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CHAPTER
VIII. A WORLD AT WAR § 1 It was only very slowly that Bert got hold of this idea that
the whole world was at war, that he formed any image at all of the crowded
countries south of these Arctic solitudes stricken with terror and dismay as
these new-born aerial navies swept across their skies. He was not used to
thinking of the world as a whole, but as a limitless hinterland of happenings
beyond the range of his immediate vision. War in his imagination was something,
a source of news and emotion, that happened in a restricted area, called the
Seat of War. But now the whole atmosphere was the Seat of War, and every land a
cockpit. So closely had the nations raced along the path of research and
invention, so secret and yet so parallel had been their plans and acquisitions,
that it was within a few hours of the launching of the first fleet in Franconia
that an Asiatic Armada beat its west-ward way across, high above the marvelling
millions in the plain of the Ganges. But the preparations of the Confederation
of Eastern Asia had been on an altogether more colossal scale than the German.
With this step, said Tan Ting-siang, we overtake and pass the West. We
recover the peace of the world that these barbarians have destroyed. Their secrecy and swiftness and inventions had far surpassed
those of the Germans, and where the Germans had had a hundred men at work the
Asiatics had ten thousand. There came to their great aeronautic parks at
Chinsi-fu and Tsingyen by the mono-rails that now laced the whole surface of
China a limitless supply of skilled and able workmen, workmen far above the
average European in industrial efficiency. The news of the German World
Surprise simply quickened their efforts. At the time of the bombardment of New
York it is doubtful if the Germans had three hundred airships all together in
the world; the score of Asiatic fleets flying east and west and south must have
numbered several thousand. Moreover the Asiatics had a real fighting
flying-machine, the Niais as they were called, a light but quite efficient
weapon, infinitely superior to the German drachenflieger. Like that, it was a
one-man machine, but it was built very lightly of steel and cane and chemical
silk, with a transverse engine, and a flapping sidewing. The aeronaut carried a
gun firing explosive bullets loaded with oxygen, and in addition, and true to
the best tradition of Japan, a sword. Mostly they were Japanese, and it is
characteristic that from the first it was contemplated that the aeronaut should
be a swordsman. The wings of these flyers had bat-like hooks forward, by which
they were to cling to their antagonist's gas-chambers while boarding him. These
light flying-machines were carried with the fleets, and also sent overland or
by sea to the front with the men. They were capable of flights of from two to
five hundred miles according to the wind. So, hard upon the uprush of the first German air-fleet,
these Asiatic swarms took to the atmosphere. Instantly every organised
Government in the world was frantically and vehemently building airships and
whatever approach to a flying machine its inventors' had discovered. There was
no time for diplomacy. Warnings and ultimatums were telegraphed to and fro, and
in a few hours all the panic-fierce world was openly at war, and at war in the
most complicated way. For Britain and France and Italy had declared war upon
Germany and outraged Swiss neutrality; India, at the sight of Asiatic airships,
had broken into a Hindoo insurrection in Bengal and a Mohametan revolt hostile
to this in the North-west Provinces the latter spreading like wildfire from
Gobi to the Gold Coast and the Confederation of Eastern Asia had seized the
oil wells of Burmha and was impartially attacking America and Germany. In a
week they were building airships in Damascus and Cairo and Johannesburg;
Australia and New Zealand were frantically equipping themselves. One unique and
terrifying aspect of this development was the swiftness with which these
monsters could be produced. To build an ironclad took from two to four years;
an airship could be put together in as many weeks. Moreover, compared with even
a torpedo boat, the airship was remarkably simple to construct, given the
air-chamber material, the engines, the gas plant, and the design, it was really
not more complicated and far easier than an ordinary wooden boat had been a
hundred years before. And now from Cape Horn to Nova Zembla, and from Canton
round to Canton again, there were factories and workshops and industrial
resources. And the German airships were barely in sight of the Atlantic
waters, the first Asiatic fleet was scarcely reported from Upper Burmah, before
the fantastic fabric of credit and finance that had held the world together
economically for a hundred years strained and snapped. A tornado of realisation
swept through every stock exchange in the world; banks stopped payment,
business shrank and ceased, factories ran on for a day or so by a sort of
inertia, completing the orders of bankrupt and extinguished customers, then
stopped. The New York Bert Smallways saw, for all its glare of light and
traffic, was in the pit of an economic and financial collapse unparalleled in
history. The flow of the food supply was already a little checked. And before
the world-war had lasted two weeks by the time, that is, that mast was rigged
in Labrador there was not a city or town in the world outside China, however
far from the actual centres of destruction, where police and government were
not adopting special emergency methods to deal with a want of food and a glut
of unemployed people. The special peculiarities of aerial warfare were of such a
