CHAPTER 41On the road
17.5.17 - Newcombe and Hornby 17.5.17 -
On the road 17.5.17 - 18.5.17 - 19.5.17
Sharraf delayed to come until the third morning, but then we heard
him loudly, for the Arabs of his raiding force fired slow volleys of
shots into the air, and the echoes were thrown about the windings of
the valley till even the barren hills seemed to join in the salute.
We dressed in our cleanest to go and call on him. Auda wore the
splendours he had bought at Wejh: a mouse-coloured greatcoat of
broadcloth with velvet collar, and yellow elastic-sided boots: these
below his streaming hair and ruined face of a tired tragedian!
Sharraf was kind to us, for he had captured prisoners on the line
and blown up rails and a culvert. One piece of his news was that in
Wadi Diraa, on our road, were pools of rain-water, new fallen and
sweet. This would shorten our waterless march to Fejr by fifty
miles, and remove its danger of thirst; a great benefit, for our
total water carriage came to about twenty gallons, for fifty men;
too slender a margin of safety.
Next day we left Abu Raga near
mid-afternoon, not sorry, for this beautiful place had been
unhealthy for us and fever had bothered us during our three days in
its confined bed. Auda led us up a tributary valley which soon
widened into the plain of the Shegg - a sand flat. About it, in
scattered confusion, sat small islands and pinnacles of red
sandstone, grouped like seracs, wind-eroded at the bases till they
looked very fit to fall and block the road; which wound in and out
between them, through narrows seeming to give no passage, but always
opening into another bay of blind alleys. Through this maze Auda led
unhesitatingly; digging along on his camel, elbows out, hands poised
swaying in the air by his shoulders.
There were no footmarks on the
ground, for each wind swept like a great brush over the sand
surface, stippling the traces of the last travellers till the
surface was again a pattern of innumerable tiny virgin waves. Only
the dried camel droppings, which were lighter than the sand and
rounded like walnuts, escaped over its ripples.
They rolled about, to be heaped in
corners by the skirling winds. It was perhaps by them, as much as by
his unrivalled road-sense, that Auda knew the way. For us, the rock
shapes were constant speculation and astonishment; their granular
surfaces and red colour and the curved chiselling of the sand-blast
upon them softened the sunlight, to give our streaming eyes relief.
In the mid-march we perceived five
or six riders coming from the railway. I was in front with Auda, and
we had that delicious thrill 'Friend or enemy?' of meeting strangers
in the desert, whilst we circumspectly drew across to the vantage
side which kept the rifle-arm free for a snap shot; but when they
came nearer we saw they were of the Arab forces. The first, riding
loosely on a hulking camel, with the unwieldy Manchester-made timber
saddle of the British Camel Corps, was a fair-haired, shaggy-bearded
Englishman in tattered uniform. This we guessed must be Hornby,
Newcombe's pupil, the wild engineer who vied with him in smashing
the railway. After we had exchanged greetings, on this our first
meeting, he told me that Newcombe had lately gone to Wejh to talk
over his difficulties with Feisal and make fresh plans to meet them.
Newcombe had constant difficulties
owing to excess of zeal, and his habit of doing four times more than
any other Englishman would do: ten times what the Arabs thought
needful or wise. Hornby spoke little Arabic; and Newcombe not enough
to persuade, though enough to give orders; but orders were not in
place inland. The persistent pair would cling for weeks to the
railway edge, almost without helpers, often without food, till they
had exhausted either explosives or camels and had to return for
more. The barrenness of the hills made their trips hungry for
camels, and they wore out Feisal's best animals in turn. In this
Newcombe was chief sinner, for his journeys were done at the trot;
also, as a surveyor, he could not resist a look from each high hill
over the country he crossed, to the exasperation of his escort who
must either leave him to his own courses (a lasting disgrace to
abandon a companion of the road), or founder their own precious and
irreplaceable camels in keeping pace with him. 'Newcombe is like
fire,' they used to complain; 'he burns friend and enemy'; and they
admired his amazing energy with nervous shrinking lest they should
be his next friendly victims.
