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'Look! There's one last thing,' went on Algy. 'We've laid out a dummy aerodrome, twelve miles south-east of Kantara. It looks fine from the air. If you want to please the Huns and at the same time would like to see them waste some bombs, you can tell them where it is.
It's all ready, fairly aching to be bombed,' he concluded with a broad grin.
'That's fine,' Biggles walked over and took the officer's cap that he had found in Mayer's c.o.c.kpit from the back seat of his machine and handed it to Algy. 'Hang on to that,' he said. 'Take it back to Raymond when you go and tell him to hide it-bury it if he likes.
He can do what he likes with it, but on no account must any one see it. Got that?'
'Yes. That's quite clear.'
'Good! Now lend me that Camel for half an hour. You can wait here for me; I'll bring it back.'
Algy's jaw dropped. 'Lend you the Camel?' he gasped.
'That's what I said,' returned Biggles. 'What are you gaping at; is it an unnatural request?'
Er-no. But what do you want it for?'
'Because I've a strong urge to be myself for a few minutes.'
'Be yourself? What are you talking about? Have you got a touch of sun or something?'
'My goodness! You are dense this morning. I just have a feeling that I'd like to forget that I'm Brunow for a little while and be what I am-a junior officer in the R.F.C.'
'But what for?'
Biggles looked exasperated. 'All right, if you must know,' he said slowly and deliberately. 'There's a fellow floating about the atmosphere in a red and white Pfalz D.
III who thinks he's c.o.c.k of the roost. He's promised to fry his twenty-seventh Englishman to-day-the conceited a.s.s-and when I saw your Camel it struck me that it wouldn't be a bad scheme if I took a hand in this frying business.'
'You mean Hess.'
,'Yes rhymes with Hess, and so does mess, which is as it should be,' observed Biggles, '
because I'm going to do my best to get Mr. Hess in the biggest mess he was ever in. Are these guns O.K.?'
'Perfectly O.K.'
'Then give me a swing.'
Algy ran to the propeller. The engine sprang into life, and the Camel sped across the desert like a blunt-nosed bullet with the slipstream hurling a cloud of sand high into the air behind it.
Chapter 13.
Vickers Versus Spandaus In his heart Biggles knew that from the first moment he saw the swaggering German Ace the greatest ambition of his life was to see him given the lesson he so richly deserved, the lesson which would inevitably be administered sooner or later by somebody; and he had resolved to set about the task that morning in the Pup he a.s.sumed Algy would be flying.
That his partner was, in fact, flying a Sopwith Camel was better luck than he could have imagined, for it evened things up.
Previously, in a Pfalz D.III, Hess could choose his own battle-field and select his opponent, for in the event of his catching a foeman who turned out to be a tartar, he could break off the combat and escape by virtue of his superior speed. This advantage of superior equipment was the dominating factor that enabled many German Aces to pile up big scores during certain periods of 1916 and 1917, a lamentable state of affairs that came to a sudden end with the arrival at the front of the Camel and the S.E.5, as the appalling death roll of German Aces towards the end of 1917 reveals.
Sopwith Camels had been in France, where the fighting was most intense, for some time, but none had reached the outlying theatres of war; consequently, a German pilot arriving in one of the distant battle-fields with the latest German fighting machine, finding himself opposed to aeroplanes of obsolete type, had every opportunity of acquiring a reputation that was often proved to be false when he encountered opponents on level terms.
But with these matters Biggles was not concerned as he sped towards the German side of the battlefield, which he knew would be the most likely place to find the German Ace lying in wait for a British two-seater; and he was jubilant at once more finding himself in the c.o.c.kpit of a Camel for two reasons. In the first place he was thoroughly at home, and secondly he would be able to force the German to fight, provided he found him, for the simple reason that he would not be able to run away, as the two machines were about equal in performance.
He might, of course, have shot the German down from his own Pfalz, but the thought did not occur to him, for it would have been little short of murder; he felt that in a regular British aircraft he was perfectly justified in fighting Hess. He would forget for the moment that he had ever existed as Brunow, and behave precisely as if he had been posted to the Middle East as an ordinary pilot of a fighter squadron. In those circ.u.mstances the combat, if it occurred, would be perfectly fair.
