Dalroy, miraculously become a soldier again, saw instantly that the troopers were cloaked, and their carbines in the buckets. He waited a few seconds while “Smithy” and his band crept swiftly along the wall of the barn. Then, copying to the best of his ability the shrill yell of a German officer giving a command, he shouted, “Squad—dismount!”
He was obeyed with a clatter of accoutrements. He ran forward. Not knowing the “system” perfected by the “lucky thirteen,” he looked for an irregular volley at close range, throwing the hussars into inextricable confusion. But not a rifle was fired until some seconds after he himself had shot and killed or seriously wounded the chauffeur and the escort. For all that, thirteen hussars were already out of action. The men who had crossed Belgium from Mons had learnt to depend on the bayonet, which never missed, and was silent and efficacious.
The affair seemed to end ere it had well begun. Only two troopers succeeded in mounting their plunging horses, and they, finding the road to Oombergen barred, tried to bolt westward, whereupon they were bowled over like rabbits. Their terrified chargers, after scampering wildly a few paces, trotted back to the others. Not one of the twenty got away. Hampered by their heavy cloaks, and taken completely by surprise, the hussars offered hardly any resistance, but fell cursing and howling. As for the pair seated in front of the car, they never knew why or how death came.
“Now, then, Smithy, show a light!” shouted Corporal Bates. “Ah! there you are, sir! I meant to make sure of this chap. I got him straight off.”
The torch revealed Corporal Franz stretched on his back, and frothing blood, Bates’s bayonet having pierced his lungs. It were better for the shrewd Berliner if his wits had been duller and his mind cleaner. Not soldierly zeal but a gross animalism led him in the first instance to make a really important arrest. His ghoulish intent was requited now in full measure, and the life wheezed out of him speedily as he lay there quivering in the gloom and mire of that rain-swept woodland road. Seldom, even when successfully ambushed, has any small detachment of troops been destroyed so quickly and thoroughly. This killing was almost an artistic triumph.
“Fall in!” growled Bates. “Any casualties?”
“If there is, the blighters oughter be court-mawshalled,” chirped Smith.
A momentary shuffling of grotesque forms, and a deep voice boomed, “Half-time score—England twenty, Germany nil.”
“Left section—look ’em over, and carry any wounded men likely to live into the barn,” said the corporal. “Give ’em first aid an’ water-bottles. Step lively too! Right section—hold the horses.”
This leader and his men were as skilled in the business of slaying an enemy as Robin Hood and his band of poachers in the taking of the king’s venison. Dalroy knew they needed no guidance from him. He opened the door of the car.