Dave Darrin and the German Submarines

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Dave Darrin and the German Submarines Page 11

by H. Irving Hancock


  CHAPTER X

  THE HOTTEST WORK OF ALL

  From the troopship line, as the "Logan" dashed away, Darrin could hearthe guns of the transports that were coming up and near enough to takepart in the fight. Wherever a periscope showed itself it was bound toinvite fire from half a dozen gunners in almost the same instant.

  "Sorry, but you soldiers will all have to go inside and remain there,"ordered Lieutenant Dan Dalzell. "We have no room for any one on deckexcept our crew."

  To most of the soldiers it seemed hard to be deprived of a view of theonly thing that interested them, but Navy officers, in issuing orders,have a way of speaking that does not admit of doubt as to their meaning.

  "There goes the 'Castle City' by the bow," called a lookout, but DaveDarrin, his eyes searching for a torpedo trail, took his word for it anddid not turn to look.

  "Torpedo wake, sir, three points off port bow!" sang out a lookout.

  Dave turned this time; the telltale line was there. His orders rappedout and the "Logan" started by the shortest cut to reach that line andto locate its source.

  Even as they raced to find that submarine, a gunner on the "Logan" firedat the briefly visible periscope of another enemy craft.

  Suddenly, not more than two hundred yards away, a periscope reareditself in their path, though not more than two feet of its lengthappeared above the water.

  Intensely alert, Lieutenant Beatty himself sighted and gave the order tofire. Nor was this an easy task, for the destroyer, to avoid ramming andripping out part of its own hull, veered aside from the direct line.

  "Fire!" yelled Beatty.

  The shell gave a good report of itself. It was plain that it had made ahit of some sort, though below the surface.

  The destroyer swung again to face its prey. Higher came the periscope,then the conning tower emerged. It was then observed that the conningtower had been struck and a hole put through it on one side. Smallthough the hole was, if the craft had submerged further instead ofrising, she would have been submerged for all time.

  Lieutenant Beatty calmly sighted for the next shot. Just as the deck ofthe undersea boat came awash the manhole sprang open and the heads oftwo German sailors appeared.

  "They're going to try to man a gun and fight us," Darrin concluded,swiftly.

  "Fire!" ordered Beatty, calmly.

  That shot could not have been better placed. It struck the tower fairly,exploding inside. It killed both men at the manhole, hurling them intothe sea. Probably it killed the officer in the conning tower as well.

  Beatty did not stop here. Another shell had been loaded in at the breechof the gun, and he bent forward to sight just as the upper part of thehull came into view.

  "Fire!" It was a clean hit, just at the water line. Hardly an instantlater, it seemed, the same gun spoke again--another water-line hit.

  "Bye-bye!" murmured Dave, as he ordered the course changed. There was noneed to wait, or to plant another shot, for the inrush of water hadsettled the fate of that submarine so speedily that there wasn't theslightest chance for any of the Huns to save themselves. That pestsettled quickly, then disappeared from view.

  "Clean work--great, Mr. Beatty!" Dave called down briskly.

  Mr. Beatty, though he acknowledged the compliment with a salute, did notturn to look at his superior, as prescribed by regulations, for hiskeen, swift glance was sweeping over the waters ahead.

  And not more than a hundred yards ahead of them a faint "wake" crossedtheir bow, headed for one of the ships of the transport fleet. Instantlythe "Logan" turned into that trail, following it back at racing speed.

  It looked like Dave Darrin's lucky day, for they plunged over the dark,heavy shadow of something that was not far below the surface.

  Knowing his speed and the length of his own craft Dave timed the instantjust right, then shouted:

  "Let go the bomb!"

  A depth bomb was instantly released over the stern.

  By the time that it exploded the speeding destroyer was safely out ofthe way of any danger from its effects. A huge, thick column of waterrose, as if overboiling from a monster pot.

  "Put about and go back to observe," Darrin directed, nodding to thewatch officer.

