Read We Shall Not Sleep Online
Authors: Anne Perry
Mason felt a chill of apprehension and dismissed it as absurd. It could not have anything to do with him. "Yes?"
Matthew seemed still to be having difficulty finding the words, and Mason became aware of the intensity of his feelings.
"In 1914," Matthew began, "my father found a copy of a treaty between England and Germany. It could have prevented the war, but at the cost of initially betraying France and Belgium, and eventually just about everybody."
Mason felt the semi-darkness of the bunker sway around him and blur as if he were going to faint. He knew with a hideous certainty what was coming next, but to hear it from Matthew himself, laden with his personal loss, gave it a reality it had never had for him before. For the first time he was face-to-face with what he had allowed to be done.
"It was signed by the kaiser, but not yet by the king," Matthew went on. "Father understood what it would mean, and he was bringing it to me in London when he and my mother were killed in a car crash. Joseph and I discovered quite quickly that it was actually murder. A young man, a student of Joseph's of high but blind ideals, had been persuaded to sabotage the road they were traveling on. It cost him his own life, and eventually his brothers as well."
Mason's mouth was dry, his throat tight. He could not have spoken even if he could have thought of anything to say.
"The man behind it," Matthew went on, "we called 'the Peacemaker,' because we had no idea of his identity. He continued to campaign against Britain and the Allies even though the war—"
Mason started to protest but bit the words off, ending as if he had choked on his own breath.
Matthew had no idea of the turmoil inside him. He continued, lost in his own anger and grief. "He was always trying to bring the war to an end while both sides were still strong enough to ally together in an Anglo-German Empire that could dominate most of the world. It would be peace, but without any passion or individuality, any freedom to think and question, to be different, to dare new ideas, to complain against stupidity or injustice, to question or work or laugh aloud. It would be the peace of death."
Again Mason drew breath to interrupt, but here in this bunker dug out of the Flanders earth where so many men had died hideously, all rational justification of such grandiose philosophical issues seemed not only vaguely obscene, but divorced from any kind of reality. It had once been the hope for a better, saner world, a way of avoiding all this wealth of loss. Now it looked like the arrogance of a lunatic, and as doomed as all madmen's dreams.
"The Peacemaker went on murdering," Matthew continued quietly. "General Cullingford; Augustus Tempany; indirectly Lizzie Blaine's husband, Theo, one of the best scientists we ever had. Perhaps even worse than murder was the corruption, and you could call that murder of the soul. Except, of course, we have to allow it ourselves before we can be corrupted. We collude in our own destruction there."
Mason still did not answer. Everything Matthew was describing was a world away from the high ideals with which he and the Peacemaker had begun, but Matthew had not seen South Africa in the Boer War: the slaughter of men; the caging of women and children in camps, starving and imprisoned. He'd had no conception before this of what total war was like.
Finally he looked up at Matthew's face in the lamplight. "If you had known, in 1914, what this would have been like, the sheer overwhelming horror of it, would you have tried to stop it?" he asked, then wished he had not. He sounded like an apologist for the Peacemaker, and he was frightened by how powerful the compulsion was within him to be honest, to cleanse himself from lies. But he had asked, and he had to wait for the answer.
Matthew looked surprised. "Maybe," he admitted. "I don't know. If I had, I hope it would have been openly, without betrayal. But it would have been futile. The balance of power was fatally flawed in Europe. We could never have bought peace without coercion and oppression. The Austro-Hungarian Empire was collapsing from within. So was Russia, in its own way. If you are asking me if I could see that at the time, no, of course not, not clearly enough to have done anything useful about it. Could you?"
"No. But I might have thought I could." Mason had already come closer to honesty than he should have. "What has this to do with finding out who murdered Sarah Price?"
"The Peacemaker hasn't given up yet," Matthew said with a jerky little laugh. "He's still in power, and there's the armistice and its terms to negotiate, and all the peace after that to fight for. If we get it wrong we could sow the seeds of another war just as terrible as this."
