Complete works of hall c.., p.485
Complete Works of Hall Caine, page 485
The room was already full when Helena and the Princess arrived, but places were found for them near to the door. This position suited Helena perfectly, but to the Princess it was a deep disappointment, and as a consequence nothing pleased her.
“All English and all soldiers! Not an Egyptian among them,” she said. “After what he has done for them, too! Ingrates! Excuse the word. That’s what I call them.”
At that moment Hafiz entered, and the Princess, touching him on the arm, said:
“Here, you come and sit on the other side of her and keep up her heart, the sweet one.”
Hafiz did as he was told, and as soon as he was seated beside Helena he whispered:
“I’ve just left him.”
“How is he?”
“Firm as a rock. He sent you a message.”
“What is it?”
“Tell her,” he said, “that great love conquers death.”
“Ah!”
At the next moment Helena’s hand and Hafiz’s found each other in a fervent clasp, and sweetheart and foster-brother sat together so until the end of the inquiry.
Presently the judges of the Court entered and took their places at the table that had been prepared for them — one full colonel and four lieutenant-colonels of mature age, from different British regiments.
“They look all right, but white hairs are no proof of wisdom,” muttered the Princess.
Then the accused was called, and amid breathless silence Gordon entered with a firm step, attended by the officer who had him in charge. His manner was calm, and though his face was pale almost to pallor, his expression betrayed neither fear nor bravado. His appearance made a deep impression, and the President told him to sit. At the same moment it was observed that the Sirdar came in by a door at the farther end of the room and took a seat immediately in front of him.
The Court was then sworn and the charge was read. It accused the prisoner of three offences under the Army Act: first, that being a person subject to military law, he had disobeyed the lawful command of a superior in such a way as to show a wilful disregard of authority (A. A., 9, 1); second, that he had been guilty of acts and conduct to the prejudice of good order and military discipline (A. A., 40); third, that he had deserted his Majesty’s service while on active service (A. A., 12, la).
“He heard it all yesterday morning,” whispered Hafiz to Helena, whose nervous fingers were tightening about his own.
The charges having been read out to the accused, he was called upon to plead.
“Are you guilty or not guilty?” asked the President.
There was a moment of breathless silence, and then, in a measured voice without a break or a tremor, Gordon said:
“I do not wish to plead at all.”
A subdued murmur passed through the room, and Hafiz whispered again:
“He wanted to plead guilty and the Sirdar had all he could do to prevent him.”
“Enter a plea of ‘Not guilty’ on the record,” said the President.
Then, addressing Gordon, the President asked if he was represented by counsel. Gordon shook his head. Did he desire to conduct his own defence? Again Gordon shook his head. The President conferred for a moment with other members of the Court and then said:
“It is within the power of the Court to appoint a properly-qualified person to act as counsel for the accused, and in this case the Court desires to do so. Is there any officer here, subject to military law, who wishes to undertake the task of Defender?”
In a moment it was plainly evident that the sympathies of Gordon’s brother officers were with him. Twenty men in uniform had leaped to their feet and were holding up their hands.
“Lord God, how they love him!” whispered Hafiz, and Helena had to hold down her head lest she should be seen to cry.
The Defender selected was a young captain of cavalry who had brought a brilliant reputation from the Staff College, and in a moment he was in the midst of his duties.
“Does the accused desire a short adjournment of the Court in order to instruct his Defender?” asked the President.
Once more Gordon, who had stood passively during these proceedings, shook his head, and then, without further preliminaries, the trial began. The prosecutor rose to make his opening address. He was an artillery officer of high reputation.
“He’ll make it no worse than he can help,” whispered Hafiz.
In simple words the prosecutor stated his case, confining himself to the briefest explanation of the facts he was about to prove, and then he called the first of his witnesses. This was the military secretary, Captain Graham, who had been present at the prisoner’s interview with the late General Graves.
“Not a bad chap — he’ll do no more than he must,” whispered Hafiz.
Replying to the prosecutor’s questions, the military secretary said that Gordon had refused to obey the order of his superior given personally by that officer in the execution of his office, and that his refusal had been deliberate and distinct and such as showed an intention to defy and resist authority.
“I object,” said the young Defender, instantly, whereupon the officer of the Court who filled the post of Judge-Advocate submitted that the witness had drawn an inference which was no evidence and ought therefore to be struck out.
The Defender then rose to cross-examine the first witness, and in a few minutes the military secretary was made to prove, first, that the prisoner had tried to show his superior that the order he was giving him was contrary to humanity and likely to lead to an irreparable result; next that when executed by another officer, it had led to an irreparable result, including bloodshed and loss of life; and, finally, that after the order had been disobeyed by the accused the most inexcusable and disgraceful and even illegal and unsoldierly insults had been inflicted upon him by his General.
“That’s true! My God, that’s true! Illegal and unsoldierly!” whispered Hafiz, forgetting to whom he was talking; and Helena, in the riot of her dual love, for her father and for Gordon, could do nothing but hold down her head.
Then the prosecutor called Colonel Macdonald.
