Interview with Evan Sinclair from Wages of Empire by Michael J. Cooper

book cover

Having run away from home in the summer of 1914 to join the Great War for Civilization, 16-year-old Evan Sinclair managed to cross the country by train, the Atlantic by steamer, and having crossed through France into occupied Belgium, he found himself with the Flemish resistance in the dangerous mission of flooding the lowlandsโ€”a singular act that stopped the Germans from reaching the northern ports and turned the tide of the war. Having played a key role in that critical mission, Evan was badly wounded and spent some weeks in a field hospital in northern France. Discharged from hospital, he and other recovering wounded soldiers are being sent back to England by hospital ship.


Ten minutes out of Calais and bound for Dover, theย HMHS Austriumย pitched on the Chanel swells onย a cold morning in late November. Sixteen-year-old Evan Sinclair stowed his gear on theย upper berth of a cramped cabin, and grasping the worn handrail, headed up the narrow steel stairwell to the shipโ€™s deck. He stepped to the side as a deckhand descended the stairs and asked, โ€œYโ€™know where I might find Evan Sinclair?โ€

โ€œRight here. Thatโ€™s me.โ€

The man handed him a piece of paper. โ€œThis just arrived for you.โ€

In the half-light he could make out the words. 

NOVEL PASTIMES WISHES TO INTERVIEW EVAN SINCLAIR PLEASE RESPOND

Evan frowned and thought, โ€œWhat the hell does that mean? Then he called out to the deckhand who had begun climbing back up the steps. โ€œHey! They want me to respond. How am I supposed to do that?โ€

โ€œAt the wireless office. Come with me.โ€

Evan followed the deck hand up the stairs and soon found himself on the bridge. There the deckhand nodded at a closed door.

Pushing it open, Evan saw a young man reading as he reclined, feet up on a low desk between a typewriter and a burnished brass telegraphy set. Looking up from his copy of Argosy All-Story Magazine, he asked, โ€œAre you Evan Sinclair?โ€ 

โ€œYes.โ€ He held up the paper. โ€œI believe this came from you. What do you make of it?โ€

The young man shrugged. โ€œThey want to interview you.โ€

โ€œAbout what?โ€

โ€œIf youโ€™d like, we can find out right now.โ€ The telegraph operator sat forward and readied his hand over the key-type transmitter. โ€œShall we?โ€

โ€œDo you have time for that?โ€

โ€œFor now, I do. Thereโ€™s nothing in the queue, and theyโ€™re waiting for your response at the destination station in Londonโ€”โ€

โ€œLondon? Isnโ€™t that too far away?โ€

โ€œNot at allโ€”we can transmit wireless over twice that distance.โ€

โ€œHow?โ€

โ€œMorse code by radio waves. Do you want to do this or not?โ€

โ€œSure,โ€ he said and watched as the operator began tapping the brass key. Once he stopped, Evan asked, โ€œWhat did you transmit?โ€

โ€œI told them that Evan Sinclair is standing by for the interview with Novel PASTimes.โ€ The operator moved his headphones up from his neck to his ears and reached out to bring the typewriter forward. โ€œTheyโ€™ll get back to us soon enough and Iโ€™ll type out the responses for youโ€”โ€ 

Before he finished speaking, Evan could hear the shrill staccato of the Morse code from the operatorโ€™s earphones. As he began typing, Evan leaned down and read the message.

WELCOME HOME HOW DOES IT FEEL TO BE A HERO

         A hero? he thought. Are they referring to what I did to help flood the polders? Evan said nothing for a few seconds while the images flashed through his headโ€”the bright moon over the lowlands, the partisans exposed by the sluice gate, the German machinegun from within the protecting nest of sandbags, firing and firing, smoke from the gun rising in the air, desperate and failed attempts by the partisans to silence it, with pistol, with grenade. He remembered crawling over smooth stones in the mud, trying to reach the dark shelter of the poplars, there the foliage blocked out the moonlight and he was able to stand and hurl smooth stones with his sling into the machinegun nest, again and again, drawing their attention away from the partisans at the sluice gate. And, finally, moonlight shining on rising water as the polders floodedโ€”

         The telegraph operator cleared his throat. โ€œDo you want to reply?โ€

         Evan nodded. โ€œTell them โ€“ Iโ€™m not sure what they mean.โ€

         The operator tapped out the message, and the reply came quickly, and the young man typed it out.