nature as to trend, once it had begun, almost inevitably towards social
disorganisation. The first of these peculiarities was brought home to the
Germans in their attack upon New York; the immense power of destruction an
airship has over the thing below, and its relative inability to occupy or
police or guard or garrison a surrendered position. Necessarily, in the face of
urban populations in a state of economic disorganisation and infuriated and starving,
this led to violent and destructive collisions, and even where the air-fleet
floated inactive above, there would be civil conflict and passionate disorder
below. Nothing comparable to this state of affairs had been known in the
previous history of warfare, unless we take such a case as that of a nineteenth
century warship attacking some large savage or barbaric settlement, or one of
those naval bombardments that disfigure the history of Great Britain in the
late eighteenth century. Then, indeed, there had been cruelties and destruction
that faintly foreshadowed the horrors of the aerial war. Moreover, before the
twentieth century the world had had but one experience, and that a
comparatively light one, in the Communist insurrection of Paris, 1871, of the
possibilities of a modern urban population under warlike stresses. A second peculiarity of airship war as it first came to the
world that also made for social collapse, was the ineffectiveness of the early
air-ships against each other. Upon anything below they could rain explosives in
the most deadly fashion, forts and ships and cities lay at their mercy, but
unless they were prepared for a suicidal grapple they could do remarkably
little mischief to each other. The armament of the huge German airships, big as
the biggest mammoth liners afloat, was one machine gun that could easily have
been packed up on a couple of mules. In addition, when it became evident that
the air must be fought for, the air-sailors were provided with rifles with
explosive bullets of oxygen or inflammable substance, but no airship at any
time ever carried as much in the way of guns and armour as the smallest gunboat
on the navy list had been accustomed to do. Consequently, when these monsters
met in battle, they manoeuvred for the upper place, or grappled and fought like
junks, throwing grenades fighting hand to hand in an entirely medieval fashion.
The risks of a collapse and fall on either side came near to balancing in every
case the chances of victory. As a consequence, and after their first
experiences of battle, one finds a growing tendency on the part of the
air-fleet admirals to evade joining battle, and to seek rather the moral
advantage of a destructive counter attack. And if the airships were too ineffective, the early
drachenflieger were either too unstable, like the German, or too light, like
the Japanese, to produce immediately decisive results. Later, it is true, the
Brazilians launched a flying-machine of a type and scale that was capable of
dealing with an airship, but they built only three or four, they operated only
in South America, and they vanished from history untraceably in the time when
world-bankruptcy put a stop to all further engineering production on any
considerable scale. The third peculiarity of aerial warfare was that it was at
once enormously destructive and entirely indecisive. It had this unique
feature, that both sides lay open to punitive attack. In all previous forms of
war, both by land and sea, the losing side was speedily unable to raid its
antagonist's territory and the communications. One fought on a front, and
behind that front the winner's supplies and resources, his towns and factories
and capital, the peace of his country, were secure. If the war was a naval one,
you destroyed your enemy's battle fleet and then blockaded his ports, secured
his coaling stations, and hunted down any stray cruisers that threatened your
ports of commerce. But to blockade and watch a coastline is one thing, to
blockade and watch the whole surface of a country is another, and cruisers and
privateers are things that take long to make, that cannot be packed up and
hidden and carried unostentatiously from point to point. In aerial war the
stronger side, even supposing it destroyed the main battle fleet of the weaker,
had then either to patrol and watch or destroy every possible point at which he
might produce another and perhaps a novel and more deadly form of flyer. It
meant darkening his air with airships. It meant building them by the thousand
and making aeronauts by the hundred thousand. A small uninitated airship could
be hidden in a railway shed, in a village street, in a wood; a flying machine
is even less conspicuous. And in the air are no streets, no channels, no point where
one can say of an antagonist, If he wants to reach my capital he must come by
here. In the air all directions lead everywhere. Consequently it was impossible to end a war by any of the
established methods. A, having outnumbered and overwhelmed B, hovers, a
thousand airships strong, over his capital, threatening to bombard it unless B
submits. B replies by wireless telegraphy that he is now in the act of
bombarding the chief manufacturing city of A by means of three raider airships.
A denounces B's raiders as pirates and so forth, bombards B's capital, and sets
off to hunt down B's airships, while B, in a state of passionate emotion and
heroic unconquerableness, sets to work amidst his ruins, making fresh airships
and explosives for the benefit of A. The war became perforce a universal
guerilla war, a war inextricably involving civilians and homes and all the
apparatus of social life. These aspects of aerial fighting took the world by surprise.
