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diff --git a/37927.txt b/37927.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..476a1df --- /dev/null +++ b/37927.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5164 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boy Volunteers with the French Airmen, by +Kenneth Ward + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Boy Volunteers with the French Airmen + +Author: Kenneth Ward + +Release Date: November 5, 2011 [EBook #37927] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY VOLUNTEERS WITH THE *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Judith Wirawan and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: _The Seraph Made a Quick Glide Below Its Adversary_] + + + + + THE BOY VOLUNTEERS + WITH THE + FRENCH AIRMEN + + + BY + KENNETH WARD + + + [Illustration: Logo] + + + THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY + NEW YORK + + + Copyright, 1917, by + AMERICAN AUTHORS PUBLISHING CO. + + + + +CONTENTS + + + CHAPTER PAGE + + I ANTWERP, AND THE FLIGHT THROUGH NORTHERN BELGIUM 13 + + II IN THE AVIATION CAMP 25 + + III THE WOUNDED AVIATORS 35 + + IV TRENCH WORK WITH THE BRITISH FORCES 48 + + V ON THE FIRING LINE 61 + + VI VIGOROUS RED CROSS WORK 72 + + VII BOUND FOR VERDUN 84 + + VIII AN AEROPLANE AMIDST THE LIGHTNINGS 94 + + IX A CHAPTER OF LESSONS ABOUT THE AEROPLANE 107 + + X A THRILLING EXPERIENCE IN THE AIR 117 + + XI A FIGHT AND A LANDING IN BELGIUM 125 + + XII EXCITING EXPLOITS ON LAND 143 + + XIII A DARING BOMB RAID TO THE RHINE 152 + + XIV A TERRIBLE FIGHT IN THE CLOUDS 160 + + + + +LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS + + + _The Seraph Made a Quick Glide Below Its Adversary_ _Frontispiece_ + + PAGE + + _Types of Allied Airplanes_ 29 + + _Airplanes of the Central Powers_ 31 + + _Allies' Distinguishing Mark_ 64 + + _Black Cross on German Flyers_ 65 + + _French and German Flags_ 75 + + _Instrument Board of Standard Airplane_ 111 + + _A Dangerous Position_ 129 + + _A Safety Manoeuver_ 133 + + + + + FRENCH AIRMEN + + + + + THE BOY VOLUNTEERS + WITH THE FRENCH + AIRMEN + + + + +CHAPTER I + +ANTWERP AND THE FLIGHT THROUGH NORTHERN BELGIUM + + +Antwerp was in a fever of excitement, as Ralph and Alfred marched up +from the quay with the Belgian troops, and rumors of an immediate attack +on the city were flying about. + +"Look at the Zeppelin!" cried out a voice. + +The boys turned to follow the gaze of the people who lined the streets. +There, almost directly west, they caught the first glimpse of one of the +monsters which appeared to be moving south, far beyond the reach of the +encircling forts, but plainly visible. + +"Nothing would suit me better than a trip in a flying machine!" +exclaimed Alfred. + +"Wouldn't that be fine?" replied Ralph. + +The sight seemed to be an inspiration to the boys. Our story will tell +how the idea so impressed itself on their minds that they almost felt +it a duty to join a flying corps. That, however, seemed to be an +impossibility. + +They had passed through Belgium, participated in the first battles of +the war, had been captured, and escaped from the Germans, and had now +reached Antwerp, with the retreating Belgian army, where Ralph had hoped +to meet his father, whom they had left in Germany almost four weeks +prior to that time. + +As the father had not arrived, owing to the embargo which had been +placed on all travelers from Germany to the warring countries, the boys +found themselves stranded in a strange city. Fortunately, their +connection with the army, and the fact that they had rendered Belgium +some service, made it possible for them to get food and lodging. + +"We have forgotten one thing," said Ralph. + +"What is that?" inquired Alfred. + +"Why, we never went to the Post Office," replied Ralph. + +At the General Post Office they received a letter from Alfred's father, +only to learn that he had been detained, as was the case with thousands +of Americans, and that it would be impossible for him to reach Antwerp. +Instead, he would be permitted to go through Switzerland, and from that +country reach Paris where he hoped to meet them. + +"But we have no money now, what shall we do?" asked Alfred. + +"That's what worries me," answered Ralph. "Father supposes that Pierre +is still with us, and that we are supplied with money." + +Three days after receiving the letter the boys heard the first definite +news of the great movement of German troops designed to attack the +forts. If they surrounded the city, and besieged it, the chances of +reaching Paris would be small, indeed. + +"Something must be done, and that today," said Ralph. "I am going to +leave if I have to walk." + +"Where to?" asked Alfred. + +Ralph smiled, as he said: "We might walk to Holland." + +Alfred almost shouted for joy, as he exclaimed: "That's a good idea. We +have about ten francs left; that ought to take us through." + +A map was consulted. "Why, yes," said Alfred, "we can go north to +Eeckeren, and from that place to Capellen, close to the frontier. It's +only twelve miles." + +After this decision they again visited the Post Office, and immediately +crossed through the city with a view of striking the main highway +leading to Holland. Reaching the outskirts of the city, they were +surprised to see great masses of Belgian troops encamped close to the +forts, which guarded the highway. They soon learned that a strong German +column had reached Brasscheat, three miles from Eeckeren. + +They looked at each other in amazement. "Well, this beats everything," +said Alfred, with a shade of bitterness. "The Germans seem to be in our +way whichever direction we turn. We'll have to take another route." + +"Another route?" blurted out Ralph. "There isn't another way to go on +this side of the river. It would be a long tramp to cross the river." + +They were now in a serious dilemma, and stood there undecided as to the +best course to follow, when they were startled by a voice: "Hello, +boys!" + +"It's Pierre!" shouted Alfred, who was the first to spy their friend. + +"And how did you get here?" asked Alfred. "We thought they had captured +you at Rouen." + +"So they did, but we got away the same night. But where are you going?" +returned Pierre. + +"Trying to get to Holland," he was informed. + +"I am afraid you will have to go south of the Scheldt to get there," +Pierre then informed them. + +"But I received a letter from father, and he wants us to meet him in +Paris," said Alfred. "You know we don't want to be shut up in the city, +if the Germans are going to surround it." + +"Of course not," answered Pierre. "But in the meantime we must find some +other way out. You know you are still in the army, in the messenger +service, and come to think of it, you haven't received any pay so far, +have you?" + +The boys laughed, for that part of it had been entirely forgotten. + +"Why, yes; the Germans paid us for work at the hospital," said Ralph. + +"And you repaid them by skipping out the next day," said Pierre with a +smile. + +"How much do you think there is due us now?" asked Alfred. + +"I don't know what you are on the rolls for, but there must be a full +month's pay due, and that would be about thirty-five francs apiece," +said Pierre. + +"Thirty-five francs!" mused Ralph. "Twice thirty-five is seventy,--about +fourteen dollars. Good, that will take us through." + +"I suggest that you come to headquarters and join us. We intend to cross +the river. It will be the safest place for you," said Pierre. + +"That will suit me," said Ralph. + +Together they marched to headquarters where they were again installed +and placed on the rolls. Late that night the regiment began its march, +reaching the dock below Antwerp at ten o'clock, where they had a long +wait before the crowded boats left the pier. On landing, the march was +resumed, and did not halt for two hours, so it was nearly three in the +morning before they were able to lie down for the much needed sleep. + +It did not seem that they had slept a half hour when they were awakened +by the heavy booming notes of cannon, and the occasional rattle and +crash of small guns. The boys now knew the kind of music which the +different weapons ground out. + +"That's a machine gun, see how regularly the shots come," said Alfred. + +"Yes; and that's a salvo from infantry," replied Ralph. "The Mannlicher +guns have an awfully snappy way of talking. Do you hear it? There it is +again. They must be rushing some of the outer works." + +The real fight, however, was between the forts and the heavy German +guns, which continued during the entire day, principally on the southern +and eastern sides of the city. The struggle was continuous for four +days. Suddenly Pierre burst in with the startling information: + +"The Germans have silenced two of the forts, and Antwerp is doomed." + +No time was lost by the defending troops, and before noon the camp was +dismantled, and the march begun. + +"Do you know where we are going!" asked Alfred. + +"Nothing more than that we are going to leave Antwerp, and try to reach +the sea," replied Pierre. + +The Belgian army had begun its famous march across the northern end of +Belgium in order to reach the sea, and secure the protection of the +English fleet in the Channel. + +"I heard some one say that we intended going through Bruges," said +Ralph. + +"Yes; and from there the army may be able to reach France, after passing +through Ostend," said Pierre. + +In an air line Bruges is fifty miles from Antwerp, and from Bruges to +the French frontier it is fully forty miles more. How the brave little +army finally reached its destination, avoiding the large German forces +sent out to intercept them, remains one of the most glorious exploits +in the history of the Belgian army. + +"Next to Belgium I am glad to be in France," said Pierre. "Now you can +get to Paris without difficulty," he added. + +It thus happened that six weeks after the boys entered Belgium southwest +of Liege, they reached Dunkirk on the French coast, and saw the immense +fleet of warships and transports, which the British had in the harbor. +It seemed that every spot around the city was taken up by tents, wagons, +mules, horses, and heavy guns, to say nothing of the soldiers on every +hand. + +One regiment after the other entrained in cars, and were whirled to the +south. Box cars, flat cars, some new, others dilapidated, were in +service. It seemed that there were thousands of automobiles in line, and +every one was anxious to get away. They even saw thousands of men, with +full kits on their backs, march out to the east, as though they scorned +to wait for railway or auto accommodations. + +Pierre was at the door of the boys' tent early in the morning of the +second day. "I am glad to tell you that the roll has been signed, and +you can get your pay," he said. "But I am awfully sorry to have you go." + +"Of course, we've had some pretty hard times," said Ralph, "but it was a +great experience. Maybe we'll come back again." + +"We're going to try to join the flying machines," said Alfred. + +Pierre laughed, and Ralph smiled, for, while that idea was uppermost in +his mind, he had never discussed the subject with Alfred sufficiently to +enable them to call it a plan that they really intended to follow out. +It was more an enthusiastic feeling of something that they would like to +do, without knowing just how they would go about it. + +"So you are really going to start for Paris this afternoon?" said +Pierre. + +"Yes; we ought to be there now, for father will wonder what is the +matter with us. You see he hasn't heard from us for six weeks, and it +has been two weeks since we received his letter," said Ralph. + +"Then why don't you wire the Continental Hotel, Paris, and tell him you +are on the way? It will relieve his anxiety. Tell him to answer you at +once, for it may take you several days to reach Paris," said Pierre. + +"Several days?" queried Alfred. + +"Yes, indeed. Troops occupy all the cars now," replied Pierre. + +So the telegram was sent, and it was decided to remain where they were +until morning so as to receive the reply before starting. But no answer +came that night or the next day. In the meantime, the boys wandered from +place to place, for, as