The hunt and the banner Part 4
Imperator Pax
Talon Master
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The hunt and the banner
Part 4
There was a discharge that managed to do nothing but kill a chicken. The men were going to need to eat of course after this but first to put things back in order Allen lifted his left hand and squeezed once, the bandit stumbled back and a face paces scrambling into a heap into the dust of the road clawing at his ruined eyes. Biting the urge to curse he readjusted and shot him this time cleanly through the hand and out the back of his skull, where a final thrash sent him into the dirt for good he stepped over the tube fed repeating rifle the man had dropped in his injury and raised his right to let both automatics chatter into the backs of the fools heedless trying to loot one of the stalls. The few who turned in time found the appearance of fifteen inch blades at the end of mausers to meet them as the infantry section menaced them from his left side. "Sergeant take this men into custody." He ordered the mustachioed man cradling one of the Broomhandles Edenborn had sent years previously. The RPF veteran nodded swaggered forward with three of the men and let a daring string of invectives inviting the bandits to give him any lip.Part 4
They didnt. The colour sergeant seemed a bit peeved at being denied the option to give them cold steel on the spot. They were encountering markedly less resistance than he'd expected. Much of the bandits had blackpowder revolvers, apparently of largely spanish production, and only a handful had ungainly long arms, and none designed before 1890. He had expected at least some Gewehr 88 commission rifles, but most were tube fed guns from Europe.
If they had been this close and in column they might have been dangerous still, but they weren't, and this was not a infantry square of 1890. They were armed ruffians usually serving as, presumably, body guards to travelling merchant spies not line infantry... and given the opportunity they'd gotten cocky and happy to try and loot stuff that they could load into their baggage before no doubt fleeing.
Allen loaded the left automatic dropping the still partially loaded magazine into his breast pocket for safe keeping as a lieutenant rushed up to him, "Horsemen are coming." Was the abbreviated declaration after the salute. He replied with 'show me' and the pushed to the old town gate. "See?"
"I see them." He replied evenly. "Run to second platoon tell them to join me on the high ground, and send a runner to third to form with their bayonets at the gate." The lieutenant, from baker company, grabbed two riflemen from his company as runners and rushed to comply as Allen holstered the brownings, and unslung the rifle on his back. Eight hundred yards give or take maybe five, and placed the post just above the man's breast bone, and exhaled.
He saw the flash of the gun and the red spray from the man's side. The horse he was riding reared, as did the one behind him, but there was no time to watch the spectacle unfolding. He tracked sideways and repeated the shots until the follower locked the bolt and he was forced to reach for the stripper clip at his belt. Twelve rounds later as a group of men from Baker began to file up the town gates. Corporals with scoped rifles leading groups of six men, and Cole threw down beside him, "Having fun without me?" He slid his muzzle through the crenulations and tracked into throng of horses.
"Its a hundred men ahorse." He replied.
"At least." Cole agreed as seven mill rifles cracked. "I've got the Vickers being brought along just in case." They fired, "Shang is rallying something, but I wasn't going to interrupt him."
He hadn't given him any specific orders other than to rally a second line of personnel. They needed to get the fires outs and the situation in hand. Allen lowered the reticle and squeezed. They were getting close enough now his zero on the rifle required him to shoot low. "They're going to try and get close enough to volley at us."
"Short of sixty yards they won't hit anything." It would make a hell of a racket, but that went without saying. A fierce whoop raised from somewhere on the side and rear. Allen paid no mind to it, engrossed in the world atop the perch that was the crenulated centuries old town gate and the sandy stone expanse leading into the hills and mountain pass beyond in the north. Cole pulled his rifle back and began to reload, "Well look at that."
He didn't have time to, Cole had stood up and the troops along the gate had begun firing from unbraced and standing positions as the enemy made their last approach beginning to slow for their cavalcade to present their rifles. The vickers had not yet arrived, but the full force of over fifty rifle men into firing ranks opened from the gates.
The point had been to hold the gates as a choke point but a large banner lead the platoon out and into the field before it as second platoon progressed through the portal with bayonet tipped mausers firing at they advanced. Upon a blue field sat a reared dragon in red.
It was the rifle fire doing the work of course, and Allen shouldered the mauser and worked the bolt.
"Wonder who's idea that was?" Cole questioned as the rout took hold.
... he grimaced, "Jun I suspect." He said before centering the crosshair on a fleeing bandit's spine and squeezed the man tumbled from the saddle much of his neck blown away. "Lieutenant," He called to another man in gray, the Chinese man saluted, "Send runners to all platoons and ascertain the lines of defense. I want to know the progress of putting those fires out." He glanced at second platoon standing well outside the town gates and out in the open. Another sergeant, this one a reed tall northern Chinese man, carrying a browning automatic shotgun had taken prisoners and was between them and the beginnings of a lynch mob. He was half tempted to tell the sergeant that the mob should be told the magistrate would be allowed to deal with bandits after everything was done, but decided to withhold. If bandits had taken hostages it might be worth trading a bunch of thieves and ruffians for them if they'd agree to that.
At least to keep it as an option in the short term. He spared a glance at the prisoners, another towards the mob, then the gate, the banner. This was not the scene the newspapers painted. Too often the papers continued to paint Bai Lang's mob as robin hood reporting attacks that had been mounting in the west but the articles written as if they were the same as Bai Lang's earlier ones. Any pretense of politics was absent with this lot. There was another reason of course to keep the prisoners from getting lynched of course... there was a chance that they might be able to shed some light on what Bai Lang had been up to since he had been forced to abandon Sow Gorge back in March... or even for that matter what had developed since he'd been repulsed outside the gates of Xian.
It took more than a quarter of an hour, not quite half, to get word and send word back and start putting things to order. They were getting used ot it, and it wasn't as if Bai Lang's predations were unusual for bandits either, whatever the reason for his sudden enmity or need to vent on the moslem hui and turkish sorts were remained poorly understood but it was looking to be, "Going to be a hot summer." In both temperature and and in terms of fighting.
"So it seems," He agreed. "Put the prisoners in the railway stockade," Improvised as it might have been, "And keep them under guard, I reckon I'll cable Cao Kun, and Peking." Technically they were over the border but he he had no idea where the provincial governor was or how to get ahold of the governor of Gansu... and there was no telling if the political situation regarding leadership in Shensi had stabilized enough that whoever was supposed to be in charge would even know either. Better to cable the capital and let them figure that shit out.
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Commentary: this is the last part of the penultimate chapter of the white wolf rebellion. The final chapter of this part of the timeline covering the summer of 1914, and the death of the bandit king. Which brings us what has happened by this Bai Lang having been forced into the interior 'the west' of China his forces have largely been scattered and while militarily superior to ethnic Hui, and Han militias under the Ma clique the latter have been able to trade land for time and attrit Bai Lang's relatively large bandit force of in particular ammunition, and horse fodder. By this point in addition to being short on most supplies Bai Lang's forces seemed to have been splintering due to the lack of booty with various groups haying off. This will end with the destructive conclusion in southern Shanxi.
My speculation is that Bai Lang's thrust into Shanxi in mid 1914 (assuming he was actually apart of that force) was that his ultimate goal was the Machine bureau that would be rechristened later as Taiyuan Arsenal in hopes of looting ammunition and weapons from the provincial army. There are some indications in primary sources that Bai Lang had died of his wounds by this point and that Yan Xishan subsequently smashed the bandit army and drove the survivors back south.