Their real object would be to swim out to any warship in the gulf. It would need the greatest strength and determination. The runners to Aleppo would not need to be so determmed, but they would have an eighty- five-mile road to cover and would be able to walk only at night, never using the highroad, and in constant danger of being shot. If these couriers managed to reach Jackson’s house, the camp might be as good as saved.
Gabriel’s suggestion, which after all afforded some vague hope of rescue, and served in any case to alleviate the im- pending certainty of death, was most eagerly and generally discussed. It was decided to send out two swimmers. One young man might be enough to send to Aleppo. There was no sense in uselessly exposing lives Two people can hide better than three, and one person finds it easier to slip past saptichs and customs officials than two. On Ter Haigasun’s suggestion, the swimmers and the runner were to be chosen from among the volunteers. The runners (either one or both, it was «till not decided) would be given a letter to take to the American consul; the swimmers, another addressed to the supposititious naval commander. To prevent these letters from falling into Turkish hands, should either of the messengers get arrested, the leather belts which the couriers wore were to be split open and the letters sewn up inside them.
Ter Haigasun appointed a day and hour at which to de- mand volunteers, and arranged the method of the announce- ment. The munadirs should be instructed to drum it rhar same evening around the camp. Gabriel offered to write the letter to Jackson. Aram Tomasian undertook the other, to the ship. He at once went apart from the rest and drafted the text to give to the swimmers, in spite of all the noise of a
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new point under discussion. From time to time he seemed carried away by his composition, would suddenly spring up and read out a passage, with the majestic intonation of a parson learning his sermon by heart. It did not take him long to finish it. It has been preserved as a document of the forty days:
To any English, American, French, Russian, or Italian admiral, captain, or other commander whom this may reach:
Sir! We beseech you in the name of God and human brother* hood — ^we, the population of seven Armenian villages, in all about five thousand souls, who have taken refuge on that mountain plateau of Musa Dagh, known as the Damlayik, and three leagues north-west of Suedia above the oiasdine.
We have taken refuge here from barbarous Turkish persecu- tions. We have taken up arms to preserve the honour of our women.
Sir! You no doubt have heard of the Young Turkish policy which seeks to annihilate our people. Under the false appearance of a migration-law, on the lymg pretext of some non-existent movement for revolution, they are turning us out of our houses, robbing us of our farms, orchards, vineyards, and all our movable and immovable goods and chattels. This, to our personal knowl- edge, has already been done in the town of Zeitun and its thirty- three dependent villages.
Pastor Aram went on to describe his experiences on the con- voy between Zeitun and Marash. He told of the edict of banishment issued against the seven villages, and gave vehe- ment descriptions of the desperate plight of the villagers in camp on the Damlayik. His appeal ended as follows:
Sir, we beg you m the name of ChristI
Bring us, we implore you, either to Cyprus or any other free territory. Our people are not idlers. We want to earn our bread with the hardest possible work in so far as we are given a chance to do it. But if this is too much for you to grant us, then at least take our women, take our children, take our old people. At least supjAy those of us able to bear arms with guns, mumtions, and
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tnouj^ food to defend eundve* to the last bieadi in our bo£es against our enemies.
We implore you, sir, not to delay until it is too late!
In the name of all the Christians up here
Your most obedient servant. Pastor A.T.
This manifesto was drafted in two languages— on one side of the sheet in French, on the other in English. The two texts were carefully revised under the zgis of Hapeth Shatakhian, that accomplished Imguist and stylist. But the task of copying them out, in minute and beautifully shaped letters, was, strangely enough, not entrusted to teacher Oskanian, famed far and wide as possessor of the best calligraphy, in every alphabet, but to Avakian, a far less expert artist. Hrand Oskanian leapt out of his seat and glowered at Ter Haigasun as though he were going to challenge him to a dud in front of the assembled Council. This new humihation bereft him of words, his lips moved but could form no sounds. But the priest, bis mortal enemy, only smiled blandly at him.
“Sit down and be quiet. Teacher Oskanian, you write far too beautiful a hand for this jdi. Nobody who saw all your squiggles and flourishes could ever bdieve our position was desperate.” ^
The black'haired dwarf advanced on Ter Haigasun with his head high. “Priest! You’ve mistaken your man. God knows I am not anxious to do your scribbling!” He shook his fists in Ter Haigasun’s face as he added in a voice unsteady with rage; “There’s no calligraphy left in these hands, Priestl These hands have given proof of something very different, much as it riles you!”
Apart from which absurd little inadent the sitting had been held in perfect amity. Even the sceptical Ter Haigasun could hope that, whatever happened in the near future^ peart» at least would reign unbroken among the elect.
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Again after that day’s council Gabriel went to look for his wife, both in her tent and the place where she received her visitors. Here, too, Oskanian and Shatakhian had come in vain, as they had so often m these last days, to pay their re- spects to Madame. Hrand Oskanian especially had been ex- tremely disappointed at not being able to display himself to Juliette as the Lion of the South Bastion. He could only set his teeth and admit that a tailor’s dummy like Gonzague was more welcome than a powder-blackened hero. But mis- trustful and silent as he was, he never got as far as suspicion. Madame Bagradian was too supremely far above him to allow of one such unseemly thought. When Gabriel caught sight of the teachers, he turned away quickly. He wandered mde- cisively on from Three-Tent Square towards the “Riviera.” Where, he wondered, would Juhette be at about this time? He had turned towards the Town Enclosure when Stephan ran across his path. The boy was as usual surrounded by the whole Haik gang. The dour Haik himself walked on a few paces ahead, as if to set a distance, proclaim his leadership, his own doughty independence. But the poor crippled Hagop kept obstinately beside Stephan while the others swarmed noisily round them. Sato lurked as usual in the rear. The boys paid no heed at all to the presence of the co mm anderit in<hicf; they tried to swarm past him without saluting, with- out even noticing he was there. Gabriel called sharply after his son. That conqueror of the guns detached himself, came slouching out from among his fellows, and approached his father with the solemn pomposity of an ape; which he had managed to learn from his new comrades. His tousled hair hung over his forehead. His face was scarlet and damp with sweat. His eyes looked filmed over with the very intoxication of conceit. Even his kilt was stained and torn with peculiar heroism.
Gabriel sternly inquired: “Wdl, what are you messing about here for?”
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Stephan gurgled and looked round vaguely. “We’re run- ning — Shaving a game . . . we’re off duty.”
“Having a game? Big chaps hke you? What are you play- ing?”
“Oh, nothing special— only . . . playing, Dad!”
As he gave this disconnected information, Stephan eyed his father rather strangely. He seemed to look up at him and say; Dad, why are you trying to keep me down out of the position I’ve had such trouble to get, among all these chaps? If you snub me now, they’ll all begin ragging me. Gabriel did not understand the look.
“You don’t look like a human being, Stephan. Do you really dare to let your mother see you in that state?”
The boy did not answer, he only stared at the ground in anguish. So far at least his father had been speaking French. But the order that followed came in Armenian; it was spoken so that the whole camp heard: “Off you go now, straight to the tent and wash, and change your clothesl And report to me tonight when you’re fit to be seen'”
Then, when Gabriel had gone a few angry steps further south, he suddenly stopped. Had the boy disobeyed him? He was almost certain that he had, and indeed when, after a while, he went back to the sheikh-tent, he found no Stephan.
Gabriel tried to think of a punishment. This was not merely a case of a boy’s disobeying his father, it was a breach of camp disapline. But it would not be easy to punish Stephan. Gabriel went across to his trunk, which was kept in his tent, and pulled out a book. Dr. Altoum’s advice that Juhette should read, and so get her mind off gruesome reality, had given him the same inclinauon. Perhaps, for the next few, dack hours, he could manage to forget reality, both outside and inescapably within him For today, nothing need be feared. The day wore on. Scouts from the various outposts came in every hour with their reports. Nothing new in the valley. A patrol had ventured nearly as far as Yoghonoluk and re-
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turned to report that it had not met a single saptieh. Gabriel glanced at the title of his French novel. It was by Charles Louis Philippe, a book he had enjoyed, though he only half remembered it. But it was sure to be full of little cafes, with tables and chairs, out on the pavement. Wide sunbeams on dusty faubourg boulevards. A tiny court with an acacia and a moss-green, closed-in fountain in the middle. And this poor court had more of the spring in it than all the glamorous myrtles and rhododendrons, anemones and wild narassi, of Musa Dagh on a March day. Old dark wooden stairs, worn smooth as sea-shells. Invisible footsteps clattering up them.
As Gabriel opened the book, a little three-cornered note fell out of It. The child Stephan had written it a few years previously. That, too, had been in August. Gabriel had at- tended the big conference assembled in Pans between the Young Turks and Dashnakzagan. Juliette and the child had been staying in Montreux. At that famous “congress of fraternization” it had been resolved that the liberty-loving youth of both peoples should act side by side to build up a new fatherland. Gabriel had, as we know, tried to .keep his promise by having himself, with other idealists, inscribed as a reservist officer on the lists of the Istanbul training-school when war<louds gathered over Turkey. Stephan’s little letter had lain since then, innocent of any gruesome future, within pages describing the Pans of Charles Louis Philippe. It had been written with immense pain, in stiff, French, copy-book letters:
“Mon cher papa< How are you? Will you stay a long time in Paris? When are you coming to sec us? Maman and I miss you very much. Here it is very pretty Lots of kisses from
Your loving and grateful son,
Stephan.
Gabriel, seated on the bed in which Gonzague Maris slept, examined the shaky childish handwriting. How could that
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prettily dressed little boy sitting in a sunny room at Montreux, scrawling on Juliette’s thick linen notepaper (which retained its scent), be one with the young scamp o£ an hour ago? Gabriel, as he sat there thinking of Stephan’s restless animal' eyes, of the throaty chatter of the herd, did not know in the least that he himself had been transformed as much as his son. A hundred details of that far-off day in August came back to Me in him, darting into his mind from that simple letter. No massacre, no gruesome brutahty, seemed more poignant than this withered leaf, shed from a life that mi^t never have been.
After attempting the first five pages of Charles Louis Philippe, Gabriel shut the book. He did not think that now, as long as he lived, he would ever be able again to fix his thoughts on one. It would be just as impossible for a navvy to turn his hands to minute carving. With a sigh he stood up off Gonzague's bed, and smoothed down the coverlet. He noticed then how, across the bed-end, Maris had laid out his clean clothes, carefully washed. Thread, scissors, mending- wool, lay beside them; tor the Greek did all his own darning and mending. Gabriel could not tell why the sight of this washing warned him of some approaching departure. He went back to his trunk and threw in the novel. But he pocketed the child Stephan’s letter. He came out of the tent thinking of the station at Montreux. Juliette and litde Stephan had awaited him. Juliette had carried a red sunshade.
Gabriel stood outside Hovsannah’s tent. He asked through the chink in the door if he might come in to see the new mother. Mairik Antaram asked him inside. In spite of all Mairik’s efforts the baby seemed determined not to flourish. Its Uny face was sdll a brownish colour, and as wrinkled as immediately after birth. Its wide-open eyes stared without seeing.
Mairik Antaram’s voice sounded impatient
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"Cheer up, Hovsaooah, and be g^ad that your baby has a birth-maiit on his breast, not on his face. What do you expect?”
Hovsannah closed weary eyes, as though she were tired of continually asserting her better nature in face of empty conso- lations.
“Why doesn’t he take his milk? And why doesn’t he cry?"
Mairik Antaram began to busy herself warming swaddhng- dothes round a hot stone. She cried out, without looking up from her work: “Wait another two days, till after the christen- ing. Lots of children won’t begin to cry ull they’re baptized.”
Hovsannah grimaced this away. “Provided we can make him live till then.”
The doctor’s wife got very angry. “You’re a wet blanket, Madame Tomasian. You depress everybody! Who can say, up here on the Damlayik, what’ll have happened in two days, to anyone! Christenmg or death? Not even Bagradian Ei- fendi could tell you for certain whether we’ll be alive in two days.”
“Wdl, if we are alive,” said Gabrid, smiling, “we must all have a christening feast, here outside the tents. I’ve talked to the pastor about it. Madame Tomasian, you must say whom you want invited.” ,
Hovsannah lay on, indifferent. “I don’t belong to Yoghono- luk. I know nobody here.”
Iskuhi, sitting on her bed, had hstened to all this without saying a word. Gabriel eyed her. “Iskuhi Tomasian, would you care to come for a walk? My wife’s disappeared. I want to look for her.”
Iskuhi’s face questioned Hovsannah, who with a plaintively exaggerated voice urged her to go with Gabriel. “Of course you must go, Iskuhi! I shan’t need you. It’ll do you good. You can’t help with the swaddling.”
Iskuhi hesitated, she could feel some hiddim spite in Hovsan- nah’s words. But Mairik Antaram insisted: ‘Tou go along,
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Sirclis, my pretty! And don't let me see you again till tonight. What sort of a life is this for you!”
Gabriel and Iskuhi went towards the Town Enclosure, though there was not much chance of finding Juliette there. They walked between the narrow lines of huts. People were sitting out m front of them. The air up here was cooler and pleasanter than it had been down m the valley. The sea sighed mildly, in long cool breaths. All were at work. The women were patching clothes and washing The old men of the reserve were plying their trades, soling shoes, planing wood, curing lamb and goatskins. Nurhan's munitions works appeared to be working overtime.
They left the camp. They could only exchange monosyl- lables. The most trivial questions and replies. They went west- wards along the highest peak. Here it was barren. They had come out of the wild plateau landscape. They were on the verge of a desert without birds’ voices, only stirred by a httle breeze, which blew across them, carrying their words to one another.
Gabriel did not look at Iskuhi; it was so good to feel her invisibly beside him. Only when they came to steep declines, did he watch with delight her hesitant feet which seemed to grow so charmingly embarrassed. Then all talk between them ceased. What was there to say? Gabriel took Iskubi’s hand. (Her lame arm made her walk on the left of him ) As they walked she surrendered to him in silence, keeping nothing back, insisting on nothing. They did not speak of this em otmtii which unfolded so swiftly They never kissed. They went on, belonging to one another. Iskuhi went with Gabriel as far as the edge of the northern trench. When she had said good- bye, he stood there a long time looking after her. No wish, no scruple, came to life in him, no vague anxiety, thought of the future. Futme? Absurd' He was light with joy from head to foot. Iskuhi’s being withdrew so delicately that not one thought of her disturbed him as he worked out his new plan
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of defence. Later, when Stephan came to report, he forgot to punish the boy for his disobedience.
The new hfe on Musa Dagh had also its religious conse- quences. In the last few decades it had been a sort of fashion among Armenians to change one’s creed. Protestantism espe- cially, thanks to the efiorts of its German and American mis- sionaries, had gained much ground since the middle of the previous century. It is enough to remember those admirable mission fathers of Marash, whose indefatigable efforts — edu- cational, charitable, architectural — had been of such service to Cilician and Syrian Armenians, including those of the seven communes round Musa Dagh. But it was certainly a most fortunate circumstance that religious differences had caused no essential rift in the national unity. Christianity itself had so hard a struggle against the Turks as to preclude petty spite and religious intolerance. Pastor Harutiun Nokhudian of Bitias had been quite free in the seven villages to preach his doctrine and theology. In all major questions of conduct he bad submitted himself to Ter Haigasun. Up here on the Damlayik Pastor Aram, his successor, took over the old pastor’s duty of ministering to such Protestants as remained, though he too submitted to the priest. Ter Haigasun let h^m have the use of his altar every Sunday after Mass to deliver his sermon, which usually not only Protestants but the whole population came to hear. Differences of ritual had ceased to matter. Ter Haigasun was the uncontested high priest of this mountain, and administered to people’s souls as the superior both of Pastor Aram and the smaller married village dergy. Therefore it went without saymg that Tomasian should ask him to baptize his new-born son.