“A brute — he’ll do his dam’dest,” whispered Hafiz.
Amid scarcely suppressed murmurs Coloned Macdonald, speaking with manifest bitterness, proved the assault upon himself, and then went on to say that it was unprovoked, it was brutal, and it was conduct unbecoming the character of an officer and a gentleman.
“A lie like that has no legs to walk on,” whispered Hafiz.
“No, but it has wings to fly with, though,” said the Princess.
“Hush!” said Helena.
Again, like a flash of light, the young Defender had leapt up to protest against an inference which the Court alone was entitled to draw, and again the Judge-Advocate had submitted that the inference should be struck out.
Amid obvious excitement among the soldiers in Court, the Defender then rose to cross-exmine the second witness, and in a moment Macdonald’s freckled face had become scarlet, as he was compelled to admit that, at the instant when he was assaulted, he had ordered the shooting of ahoy (who fell dead from the walls of El Azhar), and was swearing at the boy’s mother who was weeping over her son.
“Ah, his rage will be at the end of his nose now,” whispered the Princess.
Finally the prosecutor called the officer who was temporarily commanding the Army of Occupation to show that the accused, after disobeying the order of his late General, had disappeared from Cairo and had not been seen since the riot at El Azhar until his capture two days before.
The evidence for the prosecution being now finished, the Court prepared itself for the defence. There was a certain appearance of anxious curiosity on the faces of the judges, and a tingling atmosphere of expectancy among the spectators.
Then came a surprise. The young Defender, who had been holding a whispered conference with Gordon, turned to the President and said:
“I regret to say that the accused has decided not to call any witnesses in defence.”
“But perhaps,” said the President, turning to Gordon, “you wish to give evidence for yourself. Do you?”
There was another moment of breathless silence, and then Gordon, after looking slowly round the room, in the direction of the place in which Helena sat with her head down, said calmly:
“No.”
At that the murmuring among the spectators could hardly be suppressed. It was now plainly evident that Gordon’s brother officers were with him to a man. They had been counting on an explanation that would at least palliate his conduct if it could not excuse his offences. The disappointment was deep, but the sympathy was still deeper. Could it be possible that Gordon meant to die?
“Lift up your veil, child,” whispered the Princess, but Helena shook her head.
After the prosecutor had summed up his evidence, the Defender addressed the Court for the defence. He pleaded extenuating circumstances, first on the ground that the order given to the accused, though not in opposition to the established customs of the army or the laws of the land, was calculated to do irreparable injury and had done such injury, and next on the ground of outrageous provocation.
When the Defender had finished the President announced that his Excellency the Sirdar had volunteered to give evidence in proof of the prisoner’s honourable record, and that the Court had decided to hear him.
The Sirdar was then sworn, and in strong, affecting, soldierly words, he said the accused had rendered great services to his country; that he had received many medals and distinctions; that he was as brave a man as ever stood under arms and one of the young officers who made an old soldier proud to belong to the British Army.
There is no company more easily moved to tears than a company of soldiers, and when the Sirdar sat down there was not a dry eye in that assembly of brave men.
After a pause the President announced that the Court would be closed to consider the finding, but in order to assist the judges in doing so it would be desirable that they should know more of the conditions under which the accused was arrested. Therefore the following persons would be asked to remain:
His Excellency the Sirdar, The Commandant of Police, Captain Hafiz Ahmed of the Egyptian Army.
Helena, with the other spectators, was passing out of the room when the Sirdar touched her on the shoulder and said, haltingly:
“Have you perhaps got — Can you trust me with those letters for a little while?”
By some impulse, hardly intelligible to herself, Helena had brought Gordon’s letters with her, and after a moment’s hesitation she took them out of her pocket and gave them to the Sirdar, saying, very faintly but very sweetly:
“Yes, I can trust them to you.”
Then, with the Princess, she went out into the great hall and sat there on a window seat while the Court was closed. There was a sad and solemn expression in her face, and seeing this, even through her dark veil, the officers who were pacing to and fro, moved by that delicacy which is the nobler part of an English gentleman’s reserve — respect for the intimacies that are sacred to another person — merely bowed to her as they passed.
The strain was great, for she knew what was going on behind the closed door of the Court-room. The judges were trying to find in the circumstances of Gordon’s arrest some excuse for his desertion. She could see the Sirdar and Hafiz struggling to show that, however irregular and reprehensible from a disciplinary standpoint, Gordon’s had been the higher patriotism that, coming back under those strange conditions and in that strange disguise, he had deliberately returned to die. And she could see the Court powerfully moved by that plea, yet helpless to take account of it.
Half an hour passed; an hour; nearly two hours, and then a young officer came up to tell Helena that the Court was about to reopen.
“I think — I hope they intend to recommend him to mercy,” he said, blunderingly, and at the next moment he felt as if he would like to cut his tongue out. But Helena was unhurt. She held up her head for the first time that day, and, to the Princess’s surprise, when they re-entered the room, and the officers made way for her, she pushed through to the front and took a seat, back to the wall, immediately before the Sirdar and almost face to face with Gordon.