"Didn't you say he wanted peace?" Mason asked, remembering everything the Peacemaker had said about crushing German industry and creating a huge vacuum in the economy of Europe.
"Peace on his terms," Matthew amended. "He still hasn't learned that you can't force people without at the same time destroying them. He may well be an idealist, but that does not excuse the lies or betrayal of trust. It is the final arrogance to blind us so he can lead us whatever way he will, and we would have no power to resist. The fact that he believes he's right is irrelevant. We all believe we are right. Some of us even are."
Mason smiled very slightly, moving only his lips. "You want the right to go to hell in your own fashion?"
The shadow of humor touched Matthew's face as well, uncertainly. "If you like
to
put it that way, yes. The point is, one of the Peacemaker's allies in Germany has come through the lines. He's willing to come to London and identify him to Lloyd George."
Mason now saw with hideous clarity what Matthew was doing here in the front line, and why he cared so intensely that Schenckendorff not be executed for a crime he had apparently not committed. Possibly even if he had committed it, the price was too great, at least to the Reavleys. Mason wondered what Joseph thought of it.
Matthew mistook his silence. "I know it's not simple," he said earnestly. "Much that the Peacemaker wanted is right, and perhaps to begin with he was the most farsighted, the sanest of us all. But he usurped power to which he had no right. He is a man fatally flawed by the weakness to abuse it. Right or wrong in his vision, he can't be trusted not to betray, to kill, to corrupt in order to keep that power in his own hands. And once he has it, it's too late to change if you find you have no way to control him, or to take it back from him.
"Our war was worse than anything we could have imagined," Matthew went on, still watching Mason intently. "But what would his empire have been? And how long might it have lasted? I don't know. We didn't make the choice seeing all the way; no one ever does. We do it step by step, doing our best with each one, trying to see where it will lead. Sometimes we're wrong. But to decide for others, against their will, has to be an arrogance we can't allow. That kind of power is more than any man has the wisdom or the morality to handle."
Mason was desperately tempted to ease his hammering conscience by telling the truth of his own part. He longed to explain what he had seen in Africa and why he had tried so desperately to stop it from happening again; why he had seen the same vision as the Peacemaker, and believed in him. It would be a relief to speak honestly, justify at least his beliefs, however they had ended. But it was a luxury he could not afford, a selfishness to ease his own burden of guilt. It was an excuse too small for the cause, and the immeasurable sacrifice of others. Mere discomfort was so trivial it would be obscene to mention it.
He looked up at last and met Matthew's eyes. "So that's why you need to get Schenckendorff off this charge, and to London. What can I do to help?" He could have told them who the Peacemaker was, but he would have to tell them how he knew, and why should they believe him? It would appear entirely self-serving. The Peacemaker would deny it. Of course he would. Mason was stunned at his own gullibility; even now he had no proof. There was not and had never been anything in writing. The Peacemaker had always said it was for the protection of them both, above all of the cause, but perhaps primarily it was for his own safety. He trusted no one. It was oddly painful to understand now that that had always included Mason himself.
Nor would the Reavleys dare to trust him if they knew the part he had played. They would not know how totally Mason had at last understood what he had done, and seen it in its futility, its final ugliness.
He must tell them nothing, however badly the guilt twisted inside him and set him apart and alone.
"Help us find and prove who killed Sarah Price," Matthew told him. "Or at least demonstrate irrefutably that it wasn't Schenckendorff."
Mason's decision was without shadow. It was a long path back, one he might never complete, but he knew how to begin. "When do we start?"
* A *
Joseph returned from the front line with more wounded. As soon as he had seen them into the orderlies' care, he went to Matthew. They stood together in the evening light as it splashed red and pink over the puddles across what had been no-man's-land. It was one of the few places where they would be uninterrupted.
"It isn't Schenckendorff," Matthew said. "But we're not much closer to knowing who it is."
"I didn't think it was him," Joseph replied unhappily, staring across the now-gaudy mud. The sunset burned in the sky to the northwest. Perhaps it was foolish, but he had hoped for something more definite. He was weary, his body ached, and he had several gashes on his arms from old barbed wire still embedded in the clay. "Doesn't it help with proving who did it? How are you certain?" Then he asked the question to which he would rather not have had to know the answer. "Who lied?"