The christening had been fixed for the following Sunday, the fourth in August, their twenty-third day in camp. But Mass and other duties prevented Ter Haigasun undertaking it till late m the afternoon of that day. Since Hovsannah was
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still feeling too weak to manage to get as far as the altar, Aram had asked the priest to baptize the child on Three- Tent Square, so that the mother might be present at the ceremony.
Gabriel kept his promise to Hovsannah and sent out about thirty-five invitations, to notables and the most important section leaders. The reception into Christ’s communion of this first-born on Musa Dagh was a good way of maintaining cordial relations with the chief personahties of the people. He had still nine ten-litre jars of the heavy local vintage. Kristaphor was ordered to bring out two of them and a few bottles of mulberry brandy. He could not, to be sure, offer his guests more solid refreshment; the food supplies on Three- Tent Square were already alarmingly reduced.
The guests assembled, at four, outside the tents. A few chairs had been brought along for the older people. The sacristan had stood a htde tin bathtub on a low table. The very ancient and beautiful font in the church had had to be left behind in Yoghonoluk. Ter Haigasun robed in the sheikh- tent. Gabriel, by Aram’s wish, had con^ted to stand gin- kahair, godfather.
The church choir, led by the diminutive Asayan, had taken up Its position around the table, with its crucifix and the tin font. The lukewarm christening water had already been, borne before the altar. Now, to the singing of the choir, one of Ter Haigasun’s subordinate priests dropped three drops of the sacred christening oil into the tub.
Gabriel, the ginkahair, gingerly took the child from Mairik Antaram. The women, in honour of the occasion, had laid that sallow, brownish, puckered objea, which showed no strength, on a special cushion — a magmHccnt cushion m view of the general circumstances. The child's eyes stared without seeing at the world, into whose cruel hfe he had come so guiltless. Nor did his voice yet find it worth its while to whimper one assent to the light of God, which lights up this cruelty so
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magnificently. Gabriel held out the wretched bundle, which seemed in its estrangement to resent being captured by re- ligion, with all Its consequences, in front of the priest, as the service prescribed. Ter Haigasun’s eyes, so humble, yet so coldly sacerdotal, did not seem to know that this was Gabriel. Or at least they did not see the man, only the officiating per- son, with a ritual duty to discharge. It was always the same whenever Ter Haigasun stood at the altar or wore his vest- ments. Every human memory and relationship faded out of his eyes, to give way to the stern equanimity of his office. He asked the ritual question of the godfather. “What does this child ask?” And Gabriel, who felt very clumsy, had to answer: “Faith and hope and love.” This was repeated three times. Only then the question: “And what shall this child be called?”
He was to be called after his grandfather Master Mikael Tomasian. At this point of the ceremony that anaent was comically inspired to stand up and make a little bow, as though he were being cited to share in the future -of his descendant. Opimons differed among the lookers-on as to what that future might prove to be. Even if by some miracle they were saved, the sickly, apathetic little body would scarcely have the strength to hold on to life. Mairik Antaram, Iskuhi, and Aram Tomasian had come over to Gabriel. The child was unwound from its swaddling-clothes. Iskuhi’s and Gabriel’s hands touched more than once. A morose hopeless mood was on the spectators. Hovsannah stared with a pinched puritamcal face at the group round the font. Something seemed to impel her very soul to the bitterest desolation, hostility. It may have been the thought of that deep bond be- tween Aram and Iskuhi, brother and sister, from which at this instant she felt shut out.
Ter Haigasun took up the child with inimitable, dexterous certamty. His hands, vi^ch had christened a thousand chil- dren, worked with the almost super-terrestrial grace and ele- gance which all born priests display in even the manual part
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of their oflficc. For a second he held out the child to the people. Everyone could sec the large red birth-mark on. its chest. Then he dipped it quickly, tliree times, in water, making the sign of the cross each time with its body. “I baptize thee in the name of the Father, of the Son, of the Holy Ghost.” Hovsannah had pulled herself up from her seat. She bent forward with a convulsive grimace This was the decisive moment. Would her child, as it touched the baptismal water, break out at last, as Mairik Antaram had promised her, in a long wail? Ter Haigasun reached the suckling back to his ginkahair. It was not Gabriel, however, but Antaram who took him and dried his sickly body, gently, with a soft cloth. The child had not cried. But Hovsannah, its mother, shrieked aloud. Two long hysterical screams. The chair fell down be- hind her back. She hid her face and stumbled into the tent. Juliette, sitting at her side, had plainly heard her cry form, and repeat, a word: “Sin! Sin'”
Aram Tomasian remained some time in the tent. He came back looking pale and laughed uneasily. “You must forgive her. Ter Haigasun. She’s never really managed to get over the shock of Zeitun, though she hasn’t shown it up to now.”
He signed to Iskuhi to go in and look after Hovsannah. The girl glanced desperately at Gabriel, and seemed to hesitaPe. He said to the pastor: “Couldn’t you leave your sister with us, Tomasian.? Mairik Antaram’s in the tent, you know.”
Tomasian pulled back a chink in the canvas door. “My wife has been asking for her so urgentlyl Later, perhaps, when Hovsannah’s asleep . . .”
Iskuhi had already disappeared. Gabriel could feel that the pastor’s wife could not brook the fact that, while she herself suffered unspeakably, her young sister-in-law should not be chained to the same suffering.
Nor in the ensuing jollificauons could the guests shake o£f the weight of this christening. Gabriel had had another long
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table set end to end with the one at which Juliette “received." They all sat down along the benches. This arrangement, in the eyes of these soaally byper'Sensitive people, seemed to indicate a dual treatment, which wounded a number of snob- bish souls. The “best people” were all at Juliette’s table. Ter Haigasun, the Bagradians, Pastor Tomasian, Krikor, Gonzague Mans and — shamelessly — Sarkis Kilikian. Gabriel, who had invited that ragged outsider, now even asked him to sit be- side him. Madame Kebussyan, on the other hand, in spite of the eagerest manceuvrings, had found no seat among the notables. She had been forced to take her place with the other mayoresses, though her husband’s wealth, notwithstanding the fact that she had lost it, should really have set her high above them. Gabriel, however, talked almost exclusively to Kiltban. He kept beckoning to Missak and Kristaphor to fill up the Russian’s tin mug, since Kilikian would only drink out of that, and had thrust away the glass set out for him. Was it mere stubbornness? Or a deep mistrust in the heart of the continually persecuted? Gabriel could not be cer- tain. He tried very hard, but qmte unsuccessfully, to get on friendly terms with his neighbour. That impassive death’s- head with agate eyes, brooding on nothing, would only give monosyllabic answers.
Gabriel’s feelings towards Kilikian were complex. Here was a man of some education (three years in the Ejmiadzin Semi- nary). Hence, something more than the ordinary Asiatic proletarian. And again, his life had been so astounding that this young man’s features looked as ravaged by it, his eyes as dead, as though he were old. Set against the relentlessness of this fate, the common Armenian woe became as a shadow. Yet the man had mastered it, or at least he had not succumbed^ and that to Gabriel, was enough to prove an unusual per sonality— which compelled respect. Yet vague mistrustful feel- ings of equal strength counterbalanced this, positive attraction. There could he no doubt that Kilikian looked, and had often
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behaved, like a dangerous criminal. His vicissitudes could not always have been unmerited; somehow they were too much in keeping with his personality as a whole. Impossible to say whether prison had made him a criminal or some inborn criminal tendency led him there by way of politics. Nor did anything about the Russian in the least suggest the socialist or anarchist. He seemed not to have the shghtest feeling for ideas and general social objectives. Nor was he altogether malicious, though a good many women in the camp called him “the devil,” from his appearance. This did not mean that at any minute he might not have been ready to do a murder in cold blood. His secret lay in his being nothing at all expheit, in his seeming to belong nowhere, to be living at some zero- point of incomprehensible neutrahty. Of all the people on the Damlayik he and Apothecary Knkor were certainly the most unsocial beings. The Russian, though he attracted him pro- foundly, depressed Bagradian.
“I am glad I wasn’t wrong about you, Sarkis Kifikian. We have you, as much as anyone, to thank for our success on the fourteenth. Those machines of yours were a very good in- vention. I suppose you remembered something you’d learned at the Seminary? The Roman siege-methods, was that it?”
“Haven't an idea, don’t know anything about it,” Kilikian grinned. ,
“If the Turks don’t venture another attack on the south, that’ll be your work, Kilikian.”
This seemed to make some slight impression, but not a pleasant one. The Russian glanced with dead eyes at Gabriel. 'Wc might have made those things far better.”
Gabriel felt how inexorably the Russian was rejecting him. He began to be annoyed at his own weakness, which had nothing to oppose to this. “I suppose you got some experience of engineering in the boring-turrets of the Baku oil fields?”
The Russian smirked at him mockingly. “Wasn’t even semi-skilled. I was nothing but an ordinary hand.”
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Gabriel pushed some cigarettes across to him. “I’ve asked you here, Kilikian, to tell you some intentions of mine with r^rd to you. It’s to be hoped we’ll be getting a few days’ peace; but sooner or later they’re bound to start a fresh attack that will make all the others seem like child’s play. Now listen, my son, I intend to give you an extremely responsible post ’’
Kihkian emptied his tin mug to the very last drop, set it down reflectively. “That’s your look-out! You’re the com- mandant.”
Meanwhile, the long “churls’ table” had begun to get ex- tremely noisy. These people had become unused to alcohol, and it soon went to their heads. And Juliette had given orders for a third jar to be unsealed. There were two very argumentative facuons — optimists and pessimists. Mukhtar Kebussyan had climbed up on the bench, where he stood sway- ing and rolling his bald head. He eyed them all with immense and vacant satisfaction. He was slyly mysterious:
“We ought to negotiate. I’ve been mayor of Yoghonoluk for twelve years. . . . I’ve negotiated with the Turks, with the Kaimakam and the mudir . . . the Kaimakam was always most cordial ... I was punctual to the minute in paying in the communal bedel . . . and I used to be taken into his oflice — they all know me — the whole lot of them — ^Kaimakam, Mutessarif, Wall, Vizir, Sultan— they all knew I was Thomas Kebussyan! If I go along to negotiate, they won’t do anything to me, they know I’m a taxpayer . . . you aren’t taxpayers, there’s no comparison . . .”
The smaller taxpayers, the village mayors and headmen of minor villages, were annoyed; they pulled Kebussyan down oS his perch. Chaush Nurhan shouted that he wouldn’t stand any more useless people in camp, eating up the supplies — he’d make the whole lot of them toe the line, whether they were seventy years old or not. Laughter. The tipsy row looked as though it might end in blows. But luckily Gabriel gave
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orders that no more o£ his wine was to be distiibrned he- fore quickly leaving the table with Samuel Avakian, who had come to him to whisper some announcement
Almost all the notables had retired. Ter Haigasun had stayed just half an hour. Aram Tomasian had soon followed him and gone back to his wife in the tent Gonzague and Juhette sat together. Hrand Oskaman was still in attendance on Juliette. He sat on the grass at her feet, and refused to take a place that had been vacated. But suddenly the silent httle schoolmaster scrambled up, with the aid of his musket, as though a snake had bitten him. He stared in horror at Julietta then he turned and left them stiffly. Oskaman had not had much to drink. And yet, before he had gone a few yards, he was telling himself that what he supposed he had just seen must have been an illusion, brought on by wine. It was not to be thought, it was somethmg altogether impossible, that a fair-haired palc-skinned goddess should sit rubbing an amorous knee against that of a shady adventurer, her subject, of whose origins no one knew anythmg. Yet for all his condusive reason- mg Oskanian’s heart was still beating hard, as he crossed the square before the altar. Juhette, grown suddenly restless, stood up to say that she must go in to see Hovsannah, neglected by her culpably all this time.
The noisy quarrelling and spiteful laughter at the plebei^ table was getting more and more malicious, although all the men had long been drunk. Several uninvited people, most of them young, had come crowding in, and they heaped fuel on the flames. The sun sank.Tt had grown late. This exated christening-party cast wildly contending shadows across the grass. No doubt a brawl would have begun, had the sound of a long roll of drums, outside the Town Enclosure, not put a stop to it. Sudden quiet. “The munadirs,” said somebody, and someone else cried out: “Alarm!” The young men and the old were suddenly startled out of their quarrelsome forgetful- ness of realiues. They all went rushing oS excitedly, to take
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didu* places in the sections. Pastor Aram was seen rushing in wild haste towards the Town Enclosure. Within a few minutes Three-Tent Square was entirely empty. “Alarm I” repeated Gonzague thoughtfully, and small gold points glinted m the quiet brown depths of his eyes. This Turkish attack was just what he wanted. This time it would probably end badly. Oughtn’t they to use tonight?
Krikor could not manage to get up from table without help. Gonzague aided him. The old man’s agonized legs would not obey him. He would have collapsed, had not Maris carefully steered him home. Knkor, however, seemed scarcely to notice that he was in pain. It was nothing more than an unfortunate contretemps of nature. It took a very long time to get him to the government-hut.
“Alarm?” he asked as indiiferently as though he had scarcely noticed such a trifle, and so forgotten it again.
"Alarm!” Gonzague impressed it on his mind. “And this time It’s not going to be a joke.”
The apothecary stopped. His breath failed at every fifth step. “What does it matter to me?” he breathlessly asked. “Do I belong to them? Of course not! I belong to myself.” And his shaky hand traced a circle round him, to indicate the ex- clusive majesty of his ego-world.
“If I don’t believe in evil, there isn’t any evil in the world . . . there isn’t any death unless I believe in it. . . . Let them kill me, I shan’t even notice it. . . . Anyone who can get to that point reshapes the world out of his mind.”
He tried to raise his hands above his head. But m this he failed. Gonzague, whose whole nature continually prompted him rather to see a misfortune before it had happened than to let it happen before he saw it, had understood nothing of all this. And yet he politely asked, to please the apothecary: “Which of the ancient philosophers were you quoting then?”
The mandarin’s mask stared indifferently out through gath- ering dusk. The white goatee twitched up and down. The
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high hollow voice announced contemptuously: “That was s:ud by a philosopher whom no one but myself has ever quoted, or ever will quote — Krikor of Yoghonoluk.”
Gabriel had ordered the great alarm without having been quite sure of immediate danger. This time it needed the dark to show him what a force the Turks had massed — ^just how large it was still impossible to determine — in the Armeman valley and across the Orontes plain. The combined regulars and sharpshooters seemed too numerous to be quartered in villages and so had to camp in the open. The wide half<irclc of their campHres extended from the ruins of Seleucia, almost as far as the farthest Armeman village, and nortliwards as far as Kebussiye. By degrees the spying patrols came in with astounding news. Turkish soldiers had sprung up suddenly out of nowhere: and not only soldiers but saptiehs and Chettehs, Moslems from all over the countryside, suddenly armed with bayonets and Mauser rifles. Their officers were forming them into detachments. The number of armed men could not be estimated. Fantasuc figures went from mouth to mouth. Yet, as Gabriel watched the huge half-circle of camp- fires and considered it, these figures seemed not so fantastic after all. Two things were certain. First, the Turkish com- mander had a strong enough force to besiege the Damlayik qr storm it from South Bastion to North Saddle. Secondly, they must feel so vastly superior as to have no need to protect their advance and attack suddenly. This open advance, intended (as indeed it did) to fill the Armenians with consternauon, pointed to a defimte “case,” which Bagradian had already provided against under the heading “general attack.” He had worked it out and used a defence manceuvre. Gabriel felt much calmer than he had before the two previous attacks, though this ume things looked hopeless for the mountam-folk. After the first alarm he sent his runners out to the various points of defence, to collect all the leaders and the free decads at his
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headquarters. They were quite sober now, and all looked terrified. Gabriel, as he was empowered constitutionally to do, took over full control of the camp for the period of battle. He gave orders that all freshly killed meat was to be got ready during the night. Two hours before daybreak the trenches must be fully provisioned. Further, whatever wine or brandy was sail available in the camp must be shared out among the fighters. He placed all the remaining ten-litre jars on Three- Tent Square at their disposal. (This gift was later to cause the myth of Bagradian’s inexhaustible store of supplies.)