There had been no foresight to deduce these consequences. If there had been,
the world would have arranged for a Universal Peace Conference in 1900. But
mechanical invention had gone faster than intellectual and social organisation,
and the world, with its silly old flags, its silly unmeaning tradition of
nationality, its cheap newspapers and cheaper passions and imperialisms, its
base commercial motives and habitual insincerities and vulgarities, its race
lies and conflicts, was taken by surprise. Once the war began there was no
stopping it. The flimsy fabric of credit that had grown with no man foreseeing,
and that had held those hundreds of millions in an economic interdependence
that no man clearly understood, dissolved in panic. Everywhere went the
airships dropping bombs, destroying any hope of a rally, and everywhere below
were economic catastrophe, starving workless people, rioting, and social
disorder. Whatever constructive guiding intelligence there had been among the
nations vanished in the passionate stresses of the time. Such newspapers and
documents and histories as survive from this period all tell one universal
story of towns and cities with the food supply interrupted and their streets
congested with starving unemployed; of crises in administration and states of
siege, of provisional Governments and Councils of Defence, and, in the cases of
India and Egypt, insurrectionary committees taking charge of the re-arming of
the population, of the making of batteries and gun-pits, of the vehement
manufacture of airships and flying-machines. One sees these things in glimpses, in illuminated moments,
as if through a driving reek of clouds, going on all over the world. It was the
dissolution of an age; it was the collapse of the civilisation that had trusted
to machinery, and the instruments of its destruction were machines. But while
the collapse of the previous great civilisation, that of Rome, had been a
matter of centuries, had been a thing of phase and phase, like the ageing and
dying of a man, this, like his killing by railway or motor car, was one swift,
conclusive smashing and an end.
Then came the Battle of North India, in which the entire
Anglo-Indian aeronautic settlement establishment fought for three days against
overwhelming odds, and was dispersed and destroyed in detail. And simultaneously with the beginning of that, commenced the
momentous struggle of the Germans and Asiatics that is usually known as the
Battle of Niagara because of the objective of the Asiatic attack. But it passed
gradually into a sporadic conflict over half a continent. Such German airships
as escaped destruction in battle descended and surrendered to the Americans,
and were re-manned, and in the end it became a series of pitiless and heroic
encounters between the Americans, savagely resolved to exterminate their
enemies, and a continually reinforced army of invasion from Asia quartered upon
the Pacific slope and supported by an immense fleet. From the first the war in
America was fought with implacable bitterness; no quarter was asked, no
prisoners were taken. With ferocious and magnificent energy the Americans
constructed and launched ship after ship to battle and perish against the
Asiatic multitudes. All other affairs were subordinate to this war, the whole
population was presently living or dying for it. Presently, as I shall tell,
the white men found in the Butteridge machine a weapon that could meet and
fight the flying-machines of the Asiatic swordsman. The Asiatic invasion of America completely effaced the
German-American conflict. It vanishes from history. At first it had seemed to
promise quite sufficient tragedy in itself beginning as it did in
unforgettable massacre. After the destruction of central New York all America
had risen like one man, resolved to die a thousand deaths rather than submit to
Germany. The Germans grimly resolved upon beating the Americans into submission
and, following out the plans developed by the Prince, had seized Niagara in
order to avail themselves of its enormous powerworks; expelled all its
inhabitants and made a desert of its environs as far as Buffalo. They had also,
directly Great Britain and France declare war, wrecked the country upon the
Canadian side for nearly ten miles inland. They began to bring up men and
material from the fleet off the east coast, stringing out to and fro like bees
getting honey. It was then that the Asiatic forces appeared, and it was in
their attack upon this German base at Niagara that the air-fleets of East and
West first met and the greater issue became clear. One conspicuous peculiarity of the early aerial fighting
arose from the profound secrecy with which the airships had been prepared. Each
power had had but the dimmest inkling of the schemes of its rivals, and even
experiments with its own devices were limited by the needs of secrecy. None of
the designers of airships and aeroplanes had known clearly what their
inventions might have to fight; many had not imagined they would have to fight
anything whatever in the air; and had planned them only for the dropping of
explosives. Such had been the German idea. The only weapon for fighting another
airship with which the Franconian fleet had been provided was the machine gun
forward. Only after the fight over New York were the men given short rifles
with detonating bullets. Theoretically, the drachenflieger were to have been
the fighting weapon. They were declared to be aerial torpedo-boats, and the
aeronaut was supposed to swoop close to his antagonist and cast his bombs as he
whirled past. But indeed these contrivances were hopelessly unstable; not
one-third in any engagement succeeded in getting back to the mother airship.