Matthew's face was almost invisible in the shadows, but his voice was pinched. "I know because one of the other women was violently raped almost a month before Schenckendorff came through the lines."
Joseph drew in his breath, only beginning to imagine the horror of it.
"Don't ask me who," Matthew said quickly. "I can't tell you. I believe it. That's all anyone needs to know."
"I see. Poor woman." Joseph could understand very easily why her only chance for healing might lie in anonymity, the certainty that none of her friends or colleagues was ever aware that it had happened, still less that she was the victim. "Can you help her?" He also understood why she had chosen Matthew, a relative stranger, to tell. She might find it too difficult, too humiliating, if it were a man she knew, even the chaplain.
"I'll try." Matthew seemed happy to dismiss the subject, at least for the present.
Joseph saw Lizzie very briefly during the long, busy night. More wounded men arrived, none of them critical. But then a junior officer of nineteen who lost a leg was brought in, and Cavan struggled all night to save his life. The shock of the amputation, and then the long journey in the ambulance, had left him in a bad state.
Joseph was so exhausted, he was shuddering with cold by the time he sat on the floor in the empty Resuscitation tent. Cully Teversham brought him a mug of tea and two slices of quite reasonable bread.
"You need that more than anyone, Chaplain," he said cheerfully. "Wish Oi could get you some hot Maconachie stew, but there's none left, not till the next lot comes." He frowned. "Is he going to make it?"
"Probably." Joseph spoke more from hope than expectation.
"If Oi
can foind anything else fit to eat, Oi'll bring it," Cully said with a shrug.
"Thank you," Joseph said to acknowledge the kindness. He wanted to see Lizzie again. He wanted to hear her voice, see the smile in her eyes when she recognized him. He knew she would be too tired to talk, but they understood the same emotions too well to need more than a glance. He remembered vividly driving together in the Cambridgeshire lanes two summers ago. He had not needed to explain anything to her then. She had understood his confusion and how slowly he had been forced to face the truth of betrayal, and that it had hurt him almost more than he could face.
And here they had both spent the night fighting to save a young man's life, knowing the searing physical pain he must be feeling. But just as deep as that they could imagine the lifelong wound of being crippled, less than whole, limping when other men ran.
Was she also afraid of returning home to an emptiness after this hideous familiarity was over with: its horror and its companionship, its silly jokes, its physical deprivation, its desperate, heart-tearing loyalties? What purpose could possibly be consuming enough to take its place?
He saw her come into the tent and forced his aching legs to support him as he rose to his feet. He walked over to her, stopping just short of where she was, very careful not to crowd her or assume too much. But he wanted to be closer, even just to reach across and put his hand near hers. He saw that it was slender, bruised where she had carried a weight too heavy for her, the nails very short, one broken.
He had no idea what to say. Nothing was profound enough.
She turned and smiled at him. Despite her dark hair, her eyes were the bluest he had ever seen. What could he say that was comforting and not idiotic, so false as to be a denial of trust?
"I talked with Matthew," he told her. "He said that Schenckendorff couldn't be guilty. There's evidence that makes that certain. He couldn't tell me exactly what, and I couldn't repeat it if I knew."
She turned away quickly, looking hurt, as if she had read in his face something she did not want to see.
"I'm sorry," he said, puzzled. Who was she afraid for? Was she also terrified that someone she liked, or admired, someone she felt protective of, had killed Sarah? He could not believe it of her. He remembered vividly her clarity of thought during that terrible time when he had been so confused and led by his emotions. There had been anger, bewilderment, grief, but always that honesty, above all with herself.
There was a gulf widening between them now, and he did not understand it. The pain
it
caused him, the sense of loss, almost took his breath away, as if he were hollow inside. "Lizzie, I can't repeat things like that. How would anyone trust me if I did? I understand why Matthew has to keep silent—"