by W E Johns
He turned envious eyes upwards as an aeroplane, a mere speck in the sky, droned across their line on an unknown errand.
'Curse that organ-grinder,' muttered Summers at Ginger's elbow, nodding towards the 'plane.
'It's one of Franco's machines, then?' asked Ginger, for he did not recognize the type.
'One o' them Fiats.' (He pronounced it Fyats, but Ginger knew what he meant.) 'I've seen plenty of'em. So'll you. If he's spotted us we shall know all about it soon enough.'
Presently a shell whined overhead and burst about two hundred yards beyond the marching column.
'There y'are. What did I tell yer?' snarled Summers. 'You watch the rookies turn green.'
Ginger noticed that several of the men around him had turned pale, and realized that they were under fire for the first time. He himself felt a sinking feeling in the pit of the stomach.
Another shell wailed towards them, and Ginger was not the only one who ducked as it burst viciously in the air just short of the troops.
'Shrapnel*,' growled Summers laconically. 'Here comes another.'
* Artillery shell containing bullets or pieces of metal called shrapnel set to burst above the ground.
The shell burst some distance ahead, and Ginger grasped the fact that the 'plane now circling high over-head was correcting the gunners' aim.
'We shall get it in the neck as soon as they get our range,' murmured Summers casually.
'That's right. Be cheerful,' returned Ginger, who was feeling distinctly uncomfortable.
Before Summers could resume the conversation an order had sent the column forward at a brisk double, which was maintained until they entered a narrow defile** in the mountains. Ginger caught his breath as they entered it and his eyes fell on a line of wounded men lying beside the path. A doctor and an orderly were busily at work. One of the unfortunate fellows was groaning horribly, and Ginger looked away.
** A narrow passage through which troops can only march one behind the other.
'You'll see plenty o' that,' remarked Summers calmly. 'Yer soon get used to it, though.'
Ginger was not comforted. He kept his eyes to the front, and breathed a sigh of relief as the head of the column turned into a deep trench cut in the side of the defile. He caught a glimpse of open country and a wide river some distance below and ahead of them.
'This is the communication trench,' announced Summers. 'Looks like we're going straight into the front line.'
This expectation proved to be correct, for after proceeding for some distance, during which time the sound of rifle fire grew rapidly nearer, the troops, now in single file, entered a narrow trench that ran at right angles to the communication trench. Men, gaunt and unshaven, were leaning against the far side, firing between sandbags and lumps of rock. Some paid no attention to the newcomers; others grinned and threw coarse jokes over their shoulders.
"Ere we are,' remarked Summers. He might have been announcing their arrival at a London terminus, so dispassionate was his tone of voice.
Ginger wondered what curious urge had induced the little cockney to abandon peace and security for a war, the result of which could make no possible difference to him. The same could be said of nearly all the other members of the International Brigade.
They had come to a halt, because the men in front of them had stopped, and Ginger realized from the way they dropped their equipment, loosened their collars and made themselves at home, as it were, that this was his destination. He leaned his rifle against the side of the trench, and walked towards a wide opening in order to see what lay beyond—a step that was, in the circumstances, quite natural. He did actually reach the opening, and was staring down a steep bank below when Summers caught his arm and dragged him aside just as something thudded into the rear wall of the trench.
'What yer trying to do—commit suicide?' asked Summers, in a voice that was heavy with sarcasm.
Ginger gazed at him wide-eyed. 'My goodness! I didn't realize—' he began, but Summers cut him short.
'You won't realize anything long if you go shovin' yer 'ead through 'oles in the parapet,' he said severely. 'Take my tip and keep yer skull down till you're told to do something.'
Ginger stepped aside to permit the passage of two medical orderlies carrying a stretcher between them. On it lay the body of a middle-aged man. He had been shot through the head.
Ginger turned a white face to his new-found comrade. 'This is awful,' he said in a hollow voice.
'What—this?' Summers smiled. 'Why, this ain't nothin'. You wait. Come on, mate. Let's go and find our bivvy* and get fixed up.'