FLOODING POLDERS KEPT GERMANS FROM TAKING NORTHERN PORTS AND WINNING THE WAR NOW THEY WONT NOT NOW NOT EVER

He knew that was true. The key to a quick German victory was to seize the port cities of northern France and Belgium. But slowed and stopped with the flooding of the lowlands, their progress had ground to a halt. And everyone knew that without a quick victory, Germany would have none. And though the subsequent trench warfare was horrific and grinding, it contained Germany and drew out the war, and a longer war would end in Germanyโ€™s defeat.  

Which is why I left home to join the Great War for Civilization, he thought. To make a difference. And I did

He spoke a shortened version of those thoughts to the operator who tapped them out into the wireless radio waves bound for London. After a few minutes the next question came.

THERES TALK OF YOU RECEIVING THE VC

 The Victoria Cross? Evan shook his head in disbelief. Britainโ€™s most prestigious decoration? Theyโ€™d give it to me for throwing rocks at Germans? The ones who really deserve a medal are the Flemish partisans who died at the sluice gate, the ones who actually flooded the poldersโ€”Emile Peeters and Hendrik Geeraert.

Evan proceeded to dictate these thoughts to the operator who tapped them out. Evan made sure that he got the spelling of their names right.

After a few minutes the next question came, the shrillness of the code less jarring as Evan was getting used to it. He read the typed transcription.

WHAT DO YOU PLAN TO DO ONCE YOU GET BACK TO ENGLAND

Before speaking, Evan considered how to reply. Iโ€™m pretty sure my dad left Utah to look for me in England. Heโ€™s probably back nowโ€”at our old house in Oxford. I definitely want to spend some time with himโ€”to mend fences after the way I ran off. And once Iโ€™m fit for service I want to get back to the fight, that is, if the war is still going on. But not on the Western Frontโ€”Iโ€™ll ask for them to send me to Cairo. 

         Dictating these thoughts to the operator, Evan hoped that his father might hear the news before he arrived at the front door in Oxford. As he waited for the tapping to stop, his thoughts turned to a beautiful young nurse he had met while hospitalized in France. Iโ€™d really like to get back there for a quick visitโ€”to see her againโ€”

         โ€œUh-oh!โ€ the operator cut into his thoughts. โ€œIโ€™ve got someone in the queue now. Iโ€™ve got to sign out with NOVEL PASTimes, and take this.โ€

         โ€œNo problem. Iโ€™m glad weโ€™re done,โ€ Evan said as he watched the operator hunch over listening as he typed out the incoming message.

GERMAN U BOATS SIGHTED IN CHANNEL BEGIN EVASIVE MANEUVERS

Evanโ€™s breath caught as the operator grabbed the message and ran out to the bridge, yelling for the captain.


Wireless Telegraphy Communication between ship and shore was by Morse code, as it was for conventional telegraphy. The equipment only transmitted messages for about 300 miles in daylight, although that figure doubled or tripled after dark thanks to the refraction of long-wave radiation in the ionosphere. The wireless operators sending these messages were independent young men of the modern age who had been recruited with the promise of escaping “blind alley careers”. They chatted to wireless operators in other ships in a jaunty, mock public school slang, calling each other “old man”.


Michael J. Cooperย emigrated to Israel in 1966 and lived in Jerusalem during the last year the city was divided between Israel and Jordan. He graduated from Tel Aviv University Medical School, and after a 40-year career as a pediatric cardiologist in Northern California, he continues to do volunteer missions serving Palestinian children who lack access to care. His historical fiction novels include โ€œFoxes in the Vineyard,โ€ set in 1948 Jerusalem, which won the 2011 Indie Publishing Contest grand prize, and โ€œThe Rabbiโ€™s Knight,โ€ set in the Holy Land in 1290. โ€œWages of Empireโ€ won the 2022 CIBA Rossetti Award for YA fiction along with first- place honors for the 2022 CIBA Hemingway award for wartime historical fiction. He lives in Northern California with his wife and a spoiled-rotten cat. Three adult children occasionally drop by. Learn more atย michaeljcooper.net.ย