they still wore the trim Belgian suits, they +were privileged to visit many places barred from civilians. + +In the afternoon they found themselves far down the road leading to +Ypres, when they were startled at the sound of an unusual buzzing, and +soon divined the cause as they saw a dozen or more airplanes flying +around over the broad fields to the east. Nothing more was needed to +give the boys an inspiration. They moved toward the great field, as +though a giant magnet pulled them. Long before they were near the +hangars they could see the flyers far above them, circling about. The +scene fascinated them. + +Then something like a dull explosion startled them, and they looked at +each other and then glanced about. + +"There it is; look at it; directly above us," shouted Alfred, in great +excitement. + +"Something has happened; it's on fire," said Ralph. + +In an incredibly short space of time, something struck and rattled along +the ground not far from them, but the machine, although falling, was +still some hundreds of feet from the earth. One of the operators could +be seen frantically drawing back the levers, and trying to hold the +badly damaged ship from overturning, but his efforts were unavailing. + +The boys closed their eyes as the swiftly moving machine now actually +rolled down through space, tumbling over and over, until it finally +struck the ground with a crashing noise, not a hundred feet from where +they stood. Terrorized at the sight, they stood still for a few moments, +but this was no worse than the scenes they had witnessed in battle, so, +without a word, they made a rush for the mound of debris. + +"They are both under the machine," said Alfred. + +"Look at the smoke; it's afire," shouted Ralph. + +"Use sand! use sand!" almost shrieked Alfred. + +They had early learned that sand is more effectual as a fire +extinguisher of burning oil than water, if properly applied. Handsful of +sand were scooped up and applied. A groan from one of the men arrested +their movements. + +Alfred jumped on the broken mass, and peered down. "There he is!" he +shouted. Ralph crawled over the broken body of the airplane, and reached +down. + +"No; this man is lying still," he said. "Here he is; come on this side; +he is under the framework." + +The scene was one which well might inspire heroic work. + +The imprisoned man was quite young, with handsome features, and it +seemed cruel that such a fate should overtake him. The boys strained at +the wreck until it moved. + +"Brace it up on that side," said Ralph. + +The truss from the fuselage was removed from the aviator, the man +quickly drawn out from his perilous position, and carried clear of the +wreck. + +"Now for the other one," said Alfred. + +Blood was still flowing across the face of the other flyer, as they +crawled over the wreck to draw him out. + +"This one is alive, I am sure," said Ralph. + +"Why, yes; his heart is beating," replied Alfred, as the injured men +were laid side by side. + +"I have heard that they have first aid packages in machines of this +kind," said Ralph, as he sprang toward the remains of the machine. "I +have it," he cried, as he leaped over the wrecked pieces. "Here +is--a--_Restorative_, whatever that is,--half a wineglass at a +time,--where's the wineglass?" + +"Give each a good swallow of it," said Alfred, as he raised up the head +of the one first rescued. + +The other man opened his eyes. "Lieutenant!" he said. Then, as he gazed +at the boys, he seemed to smile, and as Alfred held up the bottle he +feebly nodded. + +It seemed to revive him in a few moments, and he struggled to raise +himself. "I feel better now, but something hurts my legs," he said. + +The lieutenant opened his eyes, and quietly looked at the boys without +speaking. + +"Can I do anything for you?" said Alfred. + +"Is Jack hurt?" he asked. + +"Yes; but he is all right," said Ralph. + +"Here I am; still on top," said Jack, as he slightly turned, and moved +his hand toward the lieutenant. + +"And what are you boys doing here?" asked the lieutenant. + +"On our way to Paris," said Alfred. + +"But where did you get the uniforms?" asked the officer. + +"Why, we've been in the Belgian army, and were in several fights," said +Ralph proudly. + +The lieutenant's face brightened into a smile, which quickly changed to +one of pain. An ambulance stopped alongside with startling suddenness, +for the boys had been too busy to notice that the watchers at the +hangars had signaled for assistance. The men were carefully carried to +the van, and as they were about to start the lieutenant motioned to the +doctor in charge, and said: + +"I want the boys to come along with us." + + + + +CHAPTER II + +IN THE AVIATION CAMP + + +Once inside the ambulance the boys had an opportunity to watch the +doctors, as they removed the clothing from the men, and began a search +for the location and nature of the injuries. It was a gratification to +be able to assist in this work. Jack's legs were both broken, and the +lieutenant's chest, back and right arm were bruised and clotted with +blood. + +"I think they are all right," said the doctor in charge. + +"But it's awfully hard breathing," said the lieutenant. + +"You must have had a pretty good weight on top of you," remarked the +doctor. + +"I should think so," said Ralph. "It was all we could do to lift up the +cross piece of the frame from him." + +"We'll straighten you out in a few days," answered the doctor, "but your +companion didn't fare as well. Compound fracture of one leg; but he has +a good constitution; he's good for several trips yet." + +The gratitude of the lieutenant was plainly observable, and the doctor +was quick to notice it. "If these young men hadn't taken you out when +they did it would have been all over with you, because the weight +prevented you from breathing." + +The lieutenant tried to smile, as he gazed at the boys, and they +understood. + +When the ambulance reached the hospital there were fifty or more +aviators from the station, awaiting the news. The boys leaped out, the +attendants were on hand with the stretchers, while the excited men +crowded around the boys to learn the details. It was not long before the +story of the rescue was known. The chief of the flying squadron came out +of the hospital, and approached the boys. The latter straightened up and +saluted. + +"You should be commended for the prompt work you performed in rescuing +the lieutenant and his pilot. I understand you belong to the Belgian +army; but you are not Belgians, are you?" he asked. + +"No, we are not," said Alfred, slightly embarrassed at the question. + +The Commandant smiled as he continued: "I take it that you are +Americans?" + +"Yes, Captain; you are right," replied Ralph. "We joined the Belgian +army at Liege, and fought the enemy all the way to Antwerp, and we had +some pretty hot times, too." + +This speech was applauded heartily, while a young man sprang forward, +held out his hand and said: "And here's United States, too." + +"We are not with the army now," said Alfred, recovering; "we hope to go +to Paris, if it is possible to get there." + +"The chances for that are not very good at present," observed the +Commandant, "but in the meantime, if you are not attached, you must put +up with us." + +"Thank you for the offer," said Ralph eagerly. "We want to get into the +flying service; that will just suit us." + +"I am afraid that the army provisions would not permit you to join," +said the officer, and all noted the expressions of disappointment that +indicated the boys' feelings at this announcement. + +"Then I suppose we'll have to force our way in, just as we did in +Belgium," said Alfred. + +This was greeted with a sally of laughter. The boys had made a hit with +the corps, and they accepted the offer of quarters for their +accommodation in the firm belief that something would turn up to assist +them in their desires. + +Boys are really at a disadvantage sometimes. This story, as well as many +others, shows that they are capable of doing things as well as men, and +that they can do some things better than most men; but in military +matters the service seems to have been made for grown-up people on the +principle that war is too barbarous a thing for young men until they are +twenty years of age. + +The boys, who were now in their glory, had a portion of a small room in +a wooden building assigned to them. At this time there were fifty +machines of various types on the ground, the particular makes being +the Bristol, the B. E., several Farman machines, and a half dozen +Sopworth tractors. + +Tom Walton, the young American who greeted them at the hospital, was +accorded the privilege of escorting the boys and introducing them. That +they had been in the first battles of the war was sufficient to give +them a coveted place in that company of enthusiastic men, for there was +some glory in having been on a battlefield,--a thing which could have +been said of only a few of those who entertained them that day. + +"I suppose you want to see the machines," said Tom. + +"Indeed, we do," said Alfred. "What is that big machine over there?" + +"That is a Bristol," answered Tom. + +"And there is another one," remarked Ralph, pointing to a machine, which +was being drawn out of the hangar. + +"No, that's a B. E. biplane," answered Tom. "You will see the difference +by observing the shape of the planes. The Bristol has the ends of the +wings rounded so that the forward corners are cut away to a greater +extent than the rear corners. In the B. E. the wings are cut to conform +with the well-known Wright type." + +"That's a Farman machine, I know," said Ralph, pointing to an aeroplane +which had a huge revolving type of motor forward of the main planes. + +"Yes; but when that machine is high in the air it would be difficult to +recognize it from that description," said Tom. "You will notice that the +lower plane is much shorter than the upper plane, and that it has a +great spreading tail,--larger than any other machine now made." + +[Illustration: _Types of Allied Airplanes_] + +"Here is another kind, a little fellow. That certainly looks different +from all the others," said Alfred, as they stopped in front of a hangar. + +"That's the Sopworth tractor, a fine, speedy machine, with square ends +to the planes, and a heart-shaped tail. It can be distinguished at any +altitude," answered Tom. + +"I notice that that has different tails," said Ralph. "Does that make +any difference in the flying?" + +"Not in the least. Shape has nothing to do with it. Surface is all that +counts. They are made with distinctive forms so that they may be easily +distinguished, one from the other." + +"We saw some German airplanes, several dozens of them, in Belgium, and +the only one I could recognize was the Taube, as they called it. They +have fan-shaped tails," said Alfred. + +"But here is the machine for business," said Tom, as they halted in +front of a gaily decorated hangar, and pointed to a trim little machine, +which was being overhauled. + +"I see you have the Stars and Stripes above the door," said Ralph. + +"Yes; and this is my machine; isn't it a beauty?" said Tom with a +considerable show of pride. + +"What is it? I mean what make?" asked Alfred. + +"It is a French Morane; I have made many trips in it," said Tom, "and +now I am going to use it against the Dutchies." + +Thus they were conducted from place to place, visited the machine shop, +which had been set up for repairs, and then inspected the landing field, +which was designed to be illuminated for night work. + +"Do you mean to say that you use the flying machines at night?" asked +Ralph. + +"Why, certainly; that is going to be a great stunt," said Tom. "The only +trouble is that where there are many lights about it is pretty hard for +a pilot to hunt out the landing place, so the authorities have made +special provision for returning aviators to enable them to land with as +much safety as in the daytime." + +"How is it arranged so they can land without a mistake?" asked Alfred. + +[Illustration: _Airplanes of the Central Powers_] + +"Do you see that tall pylon, over there?" replied Tom. "That has on it +the pilot light, much more brilliant than anything in sight. Now, look +over to the