* Slang: bivouac, a temporary open-air encampment without tents.
Ginger followed the cockney down the trench.
Chapter 9
A Lucky Combat
For two days Ginger suffered all the agonies of fear and horror inseparable from modern trench warfare, to which was added a gnawing anxiety every time he thought of Biggles and Algy, or the document that still reposed in his pocket; with the passing of time the chances of its ever being delivered became more and more remote.
There were times, however, when he forgot every-thing except the desperate business of preserving his own life, for on two occasions the enemy —for so he had come to regard the troops in the trenches opposite to them—had made determined attacks that had only been repulsed after bitter fighting and heavy casualties on both sides. At such times he had fought as furiously as the comrades who lined the parapet on either side of him; he had no choice in the matter, for while the war, as far as he was concerned, was an impersonal matter, the success of the attacking troops would in all probability see the end of him; in which case the letter he carried would never reach its destination. So he found himself a position on the firestep, and fired at the attackers with a grim zeal that won the admiration of the cockney friend to whom he had already become attached. Each attack had been preceded by a bombardment from the enemy's artillery, and machine gunnery by General Franco's airmen, which the troops in the trenches could do little or nothing to prevent. Ginger had fired at several enemy machines, and his inability to check their progress had aroused in him a wholehearted hatred of the enemy pilots who—so it seemed to him—dealt death with little risk to them-selves.
Not that his own side was without aircraft. Spell-bound, he had watched several dog-fights high in the air above, but he saw that the enemy machines were usually superior in performance to those of his own side, with the result that most of the combats ended in the enemy's favour. How he longed to be seated in one of the cockpits can be better imagined than described, for as far as he could see, in that way, and that way only, lay the mobility that meant freedom. Yet, situated as he was, an aeroplane seemed as unattainable as the moon.
He had learned to recognize one of their own machines, a squat, blunt-nosed fighter, painted blue. He had seen it several times high up; on one such occasion he had joined in a yell of triumph that arose from his trench when it had sent an Italian Fiat toppling out of the sky, to crash in flames near the river below. But that morning, shortly after dawn, during the height of the enemy's attack, it had appeared low down, and racing along the lines, had sprayed the attacking troops with its machine-guns to such good effect that it had unquestionably been a deciding factor of the battle. Ginger's interest had been all the more amplified when Fred Summers had told him that the 'Blue Devil'—for by this name the machine was known to the troops—was flown by one Jock McLannock, a wild Scotsman from Glasgow, a pilot of high social position who had abandoned his Highland home to fight in what he considered to be the cause of freedom and justice—a cause for which millions of men since the beginning of time have laid down their lives, usually in vain.
The attack had failed, and the Blue Devil had with-drawn to its distant aerodrome; the trench had settled down to its usual routine, leaving Ginger to contemplate his position with melancholy forebodings. These were not without justification. He had seen many men killed; already he had had more than on
e narrow escape, and it seemed to him that it was only a question of time before a bullet found a billet in his body. It was not so much that he was afraid of dying; what really upset him was the thought of being killed without Biggles and Algy ever hearing of his fate; that, and the fact that the letter, obviously of vital importance, could never then be delivered to those who probably even then were anxiously awaiting its arrival.
He did not, of course, abandon hope. On the contrary, he had racked his brains for some way of getting out of the trenches as a first move in the difficult task of making contact with Biggles and Algy, or ascertaining what had become of them. Vigilant eyes were ever on the watch for deserters, who, so he was told, were shot out of hand, and the expedient of trying to make an escape was fraught with such deadly danger that he dared not risk it. Sooner or later—so Summers had told him—the regiment would be given a rest, either in a camp behind the lines, or in Barcelona, where it had been, in fact, when enemy activity had caused it to be recalled, and Ginger had been caught in the rally.