The rest were either smashed up or grounded. The allied Chino-Japanese fleet made the same distinction as
the Germans between airships and fighting machines heavier than air, but the
type in both cases was entirely different from the occidental models, and it
is eloquent of the vigour with which these great peoples took up and bettered
the European methods of scientific research in almost every particular the
invention of Asiatic engineers. Chief among these, it is worth remarking, was
Mohini K. Chatterjee, a political exile who had formerly served in the
British-Indian aeronautic park at Lahore. The German airship was fish-shaped, with a blunted head; the
Asiatic airship was also fish-shaped, but not so much on the lines of a cod or
goby as of a ray or sole. It had a wide, flat underside, unbroken by windows or
any opening except along the middle line. Its cabins occupied its axis, with a
sort of bridge deck above, and the gas-chambers gave the whole affair the shape
of a gipsy's hooped tent, except that it was much flatter. The German airship
was essentially a navigable balloon very much lighter than air; the Asiatic
airship was very little lighter than air and skimmed through it with much
greater velocity if with considerably less stability. They carried fore and aft
guns, the latter much the larger, throwing inflammatory shells, and in addition
they had nests for riflemen on both the upper and the under side. Light as this
armament was in comparison with the smallest gunboat that ever sailed, it was
sufficient for them to outfight as well as outfly the German monster airships.
In action they flew to get behind or over the Germans: they even dashed
underneath, avoiding only passing immediately beneath the magazine, and then as
soon as they had crossed let fly with their rear gun, and sent flares or oxygen
shells into the antagonist's gas-chambers. It was not in their airships, but, as I have said, in their
flying-machines proper, that the strength of the Asiatics lay. Next only to the
Butteridge machine, these were certainly the most efficient heavier-than-air
fliers that had ever appeared. They were the invention of a Japanese artist,
and they differed in type extremely from the box-kite quality of the German
drachenflieger. They had curiously curved, flexible side wings, more like bent
butterfly's wings than anything else, and made of a substance like celluloid
and of brightly painted silk, and they had a long humming-bird tail. At the
forward corner of the wings were hooks, rather like the claws of a bat, by
which the machine could catch and hang and tear at the walls of an airship's
gas-chamber. The solitary rider sat between the wings above a transverse
explosive engine, an explosive engine that differed in no essential particular
from those in use in the light motor bicycles of the period. Below was a single
large wheel. The rider sat astride of a saddle, as in the Butteridge machine,
and he carried a large double-edged two-handed sword, in addition to his
explosive-bullet firing rifle.
Each side went into action against it knew not what, under
novel conditions and with apparatus that even without hostile attacks was
capable of producing the most disconcerting surprises. Schemes of action,
attempts at collective manoeuvring necessarily went to pieces directly the
fight began, just as they did in almost all the early ironclad battles of the
previous century. Each captain then had to fall back upon individual action and
his own devices; one would see triumph in what another read as a cue for flight
and despair. It is as true of the Battle of Niagara as of the Battle of Lissa
that it was not a battle but a bundle of battlettes! To such a spectator as Bert it presented itself as a series
of incidents, some immense, some trivial, but collectively incoherent. He never
had a sense of any plain issue joined, of any point struggled for and won or
lost. He saw tremendous things happen and in the end his world darkened to
disaster and ruin. He saw the battle from the ground, from Prospect Park and
from Goat Island, whither he fled. But the manner in which he came to be on the ground needs
explaining. The Prince had resumed command of his fleet through wireless
telegraphy long before the Zeppelin had located his encampment in Labrador. By
his direction the German air-fleet, whose advance scouts had been in contact
with the Japanese over the Rocky Mountains, had concentrated upon Niagara and
awaited his arrival. He had rejoined his command early in the morning of the
twelfth, and Bert had his first prospect of the Gorge of Niagara while he was
doing net drill outside the middle gas-chamber at sunrise. The Zeppelin was
flying very high at the time, and far below he saw the water in the gorge
marbled with froth and then away to the west the great crescent of the Canadian
Fall shining, flickering and foaming in the level sunlight and sending up a
deep, incessant thudding rumble to the sky. The air-fleet was keeping station
in an enormous crescent, with its horns pointing south-westward, a long array
of shining monsters with tails rotating slowly and German ensigns now trailing
from their bellies aft of their Marconi pendants. Niagara city was still largely standing then, albeit its
streets were empty of all life. Its bridges were intact; its hotels and
restaurants still flying flags and inviting sky signs; its power-stations
running. But about it the country on both sides of the gorge might have been
swept by a colossal broom. Everything that could possibly give cover to an
attack upon the German position at Niagara had been levelled as ruthlessly as
machinery and explosives could contrive; houses blown up and burnt, woods burnt,
fences and crops destroyed. The mono-rails had been torn up, and the roads in
particular cleared of all possibility of concealment or shelter. Seen from
above, the effect of this wreckage was grotesque. Young woods had been
destroyed whole-sale by dragging wires, and the spoilt saplings, smashed or
uprooted, lay in swathes like corn after the sickle. Houses had an appearance
of being flattened down by the pressure of a gigantic finger. Much burning was
still going on, and large areas had been reduced to patches of smouldering and
sometimes still glowing blackness. Here and there lay the debris of belated fugitives, carts,
and dead bodies of horses and men; and where houses had had water-supplies
there were pools of water and running springs from the ruptured pipes. In
unscorched fields horses and cattle still fed peacefully. Beyond this desolated
area the countryside was still standing, but almost all the people had fled.