When decads, group leaders, and the people of the reserve had all assembled, Gabriel made a short speech. He explained the kind of battle they must expect, and kept nothing back. He said: “By all human reckomngs we have only the choice between two deaths, between easy death in battle, or a mean and terrible death by massacre. If we realize this quite clearly — ^if we are men enough to make up our minds quite coolly to choose the first, decent death in the field, then perhaps there’ll be a miracle, and we shan’t have to die. . . . But only then, brothers!”
A new division for the case of a general attack was formed. Cliaush Nurhan, the Lion, was given command of the North Saddle. A further change of command was that Gabriel en- trusted Kihkian, as he had promised to do a few hours pre- viously, with the important sector above the ilex gully. Two entirely new fighting groups were constituted, a mobile guard and a band of komitajis. For the last Nurhan and Bagradian, remembering the guerrilla troops in the Balkan war, picked out about a hundred of the most determined men among the decads, the best shots and most expert climbers. They were to disperse over the whole valley side of the Damlayik and form ambuscades along the slopes, in tree-tops, behind rocks and bushes, in hollows and folds of the ground. They were to let the attacking Turkish columns conje on undisturbed, then suddenly open fire on them from behind, if possible from
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fcveral points at once, without sparing munitions. Eada konutaji was served out with twelve magazines, that is to say sixty cartridges, a lavish ration under the circumstances. But this time Bagradian did not propose to stint muniuons, since the coming battle would doubtless bring the final deasion, and he saw no reason for trying to economize bullets. Only a few remnants of the original cartridges, and those they had plundered, or else refilled, still remained in the stores. In his simple, logical way he explained their duties to the sharp- shooters, so that each of these youngsters understood exaedy what was wanted. The chief rule was still “a dead man for every bullet.” When the komitajis had been formed, the mobile guard was picked out from among the decads. Gabriel reduced the garrison in the South Bastion, whose strong defence works made it an almost impregnable position, to only the most neces- sary fighters. The reservists filled in the gaps. This released about one hundred and fifty rifles for his mobile guard, which he led in person, and with which he would attack in any place where the lines seemed menaced. Most of these storm troops were mounted on the camp donkeys. Donkeys in these parts are not as slow-footed and obstinate as elsewhere, but will take any pace. The two groups of the cohort of youth, the orderlies and the section of scouts, had always to keep at the heels of the guard, so that widely extended communications between all sections and the command might never be broken.
Such were the main outhnes of this ordre de batmlle, already worked out by Gabriel to meet the case of general attack. He had prepared it all with the greatest calm, during the first two hours of the night. Lastly he summoned the whole re- serve. It was ordered to vacate the Town Enclosure by sun- rise. One half of it was destined to stand by for action m the various sectors, the other took up its position on the long reaches of the high plateau. These strips of ground, which in many places, as for instance before the ilex gully sector, were only about a thousand feet wide, formed a very dangerous
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zone. Here only a few redoubts, or rather a few loosely piled up stones, defended the Town Enclosure from assault. When Gabriel had also addressed the reserve, and made them realize themselves as the filial barrier against the worst horrors of rape and child-slaughter, Nurhan the Lion sounded the bugle-call. Its fierce stutter managed to shape out a few notes of the Turkish “lights out.” This was the order to get to sleep.
Gabriel went to look at the howitzers. He mtended to spend the night adjusting them. With Nurhan’s help he had managed to train a few of the more intelhgent men for artil- lery duty. The last two scouts were in before midnight. They reported nothing not known already. The only fresh details they could give was that the half-moon flag had been hoisted over Villa Bagradian, that many horses were tethered in a line along the courtyard, and that officers kept coming in and out. It was therefore clear that the Turks had made the villa their headquarters. Gabriel waited for the late rising of the moon. Then, with compasses, he carefully began to mark out distances on his map, and to draw calculations. A big, inflated-looking full moon gave enough light to enable him to sight an auxiliary mark and adjust his guns by it. The men of the battery were instructed to drag the lockers close up to each gun. There were still five shrapnel and twenty- three grenades in the boxes. Gabriel had half these shells placed in a row behind the guns. He went from one to the other and set the fuse with his clamping-key, by the light of his electric torch. Iskuhi appeared as he was doing it. At first he did not notice she was there. She called to him sofdy. He took her hand, and led her far away from the gun, till they were alone. They sat down under an arbutus bush; it was covered all over with red berries, which, in the moonlight, had the dead look of drops of seahng-wax.
Iskuhi’s voice came subdued and hesitant: “I only wanted to ask you whether it would disturb you too much i£ tomorrow I stayed somewhere near you.”
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“There’s nothing in the world that does me so much good as to have you near me, Iskuhi.”
Gabriel bent close over Iskuhi to look far down into her eyes, which met his ardently. An odd thought sped across his mind. This feeling which drew them together might not be love, at least not love in the ordinary meaning of the word, not the kind of love which had bound him to Juliette, but something very much greater, yet less than love. It heightened all his faculties immeasurably, made him celestially happy, without any desire diverting that happiness. It may have been the unknown love of the same blood, which quickened him like a mystic spring, welling up m Iskuhi ’s eyes; not the wish to be joined in future, but the utter certainty of having been so in the past. His eyes smiled into hers.
“I have no sense of death, Iskuhi. It’s mad, but I simply can’t make myself think that this time tomorrow I mayn’t still be alive. Perhaps it isn’t a bad omen. What do you feel?”
“Death’s sure to come anyway, Gabriel. There isn’t any other way out for us, is there?”
He did not extract their double meaning from her words. An incredibly hght assurance sprang up within him. “One oughtn’t to look too far ahead, Iskuhi. I’ll think of nothing but tomorrow. I don’t even think of tomorrow night. Do you know I’m looking forward to the morning!”
Iskuhi stood up to go back to her tent. “I only wanted to ask you to promise me something, Gabriel. Something quite obvious. If things get so that there’s no more hope, please shoot me and then yourself. It’s the best solution. I can’t live without you. And I shouldn’t like you to go on living without me — not a second! So may I still stay somewhere near you tomorrow, please?”
No! She must give him her word not to leave her tent dur- mg the fighung. But, in exchange, he promised that if things got desperate he would either fetch or have her sent for, and kill them both. He smiled as he was promising this, since in-
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(jeed nothing in his heart felt the slightest prescience of an end. Therefore he did not fear in the least for Stephan, or Juliette. Yet, as he again took up his work on the guns, he found himself surprised at his own assurance, which the fiercest reality all round him, in a threatening half-moon of fire, seemed so contemptuously to disprove.
The Kaimakam, the yus-bashi from Antakiya, the red-haired mudir, the battahon commandant of the four companies sent from Aleppo, and two other officers sat that evening in the selamlik of Villa Bagradian, holding a council of war. That reception-room was as brilliant with candlelight as it had been when Juliette received notables. Orderlies cleared away the meal, which these officers had eaten in her salon. Bugle- calls sounded outside the windows, and all the pother of rest- ing and victualling soldiers. Since with these Armenian devils you never knew, the Kaimakam had ordered a guard for head- quarters. It was now engaged in setting up its camp, laying waste the park, orchard, and vegetable garden in the process.
This council had lasted a fairly long time without showing signs of complete agreement. They were discussing an im- portant matter. Would it, or would it not, be really advisable to begin operations against the Damlayik tomorrow at sup- rise, as arranged? The Kaimakam with the misanthropic complexion, the dark-brown pouches under his eyes, was the hesitant, dilatory member of this discussion. He defended his lack of resolution by msisting that, though at the Wall’s request the general in Aleppo had sent them a full infantry battalion, he had failed in his promise of mountain artillery and machine-guns. The Kolagasi (stafE captain) from Aleppo explained this by informing them that such arms had all be^ cleared out of Syria, with the transferred divisions to which they belonged, and that in all Aleppo there was not so much as a single machine-gun. Would it not, demanded the Kaimakam, be better not to attack for the next few days and
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send an urgent telegram to His Excellency }emal Padia, beg* £^g him to assign them the weapons they needed? The officers considered this impossible. Such direct appeals were likely to irritate the incalculable Jemal, and might even move him to counter-measures.
The yus-bashi from Antakiya pushed back his chair and took out a sheet of paper. His fingers shook, less from excite- ment than because he was a chain-smoker. “Effendilerl” His voice was thin and morose. “If we’re going to wait about for machine-guns and mountain-artillery, the best thmg we can do is to winter here. The army in the field has so few of them that our request would simply be ridiculous. May I again remind the Kaimakam of the exact strength of our attacking force?"
Toneiessly he read out his ^ures: “Four companies from Aleppo: say a thousand men. Two companies from Alcxan- dretta: five hundred men. The strengthened garrison from Antakiya: four hundred and fifty men. That means nearly two thousand rifles of trained infantry. Why, regiments at the front can’t be nearly as strongl Further— the second line: four hundred sapuehs from Aleppo, three hundred saptiehs from our own kazah, four hundred chettehs from the north— that’s another eleven hundred men. And, besides all that, there’s our third line, of two thousand Moslems from the villages; whom we’ve armed. So that altogether we shall attack with a force of about five thousand rifles. . . .’’
Here the yus-bashi stopped to gulp down a small cup of coffee and light a fresh cigarme. Somebody used the pause to interrupt him:
“Don’t forget the Armenians have two howitzers.”
The major’s hatchet face looked almost animated; his yel- lowish forehead began to gjisten. “That artillery is completdy useless. First, they have no ammunition. Second, nobody knows how to use the things. Third, we shall get hold of them very quckly again.’’
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The Kaimakam, who, bored or weary, had sunk far back in his chair, raised heavy eyes. "Don’t underrate this Bagradian fellow, Yus-Bashi. I’ve only seen the man once, in a bath. But he behaved, with unusual insolence.”
The young freckled mudir with the carefully manicured nails interposed reproachfully: “It was a great mistake on the part of the military authorities not to have called him up. He’s in the reserve. I know for a fact that Bagradian volun- teered several times. Without him the coast would be per- fectly quiet and normal.”
The major cut short these reflections: “Bagradian thisi Bagradian that! Such civilians aren’t so very important. I went up yesterday and reconnoitred the Damlayik ]ust to see for myself what the position was. They’re a ragged-looking crew. Their trenches seemed to me to be quite primitive. At a generous estimate they’ve got between four and five hundred rifles. We should have to spit in our own faces if we hadn’t cleared them out by midday.”
“We certainly should, Yus-Bashi,” agreed the Kaimakam. “But any animal, even the smallest, gets ferocious when it’s lighting for its life.”
The Kolagasi from Aleppo most cxplicidy endorsed the major’s view. He fully hoped that within two days he would, be out of this prmutive neighbourhood and back in the pleas- ant town of Aleppo.
Smce the oflicers all seemed so confident, the Kaimakam dismissed the sitting with a yawn: “Well, then — ^you guarantee success, Yus-Bashi?”
That draconian officer poured swaths of smoke out of his nostrils. “One can guarantee nothing in any military enter- prise. I must reject the word guarantee. I can only say that I don’t want to go on living if the Armenian camp isn’t liquidated by this time tomorrow.”
Upon which the lolling Kaimakam heavily rose. “Well, let’s get to bed.”
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But that night the potentate’s sleep was not of the soundest. He had taken up his quarters in Juliette’s room. It was still saturated with perfume from the many flasks of scent that had been broken in it. They enmeshed the slumbering dyspep- tic in such cloying and irritating nightmares that his rest was broken by several sleepless hours.
His awakening was no better than his sleep had been. Scarcely had the light begun to break when he started up to the sound of a terrific explosion. He rushed, half-dressed, outside the house. The destrucuon was great. The shell had dropped sheer in front of the steps. The fragments of every window in the whole house strewed the ground. The gust of the shell had torn a wing of the front door off its hinges and flung it back into the hallway. Three deep breaches gaped in the brick- work, and iron shards stuck up everywhere out of the ground. But worst of all was the sight of the Aleppo staff officer. That unfortunate had been designed by fate to be making his way out of the house at the very instant of the explosion. Now he sat huddled against the wall. His blue eyes looked vacantly childish. He breathed heavily, seemed lost in some dreamy past. A splinter had skimmed all the flesh off his right shoulder, another wounded his left hip. The yus-bashi was assisting him. It looked as though he were tellmg hun rather sharply not to give way so comfortably to his wound. But the Kolagasi was insubordinate. He paid no attention what- ever and lurched over, slowly, on to his side. The yus-bashi turned away angrily and bellowed at the frightened men not to stand about there with their mouths open, but go along and fetch the doctor and an ambulance. It was not so easy. The surgeon was attached to the third company in Bitias. The major had the wounded Kolagasi carried upstairs into Ste- phan’s bedroom and deposited on Stephan’s bed. He returned to consciousness, but only to implore the major not to leave him until his wound had been dressed. The Kaimakam, by
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nature a confirmed civilian, to whom bloodshed was as repugnant in practice as it frequently seemed desirable in theory, crept into the cellar as though by accident — down the dark cool stairs. Gabriel’s bombardment continued. Another shell had just come crashing into the orchard.
It was more than ironic fate which had directed the trajec- tory of the first straight to Bagradian’s own front door, check- mating the battalion commander. Perhaps it was not mere accident, but a living witness to the fact that God is not in- variably on the side of the biggest battalion. In any case this laming of the command delayed the attack by over an hour. The Turks, in the orchards and vineyards, who had already disposed themselves in extended order to advance, were kept back. The Armenian swine seemed to have known what to aim at, and have expert gunners! And, though the next eight shells were not quite so lucky, the valley was at least wide enough to ensure that, wherever they might drop, shrapnel and grenades caused panic. Three houses in Bitias, Aziz, and Yoghonoluk were set alight. A detachment of encamped saptiehs, drinking morning coffee out of tin mugs, sustained heavy losses from a grenade. Leaving three dead and many wounded, these upholders of law and order retired for ever from the engagement, without having fired a single shot.
This howitzer bombardment at least gave the results erf- visaged by Gabrid, though he got no clear perception of his success. It disorganized the Turkish plan of attack. The morale of the new civil population was so disastrously affected by it that shoals of Turkish women had begun already to take flight in the direction of the Orontes plain. Not least was the paraly- sis of the leadership, which lasted a considerable time. Not till long after the howitzers had ceased their fire, did lines of riflemen summon enough courage to advance and disappear into the woods on the lowest slopes of Musa Dagh. For an instant Bagradian reproached himself with not having pos- sessed enough audacity to post at least the four hundred men
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of his first defence, the half of his decads and komitaji^ here and there along these lines of advance, and so molest the attack before it had time to develop properly. But in any case the hundred komitajis already enrolled had disposed them- selves halfway up the hdight so skilfully, and were fired with such mad, clear-headed audacity, that they wrought more damage and confusion among the groups which came pant- ing past them than any open attack could have achieved. Twice, three times, their invisible cross-fire hurled these companies, engaged in toihng their way through thickets, wildly apart, and fully dispersed them. Cut off from their leaders, and expecting death at any instant, these groups went rushing down the slopes. It was not cowardice. Defence was impossible. After which unsuccessful attempt there was noth- ing left for the major hut to rally his companies on the line of the lowest slope, order a short rest, and serve out rations. Meanwhile the komitajis were undisturbed as they gathered up the rifles and cartridge-belts from dead or wounded, and carried them off behind their hnes.
The Kaimakam, who had come out to see the command, caustically inquired of the yus-bashi; “Are you going to repeat your tactic? If you do, it doesn’t look as if we’d ever get up the mountain.”
That irate major’s face turned coffee-coloured. He began to bellow at the Kaimakam; “Take over the command yourself if you like! It’s your responsibility far more than mine."
The Kaimakam perceived that one must be careful in deal- ing with this touchy ofiicer. This was not the moment at which to quarrel. He shnigged, in his usual sleepy way. “You’re quite right. It’s my responsibility. But don’t forget. Major, that you’ll be responsible to me. If there’s another fiasco we shall botli of us have to take the consequences, you just as much as I.”