Arabs told me Newcombe would not
sleep except head on rails, and that Hornby would worry the metals
with his teeth when gun-cotton failed. These were legends, but
behind them lay a sense of their joint insatiate savagery in
destroying till there was no more to destroy. Four Turkish labour
battalions they kept busy, patching culverts, relaying sleepers,
jointing new rails; and gun-cotton had to come in increasing tons to
Wejh to meet their appetites. They were wonderful, but their
too-great excellence discouraged our feeble teams, making them
ashamed to exhibit their inferior talent: so Newcombe and Hornby
remained as individualists, barren of the seven-fold fruits of
imitation.
At sunset we reached the northern
limit of the ruined sandstone land, and rode up to a new level,
sixty feet higher than the old, blue-black and volcanic, with a
scattered covering of worn basalt blocks, small as a man's hand,
neatly bedded like cobble paving over a floor of fine, hard, black
cinder-debris of themselves. The rain in its long pelting seemed to
have been the agent of these stony surfaces by washing away the
lighter dust from above and between, till the stones, set closely
side by side and as level as a carpet, covered all the face of the
plain and shielded from direct contact with weather the salty mud
which filled the interstices of the lava flow beneath. It grew
easier going, and Auda ventured to carry on after the light had
failed, marching upon the Polar Star.
It was very dark; a pure night
enough, but the black stone underfoot swallowed the light of the
stars, and at seven o'clock, when at last we halted, only four of
our party were with us. We had reached a gentle valley, with a yet
damp, soft, sandy bed, full of thorny brushwood, unhappily useless
as camel food. We ran about tearing up these bitter bushes by the
roots and heaping them in a great pyre, which Auda lit. When the
fire grew hot a long black snake wormed slowly out into our group;
we must have gathered it, torpid, with the twigs. The flames went
shining across the dark flat, a beacon to the heavy camels which had
lagged so much to-day that it was two hours before the last group
arrived, the men singing their loudest, partly to encourage
themselves and their hungry animals over the ghostly plain, partly
so that we might know them friends. We wished their slowness slower,
because of our warm fire.
In the night some of our camels
strayed and our people had to go looking for them so long, that it
was nearly eight o'clock, and we had baked bread and eaten, before
again we started. Our track lay across more lava-field, but to our
morning strength the stones seemed rarer, and waves or hard surfaces
of laid sand often drowned them smoothly with a covering as good to
march on as a tennis court. We rode fast over this for six or seven
miles, and then turned west of a low cinder-crater across the flat,
dark, stony watershed which divided Jizil from the basin in which
the railway ran. These great water systems up here at their
springing were shallow, sandy beds, scoring involved yellow lines
across the blue-black plain. From our height the lie of the land was
patent for miles, with the main features coloured in layers, like a
map.
We marched steadily till noon, and
then sat out on the bare ground till three; an uneasy halt made
necessary by our fear that the dejected camels, so long accustomed
only to the sandy tracks of the coastal plain, might have their soft
feet scorched by the sun-baked stones, and go lame with us on the
road. After we mounted, the going became worse, and we had
continually to avoid large fields of piled basalt, or deep yellow
watercourses which cut through the crust into the soft stone
beneath. After a while red sandstone again cropped out in crazy
chimneys, from which the harder layers projected knife-sharp in
level shelves beyond the soft, crumbling rock. At last these
sandstone ruins became plentiful, in the manner of yesterday, and
stood grouped about our road in similar chequered yards of light and
shade. Again we marvelled at the sureness with which Auda guided our
little party through the mazy rocks.
They passed, and we re-entered
volcanic ground. Little pimply craters stood about, often two or
three together, and from them spines of high, broken basalt led down
like disordered causeways across the barren ridges; but these
craters looked old, not sharp and well-kept like those of Ras Gara,
near Wadi Ais, but worn and degraded, sometimes nearly to surface
level by a great bay broken into their central hollow. The basalt
which ran out from them was a coarse bubbled rock, like Syrian
dolerite. The sand laden winds had ground its exposed surfaces to a
pitted smoothness like orange-rind, and the sunlight had faded out
its blue to a hopeless grey.