He reached the lines but could see no signs of aerial activity, so climbing steadily for height, he began a systematic search of the whole sector. Once he saw a Halberstadt in the distance but he ignored it, for it was not the object of his quest, and he continued on his way, eyes probing the skies above and below for the red and white fuselage of the Pfalz. A little later he pa.s.sed close to an antiquated B.E.2 C* and exchanged * Designed in 1912 for observation and artillery co-operation this two-seater biplane whose top speed of 72 mph was just half that of the fastest fighters, was dearly obsolete by 1918.
greetings with its crew, at the same time admiring their courage for taking the air in a conveyance so hopelessly out of date. 'That's the sort of kite Hess is hoping to meet, I'll bet; and if he could poke in a burst of fire without being seen he'd be tickled to death; probably go back to Zabala and tell the boys how easy it is to shoot down Englishmen,'
he mused. 'Pah! Well, we'll see.'
He had flown on for some little distance and was scanning the sky ahead when something-possibly the instinct which experienced air fighters seemed to develop-made him look back long and searchingly at the B.E., now a speck in the eastern sky.
Was it his imagination, or was there a tiny speck moving far above it? He closed his eyes for a moment and then looked again, forcing them to focus in spite of the glare; then he caught his breath sharply and swung the Camel round in the lightning right-hand turn that was one of its most famous characteristics. He had not been mistaken. Far above the plodding B.E. a minute spark of light had flashed for a brief instant. No one but an old hand would have seen it or known what it portended; but Biggles knew that it was the sun's rays catching the wings of a banking aeroplane.
A minute or two later he could see it clearly as it stalked its quarry from the cover of the sun's blinding glare; he could see from its shape that it was a Pfalz, but it was still too far off for him to make out its colours. 'No matter,' he thought; 'I shall have to give those two boys in the B.E. the tip, whether it's Hess or not, or else it looks like being their unlucky day.'
He was flying rather higher than the German scout, which in turn was some distance above the slow two-seater, and his advantage of height gave him the extra speed necessary to come up with them. While he was still half a mile away his lips parted in the grim smile he always wore when he was fighting as he picked out the colours of the Pfalz. They were red and white. It had placed itself in an ideal position for attack, and its nose was already going down to deliver the thrust that would send the British two-seater to its doom.
Biggles shoved his joystick forward savagely, and the needle of his air speed indicator swung upwards to the one hundred and eighty miles an hour mark; but he did not see it, for his eyes were glued on the now diving scout. He s.n.a.t.c.hed a glance downwards and saw the gunner of the B.E. leaning over the side of his c.o.c.kpit, looking down at the ground and making notes in a writing-pad, unconscious of the hand of death that was falling on him from the skies.
Biggles, was afraid he was going to be too late, so he took the only course open to him; his hand dosed over the firing lever of his guns and he fired a long deflexion* shot in the direction of the Hun, more with the object of calling attention to himself than in any real hope of hitting it. Hess apparently did not hear the shots, for he continued his swoop, but the British pilot did, and acted with admirable presence of mind. He glanced up, not at the Pfalz but in the direction from which the rattle of guns had come, and saw the Camel.
Whether he suspected that the British pilot had mistaken him for a Hun, or whether he felt the presence of some unseen danger, Biggles never knew, but he turned sharply, so sharply that his gunner fell back into his seat with alarm as he reached for his gun.
The action was quite enough to disconcert the Pfalz pilot, who may have suspected a trap, for he swerved * The amount a gunner or pilot must aim ahead of a fast moving aircraft, pa.s.sing at right angles, in order to hit it.
wildly and careered round in a wide circle, looking over his shoulder for the cause of the B.E. pilot's manoeuvre. It was a foolish move, and at once betrayed the man's lack of real ability, for Biggles swept down on him and could have fired a burst which might well have ended the combat there and had he been so inclined. But this was not his intention.
Moved by some impulse altogether foreign to his nature and his usual methods of fighting, he roared down alongside Pfalz, pa.s.sing it so closely that their wing tips almost touched. As he pa.s.sed he tore off his helmet and goggles, flung them on the floor of the c.o.c.kpit, and stared with smouldering eyes into the face of the German. There was no smile on his own face now, but a burning hatred of the man who shot down machines of inferior performance and then boasted of his prowess. He saw the look of recognition spring into the German's eyes, and the fear that followed it. 'Not so sure of yourself now, are you?' snarled Biggles. 'Come on, you skunk-fight!'