This was so true that the major had nothing more to say. Since the highest quarters, the Wali, the Minister of War, had
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liad their atteadon drawa to Musa Dagh, a third failure would mean a court mardal for the major. It would probably handle him even worse than it had his rosy-cheeked predecessor. He and the Kaimakam were linked together for good or ill. He must be kept in with. He grunted a pacific remark and set to work again. The compamcs m the north were ordered to advance immediately agamst the Armenian trenches along the Saddle. The South Bastion along the steeper ridge was not to be meddled with, since neither the major nor his effeedves were anxious for another avalanche. The major called his ofBcers together and ordered them to tdl their platoons that any man who turned back in the next advance would be shot down without mercy. A long line of saptiehs and chettehs, detailed especially for this executioner’s work, were posted along the hollows of the fore-slope. They received stringent orders to open fire on retreating infantry. Neither sapuehs nor sharpshooters had any objection to the duty. At the same time the major advanced a third, very long line of armed villagers (they even mcluded a few women) into the region of apricot orchards and vines. The companies’ terror of the major’s drastic orders had its effects. The men, driven on by panic, came rushing up the steep slopes. They did not so much as dare to get second wind. They shut their eyes and stormed through the komitajis’ fire. The afternoon was well over by the ume the three platoons, under gruelling bullets from above, managed to set foot on the upper slopes, and dig themselves in, as best they might, with their infantry spades, under the Armenian positions, or else take cover behind rocks, heaps of rubble, or folds in the ground. By this heroic advance between two fires, the major’s troops had obtained their first outstanding success. That officer, drunk with the lust of battle, waving his sword, led on fresh hnes to the assault These, too, succeeded, in implanting themselves below the Armenian trenches, and so emending the line of attack. Such successes inspired the Turkish souL They opened wild fire
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along the new line, on every attacking point. At first it mat> tcred nothing to the major whether his bullets found a mark. For two whole hours the ears and hearts of these Armemans were to be so basted into terror that the dregs of their courage should ebb away. They were also to be shown that the Turkish state had enough bullets at its disposal to keep the fire as hot as ever for the next three days. The defenders crouched back, paralysed, in their trenches, letting this dense hailstorm of bullets patter and spin above their heads. The worst of it was that the infantry nearest the Town Enclosure sent un- limited shot among the log huts, so that from time to time both dum-dum and ordinary nfle-bullets caused terrible wounds among the inhabitants. Ter Haigasun therefore gave orders for the whole enclosure to be vacated, and for non- combatants to retire towards the sea and among the rocks.
During this long frenzy of munition wasting, the major advanced one after another, his company reserves, his saptiehs, and last of all his armed peasants, all led by officers, so that overwhelmingly superior numbers, when at last he stormed, might have their effect in cvcr-incrcasing lines of men. The second, third, fourth lines of attack were stationed at fairly wide intervals behind the front. When these shaken and excited troops, emerging from the komitajis’ cross-fire, had come on bellowing up the slopes, the major ordered his first line to attack The Armenians, seasoned by now in the art of re- pelling such wide advances, fired down from their, as a rule higher, positions and calmly dispersed the attacking waves. Quickly as these lines, one after another, were advanced, they broke each time, severely handicapped by the roughness of this mountain terrain, far from the Armenian trenches. In spite of superior numbers and unlimited supplies of ammuni- tion the Moslems could not manage till almost nighfall to advance one pace on any point of attack. The Armenians still found It comparatively easy to repel them without too many losses, owing to the fact that their defences had been so skil*
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tuUy contrived. Here and there their trenches formed sharp angies, so that the oncommg Turks had to take both front and flank Are. Added to which the komitajis, who suddenly on this or that part of the line spattered the reserves with a quick and deadly rain of bullets, disconcerted these regulars. The compulsory valour of these attacks, all equally vain, had already cost the major as many men as the last defeat of the poor bimbashi, whose losses had brought him such dire dis* grace. But the yus-bashi was made of sterner stuff. He would not retire. Again and again he put himself at the head of his men, avoiding death a hundred times, by virtue of that mirac- ulous law which seems to protect all real valour in leadership. He usually stayed with the ilex-gully sector, since gradually it had grown apparent that this was the weakest part of the defence. Gabrid, thanks to his mobile guard, had still control of all the threads. “Three hours more,” he thought, “and it’ll be dark.” The guard had again and again come galloping up to reinforce a threatened sector, hold unsteady trenches, fiU up the menaced gap between two divisions, and relieve an exhausted decad. Now, however, Gabriel lay fagged out, white, breathless as a corpse, he could not tell where, and End- ing it hard to regain his strength. Avakian sat beside him, and about twelve orderhes of the cohort of youth awaited his orders. Haik was one of them. Not Stephan. Messages came in’' every minute. Mostly they came from the North Saddle, which till now had been havmg an easy day. But at about this time the Turks seemed to change their intention and prepare a big coup against the north. Chaush Nurhan’s messages were more and more anxiously framed. Not only the major but the whole staff of other officers had come up from behind cover on to the counter-slope. He had recognized them quite plainly through his field-glass. Bagradian intended to use the guard, his last defence, as sparingly as he possibly could, and not let himself be imposed upon by the inexperience of individual section leaders. This north section was by far the best defended posi-
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tbn, and he could see no reason for sending up reinforce- ments into this particular system of his defence, before the real fight had even begun. It seemed far more important to Gabriel to stay continually m the vicinity of the ilex-gully sector, by far the most menaced, and do his best to avert disaster there. So there he lay, with his eyes shut, and seemed not to heed the continual messages from the north ridge. “Only two and a half hours more of it,” his thoughts kept whispering. A lull had set in. The firing died down. Gabriel let exhaustion overwhelm him. It may have been this mental and physical cnfeeblement which caused hun to fall into the major’s trap.
Sharp echoes of the fight sounded all along the “Riviera.” Some acoustic trick made the ping and clatter of the bullets seem to whip the ground all round Gonzague and Juhette. They got the sensation of sitting in the very midst of a battle, although really it was a good way off. Juliette kept tight hold of Gonzague’s hand. He listened. The whole of him seemed to be listenmg. He sat very excited, and very still.
“I think It’s coming nearer all round. At least, that’s what it sounds like.”
Juliette said nothing. The hissing din was so fantastically strange that she seemed not to understand and, so far, scarcely, to have heard it. Gonzague only bent shghtly forward, to get a better view of the surf as it leapt round the rocks many feet below. The sea today was unusually rough: its distant anger mingled with the din of the rifles. Mans pointed south, along the coast. “We ought to have made up our minds sooner, Juhette. By now you should have been sitting quite peacefully in the manager’s house, beside the alcohol factory.”
She shivered. Her bps opened to speak, but she took a long time to find any voice; she seemed to have lost it. “The ship leaves on the twenty-sixth. This is only the twenty-third I’ve still got three days.”
yes”— lie calmed her down with the tenderest for- bearance— “you’ve got three days. ... I won’t deprive you of one of them ... if others don’t.”
“Oh, Gonzague, I feel so strange, so incomprehensible . . .” Her voice died halfway through the sentence. There seemed no object in trying to describe a state of mind which was so entirely unfamiliar. It was like drawing something soft and very vulnerable out of its protective chrysalis by the very part that felt most coldly exposed. All her hmbs had a cold life of their own, scarcely in touch with her general consciousness. She could, she felt, regretfully take off her arms and legs at any minute and lock them up m a trunk. Ages ago, when she inhabited her bright and reasoned world, Juliette would not have remained inactive. “I must have something the matter with me” would have been her instantaneous reaction, and so she would, no doubt, have taken her temperature. Now she could only sit and wonder how it was that her appalling situa- tion should at the same time feel so right, so cotnfortable. As she thought this, she twice repeated: “Incomprehensible . . .”
“Poor juhette. I understand exactly. You’ve lost yourself — first for fifteen years, and now for the last twenty-four days. Now you can’t find either the sham Juliette or the real one. You sec, I don’t belong anywhere. I’m not Armenian or French or Greek, or even American; I’m really and truly nothing, so I’m free. You’ll find me very easy to be with. But you must cut loose.”
She stared, not understanding a word he said to her. The rifle-fire was nearing the climax of its excitement. Impossible to sit quietly in one place. Gonzague helped her to her feet. She stumbled about as though she were dazed.
He seemed to get restless. “We must think what to do, Juliette. That doesn’t sound very reassuring. What are your plans?”
She half completed the gesture of putting her hands up to her ears. “I’m tired. I want to lie down.”
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“That’s quite impossible, Juliette. Just listen. They may break through at any minute. I suggest we move away from her^ and wait farther down, to see what’s happened.”
She shook her head stubbornly. “No. I’d rather go back to the tent.”
He clasped her hips, and gently tried to draw her his way. “Don’t be annoyed, Juliette. But you know it’s really abso- lutely necessary to get this thing straight in your mind. In the next half-hour the Turks may be in the Town Enclosure. And Gabriel Bagradian? How do you know he’s still alive?"
The howling and crackling all round them seemed to rein- force Gonzague’s fears. But Juliette suddenly started out of her torpor to all her old energy and decisiveness.
“I want to see Stephan. I want Stephan here, with mel” she cried out with almost angry vehemence.
Her child’s name rent a horrible fog of unreality which bad crept upon her from every side. Her maternity had become a well-built house— Its walls impenetrable, strong enough to keep out the world. She seized Gonzague with both hands and pushed him impatiently. “Go and bring Stephan to me at once, you hear. . . . Please don’t lose any time. Find him. FIl wait! I’ll wait!”
For a second he thought it over. Gallantly he suppressed every objection, and bent his head. “All right, juhette. I’ll do. whatever I can to hunt up the boy. And as fast as I can. I won’t keep you waiting long.”
And actually, within half an hour, Gonzague Mans had come back with a savage and perspiring Stephan, who came reluctantly at his heels. Juliette threw herself on her son and hugged him, shaken with dry sobs. He was so tired that, the minute they all sat down, he slept.
Gabriel the scholar, the bel esprit, had fully proved that he had the ability to lead men. The threat of death had forced it to the surface. Acknowledged and professional generals have
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often made the mistake that he now was guilty of— they have allowed their subjective preference for a certain, closely studied part of their plan unduly to influence their decisions. So that Gabriel, prejudiced in favour of the main achievement of his great scheme of defence, let himself delay too long before at last he heeded Chaush Nurhan’s messages, which had ended as desperate cries for help. Since the Turks neither renewed their attack in the ilex gully, nor at any other of the whole circle of possible attacking-points round the mountain, since rifle-fire died down on all sides, to begin again with unex- pected ferocity in the north, it began to look as if the enemy would attempt a break-through on the Saddle, with the whole strength of his far more numerous effectives. For that reason Gabriel drew together his decads, dispersed over the whole length of the mountain-slope, and led them northwards, to await the onslaught of the Turks in the second-line trench, among the rock barricades. Gabriel expected it any minute, since the fire kept growing in intensity and dusk by now had already gathered. (No one but himself could man the howitz- ers, so they had to be left to stand unused.)
Sarkis Kilikian, a section leader above the ilex gully, had behaved most gallantly all that day and beaten back five at- tacks. For a time it looked as though the extended lines of Turks, notwithstanding all their losses at that one point, would not try to force their break-through at any other, since this, after all, was the key position, which led straight into the heart of the camp. Since in the first few hours of today’s fighting Gabriel still had not been certain that the Russian would man- age to hold out, he had spent a good deal of the day in and around the ilex-gully sections, and several times had attacked with the decads, falling on the flanks of the Turks. Sarkis Kilikian’s task had been anything but easy. The main trench extended only the length of a fairly long strip of ground; the trenches of the flank defence were not very favourably placed, and were moreover several hundred paces away from the next
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sector. And these gaps wore not filled up, as were those between most of the other attacking'points, by steep descents, walls of rock, or such thick undergrowth as made them impossible to negotiate. The Russian commanded a comparatively small force of eight dccads, and it was set fairly wide apart, con- sidcnng the character of the terrain. Yet he had got through the day without too many losses; only two dead and six wounded. Something of Kihkian’s personahty, his cadaverous peace, his indifference, seemed to have gone over into his men. Whenever the Turks began to attack, these defenders aimed with a deliberauon for which “bored” seems the only word. They felt, it seemed, equally at home in life or death, so that really it made very little difference which of these two places of sojourn they inhabited in the immediate future. As Kilikian levelled his gun, he was careful not to let go out one of the cx^ cellent cigarettes of which Bagradian had made him the pres' ent of a box. Now, after so many blood-smeared hours, he stood resting his shrunken body against the parapet, and stared down the slope below the trench, strewn about with tree trunks and branches, shrubs and dwarf-pines, that fell sheer in a steep declivity to the actual mouth of the ilex gully, which the enemy occupied. Gabriel had, of course, in the first few days caused the edge of the camp to be cleared of tall trees. Kilikian’s youthful death’s-head never moved. His impressive agate eyej betrayed the supreme faculty of reducing life to a minimum of action. In his looted uniform the Russian, with his sloping shoulders and figure slender as a girl’s, accentuated still fur- ther by a very tighdy drawn belt, looked like a dapper ofScer. He said nothing at all to the men beside him, who were equally silent. Their eyes kept straying towards the shadows of trees and shrubs, which from second to second lengthened and narrowed out, became golden, secretively alive. Every Ar- menian on the Damlayik, except perhaps Krikor and Kilikian, had his mind full of one thought only, of the same thought as Gabriel Bagradian; “Only two more hours, and then the sun
will be down.” From the north came a burst otrifle-fire. Down here, wood and mountain might have been in the deepest peace. Many of these exhausted men were closing their eyes. They had the strange sensation that stolen sleep would some- how drive time on more quickly into the arms of rescuing darkness. There were more and more sleepers. Till at last scarcely one man of those who held these trenches was still awake. Only the dead, polished eyes of Sarkis Kilikian, their leader, stared fixedly at the dark wooded edge of the ilex gully. What happened in the next few minutes must be classed as one of those enigmas which no explanation explains or moti- vates. The streak of incomprehensible lethargy in Kilikian, that trait in him which the boy of eleven, lying under his mother while she bled to death, had already begun to build up m himself as protection against too great an intensity of suffer- ing, might at a pinch be made responsible. In any case he never moved, nor did his eyes change their expression, when single attacking infantrymen, followed httle by little by whole swarms of them, began to emerge at the edge of the wood. Not a shot announced the attack. The Turks seemed too timid to want to detach themselves from the jagged edge of the ilex gully. They waited uneasily for the defenders to let off their nfies. Since that did not happen, they thrust forward — there were at least three hundred of them— ran on and again waited, ducking down behind every obstacle, for the Armenian fire. Some of the men in the trench were still asleep. Others seized their guns and blmked at the noiseless, stealthy picture be- neath them. At this instant the liquid glow of sunset intensi- fied, and burst into a thousand gold sequins and splinters, 'fhe half-moons on the officers’ kepis glittered. Strangely enough they did not wear trench caps in this campaign. The Arme- nians, dazed with sunset brilliance, lifted their rifles and stared at Kilikian, awaiting his orders. Then came the inex- plicable. Instead of, as he had before, quiedy signing to them to aim, deciding how near the Turks were to come, and then
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setting his whistle to his hps, the Rtissian, reflective and de* liberate, chmbed out of the trench. This looked so like an order that, half in bewildered exhaustion, half in blind trust in the unknown intention of their leader, one after another swung over the parapet. The Turks, who had stalked their way forward to within fifty paces, started, and flung themselves down. Their hearts stood still.