There was that tense atmosphere in the Court which always precedes a sentence, but there was also a sort of humid air as if the angel of pity had passed through the place and softened it to tears.
Gordon was told to rise, and then the President, obviously affected, proceeded to address him. He might say at once that the judges regretted to find themselves unable to take account of the moral aspects of the case. Nothing but its military aspects came within their cognizance. That being so, the Court, notwithstanding the able and ingenious defence, could find no excuse for insubordination — the first duty of a soldier was to obey. In like manner they could find no excuse for a savage personal attack by an officer in uniform upon another officer in the exercise of his office — it was conduct to the prejudice of good order and military discipline. Finally, the Court could find no excuse for desertion — it was an act of great offence to the flag which a soldier was sworn to serve.
“Under these circumstances,” continued the President, “the Court have no alternative but to find you guilty of the crimes with which you have been charged, and though it is within the Court’s discretion to mitigate the penalty of your offences, they have decided, after anxious deliberation, remembering the grave fact that the force in Egypt is on active service, not to exercise that right, but out of regard to your high record as a soldier and the great provocation which you certainly suffered, to content themselves with recommending you to mercy, thus leaving the issue to a higher authority. Therefore, whatever the result of that recommendation, it is now my duty, my very painful duty, to pronounce upon you, Charles Gordon Lord, the full sentence prescribed by military law — death.”
There was a solemn silence until the President’s last word was spoken, when all eyes turned toward Gordon.
He bore himself with absolute self-possession. There was a slight quivering of the eyelids and a quick glint of the steel-gray eyes in the direction of the opposite side of the Court — nothing more.
Then a thrilling incident occurred. Helena, whose head had been down was seen to rise in her seat, and to raise her thick dark veil. One moment she stood there, back to the wall, with her magnificent pale face all strength and courage, looking steadily across at the prisoner as if nobody were present in the room. Then as quietly as she had risen she sank back to her place.
Oh, sublime power of love! Oh, pitiful impotence of words! Everybody felt the thousand inexpressible things which that simple act was meant to convey.
Gordon was the first to feel them, and when his guard touched him on the arm he turned and went out with a step that rang on the marble floor — firm as a rock.
As the Court broke up one of the officers was heard to whisper hoarsely:
“She’s worthy of him — what more is there to say?”
At the last moment the Sirdar turned to her and whispered:
“You must lend me these letters a little longer, my dear. And remember what I said before — there’s still the Secretary of State, and there’s still the King.”
XIV
THE strength in Helena’s face was not belied by the will behind it. Within an hour she was at work to save Gordon’s life. Going to the officer who had acted as Judge-Advocate, she learned that the sentence would not go to headquarters for confirmation until after two days. In those two days she achieved wonders.
First, she approached the President of the Court and made sure that the recommendation to mercy should go to London by the same mail that carried the report of the proceedings.
Next, she visited the lieutenant-colonel of every regiment of the Army of Occupation and secured his signature and the signatures of his fellow-officers to a petition asking -for the commutation of the sentence.
Two days and two nights she spent in this work, and everybody at Abbassiah and at the Citadel knew what the daughter of the late General was doing. A woman is irresistible to a soldier; a beautiful woman in distress is overpowering; all the army was in love with Helena; every soldier was her slave.
When, on the evening of the second day when she returned to the house of the Princess, she found three “Tommies,” two in khaki and one in Highland plaid, waiting for her in the hall. They produced a thick packet of foolscap, badly disfigured by finger-prints and smelling strongly of tobacco, but containing four thousand signatures to her appeal.
Perhaps her greatest triumph, however, was with Colonel Macdonald.
“I must have his help, too,” she said to the Princess, whereupon her Highness put her finger to her nose and answered:
“If you must, my heart, you must, but remember — when you want a dog’s service address him as ‘Sir.’”
She did. With a blush she told the Colonel (it was a dear divine falsehood) that Gordon had said he had had no personal animosity against him and was sorry if at a moment of undue excitement he had behaved badly.
The curmudgeon took the apology according to his kind, saying that in his opinion an officer who struck a brother officer publicly and before his men deserved to be shot or drummed out of the army, but still, if Colonel Lord was ashamed of what he had done —
Helena’s eyes flashed with anger, but she compelled herself to smile and to say:
“He is, I assure you, he is.” And before the big Highlander knew what he was doing he had written to headquarters at Helena’s dictation, to say that inasmuch as his own quarrel with Colonel Gordon Lord had been composed, that count in the offence might, so far as he was concerned, be wiped out.
The sweet double-face told him how good and noble and even Christlike this was of him, and then, marching off with the letter, she said to herself, “The brute!”
Meantime, Hafiz, acting through his uncle the Chancellor, got the Ulema of El Azhar to send a message to the Foreign Minister saying, with many Eastern flourishes, that what General Graves had ordered Gordon to do, what his subordinate had done, was a deep injury to the religious susceptibilities of the Mohammedan people.