Buffalo was on fire to an enormous extent, and there were no signs of any
efforts to grapple with the flames. Niagara city itself was being rapidly
converted to the needs of a military depot. A large number of skilled engineers
had already been brought from the fleet and were busily at work adapting the
exterior industrial apparatus of the place to the purposes of an aeronautic
park. They had made a gas recharging station at the corner of the American Fall
above the funicular railway, and they were, opening up a much larger area to
the south for the same purpose. Over the power-houses and hotels and suchlike
prominent or important points the German flag was flying. The Zeppelin circled slowly over this scene twice while the
Prince surveyed it from the swinging gallery; it then rose towards the centre
of the crescent and transferred the Prince and his suite, Kurt included, to the
Hohenzollern, which had been chosen as the flagship during the impending
battle. They were swung up on a small cable from the forward gallery, and the
men of the Zeppelin manned the outer netting as the Prince and his staff left
them. The Zeppelin then came about, circled down and grounded in Prospect Park,
in order to land the wounded and take aboard explosives; for she had come to
Labrador with her magazines empty, it being uncertain what weight she might
need to carry. She also replenished the hydrogen in one of her forward chambers
which had leaked. Bert was detailed as a bearer and helped carry the wounded
one by one into the nearest of the large hotels that faced the Canadian shore.
The hotel was quite empty except that there were two trained American nurses
and a negro porter, and three or four Germans awaiting them. Bert went with the
Zeppelin's doctor into the main street of the place, and they broke into a drug
shop and obtained various things of which they stood in need. As they returned
they found an officer and two men making a rough inventory of the available
material in the various stores. Except for them the wide, main street of the
town was quite deserted, the people had been given three hours to clear out,
and everybody, it seemed, had done so. At one corner a dead man lay against the
wall shot. Two or three dogs were visible up the empty vista, but towards its
river end the passage of a string of mono-rail cars broke the stillness and the
silence. They were loaded with hose, and were passing to the trainful of
workers who were converting Prospect Park into an airship dock. Bert pushed a case of medicine balanced on a bicycle taken
from an adjacent shop, to the hotel, and then he was sent to load bombs into
the Zeppelin magazine, a duty that called for elaborate care. From this job he
was presently called off by the captain of the Zeppelin, who sent him with a
note to the officer in charge of the Anglo-American Power Company, for the
field telephone had still to be adjusted. Bert received his instructions in
German, whose meaning he guessed, and saluted and took the note, not caring to
betray his ignorance of the language. He started off with a bright air of
knowing his way and turned a corner or so, and was only beginning to suspect
that he did not know where he was going when his attention was recalled to the
sky by the report of a gun from the Hohenzollern and celestial cheering. He looked up and found the view obstructed by the houses on
either side of the street. He hesitated, and then curiosity took him back
towards the bank of the river. Here his view was inconvenienced by trees, and
it was with a start that he discovered the Zeppelin, which he knew had still a
quarter of her magazines to fill, was rising over Goat Island. She had not
waited for her complement of ammunition. It occurred to him that he was left
behind. He ducked back among the trees and bushes until he felt secure from any
after-thought on the part of the Zeppelin's captain. Then his curiosity to see
what the German air-fleet faced overcame him, and drew him at last halfway
across the bridge to Goat Island. From that point he had nearly a hemisphere of sky and got
his first glimpse of the Asiatic airships low in the sky above the glittering
tumults of the Upper Rapids. They were far less impressive than the German ships. He
could not judge the distance, and they flew edgeways to him, so as to conceal
the broader aspect of their bulk. Bert stood there in the middle of the bridge, in a place
that most people who knew it remembered as a place populous with sightseers and
excursionists, and he was the only human being in sight there. Above him, very
high in the heavens, the contending air-fleets manoeuvred; below him the river
seethed like a sluice towards the American Fall. He was curiously dressed. His
cheap blue serge trousers were thrust into German airship rubber boots, and on
his head he wore an aeronaut's white cap that was a trifle too large for him.
He thrust that back to reveal his staring little Cockney face, still scarred
upon the brow. Gaw! he whispered. He stared. He gesticulated. Once or twice he shouted and
applauded. Then at a certain point terror seized him and he took to his
heels in the direction of Goat Island.