They were expecting a fierce attack. But Sarkis Kihkian quietly stood in front of the centre trench, not going either on or back, not shouting any word of command. Three hundred Mauser rifles opened a gruelling qmck fire on the rigid human targets above them, who stood out black against the glittering sunset. In a few seconds a third of the garrison of this sector were crouching, with groans and howls of pain on the blood- soaked earth of Musa Dagh. Sarkis Kilikian stood on, in thoughtful surprise, his hands in his pockets. The Turkish bullets seemed to avoid him, as though fate considered that to put an end to this unique destiny b^y a simple death in the field would be far too banal a proceeding. When at last he raised his hand and shouted something to his riflemen, it was much too late. He was swept along m the general flight of what still remained of the garrison, a flight which only turned and collected itself half-way to the stone barricades. These were four fairly oblong heaps of piled-up stones, almost outside the Town Enclosure. Before the fugitives reached their cover, they left twenty-three dead and wounded behind them. The Turk- ish infantry, shouting indescribable war-cries, took possession of the vacated trenches. Their reserve crowded m after them, the saptiehs, the chettchs, and last the armed villagers. A fair number of bellicose Moslem women had followed their men. When these women, hidden behind the trees of the ilex gully, saw the success of the Turkish advance, they broke forth, like frenzied ma;nads, from the wood, took each other’s hands, formed a chain, while from their throats came a long, shrill sound unhke any other, the zilgith, the ancient battle^ry of
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the vromen of Islam. This raking scream let loose the devil in the men. They, as their bold aeed instructs them, had ceased to care for life or death; they dashed in a mad gallop against the wretched heaps of stone, without firing another shot, with fixed bayonets.
In this disaster several bits of isolated luck came to the aid of the Armenians. As they saw the Turks bayonet their wounded and tread them mto the ground with their army boots, the whole watchful, frigid alertness of their unavoidable destiny came upon them again. They lay stiffly behind their cover and aimed quiedy, with all their accustomed deadly cer- tainty. The Turks had the last, dazzling sun in their faces, the Armenians at their backs. Another advantage in misfor- tune was the confusion arising from the circumstance that at- tackeis before the neighbouring sectors, running past their own officers, left their posts and, drunk with victory, swarmed towards the breach. Therefore defenders also left their trenches and crowded, left and right, towards the danger-spot. The con- sequence was a confused hand-to-hand struggle, in which fnend and foe (many Armenians were wearing plundered Turkish uniform) got mixed in together unrecognizably. It was a long time, and many men had to lose their hves, brfore the enemies sorted themselves out, and superior numbers suc- ceeded in driving back the Armenians towards the Town En-' closure. Bagradian arrived with his mobile guard at the very last second to avert the worst for the camp itself. The Turks were driven back, but only as far as then captured trenches, which they held stubbornly.
Luckiest of all, it was now mght, and a cloudy moonless night into the bargain. It had gathered quickly, unperceived. The major could no longer venture on another decisive thrust. In the dark the Armenians, who knew the Damlayik like their own bodies, had still, in spite of their many wounds, the ad- vantage over a whole division. The Kaimakam, disturbed pro- foundly by the immense losses they had sdstained, did not
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quite know what to do with this unused viaory. TTie major swore by all his gods that by three tomorrow he would have the whole business cleared up. He developed his next plan of action. The Turks, all except a few camouflaged protecting garrisons, were to be noiselessly withdrawn from the defence sector. The whole force should encamp for the mght in the wide ilex gully and be ready, a few hours before daybreak, to thrust forward, like a great battenng-ram, through this last, inconsiderable obstacle.
But that did not prevent the new Moslems in the villages, since now they were all householders, from preferring a night indoors to one in the open, and leaving the troops.
Towards six o’clock Pastor Aram Tomasian, bathed in sweat and broken with fatigue, came into the women’s tent, gulped down two glasses of water, and gasped: “Iskuhi, Hovsannah. Get ready. Things aren’t going well. I’ll fetch you in time. We must find somewhere to hide, down among the rocks. I’m going out now to look for Father.”
Tomasian had vanished again at once without properly getting his breath. Iskuhi, who had kept her promise, and not left the tent all day, helped the complaining Hovsannah to get dressed as well as she could, gave the child its bottle of watered milk, and with her right hand drew out from under the bed what little baggage they possessed. But suddenly she stopped her unfinished work and left Hovsannah without a word.
An hour after sunset. The big square, with its trampled grass before the altar in the Town Enclosure. The leaders had not retired into their hut, but were sittmg on the grass by the altar steps. The people squatted close around them in heavy silence. The huts were abandoned. From time to time the screams of badly wounded men came across from the ‘'ho$> pital.” Some of the recent dead had been rescued from the last atuck. They lay in rows, incompletely hidden by sheets and sacking. No light. No fire. The Counal had forbidden any
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voice to be raised above a whisper. The crowd was so heavily ^ent that all could easily distinguish the whispering voices o£ representatives.
Ter Haigasun seemed the only one there who could still keep his presence of min d. His voice sounded quiet and cir- cumspect. “We have only one night, that is to say eight hours’ darkness.”
He was misunderstood. Even Aram Tomasian, whose heart was torn by the thought of Hovsannah, Iskuhi, and the child, proposed all kinds of hasty plans. He suggested in all serious- ness that perhaps it would be better to clear the camp and seek shelter in defts among the rocks, in the limestone caves and grottoes of the cliffs. But his suggestion found no partisans. It was evident that these men, without any reason for it, had begun to love their habitation and would defend it to the very last. They began to argue. These few hours of darkness threat- ened to crumble away, minute by minute, without results. Here and there out of the crouching people, a woman’s sup- pressed shriek and convulsive sobbing from time to time. This day had brought death to over a hundred families, reckoning those whose wounded had fallen into Turkish hands. Nor did anyone know how many seriously wounded were still lying out before the positions, whom no one so far had managed to bring back to camp. The heavy mght pressed like a low ced- ing on Musa Dagb.
As their whisperings grew wilder and more pointless. Ter Haigasun assailed Gabnel sharply; “We’ve only one night, Bagradian Eifendi. Oughtn’t we to use these eight hours?”
Gabriel had stretched himself out full length, his arms under his head, and was staring up at the dark above. He could scarcely defend himself against sleep. Everything sank away. Meaningless words came splashing round his ears. At this in- stant he had not even the energy to answer the priest. To him- self he mumbled something incomprehensible. It was then he £elt the little ice-cold hand touching his face. It was too dark
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to recognize Iskuhi. After long straying about from post to post, she had found him at last. Now she sat down, as though it were the most natural thing for her, at his side, in the circle of the leaders. She did not seem even ashamed before her brother. This was their last and only night.
Iskuhi’s cool hand roused and quickened Gabriel like fresh water. His torpor began to melt away, his mind to germinate. He sat up and took her hand, not heeding whether anyone saw his tenderness in the dark. Iskuhi’s hand seemed to lead him back to himself through the stubborn confusion of his fatigue. His muscles became taut. That physical well-bang filled him which a thirsty man feels who has drunk his fill. Suddenly the Council held its breath. Voices came nearer. They all sprang up. Turks.? Some lanterns swung into view. It was a komitap detachment returning to camp. It wanted its orders for tomorrow. The komitaps reported that only one of their number had been killed, and two taken prisoners by the Turks, and that they had kept their positions as before. At the same time they announced that the Turkish companies wae vacating most of the sectors on the height, to collect again in the ilex gully. Communication between the captured trenches and the command was being maintained by chains of patrols. Their intentions were clear as daylight.
“Wc’li use tonight. Ter Haigasunl” ,
Gabriel said it so loud that the crowd could hear him. Simultaneously the other leaders seemed to have conquaed their paralysis. The same thought flashed through all their minds before Bagradian said a word. Only a strong surprise attack on the Turkish camp could avert disaster. But for such an attack the exhausted fighters of this day of blood had no strength left in them. The whole people, women and children, must in some way or other take part and give it the added physical weight of thousands. Now they were all tallfmg at once. Every mukhtar and teacher had his suggestions, till Ga- briel sharply commanded silence. They must not discuss this
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question aloud. It was not impossible that Turkish spies had ^pped into camp. Gabriel sent Chaush the Lion back to his sector to pick a hundred and fifty fighters, out of the twenty decads by which it was manned, who had suffered compara* tively little. He was to bring them quietly. Those left behind could and must suffice to hold their particular trenches and rock barricades against a counter-attack. The South Bastion and the sectors on the edge of the mountain, twenty decads in all, were to furnish the same, and did in fact, in the course of the next few hours, silently assemble on the altar square. With his komitajis and mobile guard Bagradian rallied a force of over five hundred. All these movements took a long time, since they had to be done in absolute quiet, and no commands, but only the most necessary directions, briefly whispered, could be given. It was very hard, in the thick darkness, to classify. Only his knowledge of each mdividual among them enabled Bagradian to divide into two groups these wearily torpid men. The first, the larger, was put in charge of the captain of the komitajis. When they had eaten a few rations and received their supply of cartridges— which again in the dark proved very difficult and laborious— they were moved some way to- wards the south, to creep down by remote tracks, noiseless as shadows, with endless precautions, through woods and thick- ets, across clearings and open spaces, nearer and nearer the Turkish camp. They had more to help them than their own instinctive knowledge of the ground; they had the campfires of the companies, which the yus-bashi had allowed to be lit on the edge of the ilex gully. These fires were built up on barren or rocky places, since otherwise, though the great gully itself was heavy with damp, the dryness of the undergrowth beyond might easily have caused a heath fire. But, in spite of these campfires, komitaji leaders managed to surround the whole elliptical valley. Armemans sat motionless in the trees; they lay hidden behind the thick arbutus bushes; here and there they curled themselves, without proper cover, round
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kaotted roots. With never-shifting eyes they watched the which gradually quietened into silence. kept their riSes trained, although it must still be more than an hour before sudden hrmg up on the mountain gave them the signal.
Bagradian had ordered Chaush Nurhan to lead the attack against the captured sector with the other group of a hun- dred and fifty rifles. Nurhan advanced his men from behind stone barricades, towards the chief trench, with its flank sup- ports. More than the dark — a soughing beneficent wind mu£S^ this crouching, rustling movement so perfectly that the Ar- menians managed to get some litde way past the trenches, on either side, and so have them surrounded. One thing was espe- cially in their favour. The Turkish trench garrison, one of the strong companies left behind, had stupidly ht a couple of acetylene lamps, which sharply ht up the soldiers’ heads and plunged all else in densest obscurity. Here, too, endlessly calm and set on their object, the Armenians sighted the garishly outhned targets. It was as though nobody breathed. Not a limb stirred. Every hfe seemed buried in the shaftless coal mine of this night.
The Kaimakam and the major were standing together at the place where, between ruined walls, the track first leaves the lower slope, to continue upwards through the wide conduit of the ilex gully. They were on the lower edge of the camp. Some men with lanterns and torches stood in a group to light them.
The yus-baslii glanced at his ultra-modern wristwatch, with its luminous face. “Plenty of time. I’m going to have them waked an hour before sunrise.” '
The Kaimakam seemed concerned for the major’s physical well-being. "Hadn’t you better sleep in your quarters, Yus- Bashi? You’ve a heavy day behind you. Bed will be good for you.”
“No! Not I don’t want any sleep.”
Ther Kaimakam said good-night, went a few paces followed by his lantern-bearers, came uphill again. “Don’t misunder-
47 *
stand my question, Major. But can I be quite certain that nothing unexpected will happen in the next few hours?”
The major, who had not come down to meet him, but stayed where he was, with his head half averted, repressed an angry reply. This civilian meddling was insufferable. He growled: “Naturally I’ve taken all the usual precautionary measures. Although my poor fellows need their rest. I’ve set very strong outpost lines. You needn’t have bothered to come back, Kaimakam. I’ve also made up my mind to send out patrols to beat up the country all round our camp.”
And as the major said, so it was done. But these patrols, exhausted corporals and men, went stumbling half asleep past the rigid Armenians, whose eyes shone feline out of the leaves. They were soon back to report to the officer in charge that the country all round was clear and in order.
Bagraoian threw down the flaming matchstick with which he had just lit a cigarette. Little flames darted along the grass, and set Are to a tidt of it. Iskuhi, still at his side, trod out the greedy flames.
“How dry everything is,” she said.
It was this match that inspired the impossible thought in Bagradian. He stood there, lost in it. The notion was double- edged. It might do his own people as much damage as the enemy. Bagradian held out his handkerchief, to test the direc- tion of this strong wind. West wind, sea wind, drivings branches downwards towards the val'ey. Neither he alone nor the Council could make the decision. Ter Haigasun, the su- preme head of the people, must say yes or no.
After an instant’s silence Ter Haigasun said: “Yes.”
Meanwhile the whole armed force had vacated the altar square and Town Enclosure. Both storming-parties breathlessly awaited the signal. Between the surrounded trench and the rock barricades the whole mass of reservist villagers. But that was not all. It must unfortunately be recorded that Stephan,
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long since escaped from his mother, was very dated and pleased with life, in spite of imminent catastrophe. This creep- ing and whispering in the dark, this close proximity of so many Jwdies on the alert, these sudden gleamings and ex- tinguishings of hooded lanteras, and a hundred more such adventurous uncertainties, keyed up young Stephan’s excited nerves to the sensation of having ban transported into the midst of a pleasantly thrilling world of dreams. All this was enhanced by the very unusual order just issued to the cohort of youth, and their pride in being allowed, as the last defence of the encampment, to share in plans soil not divulged. It is therefore easily understood that, even from their present ex- hausted state, Stephan and his comrades had been roused to irrepressible excitement.
This strange order concerned the stores of oil. All the oil casks on the Damlayik, including those of the Bagradian fam- ily, were being rolled without further explanation on to the altar square, as well as whatever branches, sticks, and cudgels could be got together from the sites of the extinguished foes. First Stephan and his comrades, then the women, and all children of nine and over, were ordered from these piles of brushwood to pick out as strong and thick a brand as possible; The teachers and Samuel Avakian, who' supervised this dis- tribution, had all they could do to prevent noisy quarr elling . They struck with their fists and whispered: “Quiet, you silly devils.” It was the same round the oil casks. The branches must be dipped to the middle in the thick liquid, and twirled round in it. There were at least three thousand of them. It took a very long time. The people were still crowding round the casks when a whistle-blast gave the signal and the hidden attackers opened foe on those trenches taken by the Turks. Its sounds were echoed at once a hundredfold by hollow din out of the gully, interspersed with drowsy long-drawn cries of alarm, so hoarse as hardly to be human.
Gabriel Bagradian stood on a little summit of rock entangle-
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meats. During the sudden, crackling tumult of battle, a sound entirely different from that of any previous attack, the leader, in a kind of dream-like expectancy, had said nothmg at all to the people waiting behind. Several minutes went by. The craclde of small arms sounded thinner. Gabriel could scarcely realize that the first act of his surprise-attack had succeeded so quickly. But Chaush Nurhan was already giving the signal — a few vehement flourishes with his lantern. The trench was back in the hands of its first defenders, who overflowed it, rushing down the slope after the enemy. Some of the Turkish infantrymen got lost in the dark and fell into the hands of pursuing decads. Some of them ran, stumbled, leapt downhill, towards the shouting gully and were bayoneted, or felled by their pursuers’ rifle-butts. Gabriel sent Avakian back to the reserve. “Ready and forwards.” He waited till the whispering shoals approached the rock on which he stood; then he ran forward and headed them. Slowly they crowded onwards down the slopes, through the thick shrubs, past the dead, down to- wards the din-filled grove.