With a savage exaltation that he had never known before, he whirled round, and nearly collided with the B.E. which, with the best intentions, had decided to take a hand. For a moment he saw red. 'Get out of my way, you fool,' he raged, uselessly as he tilted his wing, and missing the B.E. by inches, gave its pilot the shock of his life.
The moves had lost him two seconds of time, and before he was on even keel again the Pfalz had got a lead of a quarter of a mile, and was racing, nose down, for home. Not so fast, my c.o.c.k,' growled Biggles, as he stood on the rudder and shoved the stick forward.
What happened to the B.E. after that he did not know, for he never saw it again. He sent a stream of tracer down the slipstream of the red and white machine, and sneered as the pilot swerved away from it, regardless of the fact that at such a range the odds were a thousand to one against a hit.
'You cold-footed rabbit; what about the frying you were so anxious about this morning?'
muttered Biggles, as he closed the gap that separated them and sewed a line of leaden st.i.tches down the red and white fuselage. The German swung round with the desperate courage born of despair and sprayed a triple* line of bullets at his relentless pursuer; but Biggles touched his rudder-bar lightly and side-slipped away, whereupon Hess, acknowledging his master, cut his engine and began to slip towards the ground.
'You're not getting away with that, you rat,' grated Biggles, blazing up with fury at such a craven display. If you want to go down, then go, and I'll help you on your way,' he snarled, as he roared down on the tail of the falling Ace. He held his fire until his propeller was a few feet from the blackcrossed rudder, and then pressed the gun lever. A double line of orange flame leapt from his engine cowling. To Biggles' atonishment, the German made no effort to defend himself. For a fraction of a second he looked back over his shoulder and read his fate in the spouting muzzles of the twin Vickers guns; then he slumped forward in his c.o.c.kpit. A tiny tongue of flame curled aft from the scarlet petrol tank; it grew larger and larger until it was a devouring furnace that dropped through the air like a stone.
Biggles pulled out of his dive and turned away feeling suddenly sick, as he often did when he sent down an enemy machine in flames; when he looked back a great cloud of black smoke, towards which tiny figures were running, marked the funeral pyre of the man who had * Some models of the Pfalz DIII were fitted with three Spandau machine guns, synchronised to fire through the propeller.
sworn to fry an Englishman as his own birthday present.
I might as well get back,' he thought, glancing round the sky. The B.E. had disappeared, and there were no other machines in sight, so he set a course for the oasis, feeling tired and irritable now that his anger had burned itself out.
He found Algy examining the Pfalz with professional interest when he got back to Abba Sud.
any luck?' queried Algy, expectantly, as he walked towards him.
'You can call it luck if you like,' replied Biggles, simply, 'but Hess won't worry our fellows any more. Make out a combat report when you get back and put in a claim for a red and white Pfalz that fell in flames three miles north of Jebel Tire at 10.51 a.m. Our forward observation posts must have seen the show and will confirm it.
I shall do nothing of the sort,' cried Algy indignantly; 'he was your meat.'
I don't want the Huns to know that, do I, you a.s.s?' snapped Biggles. 'You do what you're told. And remember, you don't know it's Hess. Our people will get that information from the other side in due course. That's all, laddie,' he went on with a change of tone. I must be getting back now.' He looked suddenly old and tired.
O.K., Skipper,' replied Algy, looking at him under his lashes, and noting the symptoms of frayed nerves. 'When am I going to see you again?'
I don't know,' muttered Biggles, 'but pretty soon, I hope. Tell Raymond that I'm running on a hot scent,' he went on wistfully, 'and I hope to be back in 266 Squadron again before the end of the month-or else-'
Or else?' questioned Algy.
'Nothing.' Biggles looked Algy squarely in the eyes. 'Thank G.o.d it will soon be over one way or the other,' he said quietly. 'I wasn't made for this game, and I've had about enough. But I've got to go on-to the end-you see that, don't you, old lad?'