At first, only what was called the Southern fleet of the
Asiatics was visible to him. It consisted of forty airships, carrying all
together nearly four hundred one-man flying-machines upon their flanks, and for
some time it flew slowly and at a minimum distance of perhaps a dozen miles
from the Germans, eastward across their front. At first Bert could distinguish
only the greater bulks, then he perceived the one-man machines as a multitude
of very small objects drifting like motes in the sunshine about and beneath the
larger shapes. Bert saw nothing then of the second fleet of the Asiatics,
though probably that was coming into sight of the Germans at the time, in the
north-west. The air was very still, the sky almost without a cloud, and
the German fleet had risen to an immense height, so that the airships seemed no
longer of any considerable size. Both ends of their crescent showed plainly. As
they beat southward they passed slowly between Bert and the sunlight, and
became black outlines of themselves. The drachenflieger appeared as little
flecks of black on either wing of this aerial Armada. The two fleets seemed in no hurry to engage. The Asiatics
went far away into the east, quickening their pace and rising as they did so,
and then tailed out into a long column and came flying back, rising towards the
German left. The squadrons of the latter came about, facing this oblique
advance, and suddenly little flickerings and a faint crepitating sound told
that they had opened fire. For a time no effect was visible to the watcher on
the bridge. Then, like a handful of snowflakes, the drachenflieger swooped to
the attack, and a multitude of red specks whirled up to meet them. It was to
Bert's sense not only enormously remote but singularly inhuman. Not four hours
since he had been on one of those very airships, and yet they seemed to him now
not gas-bags carrying men, but strange sentient creatures that moved about and
did things with a purpose of their own. The flight of the Asiatic and German
flying-machines joined and dropped earthward, became like a handful of white
and red rose petals flung from a distant window, grew larger, until Bert could
see the overturned ones spinning through the air, and were hidden by great
volumes of dark smoke that were rising in the direction of Buffalo. For a time
they all were hidden, then two or three white and a number of red ones rose
again into the sky, like a swarm of big butterflies, and circled fighting and
drove away out of sight again towards the east. A heavy report recalled Bert's eyes to the zenith, and
behold, the great crescent had lost its dressing and burst into a disorderly
long cloud of airships! One had dropped halfway down the sky. It was flaming
fore and aft, and even as Bert looked it turned over and fell, spinning over
and over itself and vanished into the smoke of Buffalo. Bert's mouth opened and shut, and he clutched tighter on the
rail of the bridge. For some moments they seemed long moments the two
fleets remained without any further change flying obliquely towards each other,
and making what came to Bert's ears as a midget uproar. Then suddenly from
either side airships began dropping out of alignment, smitten by missiles he
could neither see nor trace. The string of Asiatic ships swung round and either
charged into or over (it was difficult to say from below) the shattered line of
the Germans, who seemed to open out to give way to them. Some sort of
manoeuvring began, but Bert could not grasp its import. The left of the battle
became a confused dance of airships. For some minutes up there the two crossing
lines of ships looked so close it seemed like a hand-to-hand scuffle in the
sky. Then they broke up into groups and duels. The descent of German air-ships
towards the lower sky increased. One of them flared down and vanished far away
in the north; two dropped with something twisted and crippled in their
movements; then a group of antagonists came down from the zenith in an eddying
conflict, two Asiatics against one German, and were presently joined by
another, and drove away eastward all together with others dropping out of the
German line to join them. One Asiatic either rammed or collided with a still more
gigantic German, and the two went spinning to destruction together. The
northern squadron of Asiatics came into the battle unnoted by Bert, except that
the multitude of ships above seemed presently increased. In a little while the
fight was utter confusion, drifting on the whole to the southwest against the
wind. It became more and more a series of group encounters. Here a huge German
airship flamed earthward with a dozen flat Asiatic craft about her, crushing
her every attempt to recover. Here another hung with its screw fighting off the
swordsman from a swarm of flying-machines. Here, again, an Asiatic aflame at
either end swooped out of the battle. His attention went from incident to
incident in the vast clearness overhead; these conspicuous cases of destruction
caught and held his mind; it was only very slowly that any sort of scheme
manifested itself between those nearer, more striking episodes. The mass of the airships that eddied remotely above was,
however, neither destroying nor destroyed. The majority of them seemed to be
going at full speed and circling upward for position, exchanging ineffectual
shots as they did so. Very little ramming was essayed after the first tragic
downfall of rammer and rammed, and what ever attempts at boarding were made
were invisible to Bert. There seemed, however, a steady attempt to isolate
antagonists, to cut them off from their fellows and bear them down, causing a
perpetual sailing back and interlacing of these shoaling bulks. The greater
numbers of the Asiatics and their swifter heeling movements gave them the
effect of persistently attacking the Germans. Overhead, and evidently
endeavouring to keep itself in touch with the works of Niagara, a body of
German airships drew itself together into a compact phalanx, and the Asiatics
became more and more intent upon breaking this up. He was grotesquely reminded
of fish in a fish-pond struggling for crumbs. He could see puny puffs of smoke
and the flash of bombs, but never a sound came down to him.... A flapping shadow passed for a moment between Bert and the
sun and was followed by another. A whirring of engines, click, clock, clitter
clock, smote upon his ears. Instantly he forgot the zenith. Perhaps a hundred yards above the water, out of the south,
riding like Valkyries swiftly through the air on the strange steeds the
engineering of Europe had begotten upon the artistic inspiration of Japan, came
a long string of Asiatic swordsman. The wings flapped jerkily, click, block,
clitter clock, and the machines drove up; they spread and ceased, and the
apparatus came soaring through the air. So they rose and fell and rose again.