There it was hke a hunt in full cry. The bravest among the officers, onbashis, and soldiers might try, again and again, to come up close to the brushwood conflagrations around their camp and douse them— they extinguished their own hves. The ring of komitaji rifles drove them back into the centre of the gully. Officers yelled contradictory orders. No one heard. In- fantrymen and saptichs ran about bellowing to find their rifles; yet, when they had them, they foimd them impossible to use. Every shot they fired might have killed a brother or a com- rade. Many flung away their arms, which impeded them, as they ran or leapt through this thorny pathlessness. The very inner life of Musa Dagh seemed to do its share in this grue- some destruction. The revengeful thicket grew rankly lux- uriant. Trees became treacherously taller. Whipping twigs and plants twined like lashes round the sons of the Prophet and brought them bw. Those who fell, lay on. The indiffer-
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eace to death which marks thdr race descend^ on them. Thejr buried their heads in thorny nests. The yus-bashi, by dint o£ his own cool energy and many strokes with the fbt of his sword, bad collected round him a litdc knot of utterly flab- bergasted infantrymen. When sergeants, corporals, and old soldiers grew aware of their officer, in a feeble glimmer of dying campfire, they joined the rest. The major, thrusting his sword towards the heights, yelled: “Forward!” and: “After me!” With an odd excitement he noticed his phosphorescent wristwatch. Suddenly he remembered the words which he had said last night to the Kaimakam: ‘1 don’t want to go on living if tomorrow that Armenian camp still isn't cleared.” And truly at that moment, he did not want to live. “After me!” he yelled again and again. He could feel the whole force of his own will-power, able by its single strength to transfer this rout into a break-through. His example had its effect. And even their longing to be out of this inferno of a wood urged the soldiers on. They roused themselves to leave the cover of their own apathy and, bcllowmg, followed thar commander. They came scatheless to the upper end of the gully. With thud- ding hearts, utterly exhausted, having lost all consciousness of reality, they went on, lurching up the mountainside, into the hght of lanterns, the fire of decads, which received them. They were flung back like so many lifeless dummies. The yus-bashi did not at first perceive his wound. He felt very surprised at suddenly finding himself so isolated. Then his right arm felt heavy. To feel the blood and pain pleased, almost delighted, him. His shame, his loss, had become far less. He dragged himself back, with his eyes shut. . . . “Fall down somewhere,” he hoped, “and forget it all.”
When, from recaptured trenches the din of batde retreated downhill, that was the sign for the Town Enclosure. A tongue of fire shot up. One of the oil-soaked torches began to crackle into flame and, within a few minutes, had passed it on to a thousand more. Most of the villagers had followed the
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e£UDp& ^ Haik, Stfipban, and the odierhoys, v\du> then, with a tordb in each hand, moved o£E in a long, extended line. Earth had never seen such a torchli^t procession. Each one who bore these spluttering candles at arm’s length was startled by this incomprehensible clarity, which seemed to light up his very soul. The light was not, as single flames are, an intensifica- tion of endless dark, but, like the hght that fires a whole peo- ple, it shot a glorious breach in the dark of space. The long, far-flung lines and groups moved onwards slowly, ceremoni- ously, as if they were on their way, not to a battlefield, but to a place of prayer.
Down in the villages, in Yoghonoluk, Bitias, in Habibli, Azir, in Wakef and Kheder Beg— yes, in the north, in Ke- bussiye even, the honey village, not one new tenant could get to sleep. When the wild clatter of the surprise attack reached these villages, their armed inhabitants snatched up rifles, set out, and now garrisoned the low ridges, though they did not venture too near the gully. But their women stood in the gardens, or on the roofs, avidly and fearfully listening to the furious yelping of the bullets. Suddenly, at one in the morning, they saw the sun come up behind the Damlayik. Its black ridge stood sharply outlined; behind it spread a tender, rosy glow. This unearthly vision, this ncver-to-be-equalled sign and wonder, worked on these credulous women’s spirits like the trump of doom. And when, a short while later, the whole edge of the mountain burst into flames, it was too late for natural explanations. )esus Christ, the prophet of unbelievers^ had let the sun of His might rise behind the mountain; the Armenian }inn of Musa Dagh, in alhance with Peter, Paul, Thomas, and the other worthies of the Evangel, were protect- ing this people. The anaent myth of supernatural powers be- hind the Armenians had found its completest confirmation. More than these simple women became imbued with it. The mullahs, too, watching the miracle from the round gallery encircling the church dome of Yoghonoluk, took flight out of
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this mosque that had been the Church of Ever-Increa^g Angelic Powers.
Less magically, but far more terribly, were those Turkish soldiers still on the mountain-slope appalled by this irresistible line of lights. It gave the impression of vasdy superior num- bers, sprung up out of nowhere, as though the whole Arme- ian nation, all the convoys dispersed over Turkey, were gathered at that time and in this place to avenge, with torches and balls of Hre, on a mere handful of their oppressors, the monstrous wrongs they had endured. The little garrisons of Turks before each defence-sector raced back down the slopes. No officer could manage to hold them. All still alive in the cursed region of the ilex gully had fought their way, heedless now of bullets, through thickets, and come out on the lower slopes. The Armenians were not numerous enough to box- barrage the mouth of the gully. A few valiant officers and men, missing their bashi from among them, had once again forced their way out, to snatch up that wounded, unconscious officer just as he was about to be taken prisoner. They carried him down to Villa Bagradian headquarters. During which painful journey he came to himself. He knew now that everything was over, that the Christians had scattered his whole power, that for him there could be no return, no reinstatement. From the depths of his soul he cursed the bullet which had only shattered his right arm, and not done its business more effi- ciendy. He only longed to faint again. That prayer, however, remained unanswered. The clearest, coldest perception of pre- cisely what this would mean worked on and on in him.
The procession of fire had no more enemies left to face. Slowly the long lines of incendiaries approached the ilex gully, the woods around it. About half-way down the slope Ter Haigasun halted the long lines and gave the order (passed from one to the other) to cast fiaming stumps into the under- growth. The flames sank down in the smoking shrubs. From all sides, in a few minutes, there came an endless crackling, as
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of pistol shots, as if the whole Damlayik would explode. Flames shot high in many places. The woods were on fire. Woe, if the wind should veer in the next few hours. The Town Enclosure, which lay nearest the edge of the mountain, would have been the prey of flying sparks and tongues of flame, borne down the wind. It was fortunate that Gabriel Bagradian should have cleared a glacis before these sectors. This forest fire ate its way so quickly, so instantaneously, up the sun-dried flanks of the Damlayik, that what stood here in a roaring mass of flame looked like no earthly fire, no earthly fuel. There was scarcely time for komitajis and decads lower down the slope to rescue the spoils of the attack; more than two hundred Mauser rifles, abundant munitions, two field-kitchens, five sumpter mules with their fodder, bivvy sheets, rugs, lanterns, and much besides.
When the real sun came up, a stony sleep lay on the Damla- yik. The fighters slept where they had fallen. Only a very few had had the strength to drag back into cover. The boys slept, coiled in heaps on the bare earth. Women in the Town En- closure had sunk down hfeless on their mats, unwashed, tousled, without a thought of their tiny children who whim- pered hungrily. Bagradian slept; so did all the leaders. Even Ter Haigasun had not the strength to complete his Mass of thanksgiving. Towards the end of it, overcome with exhaus- tion, he had sunk down like a drunkard before the altar. The mukhtars slept, without having picked the day’s sheep for killing. The butchers slept and the milkmaids. No one went to work. No fires were lit in the kitchen square, nor water carried from the wellsprings. No one could attend to the many wounded still lying in agony in their trenches, nor to those who m the course of hours had managed to drag their way to the hospital-hut. All who are summarized so impersonally in that one colourless word “wounded” lay strewn about in hor- rible reality: faces without eyes or noses, chins mushed into
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bleeding pulp, bodies smashed by dum-dum bulkts, ydpii^ men with stomach wounds, dying of thirst. Only death, .Bet Bedros Hekim, could help these wretched. But till he beat compassionat^y over them, they too were helped through dragging hours by some narcotic, feverish half-sleep.
Down in the valley slept the infantry, the saptiehs, chettehs, as many as came clear of the slaughter. The officers slept in their rooms at Villa Bagradian. Yesterday’s first viaim, the Kolagasi from Aleppo, had been taken back in an ambulance to Antakiya many hours ago. Now another wounded officer had replaced him on Stephan’s bed. The Kaimakam, too, in Juliette’s bedroom, had been overcome by sleep. He had been engaged on a report to the Wall of Aleppo when it became no longer possible to sit upright.
But his mind and conscience worked in the depths of sleep with more cruel truth than ever in the meshes of consuousness. He had just encountered the worst set-back in his career. Yet e/ery failure contains the elements of grace in it, since failure, with a grin, reveals the ineptitude of human estimates of worth. This Kaimakam, this high official, this member of Ittihad, he of whom the party thought so highly, this Osmanli, steeped to the marrow in all the pride of his warrior race — what had he just been forced to experience? That the weak wer& strong, the strong in ^reality impotent. Yes, impotent even in those heroic acuvities which made the weak appear so des- picable. But in his sleep the Kaimakam’s perceptions went deeper still. So far he had never one instant doubted that Enver Pasha and Talaat Bey were m the right; more, that against the Armenian millet they had acted with consummate statecraft. Yet now furious doubts of Enver Pasha and Talaat Bey reared up within the Kaimakam, since failure is also the stern parent of truth. Had men the right to work out skilful plans by which this or that people should be stamped out? Was there even, as he had asserted a thousand times there was, enough practical basis for such a scheme? Who is to say
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that one people is worse or better than another? Certainly men oannot say it. And God, that day on the Damlayik, had given a most unmistakable answer. The Kaimakam saw himself placed in certain contingencies which made him feel not a litde concerned for his skin. He was sending in a written resig- nation to His Excellency the Wali of Aleppo, destroying, of his own free will, the whole structure of his career. He offered the Armenians, in the person of Gabriel Bagradian, wrapped in a bathgown, freedom and friendship. In the central com- mittee of Ittihad he urged the immediate recall of all Arme- nian convoys and passed a compensatory tax to indenmify them. But the Kaimakam’s soul only haunted such ethical summits in deepest sleep. The thinner wore the fabric of his slumbers, the nearer he returned to everyday consciousness, the more utterly did his surface mind reject any such foolhardy suggestions. At last, in far smoother, more peaceful repose, he hit on a convenient way out. Why not simply omit any super- fluous, uneasy report to the central authorities? The Kaima- kam slept on till midday.
The dead slept, the Christians and the Mussulmans, strewn here and there in the bushes above the ilex gully, the thickets of the northern side. The licking flames of this huge mountain conflagration crept nearer with overweening playfulness. These flames seemed to rouse the sleepers; they raised them up from underneath, so that the dead, with a stiff ]erk of terror, sat bolt upright, before their bodies started crackling, and they sank back into the cleansmg holocaust. From hour to hour the Arc increased, spreading far and wide across the Damlayik, to north and south. It halted only at the barren stone slopes of that incline which falls sheer from the South Bastion, while a rocky inlct'protected the North Saddle against it. The green slopes of this mountain blessed with many springs, this miraclf; of the Syrian coast, triumphed once again with flaming ban- ners, till at last nothing was left to devour but a strong obstacle field of glowing embers. Thus did Musa Dagh armour with
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fire, with red-glittering debris, her weary sons, lost in thdr gulf of sleep, unaware that for some time now they need fear no more from their pursuers. None realized how a friendly wind kept danger helpfully off the Town Enclosure, driving sparks and tongues of dame downhill. The villagers and the decads slumbered on till late afternoon— only then did the Council meet to resolve that every imperilled point must be fully cleared of wood and undergrowth. This was a new and ex- hausting task.
They had slept all through the day, all but one of them. She in her tent sat on the bed and never moved. But it served her litde to make herself feel smaller and smaller within the buzz- ing cocoon of her inexpressible ahenation, her inescapable
4
Sato*s Ways
Although the lucky wind still kept its direction, this forest, or rather mountain fire had a deeply depressing effect on all these people. There was no more darkness. The red-eyed nights squinted and blinked at them. Crazy shadows leapt up to dance. Unendurable heat, at midnight just as at midday, with- out a breath of cooling air. Biting fumes strangled every breath. They ate into the membrane of nose and throat. A unique and curious form of cold in the head spread savagely through the whole camp, making tempers more and more un- certain.
Instead of pride in victory, jubilant thanksgiving, the first signs of demoralization began to show themselves, those signs of a sinister inward process, which threatened to destroy all disciphne in sudden bursts of wild ill-temper. This, in great measure, was the cause of the ugly brawl with Sarkis Kilikian, which took place, unluckily, on the very night of this day’s repose. It is one of the reasons why neither Ter Haigasun nor Gabriel would let themselves be influenced by the fact that now, by God’s mercy, a long truce might be expected. To be sure, this mad idea of setting a mountain on Rre had, with the vast new loot of rifles, much improved the prospects of the defence. Even the hope that the Turks might renounce all further attempts was by no means so insane as it had been. And yet— only the breast of the Damlayik was in flames; its hips, the stone slopes above Suedia and the North Saddle, were as liable as ever to be attacked. In no circumstances therefore
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mutt the stringent routine o£ the trenches he rriioDcd The leaders* authority must be kept as implacable as ever.
It was just as essential to re-establish the morale of the Town Enclosure. What Ter Haigasun called “normality” must be re^ affirmed against all destructive evil powers. So that, when it met that night, on the evemng of the twenty-fourth, the Coim- cil of Leaders, to avoid any mass excitement, decided against ceremonial burial of the dead.
In this la^e afternoon, detachments, sent to bring in the dead, came back with sixty-seven corpses, out of the hundred and thirteen missing men. There were also a good many mortally wounded, who died that night, since they had no proper medical aid. Dr. Bedros Altouni had much to say to the Coun- cil on this point. In his sharp htde voice, which certainly was not suited to solemn talk of corpses, he informed them that, since the summer heat was unbearably intensified by this fire, it was essential- to bury at once. Every minute’s delay was a danger to the whole camp. He, Dr. Altouni, disliked having to say such a thing to mourners, but by now, surely, everyone’s nose must have convmced him of the absolute necessity for funerals. Not a second to lose! Let every bereaved family set to work and dig its grave at the place appointed. The Coun- cil, in Altouni’s opinion, would have been far wiser to leave all the dead to the mercy of the great fire. It had not been able to make up its mmd to do so.
So the dead were wound into their shrouds, for the comfort of orphans and widows. A heap of his own earth was (^ranted to each.
This order did not, as some had feared it might, cause much ill-fcehng among the people. They feared too much for their own health. And corruption had already become apparent. Three hours after midnight, it was finished. This exhausting work had stifled pain. Only a very few surviving relatives re- mained standing by the graves, with the candles they had been keeping so long. Reflections from the mountain fire swallowed
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tb^ poor corpses Into their shadow. Numk and her colleagues had stayed in the valley. They dared no longer leave their holes, since the Turks had caught two old beggarmen in the maize-fields, and thrashed them to death.
On the following morning, August 25, two very important public events were due. The first concerned the selection of volunteers for Alexandretta and Aleppo. Swimmers and run- ners must leave at once. The other event was the trial of Sarkis Kihkian. The case stood as follows: There could be no doubt that Sarkis had to answer to the people for heavy losses, and yet Gabriel had not thought of callmg him to account for criminal negligence, since in ail previous attacks the Russian had behaved with the coolest gallantry. Gabriel had a certain insight into human incalculabilities, and knew besides that it is impossible to reconstruct with any reality a determined instant in any battle. But other leaders disagreed. There had been a brawl on the altar square. Sarkis had stood surrounded by an angry mob of his comrades. . . . Let him explain— answer their questions— justify himself! He neither justified nor explained. He stood, with his bleached face, his incurious eyes, his mouth shut before the frenzied accusations that spat- tered around him. This silence may not have been as insolent, malicious, self-assertive, as it seemed. Perhaps Kilikian himself could not understand his sudden negligence, and disdained all such easy excuses as “fatigue” or “misunderstood intentions.” He was shoved this way and that; fists kept dancing under his nose. Probably any jury would have found that he acted in self- defence, had It not been that he struck the first blow. . . . And had not that blow been so terrible!
For a while, apathetic as ever, he let them shove and push him as they pleased, seemed indeed scarcely to notice what was happening. Suddenly, then, he snatched his bony fist out of a pocket, and dashed it in his youngest tormentor’s face, so horribly that the lad collapsed, streaming with blood from a broken nose, having lost an eye. It was done with incredible
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swiftness. For a half-second Kilikian had straightened up out of his slouch, his eyes had seemed to flare — ^then they went as dead again as ever. No one would have thought him the aggressor, and, at first, luckily for him, most did not know how it had happened, and retreated a step. But when, with shouts of anger, they closed m on him, it would have gone very badly with him indeed, had the police of the Town En* closure not saved him by taking him in charge.