Between craters the basalt was
strewn in small tetrahedra, with angles rubbed and rounded, stone
tight to stone like tesserę upon a bed of pink-yellow mud. The ways
worn across such flats by the constant passage of camels were very
evident, since the slouching tread had pushed the blocks to each
side of the path, and the thin mud of wet weather had run into these
hollows and now inlaid them palely against the blue. Less-used roads
for hundreds of yards were like narrow ladders across the
stone-fields, for the tread of each foot was filled in with clean
yellow mud, and ridges or bars of the blue-grey stone remained
between each stepping place. After a stretch of such stone-laying
would be a field of jet-black basalt cinders, firm as concrete in
the sun-baked mud, and afterwards a valley of soft, black sand, with
more crags of weathered sandstone rising from the blackness, or from
waves of the wind-blown red and yellow grains of their own decay.
Nothing in the march was normal or
reassuring. We felt we were in an ominous land, incapable of life,
hostile even to the passing of life, except painfully along such
sparse roads as time had laid across its face. We were forced into a
single file of weary camels, picking a hesitant way step by step
through the boulders for hour after hour. At last Auda pointed ahead
to a fifty-foot ridge of large twisted blocks, lying coursed one
upon the other as they had writhed and shrunk in their cooling.
There was the limit of lava; and he and I rode on together and saw
in front of us an open rolling plain (Wadi Aish) of fine scrub and
golden sand, with green bushes scattered here and there. It held a
very little water in holes which someone had scooped after the
rainstorm of three weeks ago. We camped by them and drove our
unladen camels out till sunset, to graze for the first adequate time
since Abu Raga.
While they were scattered over the
land, mounted men appeared on the horizon to the east, making
towards the water. They came on too quickly to be honest, and fired
at our herdsmen; but the rest of us ran at once upon the scattered
reefs and knolls, shooting or shouting. Hearing us so many they drew
off as fast as their camels would go; and from the ridge in the dusk
we saw them, a bare dozen in all, scampering away towards the line.
We were glad to see them avoid us so thoroughly. Auda thought they
were a Shammar patrol.
At dawn we saddled up for the
short stage to Diraa, the water pools of which Sharraf had told us.
The first miles were through the grateful sand and scrub of Wadi
Aish, and afterwards we crossed a simple lava flat. Then came a
shallow valley, more full of sandstone pillars and mushrooms and
pinnacles than anywhere yesterday. It was a mad country, of
nine-pins from ten to sixty feet in height. The sand-paths between
them were wide enough for one only, and our long column wound
blindly through, seldom a dozen of us having common sight at once.
This ragged thicket of stone was perhaps a third of a mile in width,
and stretched like a red copse to right and left across our path.
Beyond it a graded path over black
ledges of rotten stone led us to a plateau strewn with small, loose,
blue-black basalt shards. After a while we entered Wadi Diraa and
marched down its bed for an hour or more, sometimes over loose grey
stone, sometimes along a sandy bottom between low lips of rock. A
deserted camp with empty sardine tins gave proof of Newcombe and
Hornby. Behind were the limpid pools, and we halted there till
afternoon; for we were now quite near the railway, and had to drink
our stomachs full and fill our few water-skins, ready for the long
dash to Fejr.
In the halt Auda came down to see
Farraj and Daud dress my camel with butter for relief against the
intolerable itch of mange which had broken out recently on its face.
The dry pasturage of the Billi country and the infected ground of
Wejh had played havoc with our beasts. In all Feisal's stud of
riding-camels there was not one healthy; in our little expedition
every camel was weakening daily. Nasir was full of anxiety
lest many break down in the forced march before us and leave their
riders stranded in the desert.
We had no medicines for mange and
could do little for it in spite of our need. However, the rubbing
and anointing did make my animal more comfortable, and we repeated
it as often as Farraj or Daud could find butter in our party. These
two boys were giving me great satisfaction. They were brave and
cheerful beyond the average of Arab servant-kind. As their aches and
pains wore off they showed themselves active, good riders, and
willing workmen. I liked their freedom towards myself and admired
their instinctive understanding with one another against the demands
of the world.