They passed so closely overhead that Bert could hear their voices calling to
one another. They swooped towards Niagara city and landed one after another in
a long line in a clear space before the hotel. But he did not stay to watch
them land. One yellow face had craned over and looked at him, and for one
enigmatical instant met his eyes.... It was then the idea came to Bert that he was altogether too
conspicuous in the middle of the bridge, and that he took to his heels towards
Goat Island. Thence, dodging about among the trees, with perhaps an excessive
self-consciousness, he watched the rest of the struggle.
Then to their support came a second string of red
flying-machines driving up from the east. They rose up out of the haze above
the houses and came round in a long curve as if surveying the position below.
The fire of the Germans rose to a roar, and one of those soaring shapes gave an
abrupt jerk backward and fell among the houses. The others swooped down exactly
like great birds upon the roof of the power-house. They caught upon it, and
from each sprang a nimble little figure and ran towards the parapet. Other flapping bird-shapes came into this affair, but Bert
had not seen their coming. A staccato of shots came over to him, reminding him
of army manoeuvres, of newspaper descriptions of fights, of all that was
entirely correct in his conception of warfare. He saw quite a number of Germans
running from the outlying houses towards the power-house. Two fell. One lay
still, but the other wriggled and made efforts for a time. The hotel that was
used as a hospital, and to which he had helped carry the wounded men from the
Zeppelin earlier in the day, suddenly ran up the Geneva flag. The town that had
seemed so quiet had evidently been concealing a considerable number of Germans,
and they were now concentrating to hold the central power-house. He wondered
what ammunition they might have. More and more of the Asiatic flying-machines
came into the conflict. They had disposed of the unfortunate German
drachenflieger and were now aiming at the incipient aeronautic park, the
electric gas generators and repair stations which formed the German base. Some
landed, and their aeronauts took cover and became energetic infantry soldiers.
Others hovered above the fight, their men ever and again firing shots down at
some chance exposure below. The firing came in paroxysms; now there would be a
watchful lull and now a rapid tattoo of shots, rising to a roar. Once or twice
flying machines, as they circled warily, came right overhead, and for a time
Bert gave himself body and soul to cowering. Ever and again a larger thunder mingled with the rattle and
reminded him of the grapple of airships far above, but the nearer fight held
his attention. Abruptly something dropped from the zenith; something like a
barrel or a huge football. Crash! It smashed with
an immense report. It had fallen among the grounded Asiatic aeroplanes that lay
among the turf and flower-beds near the river. They flew in scraps and
fragments, turf, trees, and gravel leapt and fell; the aeronauts still lying
along the canal bank were thrown about like sacks, catspaws flew across the
foaming water. All the windows of the hotel hospital that had been shiningly
reflecting blue sky and airships the moment before became vast black stars.
Bang! a second followed. Bert looked up and was filled with a sense of a
number of monstrous bodies swooping down, coming down on the whole affair like
a flight of bellying blankets, like a string of vast dish-covers. The central
tangle of the battle above was circling down as if to come into touch with the
power-house fight. He got a new effect of airships altogether, as vast things
coming down upon him, growing swiftly larger and larger and more overwhelming,
until the houses over the way seemed small, the American rapids narrow, the bridge
flimsy, the combatants infinitesimal. As they came down they became audible as
a complex of shootings and vast creakings and groanings and beatings and
throbbings and shouts and shots. The fore-shortened black eagles at the
fore-ends of the Germans had an effect of actual combat of flying feathers. Some of these fighting airships came within five hundred
feet of the ground. Bert could see men on the lower galleries of the Germans,
firing rifles; could see Asiatics clinging to the ropes; saw one man in
aluminium diver's gear fall flashing headlong into the waters above Goat
Island. For the first time he saw the Asiatic airships closely. From this
aspect they reminded him more than anything else of colossal snowshoes; they
had a curious patterning in black and white, in forms that reminded him of the
engine-turned cover of a watch. They had no hanging galleries, but from little
openings on the middle line peeped out men and the muzzles of guns. So, driving
in long, descending and ascending curves, these monsters wrestled and fought.
It was like clouds fighting, like puddings trying to assassinate each other.
They whirled and circled about each other, and for a time threw Goat Island and
Niagara into a smoky twilight, through which the sunlight smote in shafts and
beams. They spread and closed and spread and grappled and drove round over the
rapids, and two miles away or more into Canada, and back over the Falls again.