During the morning of his trial by the Councd, he admitted indifferently that it was he who had struck the first blow; that he had known just what its effects would be. Nor would he attempt to prove self-defence. He seemed too detached, too bored, too slack, to speak. The circumstances in which he must live or die may have been, to such a man as Kihkian, a matter of more profound indifference than other people could ever realize. Gabriel heard the case without saying a word. He neither defended nor accused. The exasperated people de- manded punishment.
Ter Haigasun, having heard the last witness, sighed: “What am I to do with you, Sarkis Kihkian? One only needs to look at you to see that you don’t fit into any order established by God! I ought to have you turned out of camp.”
He did not, but instead sentenced Kihkian to five days’ im- prisonment in irons, intensified by three days’ fasting. This punishment was worse than it may appear. For a brawl, in which he had not really been the aggressor, Kilikian found himself degraded from his rank as a respected leader and thrust back into the criminal underworld. It was the harsh- est degradation. But no indication on his part suggested that he had any honour left to degrade. After the trial they bound him hand and foot with ropes and placed him in the lock-up which formed the third room of the government-hut. Now Kilikian looked as he had so many times in the course of his inexplicable life, in which punishment had come so swift on the hcek of the vaguest misdoing, or of none at all. To
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penalties also he submitted, with indiiSercnt eyes, as to yc another, familiar, inescapable incident, in a life so subtly contrived. But this prison-house differed at least from all other, similar, institutions in his wide experience by the fact that he had to share it with so august a spirit as Krikor. Right and left, two kennels, with plank beds, as alike as cells. The one, a shameful lock-up; the other— the universe entire.
Gabriel could feel in every nerve the advent of an incalculable event which would nullify the results of their recent victory. He had therefore urgently insisted that the messages must go out that day. Something must be made to happen quickly. And, even if the attempt proved vain, it would at least en- gender hope and expectation. The volunteers assembled, as the leaders had ordained, on the altar square. The whole camp was astir, since this choice of messengers, freely come to offer their lives, concerned the whole people.
Gabriel came from a short inspection of the decads. In view of the dangerous slackness and irritation, which threatened to spread all through the camp, he had ordered fresh drill and fighting-exercises for that same afternoon. His whole first defence had now been adequately armed with the two hun- dred freshly captured Mauser rifles. The best of his reserve had been sent to fill in the gaps, left by the recent, heavy fight- ing. Already Chaush Nurhan’s jerky bugle-calls could be heard, drilling these recruits. Iskuhi had come half-way to meet Gabriel. Since the first, sudden emotion sprang up bp- tween them, she had sought him cut with the frankness of a little girl. They were walking side by side, without a word, the rest of the way to the altar square. Gabriel, whenever he had her with him, would be filled with the same strange, restful security. Always it was the same sensation, that what he felt for her was the most intimate thing he had ever known. Her warmth, as of a clear fire, seemed to reach far back, beyond any frontiers of conscious memory. Nor did she leave his side
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in the {dace of a8seiid>Iy, although she was the only womaiv' standing here without excuse in the midst of thoe dduting men. Had she no fear that they all might comment on her behaviour? That even her brother, Aram, might suspect?
About thirty young men waited as volunteers for the Coun- cil of Leaders to choose among them. Five of them were still in their teens. The eldest among the cohort of youth had been allowed to give in their names. Gabriel, with a start of fear and anger, saw his son Stephan beside Haik. After a bnef consultation with the other members of the Council, Ter Haigasun announced his choice. It was he who always gave the final deasion in any estimate of the people’s capacities and strength.
The swimmers had been easy enough to pick out. In Wakei^ the southernmqst village, on the edge of the Orontes plain, and hence nearly on the coast, there were two famous divers and swimmers, one nineteen, the other twenty. Ter Haigasun handed out the leather belt, with its appeal, sewn up inside, to the possible commander of any English, American, French, Russian, or Italian gunboat. The swimmers were to set out that night after sunset, over the North Saddle, having spent their last afternoon with their families.
The question of the runners to Aleppo took a few minutes longer to settle. They had decided that only one young man should go out on that dangerous mission. But no Armenian adult. Pastor Aram Tomasian was convinced, would have the same chance as would a boy of getting to Aleppo alive. Ar- menian boys wore almost the same dress as Turkish. A boy would have twice the chance of slipping through. The justice of this was admitted. And one name occurred to them all: “Haik.” That dour, resolute lad, with the fabulous swiftness, his body as hard as polished stone, was the right messenger, or nobody. Not another peasant in all that countryside had Haik’s sightless adaptabihty to the earth over which he moved, that omniscient eye, as of some great bird, that setter’s nose^
ifaift of a rat, the slippery ainddeaess ot an otter. If any- one here could succeed in evading death on the road to Aleppo, it must be Haik, and only he.
But, when Ter Haigasun gave out Haik’s name from the altar steps, there was a most unseemly protest from Stephan. Gabriel’s face twitched with anger as he saw his son come im- ^pudently forth from his place in the line of volunteers and plant himself there under his nose. Never before had the crude precocity, the mental and physical untidiness, of his own son seemed so apparent.
Stephan bared his teeth, like an angry dog. “Why only Haik? I want to go to Aleppo, too. Father.”
His mutmous voice shrilled out over the whole square. Such words, from a son to a father, were never heard among Arme- nians. Not even the unusual circumstance, this zeal in their defence, could excuse them.
Ter Haigasun looked up impatiently. “Tell your son to be- have himself, Gabriel Bagradian.”
Pastor Aram Tomasian, used at Zeitun to dealing with difficult boys, tried to pacify Stephan. “The Council of Lead- ers has decided that only one is to go to Aleppo. A big, intelli- gent fellow like you ought to know what the Council’s orders mean to all of us. Absolute obeffience — isn’t that it?”
But the conqueror of Turkish howitzers was not to be fobbed off with legalities. Having no distinct notion of this duty, nor of how unfit he was to perform it, he could only fed he was bang snubbed, set bdow the great competitor. The presence of so many assembled worthies did not deter in the least his touchy impudence. He still glared boldly at his father. "Haik’s only about three months older than mel He can’t even speak French. Mr. Jackson won’t understand him. And what Haik can do, I can ”
Now Gabriel lost his temper. He came one quick step nearer Stephan. “Do? You can’t do anything. You’re a soft European — that’s all you arc. A spoilt city child! Why, they’d snap you
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up Cke a blind cat. Get out! Go to your mother. If you stay another minute, I’ll ”
Such harshness was most unwise. It hit Stephan’s most tender susceptibilities. He was being publicly kicked down from the place he had found it so hard to win. Now ail his deeds had been done in vain: his fruit-stealing, his heroic cap- ture of the guns, which had nearly earned him the title “Lion.” In a flash Stephan grasped the fact that no deed is done once and for all, that we always have to begin again at the begin- ning. He became suddenly very quiet. His sunburnt skin flushed darker than ever. He stared at Iskuhi with big eyes as though he were only just discovering her. It seemed to him that she answered his look severely, in a frigid stare. Iskuhi as the hostile witness of his defeat I It was too much! Suddenly Stephan began to bellow, not like an almost grown-up hero, a crack shot, the captor of enemy artillery, but like an unjusdy punished schoolboy. Yet these childish sobs evoked no sym- pathy in the others, rather a kind of unholy glee. It was a fairly complex state of mind that invaded not only Stephan’s comrades, but the grown-ups, and concerned not only the son but, for some obscure reason, Gabnel. “You don’t belong here.” It needed only a pretext for that sensation, and there it was! Stephan at once suppressed his howling grief. But its brief display had been quite enough to arouse contempt, not only among his comrades, but in all the other groups of the cohort of youth. Only Haik stood lost in serious bought. All this had noting to do with him. . . .
Now the only thing left to Stephan was to slink away, with suspiciously heaving shoulders. Gabriel watched him go, in silence. He had ceased to be angry, having remember^ the little boy in Montreux— Stephan, charmingly dressed, his head bent sideways over the notepaper, forming big, round letters. He thought: “Stephan’s getting a big boy. He’ll be fourteen in November.” . . . And this “he’ll be” . . . “in November” . . . what idiotically Utopian thought was this? A rliill presenti-
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ment stole over him. . . . Something that can no longer he prevented! . . . Gabriel went to Three-Tent Square for an* other talk with his son.
But neither Stephan nor Juliette was to be found there. In the sheikh’s tent he changed his underclothes. As he did so, he missed one of the coins given him by the Agha Rifaat Bereket. It was the gold coin, with the head in sharp half- relief of the great Armeman king, Aschod Bagrathuni. He turned out the pockets of every suit. The gold coin was no- where to be found.
It was most unlucky that this new incursion of Turks and Arabs should have put an end to Sato’s vagrant double life. And her status among the children was lower than ever. Ter Haigasun, a few days ago, in spite of all the teachers’ recal- citrance, had insisted that school must be properly kept. But now, not even that martinet, Hrand Oskaman, could enforce discipline in class if Sato were sitting among the rest. “Stinker! Stinker!” chirruped the whole merciless flock, the instant that vagrant entered the school enclosure. Even up here, in this last refuge of the persecuted, Sato, that lousy orphan, supplied these children with a welcome pretext for feeling distin- guished and nobly born. During one such class, taken by Iskuhi, their derision howled so loud that even the teacher, without concealing her own repugnance, drove the hated Sato out of class. “Go away, Sato; and don’t let me see you again, ever!”
So far, in stolid indifference, ignorant alike of honour and shame, Sato had managed to hold her own. But now that her admired Iskuhi, her kuchuk hanum, had joined the enemy, thrusting her forth, Sato had to obey. In her short European frock with the butterfly sleeves, which, ragged and caked with mud, made her look grotesque, she went trailing off. But only as far as the nearest bush, under which she lay down quiedy, like a jackal watching a caravan-camp with ravenous eyes.
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Sato was not so poor as she seemed. She, too, had a world* For instance, she could understand the animals which strayed across her vagrant way. Iskuhi and all the others would no doubt have said without hesitation that Sato was a cruel little beast to them. Everything about her suggested it. But — on the contrary I This bastard waif vented none of her spite on beasts, which she handled with a protective, whispering sym- pathy. Her insensitive hands would pick up a hedgdiog, and she would whisper so long that at last the ball began to un- roll, the pointed snout darted forth, the alert, businesslike eyes of a small bazaar-shopkeeper sized her up quickly. Sato, who could only speak to grown-ups as though she had a gag in her mouth, was expert m every shade of bird-cry. Such gifts, which would no doubt have commanded respect, she diligently hid, fearing they might do her social damage. And, as with beasts, so could she talk with the old madwomen, crouching in their holes round the Yoghonoluk churchyard. Sato never noticed that these breathless, disconnected gabblers used their tongues in any way differently from other, sanely gossiping matrons. In any case it was very pleasant to take one’s share in such friendly talks, which made no fatiguing demands on one’s choice of expression. The smaller beasts, these female half-wits, and sometimes even a bhnd beggar, formed a realm apart, in which Sato found herself respected, as every human being must needs feel respected, in order to live. Though, to be sure, with Nunik, Wartuk, Manushak, Sato was still a respectful underling.
But now this communion was shattered. It was dull. There was reaUy no point in straying about within camp bounds Little by httle, this idle resdessness got diverted into channels of its own: spying on grown-ups. With the sharp instinct which mocked all that unintelligible book-learning, Sato perceived whatever was animal in these grown-ups, all that might have escaped their control, 'all cravings, their mad self-seekings. Of those emotions of whose dangerous existence in the world
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was scarcely codadously aware, idw could nonetbeless hear the grass grow. The avid litde spy, like a magnet^ drew all that was not in order towards hnself.
It is therefore not in the least surprising that Sato soon real> ized how things were between Gonzague and Juhette. The pricking, onunous sense of a major catastrophe mvaded her. AIL disinherited people know this delightful prescience of catastrophe, the deheious hope that the world is about to crash, which forms one of the strongest impulses both to minor scandals and revolution. Sato kept close behind these two. Next to Bagradian himself, Juhette a'nd Monsieur Gonzague were the most resplendent apparitions in Sato’s world. She did not hate them in the least, m the way bad servants hate their masters. She felt a primitive’s curiosity for something which seems almost superhuman.
She had soon spied out their hiding-place, the secret place of myrtle and rhododendron. With delight trickling down her spine, she forced her muzzle slowly through the thicket. Her ghttering eyes were avid for this sight sent by the gods. The august, resplendent hanum, from France, the giantess, the ever-perfumed . . . now her hair hung in wisps over a face which advanced its almost lifeless surfaces, its wide, dolorous mouth, towards the steady features of the'man who, with drooping lids, still seemed acutely on the alert as, first, he savoured the gift, before drawing it close. Sato, shakmg with excitement, watched the play of Gonzague’s long, narrow hands, like the knowing hands of a blind tar-player, come and go across the hanum’s white shoulders, and cup her breasts.
Sato saw all there was to see. Also, what was not to be seen. The schoolteachers had given her up long ago. Not even “twice two’s four,” not even the alphabet, could be hammered into this creature’s stuttering mind, occupied with its own aimless images. Sato could make no progress, since her over- developed sense of tracks and clues engulfed all mental pos-
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al^ties. Hidden among myrtle and rhododendron, she could taste the delicious ardours of this interlude, and yet, all the time, he well aware how lost and bewildered Juliette was, how resolved, Gonzague. Her mmd was nothing, her in- stinct everything. Sato would have had no reason to curtail the raptures of the voyeuse. had there not been a certain com- plication, wounding to her most vulnerable emotion. Another couple had not long escaped her setter’s nose. They offered no spectacle, had found no refuge for their desire. These two did not steal away together into labyrinthine bushes along the coast; they preferred the barren knolls and empty reaches of the high plateau. It was hard to spy them out without being seen. But Sato, luckily, or unluckily, had the faculty for mak- ing herself invisible. At this she was even better than Master Haik. This second pair kept drawing her off the scent of her sweet absorbing espionage on the first. True, she scarcely managed to see them kiss. But, between Iskuhi and Gabriel, this never-kissing passion burned far deeper, into Sato’s heart, than all the embraces between Gonzague and Juliette. These two had only to touch hands, and glance briefly at each other; then, as though shattered, avert their eyes, to assure Sato that their union was far more maddeningly complete than all the close proximity of the others. Above all the communion be- tween Iskuhi and Gabriel was detestable, and made Sato sad.
Her memory had imagined a golden age. Had the orphan- age teacher in Zeitun not always been good and gentle with Sato? Had she not often expressly said: “My Sato’’? Had she not even allowed her Sato to squat on the grass at her feet, and • pat these feet, and stroke them even? Who but the effendi was to blame for the fact that this happy relationship, this mutual esteem, and their caresses, had ended harshly? Who but the efFendi was responsible for the fact that, when Iskuhi’s Sato approached her, with a loving and open heart, she only snapped: “Go away, Sato, and don’t let me see you again, ever’’? Sadly the waif sought out a place to think in. But
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plaoning and reflection were never her strong points. Either she evoked transient images, or would start at the sudden flash of a perception. These perceptions and images had no need at all of the assistance of anythmg hke consaous under- standmg. They worked blindly towards an aim: just as they could join up threads, let them drop, take them up again, and so spread a web of planned revenge, of which their mistress was almost unaware.
JuuETTE was on her way to Gabriel.
Gabriel was on his way to Juhettc.
They met between Three-Tent Square and the North Sad- dle.
“I was on my way to look for you, Gabriel,” she said. He said the same. That absent-minded “running to seed,” which for so long had infected the “foreigner” had done its work. Where was Juliette’s “sparkling step”? She walked' like some- one who has been sent somewhere on an errand. As indeed she had. Gonzague had sent her to tdl the truth at last, and announce her wishes, since this was the time of separation. . . . “Am I getting short-sighted,” she thought, “I see so badly?” She was surprised at the November twilight of this hot midsummer afternoon. Was it the swaths of smoke all over the Damlayik? Was it that other, confusing vapour, thickening daily, which seemed to have clouded her mind? She was surprised that, as she stood facing Gabriel, Gonzague should have become so absurdly unreal. She was surprised th^t this Gonzague let her encumber him. Everything seemed so far away, and so surprising. . . . Her garter had slipped, and her stocking was fdhng below her knee, a sensation she loathed. Yet she never stirred. *Tve suddenly lost the strength even to bend,” so it crossed her mind. “And yet, this evening, I shall have to climb down all those rocks, to Suedia.”