He thought of asking to be transferred to the Air Force, and would have done so had he been able to explain his position and qualifications to the French sergeant or the Spanish commanding officer; but cautious inquiry had elicited the fact that neither of them spoke English, and as he could speak neither French nor Spanish, the difficulty seemed insurmountable. The last thing he wanted was to create an impression that he was looking for an excuse to get out of the line, for that would be more likely to make him an object of suspicion. Moreover, it might lead to embarrassing questions as to how he got where he was, which might easily result in investigations that would come to Goudini's notice. So he did nothing, deeming it expedient to wait for a chance that must—so he told himself with more hope than confidence—sooner or later turn up.
It was late in the afternoon when, sitting on a box of ammunition in the bottom of the trench cleaning his rifle, he was aroused from his task by the roar of aircraft overhead. Looking up, he saw an enemy two-seater approaching the lines from beyond the river, flying on a meandering course which suggested that it was engaged either on photography or reconnaissance. But, although the pilot was obviously unaware of it, he was not alone in the air. Roaring down in an almost vertical dive from a sky now soft with sunset hues came a single-seater; and it did not need Summers' shout to tell Ginger that it was the Blue Devil.
Thrilling with excitement, Ginger sprang to his feet to watch the combat that was imminent, for if such affairs aroused the enthusiasm of his comrades—and they certainly did—how much greater was the effect on him, an airman!
The pilot of the two-seater, and his gunner, were both guilty of gross carelessness. To Ginger's professional eyes there was no doubt whatever about that. Or it may have been that they were over-confident. Be that as it may, they were both caught napping, and the nimble scout got in a long burst of fire, which struck the larger machine, and from which it never fully recovered. It lurched, swerving as it did so, but almost as quickly recovered and turned, nose down, for the safety of its own lines.
But the fighting pilot had no intention of allowing it to escape. His dive had carried him down below the two-seater; but now, with the tremendous speed gained by the dive to add to the power of his engine, he whirled round and, guns chattering, zoomed up like a rocket under the tail of his victim.
The nose of the two-seater jerked up convulsively, an almost certain sign that the pilot had been hit. But still the machine did not fall. The engine cut out, and it settled down in a steep glide, its nose still pointing towards home.
It was clear to Ginger that the gunner in the two-seater did not lack courage, for he could see him swinging his gun this way and that as he strove frantically to bring it to bear on the Blue Devil, who was now pouring in burst after burst of fire from different angles, at a speed that gave the two-seater gunner little opportunity of getting a sight on him.
The larger machine was now clearly in a bad way; its glide had steepened into a dive, and its course had become so erratic that it seemed only a question of seconds before it went into a spin from which it certainly would not recover. And the pilot of the Blue Devil might well have let it go at that. But prudence plays little part in air fighting, and the Scotsman was clearly determined to finish what he had so well started. He had climbed above his victim, and now he rushed in to deliver what was no doubt intended to be the coup de grâce*.
* French: death blow.
But now it was his turn to be guilty of an indiscretion—either that, or he under-estimated the valour of the gunner in the two-seater. Instead of remaining in the larger machine's blind spot, he allowed his dive to carry him up until he was almost alongside his quarry, thus giving the gunner an opportunity he was not slow to seize. Staggering to his feet, he dragged his gun round, and poured a withering blast of fire at his blue persecutor. At such a range he could hardly miss.
The wild exultant yells of triumph that had followed the combat from the trench in which Ginger stood fell to a breathless hush.
'Blimey!' gasped Summers, 'he's got 'it. Not 'arf 'e aint.'
Ginger did not answer. With parted lips he was watching the Blue Devil, now the only machine in the sky, for immediately following the gunner's last brilliant effort the two-seater had gone into a spin from which it did not recover until it crashed just beyond the river. A curious silence hung on the air, for the Blue Devil's engine had stopped. With stationary propeller, the machine was gliding back from the enemy lines, over which the fight had carried it, towards its own. It was, in fact, heading for the section of trenches held by the International Brigade.
'Maybe he'll be all right, after all,' exclaimed Summers, nervously.