left, nearly a quarter of a mile away; that pylon carries a +brilliant red light. The other two pylons to the north and to the south +have blue lights. The aviator knows that the bright light is to the east +of the red light, and that he must make a landing somewhere between the +brilliant light and the red light, between the limits marked by the blue +lights." + +"I should think that would be easy," said Ralph. + +"It is when the night is clear; but the trouble is that the fog from the +channel gives us considerable trouble, and then we have to glide back +and forth very low to get our bearings, and that is dangerous business +in the night." + +The inspection raised the enthusiasm of the boys to the highest pitch. +For them there was now no other life than flying, and, indeed, things +seemed to be coming their way. They had learned more about machines +during the two hours thus spent than they had acquired in all their +lives previous to that time. + +"I want to ask a favor of you," said Alfred, as they were returning to +their quarters. + +"Go ahead," said Tom. + +"I would like to go up in a machine with you," was the reply. + +Tom stopped, and looked at Alfred. "Do you really mean it?" he asked. + +"Of course I do," replied Alfred. + +"That's what I want to do, too," chimed in Ralph. + +"It's against the rules to take up any one but the observers during +practice hours; but let me see,--we may be able to fix it up some other +time," said Tom. + +"Do you have to do much practicing?" asked Alfred. + +"Only from six to eight hours a day," answered Tom. + +"What! do you mean practice flying when you are not scouting?" asked +Ralph. + +"Well, I should say so," was the answer. + +"How long have you been flying?" asked Ralph. + +"About two years," said Tom. + +"And still they make you fly every day, for practice?" asked Alfred. + +"Of course," said Tom. + +"And what is that for?" asked Alfred. + +"Flying airplanes for war purposes is something different to ordinary +flying. The principal practice is to learn the methods of attack and +defense. But that is not all. The airplane is the eye of the army; the +observer must know how to observe. He must be able not only to see, but +to put his knowledge into such form that it can be handed in in the form +of a report. While he may get the information he must learn that the +information is not for his own gratification, but for the use of the men +in the field," said Tom. + +"Do all the machines carry a pilot and an observer?" asked Ralph. + +"Not by any means," answered Tom. "The first duty of a pilot is to learn +how to control his machine when approaching an enemy, and how to attack +or to avoid him. For that purpose he has a machine gun which he uses in +flying." + +"I had no idea that there was so much to do in the business," said +Alfred. + +"That is only part of the practice," continued Tom. "The most +interesting part of the work is to practice flying in squadron +formation, to observe the signals of the commanding officer and to +execute movements. For this purpose two squadrons oppose each other, and +sally forth, the object being to judge the objects of an attacking force +and to devise means to repel the enemy." + +The boys sat on their improvised bunks until a late hour that night. +They discussed the airplanes; the men they had met; their work in +rescuing the fallen aviators, and the things they had learned in this, +to them, the most eventful day. + +"I wonder what father would say if he knew we were going to join the +aviation corps?" said Alfred. + +"Well, I wonder what he will say when he hears what we were doing in +Belgium," replied Alfred. + +"He must have gotten our letters by this time," said Ralph. + +"Then why doesn't he answer our telegram?" asked Alfred. + +"Why, we forgot to go back to the city and inquire for it," said Ralph. + +"That's so; but we've been too busy for that; we must do that the first +thing in the morning," said Alfred. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE WOUNDED AVIATORS + + +They were out early the next morning, and started for the tramway a mile +distant. They passed Tom's hangar, and stopped for a moment to take a +look at his machine. As they were leaving they heard his voice: + +"Going to leave us?" he inquired. + +"No; but we must go to the city to get our mail, and we are expecting a +telegram," shouted Ralph. + +"Get back by eleven o'clock if you can," was the answer. + +"We'll be here, sure," said Alfred. + +"He must mean that we can have a try in the machine at that time, I +suppose," remarked Ralph. + +"I imagine that's why he wants us back then," answered Alfred. + +They covered the mile in record time. The idea of going up in a machine +was a stimulus, and they talked about it all the way, and wondered what +it would feel like to sail above the earth in a war-machine. + +At the post office they had their first disappointment, and there was +nothing at the telegraph office. They were perplexed at the absence of +news, but consoled themselves with the thought that transportation from +the Swiss frontier might be in the same condition as at the Western +front, so they decided they would not remain long in the city. + +The city, containing a population of about 40,000, is located on the +sand dunes. It takes its name from the old church of St. Eloi, and means +_church on the dunes_. It has been in existence for over a thousand +years, and was owned by the Dutch, the Spaniards, and the English, +before it became permanent French territory. + +Passing through the principal square, on their way to the terminus of +the tram cars, they saw crowds of people moving toward the main landing +place of vessels. They followed, and witnessed the debarkation of the +first vessel load of Red Cross supplies, accompanied by a large corps of +physicians and Red Cross nurses. + +Fully fifty vans were taken from the ship and lined up, with their +equipments, ready for a prompt start. A number of lorries (large motor +trucks), carrying beds, bedding and like material, followed, and were +placed behind the vans. + +"Do you know where they are going?" asked Ralph, addressing a young man +in uniform. + +"To the general hospital, where they will be assigned to stations near +the front," he replied. + +"Do you mean the general hospital near the aviation ground?" inquired +Alfred. + +"Yes," was the answer. + +"Probably we can get a chance to ride there," said Ralph, addressing +Alfred. + +The man overheard the remark, and quickly turned to the boys. + +"Are you attached to the flying squadron?" he asked. + +"Yes," replied Alfred. + +"Then they wouldn't object, I am sure," answered the officer, and he +strode forward. After speaking a few words to one who seemed to be in +charge, he motioned to them. + +"Get in, boys," he said. + +They were quick to respond, and, after thanking the officer, mounted one +of the vans. Inside were three nurses and two physicians, who smiled at +the boys. + +"So you are going to war, too?" said one of the nurses, as she made room +for them. + +"Yes," said Alfred, rather shyly; "we are going back." + +"Going back?" remarked one of the doctors. "Did you say 'going back?'" +he inquired. + +"Well, we were with the Belgian army from Liege to Antwerp, and came +across the northern part of Belgium with them," said Alfred. + +"Then you must have seen some fighting?" asked one of the others, much +interested. + +"Yes, indeed; we were in the first battles of the war," said Ralph. + +The information was certainly an interesting bit of news. From that time +on the boys were the center of interest, and many questions were plied +and answered. + +"But where are you bound now?" asked one of the doctors. "If I +understand correctly, you are attached to the aviation corps, is that +so?" + +"Yes, we are being put up by them, and we may do some flying in a few +days," said Alfred. + +"We do hope you will be successful," said one of the nurses. "Won't you +tell us where you are from?" + +"We are from New York," said Alfred. + +"Then you are not English?" she asked. + +"Oh, no," replied Alfred. "But that doesn't make any difference. It's +just the same as though we were English. We want to help out." + +There was a merry roar of laughter at this, and Ralph immediately chimed +in with a sort of explanation: "The Germans didn't treat us right, when +they captured us, and, anyhow, they had no business to attack Belgium." + +"Good for you," said a sweet little miss. "We like Americans, and +especially those like you who have that spirit." + +The vans covered the ground to the general hospital in quick time, and +the boys were really sorry when the van drew up before the building, but +they quickly recognized the place where they had accompanied the injured +aviators the previous day. + +"Ralph, we ought to go in and see the lieutenant and Jack," said Alfred. + +"Who are they?" interposed the doctor. + +"Why, they fell with their machine yesterday, and we helped them out," +said Alfred. + +"What was the lieutenant's name?" asked the doctor. + +"Why, we don't know; we forgot to ask for it; but maybe they will let us +in," said Ralph. + +"Come along," said the doctor. "We'll find a way to get in." + +They followed him up the steps, and marched to the office, where the +doctor was greeted by many of those present. + +"Who was it that met with an accident yesterday?" he asked. + +"Lieutenant Winston," was the reply. + +"And was he badly hurt?" almost shrieked the sweet little nurse who had +accompanied the party in the van. + +"No; he is getting along well," said the attending physician. "He owes +his life to a couple of brave lads, who happened to be near. He has been +anxious to see the boys, and has asked where they were." + +"We are the ones who helped him," said Ralph. "We want to see him; may +we?" + +"Oh, thank you, thank you so much," said the nurse. + +"Do you know him?" inquired Alfred. + +"He is my brother; may we go to him at once?" she asked. + +"I will take you to him," said the physician. + +"So you are Miss Winston?" said Alfred. "Isn't it funny how we happened +to meet you?" + +She almost hugged the boys in her joy at the news, and at her good +fortune in thus meeting the boys who were instrumental in saving her +brother. + +The lieutenant saw his sister approaching arm in arm with the two boys. +The greeting was a most affectionate one. + +"I met the two boys in Dunkirk; they just happened to get into our van. +We learned after we got here what they had done. Isn't it noble of +them?" she said. + +"I have tried to find them all day," said the lieutenant, and he pressed +the hands of the boys. "Yes, I was in an awfully tight place when the +boys found me; but I am all right now." + +They remained with the lieutenant and his sister for more than an hour. +They had entirely forgotten their appointment with Tom. It was nearly +twelve o'clock. + +"I am afraid we shall have to leave you," said Ralph. "We promised Tom +to be over at the hangar at eleven." + +"Tom Brandon; the American dare-devil?" said the lieutenant, smiling. + +"Why, yes," replied Alfred, somewhat hesitatingly. "Is he a dare-devil?" +he continued, with wide-open eyes. + +"Well, he doesn't seem to be afraid of anything; I suppose he would go +anywhere, if he was ordered to make the trip. Is your engagement an +important one?" asked the lieutenant, with a curious light in his eye. + +"Why,--yes,--we--we wanted to take a flight this afternoon," said Ralph. + +"Do you think they would let us?" asked Alfred quickly. + +"Rather against the rules and somewhat risky," said the lieutenant, +slowly shaking his head, but his face relaxed, as he saw the crestfallen +appearance of the boys. "We can get around the rules sometimes," he +added. + +"Tom said he would try to fix it for us," said Ralph. + +"Then go at once, and tell him that Winston gave him permission," said +the lieutenant. "Do you think it is safe, Addie?" he asked, turning to +his sister. + +"It seems to me it is safe to trust boys who have been in battles as +they have, don't you?" she replied sweetly, as she arose and grasped the +boys' hands. "Now, don't forget us, will you?" + +"No, indeed; we intend to come over to see you in the morning," said +Ralph. + +The boys fairly flew across the broad