A German caught fire, and the whole crowd broke away from her flare and rose
about her dispersing, leaving her to drop towards Canada and blow up as she
dropped. Then with renewed uproar the others closed again. Once from the men in
Niagara city came a sound like an ant-hill cheering. Another German burnt, and
one badly deflated by the prow of an antagonist, flopped out of action
southward. It became more and more evident that the Germans were
getting the worst of the unequal fight. More and more obviously were they being
persecuted. Less and less did they seem to fight with any object other than
escape. The Asiatics swept by them and above them, ripped their bladders, set
them alight, picked off their dimly seen men in diving clothes, who struggled
against fire and tear with fire extinguishers and silk ribbons in the inner
netting. They answered only with ineffectual shots. Thence the battle circled
back over Niagara, and then suddenly the Germans, as if at a preconcerted
signal, broke and dispersed, going east, west, north, and south, in open and
confused flight. The Asiatics, as they realised this, rose to fly above them
and after them. Only one little knot of four Germans and perhaps a dozen
Asiatics remained fighting about the Hohenzollern and the Prince as he circled
in a last attempt to save Niagara. Round they swooped once again over the Canadian Fall, over
the waste of waters eastward, until they were distant and small, and then round
and back, hurrying, bounding, swooping towards the one gaping spectator. The whole struggling mass approached very swiftly, growing
rapidly larger, and coming out black and featureless against the afternoon sun
and above the blinding welter of the Upper Rapids. It grew like a storm cloud
until once more it darkened the sky. The flat Asiatic airships kept high above
the Germans and behind them, and fired unanswered bullets into their
gas-chambers and upon their flanks the one-man flying-machines hovered and
alighted like a swarm of attacking bees. Nearer they came, and nearer, filling
the lower heaven. Two of the Germans swooped and rose again, but the
Hohenzollern had suffered too much for that. She lifted weakly, turned sharply
as if to get out of the battle, burst into flames fore and aft, swept down to
the water, splashed into it obliquely, and rolled over and over and came down
stream rolling and smashing and writhing like a thing alive, halting and then
coming on again, with her torn and bent propeller still beating the air. The
bursting flames spluttered out again in clouds of steam. It was a disaster
gigantic in its dimensions. She lay across the rapids like an island, like tall
cliffs, tall cliffs that came rolling, smoking, and crumpling, and collapsing,
advancing with a sort of fluctuating rapidity upon Bert. One Asiatic airship it
looked to Bert from below like three hundred yards of pavement whirled back
and circled two or three times over that great overthrow, and half a dozen
crimson flying-machines danced for a moment like great midges in the sunlight
before they swept on after their fellows. The rest of the fight had already
gone over the island, a wild crescendo of shots and yells and smashing uproar.
It was hidden from Bert now by the trees of the island, and forgotten by him in
the nearer spectacle of the huge advance of the defeated German airship.
Something fell with a mighty smashing and splintering of boughs unheeded behind
him. It seemed for a time that the Hohenzollern must needs break
her back upon the Parting of the Waters, and then for a time her propeller
flopped and frothed in the river and thrust the mass of buckling, crumpled
wreckage towards the American shore. Then the sweep of the torrent that foamed
down to the American Fall caught her, and in another minute the immense mass of
deflating wreckage, with flames spurting out in three new places, had crashed
against the bridge that joined Goat Island and Niagara city, and forced a long
arm, as it were, in a heaving tangle under the central span. Then the middle
chambers blew up with a loud report, and in another moment the bridge had given
way and the main bulk of the airship, like some grotesque cripple in rags,
staggered, flapping and waving flambeaux to the crest of the Fall and hesitated
there and vanished in a desperate suicidal leap. Its detached fore-end remained jammed against that little
island, Green Island it used to be called, which forms the stepping-stone
between the mainland and Goat Island's patch of trees. Bert followed this disaster from the Parting of the Waters
to the bridge head. Then, regardless of cover, regardless of the Asiatic
airship hovering like a huge house roof without walls above the Suspension
Bridge, he sprinted along towards the north and came out for the first time
upon that rocky point by Luna Island that looks sheer down upon the American
Fall. There he stood breathless amidst that eternal rush of sound, breathless
and staring. Far below, and travelling rapidly down the gorge, whirled
something like a huge empty sack. For him it meant what did it not mean? the
German air-fleet, Kurt, the Prince, Europe, all things stable and familiar, the
forces that had brought him, the forces that had seemed indisputably
victorious. And it went down the rapids like an empty sack and left the visible
world to Asia, to yellow people beyond Christendom, to all that was terrible
and strange! Remote over Canada receded the rest of that conflict and
vanished beyond the range of his vision.... |