The husband and wife began a really remarkable conversa- tion, which ended in nothing. Juliette started it: “I blame my-
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tdf terribly for not having b^n with you these last few You’ve had a great deal to go through, and you’ve done mag- nificendy. And you’re always in danger. Oh, mon ami, I’ve behaved disgrac^uily to youl”
Such an admission, a few weeks previously, would have moved him. Now his reply was almost formal: “I, too, have you on my conscience, Juliette. I ought to have been consider- ing you more. But, believe me^ especially recently, I just haven’t been able to manage it.”
Very true, although he gave it a double meaning. His truth should have given her courage to speak hers. She only hastened to agree: “Of course you haven’t. I can quite see you’ve had very different things to think of, Gabriel.”
He proceeded along this dangerous road: “I’ve naturally al- ways known, and been very glad to think, you weren’t entirely deserted.”
This got them both to the point in their tepid dialogue, a( which it was as though they had both shammed dead, al- though the vistas around them were free on all sides. It could have been Juhette’s chance, had she seized it quickly enough. She could have spoken her mind:
- Tm a stranger here, Gabriel. The Armenian fate has been
stronger than our marriage. Now I’ve got my very last chance of avoiding that fate. You yourself have suggested I should, a hundred times, and were always making plans to save me. I’d hoped I had the strength to hold out to the end. I haven’t. I can’t ever have;, since this fight isn’t my fight. Let me go.”
None of these very simple and natural words passed Juliette’s lips. Filled as she still was with the vain delusion that she, in their marriage, had been the donor, the superior, she was sure that, if she said it, he would break down. Could she suppose that perhaps he might only answer her good-naturedly:
“I quite understand, chine. Even if I must perish because of it, I ^ haven’t the right to hold you back. I’ll do all that’s
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m mj power to help jrotL HI evoi 1<% Stcf^iaa go, £oi your indb^ since I know how much you want to save Jiim.”
Frankness, in these few minute^ might have made as clean a job of it as that, had not things been really too complex to disentangle. Juliette knew as little of Gabriel as he of her. Nor did she know if she really was in love with Gonzague. Ga> briel was equally unaware how much he was in love with Iskuhi, and of what kind of love it was that linked them. Juliette’s religious and bourgeois past made her recoil at the thought of sinful happiness. She had many reasons for mis- trusting the transparently impenetrable Gonzague, and not least that he was three years younger than she. In Pans there would have been a traditional form for all of tnis. On these fantastic reaches of the Damlayik the sense of sin oppressed her heavily.
But these were only minor complications. For several min- utes at a time she was perfectly ready to nurse the thought that she would fly the mountain with Gonzague and await the steamer in the little house beside the alcohol factory. Then, in the very next instant, it all seemed too fantastically impos- sible. It would need the most resolute courage to risk so Bnal an adventure, even if she avoided death in the process. Would it not really perhaps be better to wait and see what happened on Musa Dagh than to find oneself suddenly left in Beirut? The thought of the long climb in the night, of the dangerous business of crossing the Turkish plain of the Orontes, of the sea-voyage among the casks of alcohol, the threat of sub- marines— the prospect of all these dangers and fatigues en- tangled itself into what, in the circumstances, was a merely ridiculous feeling of propriety; “Ca ne se fait pas."
But what was all that, compared to the pain of losing Ste- phan? She kept dear of him nowadays. She had ceased to make sure he washed and was properly fed. She no Johger, even at night, according to the sacred custom of mothers, came to his bed in the sheikh tent, to see that he was settling down
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properly. All these omissions, these neglects, were summed up in a prudishly guilty feeling,t which weighed most heavily on her for Stephan’s sake. And, laden with all this guilt, she had come to Gabriel, to be frank, to say good-bye.
They eyed one another, the wife and husband. The husband, as it seemed to him, saw a face which looked at once elderly and dissipated. He fancied he caught a shimmer of white upon the temples. All the less, therefore, could he understand these sparkling eyes, this mouth, which seemed to be so much big- ger, with chapped, swollen-looking bps. “She’s going to bits, with this life,” he thought. “What else could one expect.^’’ And though, not so very long before, he had had the impulse to tell Juliette about Iskuhi, he abandoned it now. What good would it be? How many days have we still before us?
The wife saw a lined, distorted face, every feature different, framed in one of the round, untidy beards which she couldn’t abide. Each time she saw it, she had to ask herself: “Can this oriental bandit really be Gabriel?” And yet the voice was still Gabriel’s voice. Might she not surely have been faithful to it?
Thoughts buzzed through her head; “I’ll stay, I’ll go, stay, go,” But her heart was moaning: “Oh, if it were only all over!”
Their talk swerved neatly off its dangerous track. Gabriel described the favourable prospects of the near future. Most probably they’d a long rest to look forward to. He emphati- cally repeated Altouni’s very good advice: “Lie in bed and read, read, read,” A swath of smoke from the great blaze drifted heavily across her vision. They had to pass through resinous, sharply fragrant wood-smoke.
Gabriel stopped. “How one smells the resin! This fire’s been a good thing, for several reasons. Even the smoke. It disinfects. Unluckily we’ve already twenty people lying m the isolation- wood, infected by that blasted deserter from Aleppo.”
He could manage to talk of nothing but public events. So he was too indifferent to feel anything of what her silence had tried to express to him! . . . “I’m going. I’m going. I’m
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going"— it kept sounding in her ears, like a roaring seashelL Then, in the very midst of a smoke-swath, Juliette turned pale and lurched, so that he was forced to hold her up. His touch, a thousand times familiar, pulsed through her body like an anguish. She could just manage to turn her face to him.
“Forgive me, Gabriel, but I think I’m . . . I’m going to be ill. ... Or I am already.”
Gonzague Makis was already waiting for Juliette, at the place on “the Riviera” which they had arranged. He waited, observ- ant and self-possessed, smoking his half-cigarette to the very end. Being an extremely thrifty soul, he had still twenty-five whole cigarettes. He never threw away the ends, but saved them up to use in his pipe. Like most people reared in shabby gentility, in a series of cheap litde boarding-schools, people with definite pretensions, who have never owned more than two suits at a time, Gonzague was a fanatic for economy. He used what he had to the last thread, the last bite or drop.
When Juliette came towards him, in a curious, lurching stride, he sprang to his feet. His gallantry towards his mistress had not changed in the least since she became one, and the clear attentiveness in his eyes, under the closely slanting eye- brows, still remained, even though a glint of firm criticism in- tensified it.
He at once noticed her defeat. “So again you’ve not spoken.”
She sat down beside him without answering. What could be the matter with her eyes? Everything, even the closest sur- rotmdings, was being tossed on a noiseless storm, or veiled in rain. As the fog' cleared, palms began growing out of the sea. Camels, with disapproving, averted faces, walked in pro- cession across the waves. Never before had the surf bdow beaten so noisily or seemed so near. You simply couldn’t hear yourself speak. And Gonzague’s voice came bom far away.
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- All is no good, Julietxe. You’ve had days to do it
The steamer won’t wait for us, and the manager won’t hel^ us a second time. We must leave tonight. Do try and be reason* able."
She hid her breasts with her clenched fists, and leaned for- ward, as though to master a stubborn pain. “Why are you so cold with me, Gonzague? Why won’t you ever look at me? Do look!’’
He did just the opposite: he looked far out to sea, to let her feel he was annoyed. “I always used to imagine, Juliette, that you were a plucky, determined kmd of woman, and not senti- mental.”
“P I’m not what I was. I’m already dead. Leave me here. Go by yourself.”
She expected a protest. But he said nothing. These silences, which renounced her so easily, were more than Juliette could bear. She whispered, in a very subdued voice: “I’ll come with you— tonight.”
Only then did he lightly caress her knee. “You must pull yourself together, Juliette, and get over all these scruples and hindrances. You’ve got to cut loose. It’s the only way. Let’s get it all clear, and not deceive ourselves. There’s nothing else to be done. You’ll have, somehow, to tell Bagradian. I’m not suggesting in the least that you’ll need to make a general con- fession. This is our chance, and we shan’t get another. That explains the whole thing. You can’t just — vanish. Quite apart from the fact that it would be so incredibly mean, how would you live? Have you thought of that?”
And so, with ail the steadiness and certainty of his voice and manner, he kept persuading her that Bagradian would be bound to make what arrangements he could, to assure her im- mediate well-being. There was not a hint of vulgar adventure in what he said, though he frankly reckoned on Gabriel’s, and perhaps Stephan’s, imminent death. (As Juliette saw, he was perfectly willing, if she insisted, even to encumber hiirniflf with
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Stt^phai^ dioUj^ it wotdd certainly complicate thdr escape.)
As he came to the end, he grew impatient, since their la$t«precious hours were now on the wane. And how many times had he not had it all to say before? Had Juhette been able to think, she would have had to admit the justice of every word. But, for the last few days, the most casually heard, or thought, words or expressions had clung like leeches ta her brain, obstinately refusing to be pulled off. Now she heard the words: “How would you live?” The loud “hve” blared in her mind incessantly, as the needle on a worn-out phono- graph record sticks and repeats the same maddening notes. Incredible mists kept rising out of the earth, as though they had been sitting beside a swamp. She herself had become a worn-out phonograph record, and the needle stuck.
“How should 1 live, how should I live, how should I live, in Barut, Beirut. . . . What for?”
Gonzague took pity on Juhette, whom, as he imagined, her conscience tormented. He wished to help her. “You shouldn’t take It so badly, Juliette. Only think what it means! You’ll be saved! If you like. I’ll be with you— -but not if you don’t.”
As he was saying that, she could see the sick boy from Aleppo, the deserter, over whose mangy, red-spotted chest she had bent a few days ago in such an exalted wave of despair- ing emotion. She must really go and see her mother. Maman was living in a hotel. A long corridor, with hundreds and hundreds of doors. And Juliette had forgotten the num- ber. ...
Now Gonzague’s voice was tender and charming. It was doing her good. “I shall be with you.”
“Will you? Are you with me now, Gonzague?”
Amiably, he became matter-of-fact. “Now, listen carefully, Juliette. Tonight I shall wait about for you here. You must be ready by about ten. If you need me sooner— let’s suppose Bagradian wants to speak to me— send someone along. I’ll help you. You can easily bring your big suitcase. I shall manage
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to carry it. . . . Be careful how you choose your things. But you’ll ^ able to buy anything in Beirut.”
She had really bcra doing her best to understand him. She began repeating it, like a d^d: “Tonight, about ten. . . . I’m to bring a suitcase. ... I can get anything in Beirut. . . . And you? . . . How long will you stay with me?”
These vague mutterings, at so decisive an hoiur, exhausted his padence. “Juliette, I loathe the words ‘for ever’ and ‘al- ways’ . . .”
She gazed devoutly at him. Her cheeks flamed. Her half- open lips pouted out. It was as though she had just opened the right door. Gonzague was sitdng at the piano, strummi ng the mtttchtche he had played the night the sapdehs came. He’d said to her: “There are only moments.”
It filled her with profound hilarity. “No, don’t say ‘always’ or ‘for ever.’ Just think of the momenti”
Now she could understand, with an indescribable super- clarity, that there are only moments— that, tonight, the steamer, the suitcase, Beirut, her decision, had really not the slightest meaning for her; that impenetrable solitude was await- ing her, into which neither Gonzague nor Gabriel would find a way, a solitude full to the brim of home-comings, in which it would all be setded and cancelled out. The happiness of it came rushing m on her, filled her with strength. The amav-pH Gonzague had no longer a shattered woman to deal with, a woman driven into a corner— he had the chStelaine of Yog- honoluk, more beautiful than ever before. He took Juliette in his arms. It might have been for the first time.
Her head toppled strangely from shoulder to shoulder. But he paid no heed. And the meaningless words which she seemed to mutter in dreamy esetasy passed his ears unheard.
Until the men came where she could look at them, Sato still did not know what was going to happen. She was on guard a few yards away from the adultery, but was feding too empty,
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too morose, to crawl in through the bu^es and view the pair.
, . . Yes, i£ she could only have worked it up a bit! How pleased old Nunik would have been with her; what thanks and pence she might have earned! But Sato was caught! Sato was no longer allowed to take profitable messages to the val- ley, and bring them back from the valley to the mountain. All the more corrosive, therefore, her jealousy, the one cogent emotion she still possessed. To get Iskuhi away from the effendi! To pay the effendi back! She lay, with her knees drawn up under her, staring at the smoky sky.
Then came the men. They came on slowly. Sato perceived the Leaders of the Council— Ter Haigasun, Bagradian Effendi, Pastor Aram. After these, the mukhtar Thomas Kebussyan, Teacher Oskanian, and some village elders of Bitias. The elect had only just iimshed a short, but very serious conversation, and seemed depressed. They had every reason to be so. The food situation was very grave. The herds had not diminished "according to plan,” but by the unknown law of some wild progression of ever-diminishing returns. Rations were bang cut down every day. Yet that did nothing to check the dwin- dling supplies, for which bad fodder seemed responsible. In spite of all Tomasian’s efforts, his fishery made no headway. And this new, contagious fever in camp was beginning to take alarming forms. Only yesterday four fever patients in the isolation-wood had died. Dr. Bedros Altouni could scarcely move on his weak little 1^, crooked with age. Over fifty wounded lay in and around the hospital-hut, and at least as many in the log huts, all without drugs or proper bandages, left to their own devices, or God’s. Worst of all, this growmg exasperation, an unforeseen result of victory, which had taken such a hold on all men. No doubt the cruel heat of the burmng countryside, this itching cold in the head produced by pine- smoke, the over-fatigue, had all contributed— and the eternal meat. Its deepest cause was the fact that life up here was in- supportable. In the last few days, apart from the Kilikian in-
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ddeat, there had been many brawls, and knives had been usc^
Today all this impelled the leaders to give more attention than they had to the seacoast side of the Damlayik. Up on the "Dish Terrace,” which stood far removed from all these hap- penings, there fluttered the great signal; “Christians in Need.” Two scouts of the cohort of youth were continually on duty beneath it, scanning the sea for passing ships. It seemed likely that some undependable lad had overlooked one ship, or several, since not even a fishing-smack had been sighted, and this in August, at a time when, as a rule, the Bay of Suedia is covered with this kind of petty craft. Did God really intend to let the sea become a desert, merely to take from his Chris- tians on Musa Dagh what slight hope they still had of sur- ' vival? The Council had decided to strengthen this look-out, and recondition it. The watch on the “Dish Terrace” was henceforth to be kept by grown-up men. At some jutting point, farther south, a second would have to be cstabhshed. The leaders had come out today to setde on the likeliest pro- montory.
At first the soft crop-grass of this highland muffled, even for Sato, the men’s approach. When she twisted round on her side, they were fairly near her. She was up in a flash — some- thing sprang to life inside her — and waving wild arms in their direction. At first they paid no attention. Whenever Sato made her presence known, in any group, it was the same. All eyes would seem not to have nooced her, all heads would be slightly averted, in a kind of severe, shamefaced discomfort., Sato was an “untouchable”; all who encountered her felt the same, though, to the Christian, all God’s creatures are, by birthright, equal in His eyes. Today these serious men, full of care and business, saw, without having seen, this waving half- wit, and went calmly on. But the last of them, Thomas Kebus- syan, suddenly stopped and turned round to Sato. Her con- quest had so definite an effect on all the others that they, too, halted, as by a spell, and eyed the sign-giver. So much at least,
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her strength had achieved. The leaders stood as if bewitched, eyeing the repulsive little creature, since now she pranced