grounds in order to reach the +hangar. Their chagrin was great as they peered in to find that Tom and +his machine were absent. + +"Looking for Tom?" asked one of the men. + +"Yes; do you know where he is?" asked Alfred. + +"He's coming now, I think," was the reply, as the man approached the +door and glanced upward. "Yes; there he is, winging it in." + +Within two minutes the Morane gave a quick dive, then flattened out and +skimmed the ground, and just before alighting the nose of the machine +gave a short, quick, upward dart. + +"He does that the slickest of the whole lot. That was a quick stop, sure +enough," remarked an attendant. + +The machine had landed not two hundred feet from the hangar. The boys +were over without delay, and accosted Tom, as he reached the ground. + +"We are sorry that we couldn't get here in time, but we met Lieutenant +Winston's sister coming over, and we were detained at the hospital," +said Ralph. + +"It's just as well, as I couldn't make it. The commandant wouldn't give +me the time to take you out," said Tom. + +"But the lieutenant told us to tell you that he gave you permission to +take us," said Alfred. + +"Did he say that? Well, that's another thing. I'll tell the commandant," +and, without another word, he crossed the field, and disappeared. He was +back in five minutes, and waved his hat as he appeared. + +"All right, boys; we'll have an hour's flight; how will that suit you?" +he said. + +The boys were too much excited to know what to say in reply. Tom walked +around the machine, observing every part of the control plane and the +wires, then mounted the chassis, and with a wrench unscrewed the base of +the machine gun. + +"Here, boys; we'll take this off for the afternoon; it'll give you more +room. There, take hold of it at both ends, and carry it into the +hangar," he said, as he handed down the weapon. + +"Gee! but that weighs something!" said Ralph. + +"Close to eighty pounds, I should say," observed Tom. + +"Where shall we sit?" asked Alfred. + +"You can easily crowd into the hole in front," said Tom. "Now don't get +frightened and jump out; I can bring you down easier than that. If it +seems to turn over, don't mind. That's part of the game." + +The Morane was equipped with a self-starter, but three attendants were +on hand to hold the machine. They took their places and Tom turned on +the switch. Whir-r-r-r-r,--they felt the tremor of the machine. Soon +Tom's hand was raised and came down with a swift motion. They felt the +machine slowly gain headway, and then it seemed to spring forward with +huge leaps. At first they could feel the oscillating motion of the +wheels, and as the speed increased there was less jar until finally +there was no further vertical movement, and they no longer felt the +wheels traveling over the ground. + +"We're up!" shouted Ralph in excitement, as he turned to Tom. The latter +evidently knew what Ralph meant, even though the noise of the motor +prevented him from hearing, for he merely smiled, and shook his head. + +Alfred leaned over the side of the body, and gazed at the wheels, and as +he did so something seemed to push the seat of the aeroplane upwardly. +He quickly turned toward Tom and smiled. They were in the air. How +glorious it seemed to Ralph and Alfred at that moment. The feeling was +an indescribable one; they were now going up rapidly; ahead was a tall +pylon, which seemed to be directly in their way. + +Ralph seized Alfred's arm, and pointed toward it, their eyes being +intently fixed on the square flag which flew above the mast, but the +machine seemed to whiz by it like a streak. After passing it the machine +seemed to slow down. They were not aware that the closer you are to an +object the faster seems to be the motion. Looking down at the earth they +could note an object for some time, and as they went further up and up, +things on the earth seemed to pass by with less and less speed. + +The most confusing thing to them was the constant change of position. +Instead of making a straight-away flight Tom circled around the aviation +field twice, going higher on each turn. The great hangar was plainly +visible each time they came around, but it grew smaller and smaller. + +The boys leaned over the body of the machine, and scanned the earth +below. It was too grand and inspiring for words. It was some time before +they began to realize that the hangars were disappearing, and that the +machine was now going forward in one direction. The country below was a +confused maze of narrow yellow streaks, bordered by green and yellow +spots, with innumerable rows of dark green and brown bands and patches, +which they soon recognized as trees, while cottages and larger buildings +dotted the whole landscape as far as the eye could reach. + +Alfred was the first to cast his eyes to the north. What he saw almost +startled him. A dark vivid green spread to the horizon, blending with a +pale mist, far, far away. + +"Look! look!" he cried. + +"That's the sea!" shouted Ralph. + +Tom smiled as he reveled in their joy. He pointed ahead, and the boys +quickly turned. Far off, in the distance, they saw what seemed to be +immense fields of snow. + +"What can that be?" asked Ralph. + +Alfred shook his head, and gazed silently, then turned toward Tom. "Can +you make it out?" he asked Ralph. The latter shook his head. + +The machine went on for ten minutes more. Beyond the white fields +something else arrested their attention; great clouds of smoke were +observed. They were not clouds, and there was no fire visible on the +earth. That was the second mystery. + +"I know what that is now," said Ralph. + +"What is it?" asked Alfred. + +"Tents, tents," said Ralph. + +"Yes, and that smoke must come from the big guns," said Alfred. + +Ralph turned his head toward Tom, and raised his cap. The latter knew +that the boys recognized the nature of the scene before them. + +"That must be a battle," said Alfred, as he pointed to the great clouds +of smoke. + +"Look way over to the left," shouted Ralph. "See that long, narrow road? +There is something moving there." + +"Why, that is cavalry; sure enough. See, they are turning a corner in +the road. That's plain enough," said Alfred. + +"I wonder if he is going to take us over the German lines?" queried +Ralph. + +"And suppose something happens, and we are compelled to go down; we'll +be in a nice fix," remarked Alfred. + +Ralph shook his head, and glanced back toward Tom. The latter, however, +soon turned the machine. As he did so a dozen or more aeroplanes came +into view. They noticed that the machine was going toward a field where +a huge gas bag was moored near the ground. It was an observation +balloon. Beyond were several dozens of flying machines drawn up in front +of the hangars. Tom circled the machine around several times; the earth +came nearer, and soon they observed a long stretch of green that seemed +to invite them. In another minute they were several hundred feet from +the earth, and they seemed to go faster and faster. + +"Whew! but doesn't it scoot now," said Alfred. + +They grasped the body of the car, while it seemed to fairly sizzle +through the air. Closer and closer the earth crept up toward them. They +felt that it would be necessary to hold fast when the shock came. The +next sensation was most peculiar; the body of the car began to rock up +and down; the din of the motor had ceased, and they were riding on the +earth. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +TRENCH WORK WITH THE BRITISH FORCES + + +Everyone seemed to know Tom, as he was heartily greeted on all sides. +The appearance of the boys, however, was a puzzle to the group of +aviators. + +"Let me introduce my friends, Ralph and Alfred, genuine American boys, +who were with the Belgians in their great fight from Liege to Antwerp," +said Tom. + +"How did that happen?" asked one of the men, as he grasped their hands. + +"We were on the spot when war was declared, and we just pitched in and +helped them out," replied Ralph. + +"Were you in any battles?" asked another. + +"Oh, in a dozen, or so," answered Alfred. + +"Good boys!" shouted several. + +"How did you happen to get here?" asked the first interrogator. + +"We came over with the Belgians, from Antwerp," said Ralph. + +The foregoing information was enough to introduce the boys, and they +were gratified to find several other Americans in the party. + +The reception was cut short by the peculiar antics of a huge Farman +machine, which was approaching in an erratic manner. It seemed to dart +back and forth, and swing around in short circles, as though wounded. + +"Something is the matter with Le Clere," shouted Tom. + +At that moment the machine darted toward the earth, and the boys held +their breaths at the anticipated calamity. Fifty feet from the earth the +machine righted itself, and swooped upward, then, with a vicious plunge, +it went down and struck the earth, the crash being plainly heard, +although it landed more than five hundred feet from where they stood. + +Every one on the ground rushed toward the fallen aviator. Before they +reached the scene, two men extricated themselves, and stood on the +debris. + +"What was the matter?" asked Ralph. + +"Look at the holes in the wings," said Tom. "That tells the story; +pretty well riddled." + +"Are you all right?" shouted one of the men. + +"Yes, but that was a dandy fight, and we brought him down," replied Le +Clere, a daring Frenchman, who handled the machine gun. + +The Gnome motor was lying on the ground twenty feet from the wreckage. +One of the planes was tilted up at an angle, and was uninjured, but it +carried the marks of twenty holes, through which the sunlight streamed. + +"That will give you an idea of the fascinating work we are engaged in," +said Tom, pointing to the bullet marks. The body of the machine was +wrecked, and the fuselage a mass of splinters. It was, indeed, a mystery +how the two flyers escaped without injury. + +"What will they do with the machine?" asked Alfred. + +"They'll build up another out of it in two days," said Tom. + +"The Germans are marching west and south of Roubaix," said Le Clere. +"They have already reached Mons, and are going straight toward Paris." + +The boys looked at each other in amazement. It seemed as though their +trip to Paris would be interrupted, after all. Tom seemed to read their +thoughts. + +"How far is it to Mons?" asked Alfred. + +"About fifty miles south," said Tom. + +"And what is the name of the town which we saw before we came down?" +asked Ralph. + +"Lille," was the response. "But we must be going back," continued Tom. +"We are going to move south in the morning, and I have a few things to +pack up." + +After bidding good-bye to every one, they climbed into the airplane, and +those present gave the boys a cheer, as the machine glided forward. Tom +had promised to give them an hour's flight, and it was now four +o'clock. They had heard about taking observations, while on the grounds +at Lille, and they busied themselves in trying to do work of that +character. How small the houses were! They could see little creeping +things, that soon evolved themselves into horses and wagons, but they +seemed unreal. + +The flight to Lille covered a distance of forty-five miles, and it took +them an hour. It didn't seem that they could have been aloft half of +that time. Now, on returning, the novelty had worn off, and they were so +much interested that they forgot to look at their watches until the deep +blue haze, which betokened the approach to the sea, aroused them. + +"Why, it's past five o'clock," said Ralph. "Tom was going for an hour's +flight only," said Alfred. + +"He just said that in fun, I suppose," replied Ralph. + +After alighting the boys did not know how to fully express their +appreciation of Tom's kindness for the great treat, and they inquired +whether they could not be of some service to him, as they were only too +anxious to help him out in any way that would be useful. + +"Why, no; I don't know what I can put you at," replied Tom. "Of course, +there's always lots to do about the hangar, and the first thing to learn +is how the machines are built, and how to handle them; and then, an +important thing is to learn all the tricks in a gasoline