Of course,' replied Algy, swallowing something in his throat.
'I thought you would. Well, cheerio, old boy.' 'Cheerio, old son.'
Their hands met in a firm grip, the only time during the whole war that either of them allowed their real feelings to get uppermost.
Algy stood beside the Camel and watched the Pfalz until it disappeared from sight. '
Those soulless hounds at the Air Board need boiling in oil for sending a fellow like Biggles on a job like this,' he muttered huskily. 'Still, I suppose it's what they call war,'
he added, as he climbed slowly into his c.o.c.kpit.
Chapter 14.
Biggles Flies a Bomber Biggles arrived back at Zabala just as the station was closing down work for lunch. He handed his camera to the photographic sergeant with instructions to be particularly careful with the negatives, and to bring him a print of each as quickly as possible, and he was walking down to the headquarters offices when he saw von Stalhein and the Count, who had evidently heard him land, waiting for him.
Did you manage it all right?' inquired von Stalhein, with his eyes on Biggles' face.
I burnt the machine and took the photographs, but naturally I can't say what they're like until I've seen them.'
'Did you land?' Von Stalhein asked the question sharply, almost as if his intention was to catch Biggles off his guard.
'Land!' replied Biggles with a puzzled frown. 'Why should I risk a landing in the desert when I had incendiary bombs with me?'
Oh, I merely wondered if you had-just as a matter of interest,' retorted von Stalhein. '
You've been a long time, haven't you?'
as a matter of fact, I have,' admitted Biggles. 'I intended going straight there and back, but I saw something that intrigued me and I thought it was worth while following it up.'
Indeed! and what was it?' asked the Count, interestedly.
'A new type of British machine, sir,' answered Biggles. 'I didn't think they had any of them on this front; maybe they have only just arrived.'
'What sort of machine was it?'
a very fast machine with no dihedral on the top plane; they call it the Camel, I think, and it's made at the Sopwith works.'
The Count grimaced. 'I've heard of them in France,' he said quickly. 'What did you do?'
I took up a position in the sun and watched it, thinking it might possibly lead to the aerodrome of a new squadron.'
'Splendid! What then?'
'The machine crossed the British lines and began to glide down, so I climbed as high as my machine would take me and saw it land at what looks like a new aerodrome about twelve miles south-east of Kantara. I'm not sure about it being a new aerodrome because I haven't had time to verify it in the map-room; it may have been there a long time, but I'
ve never noticed it before.'
I've never heard of an aerodrome there,' declared the Count, while von Stalhein looked puzzled.
It wasn't there a few days ago,' he said slowly.
Biggles wondered how he knew that, but said nothing.
'Very well, go in and get some lunch,' went on the Count. 'Our Brunow is becoming quite useful, eh, Erich?'
Von Stalhein smiled a curious smile that always gave Biggles a tingling feeling down the spine, but whatever his thoughts were he did not disclose them, so Biggles saluted and departed in the direction of the Mess.
He had just finished lunch when an orderly arrived with a message that he was wanted at headquarters, so he tossed his napkin on the table, swallowed the last drop of coffee in his cup, and with an easy mind made his way to the Count's office.
ah, Brunow, there you are,' began von Faubourg, who was sitting at his desk while von Stalhein leaned in his usual position against the side, blowing clouds of cigarette smoke into the air. 'We've been talking about this report of yours concerning the new aerodrome,' continued the Count, 'and we have decided that there is a strong probability that the British have brought out a new squadron, in which case it would be a good plan to let it know what to expect. If we can put some of the machines out of action so much the better, otherwise we're likely to have some casualties. I suppose you've heard that Hess hasn't come back from his morning patrol? We don't take the matter seriously, but I've rung up the other squadrons who say that they have seen nothing of him, so it rather looks as if he had forced landed somewhere.'
Biggles nodded. 'That must be the case, sir. One can hardly imagine him coming to any harm,' he said seriously.
'No, the thought is preposterous. But about this projected bomb raid. You marked down the exact position of the aerodrome, did you not?'
I did, sir.'
I thought I understood you to say that. I've detailed six machines to go over this afternoon and strike while the iron is hot, so to speak, and in order that there should be no mistake I want you to fly the leading one.'