Ginger shook his head. 'He'll never do it,' he said confidently. 'He's due for a crack up, anyway, when he comes down on the rocks. Even if he isn't hit I'm afraid he's going to be knocked about when he strikes the carpet.'
The further the crippled machine glided the more clear it became that Ginger's estimate had been correct. The Blue Devil could not reach the front line trench. The pilot did his best—as he was bound to do in the circumstances—holding the machine in a steady, shallow glide, regardless of the rattle of musketry that followed it from the enemy trenches.
'Yes! He'll do it!' yelled Summers, dancing in his excitement. 'Come on, mate, come on!'
'He'll be at least fifty yards short,' replied Ginger calmly.
'Then he'll be potted before he can get in here,' declared Summers.
Ginger knew what he meant. The place where the Blue Devil would crash in another instant was in full view of the enemy trenches, and the artillery beyond them, so the machine and its pilot would be subject to a fire from which only a miracle could help them to escape.
The Blue Devil struck the sun-drenched rocks with a crash like a falling tree. Under the impact the landing-gear was torn off, but not before it had sent the fuselage bounding high into the air. For a moment it hung in space, wallowing like a fish out of water, and then came down on a wing-tip with another crash that ripped the wing off at its roots. The rest settled down with a splintering of three-ply. Then there was silence.
Ginger, rushing to a loophole in the parapet, saw that the crash lay about forty yards only from the place where he stood. Risking a sniper's bullet, he watched to see if the pilot was able to disentangle himself, but there was no sign of movement.
'You'll get a bullet through yer nob if yer stand there much longer,' warned Summers.
Ginger twisted away from the loophole, his brain in a whirl. 'He's trapped in the wreckage,' he cried hoarsely. 'I know he was all right coming down because I saw him moving; his head was over the side looking to see where he was going.'
'What abart it? Yer can't do nothin'.'
'I tell you he's only trapped,' cried Ginger again.
As if in confirmation, a faint hail came from where the crashed machine lay.
A ripple of excited conversation buzzed along the trench, but nobody did anything.
Ginger felt a wave of anger and indignation sweep through him, and the sound of rifle fire from the enemy trenches moved him to a sort of madness. Wild-eyed, he looked about him for an instrument that might be of service. The only thing he could see was the bayonet on his rifle. In an instant he had snatched it off and was scrambling up the parapet.
"Ere, what's the idea?' jerked out Summers in a startled voice.
Ginger did not answer. He flung himself over the parapet of sandbags, and staggering to his feet, ran like a hare towards the crash. There was no thought in his mind that he was performing a brave action; in fact, he hardly knew what he was doing. The action had been spontaneous. An airman, and as such, a comrade, was exposed to peril. It seemed, therefore, only a natural thing that he should do his best to rescue him. That this might in the end turn to his own advantage was the last thought in his mind, nor did it remotely occur to him that the incident might be the answer to his prayers.
With bullets whistling past his ears, or screaming off the rocks around his feet, he reached his objective, and saw at once that his suspicions were correct. The pilot was not only conscious, but was making strenuous efforts to free himself. What prevented this was a flying wire dragged taut across his chest, holding him in his seat. He rolled his eyes questioningly when Ginger arrived on the scene.
'Losh, mon, take care! Ye'll get shot.'
The advice fell on heedless ears. Ginger hacked on the wire with frantic energy. Even if he had been pre-pared to take care, it was not easy to see how this was to be done. 'Keep your hands clear or the wires may cut them,' he admonished the struggling pilot.
'Scotland for ever!' shouted the pilot of the Blue Devil.
'Scotland yourself; I'm English,' shouted Ginger, and with that he struck the wire such a tremendous blow that not only did the bayonet sever it but it came within an inch of taking the pilot's hand off. To complicate matters, at that moment a bullet hit the blade, striking it out of his hand with such force that his wrist was numbed, and he pitched clean over the fuselage on to the rocks on the other side. Half dazed, he was picking himself up when a hand seized him by the collar and dragged him with scant regard for bruises into a near by shell-hole.