engine." + +"That's just what we want to learn," said Alfred, enthusiastically. + +"But I thought you had to go to Paris to meet your father?" said Tom. + +"Yes," replied Alfred ruefully; "but we can come back. I'm sure there +will be no objections." + +"Of course, it's your first duty to go to Paris--that is, if you can get +there," said Tom, rather slyly. + +There was now nothing for them to do but to make an effort to reach +Paris. Immediately after landing, they started for the tram way, and +reached Dunkirk after six in the evening. + +"I never was as hungry in my life," said Ralph. + +"Do you know why?" answered Alfred. + +"Come to think of it, we didn't get anything to eat at noon," was +Ralph's answer. + +After alighting from the cars, their first mission was to seek a +restaurant, and from that point they soon reached the post office, only +to be again disappointed. At the telegraph office they had the same bad +luck. + +"I wonder where father is?" said Alfred. + +"I suppose we shall have to go, whether we want to or not," suggested +Ralph. "Let us inquire at the transportation office." + +At the main office they soon learned that the troops from England were +occupying every coach, motor wagon and bus that was in sight, and that +there was no encouragement in that direction. But an idea occurred to +Alfred. + +"We belong to the army, don't we?" he said. + +"Suppose we apply as soldiers, and tell them we must get to Paris at +once." + +They reached the main office of the Army transportation service, and +boldly made their way to the room indicated by an attendant. In a few +moments they were ushered in, and saw at least a score or more soldiers +and officers in the room, at one end of which sat a white-haired +officer, and several other officers, issuing orders. + +"Your business?" said an officer, approaching them. + +"We have been with the Belgians, and have just come from Antwerp. We are +Americans, and are trying to reach Paris, and we wanted to know if we +couldn't go on one of the trains?" explained Alfred. + +The officer shook his head. "I am sorry to say that we cannot provide +for any one unless connected with the army," he said. + +"But we are connected with the army," said Ralph. "We were messengers, +and have had a lively time, too." + +"Yes, and we expect to join the flying corps, but father expects me in +Paris," said Alfred. + +The officer smiled, and pondered a moment. Then, motioning to them, he +passed out of the room, the boys following. They crossed the hall, and +entered a narrow room. + +"Lieutenant," he said, "issue a permit for these boys to ride on any +available train to Paris." + +The boys expressed their thanks to the officer, and, after giving their +names and home addresses, they received a card, which stated that the +Army transport service permitted them to ride on any train where there +was available room, at the discretion of the officer in charge of the +train. + +"I should advise you to see the officer at the station in the morning, +and get him to assign you to a train number, as the quickest way," said +the clerk, as he handed them the permit. + +"Nothing like determination," said Ralph. "It is bound to pull you +through." + +It was too late for them to return to the aviation field that evening, +so after considerable search, they finally found a room, and after +discussing the events of the day fell asleep, and awoke long after the +sun had risen. + +"We've got to do some hustling," said Ralph. "We ought to see Tom this +morning and tell him of our good luck." + +They partook of a hasty breakfast, and were at the station in order to +get an assignment. But this was not an easy matter. They waited for +nearly two hours before they were able to reach the proper official. + +"I am sorry to say that we cannot take you today, but I will try to make +a reservation for you tomorrow. Come here after four this afternoon," +said the officer. + +"Now for the aviation field," said Alfred. + +They were detained for more than an hour watching several newly arrived +regiments embark on a train, which slowly pulled out to the south, and +it was nearly noon when the grounds were reached. There seemed to be a +change in the place. The hangars were empty, and no machines visible. A +score of men were taking down the temporary hangars and from them it was +learned that the entire corps had started at eight o'clock for the +southern station. + +"That's too bad!" said Ralph regretfully. "I wish we had started back +earlier." + +"Then we might go to the hospital," suggested Alfred. + +The head surgeon remembered the boys. "It's too bad," he said. +"Lieutenant Winston has been removed to the hospital at Dunkirk, and +will leave for England tomorrow; but his sister is still here,--ah, here +she comes." + +"Oh, I am so glad to see you. Brother asked for you before he left. If +you are going to England, you must go to see him. He is at Hempstead." + +"We expect to go to Paris tomorrow, and we are sorry not to be able to +see him," Alfred told her. + +They at once returned to Dunkirk, and awaited anxiously until four +o'clock. Before they had an opportunity to speak to the officer in +charge, he shook his head, to indicate that there was no room. They +lingered about, but it appeared to be a hopeless task. Four tracks ran +by the station office, and these were constantly filled with empty cars, +then loaded up, and drawn out. They watched the proceedings until the +sun went down, when tired and hungry, they crossed the street, entered +a coffee house, and ate a hurried supper. + +As they were moving out the doorway, Ralph stopped. Turning to Alfred, +he said: "We are chumps; that's about the size of it." + +"Why so?" asked Alfred. + +"We have the permits, haven't we? Why are we waiting for that fellow at +the station to get us an assignment?" replied Ralph. + +"That's a fact; let's make our own assignment; come on," answered +Alfred. "Is this train going south?" he asked, addressing a soldier who +was about to enter a half-filled compartment. + +"Aw! I dare say it is," was the jolly response. + +"Get aboard," said Alfred. + +Unabashed, they swung themselves up on the running board, and entered +the compartment. The occupants glanced at them for a moment, and seeing +the trim uniforms, at once became inquisitive. + +"How did you happen to be directed to this train?" asked one of them. + +"Oh, we attended to that ourselves," said Alfred. + +"Our permit's all right, but we couldn't wait for them to make up their +minds when we ought to go; so here we are," said Ralph, with a laugh. + +"Well, you fellows'll do; but it's a long way to Tipperary," said a +voice, which trailed off into the tune of the well-known song. His +companions chimed in, and it was not long before the occupants of the +adjoining compartments joined in the song. It was a jolly crowd, but no +one seemed to know where they were going. All had heard of the rapid +advance of the Germans toward Paris, and that General French was trying +to impede their advance somewhere to the south. + +It was fully nine o'clock that night before the train made a real start. +Before that time they were pushed around on the various sidings for an +hour, and it was a relief to see the fields and feel the continual +motion of the train as it finally speeded away. + +There was no time for talk now. Each tried to find a comfortable place +in order to get some sleep. They dozed and dozed, as most people are +liable to do in uncomfortable surroundings, and some hours afterwards an +orderly appeared at the door, shouting: + +"All out, men; form in ranks." + +"I suppose we shall have to get out, too," said Alfred. + +"Why, no; this can't be Paris," replied Ralph. + +"I know bally well it isn't," said a voice. + +That settled it; tired and sleepy they swung off the running board, and +looked at the long lines forming at the side of the train. + +"Do you know where we are?" asked Ralph, addressing a soldier at his +side. + +"Don't know, my boy; we've had a steady run, though, for about three +hours," was the reply. + +"We are east of St. Quentin; we passed through the city half an hour +ago; this isn't much of a hill we are on, but the Germans and French +fought a battle on this very spot in the campaign of 1870-1," said an +officer. + +Alfred saluted the officer, and asked: "How far are we from Paris, sir?" + +"I think it must be fully a hundred miles," was the reply. + +The men were ordered to line up, and soon the order came to march. As +the boys had no other place to go, and the train was even then backing +toward the city, they marched alongside of the column. The tramp was +across open fields for a half-mile, where a road was sighted, but it was +lined with troops, and heavy artillery, going eastwardly. + +The column continued on, parallel with the road. It was dry, dusty and +warm. There was a hum of sounds, and occasionally a boom or two, which +the boys recognized from their previous experiences. The most emphatic +voices were those of the drivers, who were piloting the horses drawing +the artillery and caissons. An hour's march brought them to a small +stream, which was crossed without waiting for boats or hunting for +bridges, as it was easily waded. + +Across the stream they ascended an elevation, at the crest of which was +a line of soldiers busily at work with spades and pick-axes. Trenches +were being formed. They were cheered by the workers, but there was no +halting. On they went over level ground, only to meet another line of +men similarly engaged. Several hundred feet beyond an order came like a +shot: "Halt!" + +An orderly came riding up at full speed, and looked around. "We are +waiting for orders, I suppose," remarked a lieutenant. + +The orderly put spurs to his horse, and rode to the right, as he espied +a group of horsemen. "Form your men along this line, and dig in," he +directed. + +The order was given: "File to the right; halt; stack arms." + +Several lorries, which had been following them, came up, and at a word +of command the men began to unload shovels and picks. This began to look +like business. It was now growing light, but it still lacked a half hour +before sunrise. + +"Why can't we lend a hand?" inquired Ralph. + +"Of course we can," answered Alfred. + +They were alongside in an instant. Ralph jumped into the vehicle, and +helped to hand out the implements, while Alfred tried to edge his way +in. Their earnestness attracted the officer in charge, and he smiled, +and nodded his head in approval. Thus two van loads were dumped out, and +carried forward of the rows of stacked arms. + +An engineer officer marked out the line of the trench, and the men were +set to work. They were now doing the job for a _real_ purpose, as during +their month of training in England these men had been instructed how to +go about the business of making trenches, and it was wonderful to see +how quickly the furrows were dug out. They were about four feet deep, +the earth being thrown up on the side toward the enemy, thus making a +shelter trench five feet deep. + +As soon as the main line was thus completed, traverses were cut, leading +out at right angle to the rear of the main trench. These were formed in +zig-zag fashion, the object being to form shelter sections along the +entire trench, so that those within would not be subjected to what is +called an enfilading fire. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +ON THE FIRING LINE + + +"Look at the guns back there," shouted Ralph, as the company marched +back to get their first breakfast after three hours of hard work. + +"Come on, boys!" said the corporal in charge, smiling at the boys. +"You've worked pretty hard for lads of your age; come and have something +to eat." + +"So we will," said Alfred; "but what are the guns doing back there?" he +asked, as he pointed out a battery which had limbered up and was +wheeling into position. + +"You will see in a few moments," replied the corporal, and before they +reached the mess wagon the guns began to roar. + +"How far away are the Germans?" asked Ralph. + +"About two and a half miles, I should judge," replied the corporal, +looking at the battery. + +"How can you tell by looking at the guns?" asked Ralph. + +"By their angle," was the answer. + +Before they ceased speaking, the first shot was fired, then another and +another, all of them trial shots, as one of the soldiers explained. Then +another battery to the left, heretofore unnoticed, began to fire, while +one posted higher up on the right, and two more beyond, chimed in. This +was a new experience to the boys, as the Belgians, with whom they had +formerly associated, were lacking in field pieces compared with those +they now saw and heard. + +The challenge was promptly accepted by the Germans, and within fifteen +minutes the whole crest to the east of them, probably two miles distant, +seemed to be ablaze. It was singular, however, that none of the missiles +fell near the troops where the boys were located. On a little elevation +to the right of the kitchen vans the boys noticed a group of officers +with field glasses, intently scanning the rear of their position. + +"The blooming blokes are shooting too far," remarked a soldier. + +"Why are they doing that?" asked Alfred, who overheard him. + +"Oh, they'll get the range in time," he replied. + +"There's the first airship, to give them a pointer," said the corporal, +as an airplane appeared in sight. + +"Two of our machines are coming up," shouted Ralph. "Now there'll be a +fight." + +Ralph was right. The two English machines steered straight for the +oncoming Fokker, the latter veering to the left in time to prevent too +close a meeting. Within a minute three more German machines came into +sight, their appearance being answered by four of their own machines, +which came up from the rear, and sailed straight across above them to +the German positions on the crest of the hill. They were much higher +than the German machines, the reason being that the enemy had a number +of anti-airship guns to meet any flyers who dared to cross the line at a +low altitude. + +It was, indeed, an interesting sight to observe the numerous airplanes, +which were employed by the two forces. They seemed to be flying back and +forth in the utmost confusion, and, frequently, puffs of smoke would +indicate that they were firing at each other. + +The corporal with whom the boys talked seemed to be unusually well +informed, and quite a number of the soldiers addressed him for +information. + +"How do they recognize an enemy?" asked Ralph. + +"Oh, that's an easy matter," he replied. "I suppose the flyers in the +air do it on the same principle that we are in the habit of recognizing +automobiles. Why, I have a lad not ten years old who can tell the make +of almost any auto the moment he sees it. Generally, if the make of the +plane is similar to those attached to the aviator's side he is able to +recognize it by the special mark it carries." + +"What mark do you mean?" asked Alfred. + +"Why, the English and the French mark is in the form of a circle, +generally three, each circle being of a different color," was the +answer. + +"There is one,--why, it's red, white and blue," said Ralph. + +"That's correct,--those are the colors of the Allies." + +"What are the German colors?" asked Ralph. + +[Illustration: _Allies' Distinguishing Mark_] + +"Black and white," said the corporal. + +"Oh, yes, they have a cross," said Alfred. + +"Yes; a cross in imitation of the iron cross, so far as its shape is +concerned," he answered; "that is, a black cross on a white field." + +The company marched back to the line. During the next half hour there +was nothing but expectancy, waiting, waiting,--that most trying thing +for soldiers, who know that a battle is impending. Then a hundred feet +to their rear there was a terrific explosion, which startled every one. +This was followed by others, but none reached the trench line. + +Thus, during the whole day, there was an exchange of artillery, the +greatest damage being done to those in the rear who were trying to get +to the front. + +"With the long range guns the great danger isn't always with the fellows +in front," said the corporal. + +[Illustration: _Black Cross on German Flyers_] + +At four that afternoon the company was startled by an order to leave the +trenches and fall to the rear. Every one cast questioning glances, but +the knapsacks and rolls were quickly seized, and within ten minutes they +were in line with the regiments to the right and the left. There was no +hurrying or disorder. + +"I wonder why we are going back?" asked Ralph. + +"I suppose it's our business to retreat," returned the corporal. + +They marched fully a mile to the rear, passing on the way at least half +a dozen lines of trenches, which had been thrown up since the boys +covered the ground the night before. Every trench line was filled with +soldiers, those in the front being the first to retire. On the way they +saw how the great shells had played havoc with many of the works. + +They again crossed the river, and at six o'clock that night a new line +was formed, and the spades and picks were again brought into use. The +booming of cannon was incessant, and, although they tried to get some +sleep after midnight, they were frequently aroused by the marching of +troops. At daylight they were again marched out of the trenches, and a +quarter of a mile from the last trench halted to partake of breakfast. + +The march was directly south, and at noon they reached a town of some +importance, called Chauny. They went through without halting, crossed +the river Oise, and at four o'clock halted on the eastern banks of a +stream, which flowed northwardly. Here they waited for orders. A +picturesque bridge spanned the stream, and the boys wandered across. +West of the river was a broad expanse of country, perfectly level, and +thousands of people from the nearby villages lined the road, all +crossing to the west. + +All were excited, and seemed to be going toward the narrow road, which +led to the left, and, naturally, the boys followed the movement of the +crowd. Their curiosity was soon satisfied, for beyond was a sight which +caused their hearts to beat with joy. Fully a dozen airplanes were drawn +up in line, and the boys started forward on a run that seemed to instill +the same activity in many others present. + +"There's a Morane," said Ralph. + +"Yes; and that's Tom getting out of the machine," shouted Alfred, as +they rushed up and greeted Tom, who looked at them in astonishment. + +"And how did you get here?" he inquired. + +"Came over with the troops," explained Alfred. + +"With what troops?" he was asked. + +"Don't know," answered Ralph, "but they are from Essex." + +"Well, we've been on duty for a day directly over the lines east of St. +Quentin," said Tom. + +"Did you have a fight?" asked Alfred. + +"I should say we did," answered Tom. "Brought down two, at any rate, and +it was pretty hot for about an hour. So you are on your way to Paris; +sorry you didn't get back before we started," he added. + +"We got to the grounds several hours after you left," said Alfred. + +"Glad you came; we can put you up, if you are willing," remarked Tom. + +"Thank you for the invitation; we helped them on the trenches and have +done considerable marching, so it's better than going back to camp," +said Ralph. + +The boys were up early in the morning, but didn't have the least idea +what steps to take to continue their journey. Everything in the way of +transportation was reserved for the troops. Thousands of people were +leaving their homes, and people with household effects, mounted on all +sorts of conveyances, were noted on all sides, although at this time the +Germans were not within ten miles of the river. The nearest railway to +the south, which ran east and west along the southern bank of the river +Aisne, was fully ten miles distant from this point. + +Tom was on hand early, and greeted the boys most affectionately. + +"I have been thinking I might be able to help you out a bit," he said, +after a little talk. "We are ordered to the station near +Villers-Cotterets, and that's only forty miles from Paris." + +"How can you help us?" inquired Ralph excitedly. + +"Probably I can give you a lift in the machine," he said. + +"How far is that from here?" asked Alfred. + +"Twenty miles," replied Tom, and the two boys looked at each other +hopefully, as he left them. + +Tom re-appeared at three o'clock, and informed them that they would +start in fifteen minutes. + +"If you are ready for the trip, jump in and make yourselves +comfortable," he said, and they required no second invitation. + +The dainty Morane just suited them, and they were in their seats in an +instant. Tom then tossed them a light package, which they tucked away, +and the engine began to buzz. As they glanced around, two more machines +seemed to vie with them in taking the air, then, as they again looked +around, four more machines began to move, and soon all were on the wing, +flying side by side, excepting two large Farman machines, which were +well in the lead. + +Up, up, up, they went, the machines on line with each other maintaining +a height of about four thousand feet, while the Farmans were about five +hundred feet higher. Within a half hour they saw in the distance what +appeared to be a silver ribbon running east and west, which proved to be +the river Aisne, and to the east they saw the city of Soissons. The +beautiful aviation ground was reached within an hour, and they alighted +in front of a magnificent group of hangars in the center of well-tilled +fields, so located as to afford a view in all directions from the +grounds. The machine was then put up for the night, and Tom and the boys +were glad to turn in for a much-needed rest. + +It was now the first day of September, and there had been nearly one +month of war. The immense German forces had hewn their way through +Belgium and entered France, reaching the cities of Laon, Epernay, and +Chalons-sur-Marnek, thus forming a huge circle. They were within +forty-five miles of Paris. + +When the boys awoke the next morning the first words that greeted them +were: "The Germans are within five miles of Soissons." + +They rushed over to the hangar, but the machine and Tom were not to be +found. This was another source of grief to them, and they stared about, +and wondered at this new turn of affairs until, meeting an attendant, +Ralph inquired: + +"Do you know where the Morane has gone?" + +"They all started on a reconnoitering trip at five this morning," was +the reply. + +"Do you think they will come back here?" asked Alfred. + +"That is doubtful," answered the man. + +"Then we shall have to make our way to Paris as best we can," said +Ralph. "Do you think we would have any chances on the railroad?" + +"It's doubtful. I should take my chances over the highway directly +south, if I wanted to make Paris," answered the man. Then, after a +little reflection, he added: "A large English force is expected to be +here from Laon, and it may arrive before noon. Possibly the flyers will +return, but if the German forces are too close, they will go on to the +next station at Crepy, directly south of this place." + +"Then that's the place for us," proposed Alfred, as he thanked their +informant. + +They had no trouble in getting breakfast and after waiting for an hour, +during which all sorts of rumors were floating about, they concluded +that their only course would be to commence the trip. It was not +necessary for them to inquire the way, as the highway, in the distance +was filled with fugitives, all trying to get to Paris, or, at least, to +avoid the invaders while there was yet time. + +Reaching the highway, they moved along with the procession, and, shortly +before twelve o'clock, reached Crepy, ten miles from Soissons. They were +now twenty-five miles from the center of Paris, and after getting a good +meal they again took up the march over a beautiful road, which ran +southeast. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +VIGOROUS RED CROSS WORK + + +A mile from the town they came within sight of a cross road, filled with +an immense concourse, which seemed to be wending its way east. +Approaching nearer, they recognized troops, artillery and horsemen, the +latter moving along in the fields parallel with the roadway. + +"It seems to me the firing is much nearer than when we started out this +morning," said Ralph. + +As they passed through the marchers, and proceeded along the highway, +they saw that troops were noticed posted everywhere, and that batteries +were lying in wait in every advantageous spot. + +"I think we made a mistake in taking this road. We should have traveled +the one which went to the west," said Ralph. + +"Then let's go out the first road that crosses this," replied Alfred. + +Meanwhile the sounds of battle came nearer and nearer. The artillery +posted on the elevation began to speak, and before there was time to +realize it the boys were within the battle zone, and bearing down on the +road along which they were traveling. They had no trouble, however, in +leaving the road, as all the fences were down, and many of the fields +were cut up with the hoofs of horses, and creased by the huge artillery +wheels. + +To add to the confusion, shells began to fall all about them, and +occasionally a terrific explosion would follow, leaving them dazed and +startled. They ascended a hill, and, looking back, saw nothing but dense +clouds of smoke, and a scene of indescribable confusion. + +"What's that down there?" shouted Alfred, pointing to a group of vans +close by the side of a stream. + +"That must be a Red Cross station; so it is," said Ralph. + +Their footsteps were hurried, but before the place was reached they saw +stretcher bearers, and also noticed the wounded being unloaded from a +field van. Glancing to the left they saw fully a dozen vans of like +character, as indicated by the great red crosses on their sides, rushing +up the narrow street from the southeast. + +"Let's give them a hand," said Alfred. + +A business-looking surgeon stood at the rear end of one of the vans, as +the boys approached. They saluted. "Can we do anything to help out?" +asked Ralph. + +The doctor looked at them for a moment, apparently non-plussed at their +appearance. + +"Yes, indeed; we need you and many more willing ones like you." + +"What shall we do?" asked Alfred. + +The surgeon drew a pad from his pocket, wrote a few words on it, handed +it to the boys, and said: "Present this to the officer yonder." + +The officer indicated received the slip, while directing the disposition +of a wounded soldier, glanced at it hurriedly, then looked at the boys. +"Ah, want to get on duty? We can accommodate you; there, put those +stretchers in the van. One of you can take this to the supply van," he +said. Ralph seized the paper, and looked about. + +"The van with the flag on it," explained the officer. + +Ralph rushed across the intervening space, and presented the paper to a +Red Cross nurse, who smiled sweetly as she glanced at the paper, and +looked inquiringly at Ralph. She then turned, seized three packages, and +handed them to Ralph, while he thanked her and quickly rushed away. The +packages were stored in the van, water was supplied to the containers in +the vehicle, and the moment the last article was on board, the van +started. + +The boys were both within, as well as three men and a surgeon. They had +heard no orders, but knew they were bound for the battlefield. There was +no talking indulged in. The men were too intently engaged in listening +to the din of the conflict, and watching the soldiers moving to and fro. + +"Has there been much of a fight?" asked Ralph. + +"They have been at it all morning," said one of the men. Then, glancing +at the boys, he continued: "But this is a bad place for you +youngsters." + +"I am afraid you will regret it before you return. The scenes are +awful," continued the man. + +"We know what it is," said Alfred. "We saw the worst kind of fighting in +Belgium." + +[Illustration: _French and German Flags_] + +"We were with the English in the battle east of Soissons, and had some +experience there," said Ralph. + +"Aren't you English?" asked the surgeon. + +"Oh, no; we're Americans," replied Alfred. + +At this point a lieutenant rode up alongside, and shouted: "There has +been a tough scrap at the mill; we have driven the Germans back; take +this road down to the river; you will find plenty of poor fellows there +who will need you." + +The French had made a terrific charge at this point, and many were lying +dead, where the van slowed down, so as to give the surgeon and helpers +an opportunity to pick out the wounded cases. + +Wherever there was a movement in a prone figure the men stopped and made +an examination. In some cases the wounds were hurriedly dressed, and the +victim's position rendered comfortable. In other cases the surgeon +motioned to the helpers, who quickly brought the stretchers, and carried +the wounded into the van. + +On this single trip they attended, or gave first aid to thirty, but only +the most severely injured were taken into the van, which now turned and +quickly speeded along the narrow road to the field hospital. Reaching +this station the men were carefully taken out, their wounds re-examined, +and carried into a temporary shelter for a second operation or +treatment. + +A huge van then arrived from the southwest. Carefully and tenderly eight +men were placed on the cots within, the boys being delegated to assist. +When the order was given to leave, the boys remained in the van, as it +started out on its journey, but they didn't have the least idea where it +was bound, although you may be sure they were curious to know. + +After every one had settled down,--that is, if such a thing as quiet and +comfort were possible in a van load of wounded men, Ralph turned to the +surgeon, and said. "Where are we going?" + +"To Paris, if we can get through," was the reply. + +The van had a wonderful set of springs, so that, although it was +necessary hour after hour to go through fields, instead of traveling +along the road, there was little discomfort to the wounded men. + +"Why are the men being taken to Paris?" asked Alfred. + +"So as to relieve the emergency station behind the battle front," +explained the surgeon. "That is one thing; the other is, that the great +German forces are driving in our comparatively small army, until the +Paris forts are reached. There they will be stopped, and we must take +our wounded with us, and out of the reach of the enemy." + +At Dammartin they saw the first Red Cross railway van,--an entire train +load, filled with wounded from the emergency stations, and here also +they were joined by fifteen vans taking the wounded on to the city. It +was thus a fortunate stroke for the boys that they undertook to help the +field hospital workers, for it directly assisted them in their effort to +reach the end of their journey. + +Traveling was slow, and many detours were necessary, so it was not until +the fourth day of September that they caught sight of the walls of +Paris, and they soon had the pleasure of driving over the beautiful +smooth streets again. They went directly to the center of the city, +passed down the rue de l'Opera, through the Place de la Concorde, and +over the bridge to a hospital near the Place des Invalides. + +Their charges in the van were soon provided for, and carried into +comfortable berths. As they were leaving the ward, they heard a weak +voice calling: "Ralph; Alfred." + +They were startled, and turned around with wondering glances. A nurse +motioned to them, and pointed toward a figure with bandaged head and +arms. They approached. + +"You don't know me, I suppose?" said the voice. + +"No,--no," said Ralph. + +"I believe it's Tom," said Alfred. + +"Right," said the voice. + +The boys knelt down at his side at once. "How did it happen?" asked +Alfred. + +"Well, they got me first; but I brought down two of them before I was +hit," Tom told them. + +"What became of the machine?" was Alfred's next question. + +"I don't remember anything about it," was the reply, "but they told me +it made fine kindling wood." + +"Too bad!" consoled Alfred. "I liked that little Morane; and to think +it's all broken up." + +"How did you get here?" asked Tom. + +"Why, we came down with the Red Cross people," explained Ralph. + +"You seem to get into all sorts of trouble, all along the line," said +Tom with an attempt to laugh. + +"But are you badly hurt?" inquired Alfred anxiously. + +"The doctors say that there are only a few bones broken, several joints +wrenched out of shape, and some of the bark peeled off, but I ought to +be out in a few weeks," said Tom. + +"Tell us what we ought to do now?" Alfred asked him. + +"What do you mean?" + +"Why, I want to know whether they will expect us to keep on in the Red +Cross service?" + +"You volunteered, didn't you?" replied Tom. "You helped them out of your +free will, and you can leave whenever you want to, if that's what you +are getting at." + +"I wouldn't mind volunteering in the aviation corps," said Ralph. "I +would just like----" + +"So they got you this time, eh?" said a voice. + +The boys turned, and saw a handsome man with the uniform of a lieutenant +in the aviation service, who approached, and leaned over Tom. Tom +replied with a smile, and raising his injured hand, pointed to the boys. + +"Lieutenant," he said, "I want you to get acquainted with two of my +American friends, who have been in the thick of it right from the start. +Now you'll be conferring a special favor if you can take them in to help +you out. Oh, they're bricks," continued Tom, as he saw a shade of +discouragement in the lieutenant's features, "they are made of the right +stuff." + +"We leave for Verdun in the morning," said the lieutenant, "but I will +see what can be done in the meantime." + +As they left the hospital the first thought was to go to the Continental +Hotel to try to get a trace of Alfred's father. Arriving there a letter +was handed them, together with two telegrams from Berne, Switzerland, +one of the messages having been received that very day. The missives +informed him that his father had not been able to leave German territory +until the twenty-eighth of August, and as he had received word that the +Germans were approaching Paris he thought it unwise to make the trip to +that point, but would await word from them before deciding what to do. + +"How far is it from Berne to Verdun?" Alfred asked the clerk. + +"About three hundred kilometers," was the reply. + +"Let's see; that's about two hundred miles," said Alfred. "And it's a +hundred and fifty miles to Verdun. + +"Then we'll go to Verdun," said Ralph. "But how?" + +The subject was debated for an hour, when it was decided to return to +the hospital. They had forgotten to learn the lieutenant's name, +although probably Tom knew how to reach him, they reasoned. + +Arriving at the hospital they learned that Tom was asleep, and that no +one would be permitted to see him, so they wandered around without the +slightest idea what course to pursue. They even discussed the +feasibility of walking to Verdun, but that idea was soon abandoned. + +"I wonder where the aviation grounds are?" remarked Ralph. + +They soon learned that several corps were located at the great race +course in the Bois de Boulogne, and they were soon on the underground +railway speeding to the nearest station in that vicinity. Arriving at +the grounds they approached the entrance, and their hearts sank as they +saw a great crowd gathered, and one after the other turned away. + +"Chances of getting in seem to be pretty slim," said Alfred. + +"Well, we might try it, anyhow," said Ralph, as he pushed forward. + +They marched up to the gate, and passed through without the least +objection on the part of the guards. This was the greatest surprise to +both. They had forgotten that the uniforms they wore gave them +admittance without question. Evidently they were taken for army +messengers. + +"See that American flag?" shouted Ralph. + +"That's the place for us," replied Alfred. + +Accordingly, they lost no time in making for the hangar on which the +emblem appeared. They saw a Farman machine partly outside of the hangar, +and in the body of it was seated a ruddy-faced chap. + +"What's up?" he asked. + +"Came over to help you out," said Alfred. + +He looked down, and slowly said: "You did, eh?" + +"Well, we've seen a little active service at the front, so far," +explained Ralph, "been in battle several times, have been captured by +the Germans, helped to build trenches, worked with the Red Cross people, +and had a few