  Even before they were fully about an exultant hurrah came from a lookoutforward.

  "Was she hit, lookout?" Dave shouted.

  "'Hit' is the right word, sir," came the response. "On that spot, atthis minute, there's more oil than water."

  In another instant Dave also beheld the big, spreading mass of oil.There was no need of investigating further. He turned in search of otherenemy craft.

  Ten minutes passed without sight of one near enough to engage Darrin'sattention. It would not be good judgment for the "Logan" to go huntingin some other craft's territory.

  At last, a thousand yards away, a conning tower, with only a stump of aperiscope remaining, rose through the waves. Time was, in the war, whena shattered periscope obliged a submarine to choose between rising tothe surface and sinking, but later periscopes were so adjusted that theycould be shot away without imperilling the safety of the underseascraft. This emerging craft showed also a damaged tower, and the risinghad to be of the quickest order.

  "I hope that chap isn't going to surrender," muttered Dave, as heordered the "Logan" headed straight toward the sea monster. "It takestoo long, in a fight like this, to receive a surrender and remove theprisoners."

  In a very few seconds, however, the enemy relieved his apprehensions.Beatty fired two shots, both of which went a few feet wild. In that timethe German commander rushed men out to the bow gun. Though her tower wasdamaged, the craft could still fight on the surface.

  One after another eight German sailors leaped out to the deck, throwingtheir six-inch forward gun into fighting position.

  R-r-r-r-rip! Rat-tat-tat-tat-tat! Two machine guns on the "Logan" wereturned loose. One German sailor, then another, was hit, fell and rolledfrom the wet platform into the sea.

  Bang! roared out Lieutenant Beatty's gun, but the shot did nothing morethan tear away a part of the conning tower's top.

  Still the machine guns played upon that Hun gun-crew. Three more of theenemy were laid low, two of them rolling overboard into the sea.

  A flash leaped from the German gun. A swell, lifting the bow of thesubmarine at that instant caused the shell to go screaming overhead, soclose to the bridge that the three officers there "ducked" withoutrealizing that they were doing so.

  Aiming for the German gun, Beatty sent in a shell that pierced the topof the hull twenty feet ahead of the gun.

  "Cooler, old chap!" Lieutenant Beatty breathlessly adjured himself, andspent perhaps half a second more in the sighting this time.

  Just before he fired, the Huns let go with their big piece again. Theshell struck the "Logan's" foremast, damaging it, though the mast didnot go overboard.

  Two sailors on lookout, hit by flying pieces of steel, were hurled intothe air. One dropped to the deck, a hopelessly mangled mass of tornflesh; the other seaman was knocked overboard.

  Dave turned to look at that wreck of a human being as it struck thewater. He knew there was no life in the man, so gave no order forrecovering the body.

  Down below sailors sprang to lift the dead man, who had dropped there,on to a stretcher. They carried him below, to be buried later.

  Beatty did not delay his firing an instant. This time the shell struckat the base of the enemy's tower. A fragment of the exploding shell musthave hit one of the German gun-crew, for a man fell on his face androlled overboard. However, that mattered little in the fight, for stillHun reinforcements came through what was left of the conning tower.

  "I seem able to hit everything but that gun or the water-line," fumedLieutenant Beatty, enraged with himself.

  Hit though the tower had been, and though, also, three or four membersof the Hun crew must have been killed in those hits, the steering gearof the submarine was still left and the grim craft was maneuvered in away to challenge admi
ration.

  Considerate of the feelings of the officer with the forward guns, Darrinhad refrained from giving one order, but now passed the order to themachine gunners to concentrate their fire on the enemy hull at the waterline.

  The water alongside the submarine began spurting in tiny jets. Thissieve-like riddling would presently settle the fight, unless the Hungunners got in just one shot where it would tell best. The fight,therefore, was not yet won by the destroyer.

  "Fire!" ordered Beatty, in forced calm. Then, all in an instant, thatyoung naval lieutenant threw up his hands.

 

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