flights in an airplane, and as we like aviation business +best of all, we thought we'd come over and go to work." + +The airman raised himself, sat down on the side of the car body, and +commenced to laugh, although Ralph's remark was said without the least +tinge of pride or boasting. Several from the adjoining hangars came in +to learn the cause of the boisterous mirth. + +"Well, that's fresh enough to come from real American boys," he said, +after he had sobered down a little. + +"That's right; we're from the United States; we came here because we saw +the flag on the outside; what shall we do the first thing?" said Alfred. + +"From America?" said the man, climbing down from the machine. "And you +are regular Yankees? Well, well; that's too good! I'm something of an +American myself. By jingo, you're the kind of fellows to have around. +Want a job? Where did you get your uniforms? They look all right." + +"Oh, these are Belgian uniforms. We were with them, you know, and had a +pretty hot time, too," said Ralph. + +This information, as they now knew, was the best credential possible, +and they were soon the center of an admiring crowd. Somehow the +determined matter of fact and positive way which the boys adopted had +the effect of winning their way, and it was thus that they had the +satisfaction of entering a service which it is a most difficult thing +to do even with the best credentials. + +The happiness of the boys was complete when their new friend told them +to get up on the machine, and help him to take out the engine. Coats +came off in a hurry, and they looked around for some substitute to +protect their clothing. + +Their friend supplied the necessary articles at once remarking as he did +so that he ought to know their names. + +After this information was supplied, he remarked: "My name is Martin; +Bill Martin, Fifth Aviation Corps; don't forget the Corps or you may +have trouble in getting into the grounds; and, by the way, how did you +happen to get through?" + +"If you mean the gates, why, we just walked right through," said Alfred. + +"Just as though you had a right to do so!" said Martin, as he again +commenced to laugh. "You said you were up in an airplane; where was +that?" + +"Up at Dunkirk, and back of the firing line, south of the St. Quentin," +said Ralph. + +"Do you know Tom Watkins?" asked Alfred. + +"Do I know Tom? Why, we came over together; poor fellow, he got a bad +fall," said Martin. + +"We heard about it and saw him at the hospital today," said Alfred. + +"You don't say? So you've been flying with Tom? I'm glad to know that," +said Martin, as he nodded his head approvingly. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +BOUND FOR VERDUN + + +For three days more the boys wandered about Paris,--three days of the +most fearful suspense; and then began the battle of the Marne. Every +airplane in and about Paris was at the front, on the line somewhere, and +the boys were deprived of the opportunity to see the new friend they had +made at the Bois de Boulogne station. + +They were so sure of being able to go to Verdun that Albert wrote to his +father of their plans, in the hope that he would consider it wise to +leave Switzerland for that point, where they might meet. + +The Germans had been defeated; Paris was safe, the French line having +held firmly all the way to Verdun. The determination to go there was +firmly fixed in their minds, but they could see no way to accomplish the +purpose. A visit to Tom at the hospital only resulted in their being +told that the lieutenant was in the field, no one knew where. + +"I have an idea," said Ralph, as they emerged from their room one +morning. + +"What is it?" asked Alfred. + +"We might get attached to the Red Cross some way, and that would be +sure to take us to the front," replied Ralph. + +"That would be just as hard as to get in with the flying people," +answered Alfred. + +"That may be so, too, but I can't see any other way." + +They again called at the Continental Hotel in the hope that there might +be some further news. To their surprise they found a letter from +Alfred's father with a check for their personal expenses. While reading +the letter they overheard a conversation which gave them the solution, +as they thought, of their difficulties. + +"No," said a voice, "they will not ticket us to any point near the +firing line, but we might go to St. Dizier, and from there work our way +north." + +"Good idea; let's book at once," said the second voice. + +"Come on," said Alfred. "That's the right tip. Let's find out where St. +Dizier is." + +The clerk informed them: "It is about a hundred and sixty miles east of +Paris." + +"Then it can't be far from Verdun," remarked Alfred. + +"Sixty miles southwest, I should judge," was the answer. + +"Do you think we would have any trouble in reaching that point?" asked +Ralph. + +"I think the trains are still running, but they may not adhere to the +regular schedule. The line runs south of the war zone, you know," said +the clerk. + +That settled it. They hurried to the Banque Francaise, and having +secured currency for the check, started for the booking office as fast +as they could walk. It was impossible at this time to get a conveyance +as only the underground railways and a few tram cars were in service, +the government having requisitioned all the horses, and automobiles a +week previous to this time. + +They booked second class, the official stating that the tickets were +sold at the risk of the holders, and that they would have to take their +chances on the trains, so they were at the eastern railway station +before one o'clock, in the hope that the regular through train at two +that day would be able to accommodate them. In this they were +disappointed, so they waited about until five o'clock, and had the good +fortune to have the tickets accepted by the gateman. + +They passed through an immense crowd of newly arrived soldiers, and were +jostled about by hosts of men, women and children who were departing for +the southeast, most of them bound for Chaumont. Within an hour they +finally found a train bound for their destination, but it was another +hour before the train began to move. + +The trip was a weary one all through the night, as they seemed to stop +at every station, although it was the fast express. The intense +excitement of the people all along the line; the passing of trains; the +crying out of the latest news; and the bustle of the new arrivals in the +already crowded compartments, made sleep impossible. The sun had been +up two hours before the station of St. Dizier was announced. + +The boys were out and scampering along the platform ahead of most of the +crowd. As they passed out the end of the station they noticed a sign on +a train: "For Bar-le-Duc, 10 o'clock." + +"Let's see where that place is," said Alfred. + +The information was obtained. It was twenty kilometers northeast. + +"That's the place we must go; it's twenty miles toward Verdun, and now +is our time," said Ralph. + +"Let's have something to eat first," said Alfred. + +After the meal they booked for Bar-le-Duc, and this train started +promptly. Only two coaches were reserved for civilians, the others being +filled with soldiers. The town, which was reached shortly before noon, +had the appearance of an armed camp. Here they received the startling +news that the Germans were at St. Mihiel, thirty-five miles northeast of +that place. + +There was no sign of panic there, however. Verdun, Toul and Nancy were +still intact, and there was no fear that either place would yield. + +Before they had been in the city an hour they saw a dozen or more +airplanes overhead, and it was not long thereafter until they learned +that one of the most famous stations belonging to the flyers was located +north of the place. A conveyance was readily obtained, as a line of +busses paralleled the railway track, and in another hour they were on +the plateau where the great hangars were located. + +As they were crossing the field, and approaching the first tier of +hangars the boys noticed the two men whose conversation had been +overheard in the Continental hotel. "They are the very men," said +Alfred; "I wonder what they are here for?" + +The men stopped and looked at the boys for an instant. Ralph approached +them and said, with a smile: "You beat us here after all." + +The men appeared to be puzzled at being thus addressed. Alfred saw that +they did not understand Ralph's greeting, and said: "We are under +obligations to you for telling us how to get here, and I want to thank +you." + +"I don't exactly understand," said one of the men. + +"We heard you talking about making this trip, and as we wanted to get to +the front without knowing just how to do it, your conversation helped us +out," said Ralph. + +"I'll bet you're American boys," said one of them, laughing. + +"Indeed, we are," said Alfred. + +"Belong to the service?" asked the other. + +"Oh, yes," answered Ralph,--"that is, we did belong to it." + +"Which branch?" asked the man. + +"Messenger service in Belgium, aviation and trench service with the +English, and Red Cross in the French army," answered Alfred. + +This response was answered by hearty laughter on the part of both men, +and one of them responded: "That is a pretty comprehensive service, I +should say." + +"Where are you from?" asked the other. + +"New York," answered Ralph. "Why, you look like Americans, too." + +"We're from the same place," was the answer. + +"And you look like newspaper men," remarked Alfred. + +"That's a good guess," was the reply. "But how did you know?" he asked. + +"I saw you taking notes as we walked across the field," answered Alfred. + +"Good inference," he replied. "Are you looking for a job?" + +"Yes, we're going into the aviation service," answered Ralph, with all +the assurance of a winner. + +"See you again," was the final reply, as the two men left them. + +"Now, I wonder if they have any American flags at this place?" remarked +Ralph. + +They marched back and forth without a sign of that much desired emblem. +At one of the hangars two men were tugging at a machine, and slowly +bringing it out of the hangar. Without a word the boys sprang forward +and assisted in the operation, an act which brought thanks from the men. +Then, more in curiosity than anything else, they slowly walked around +the machine and examined its construction. + +The aviator watched them for a few moments. Evidently, to his mind, the +boys knew all about flying machines, or, at least, must have had some +acquaintance with them. This seemed to interest him, and he began a +conversation with them. He soon learned their history, and bestowed +words of praise on them for what they had done. + +"So you want to be aviators, eh?" he inquired. + +"Yes, and we'll do anything to get in," said Alfred. + +"To be aviators in the service of the Government it will be necessary to +take the Regulation course," said the man. + +"There isn't time for that," said Ralph. "We can help out now, even if +we don't do any flying, can't we?" + +The man chuckled. "I suppose you can tighten up bolts, examine, and +stretch the stay wires, and things like that?" he remarked. + +"As well as take out the engine and overhaul it," added Ralph. + +"Well, yes; that's a pretty good job; do you think you could do that?" +he asked. + +"Why, yes; we know something about it," replied Ralph. + +"Well, stay around here; we want some handy fellows; but I'm afraid +you'll have a hard job to get on the pay roll," he added. + +"Never mind about that end of it; we want to be doing something; that's +the main thing," said Alfred. + +It would not be interesting to go through the long details of work that +the boys entered into under those circumstances. Each day for more than +two months the boys found plenty of work to do. They became general +favorites at the camp, and while their services were not recognized in +an official way, as the regulations did not permit of the employment of +minors, still, in view of the fact that they had such an interesting +history, and had entered into the work with such zest the commandant at +the station permitted them to remain, and eventually provided them with +rations and quarters, to which was added a small pay, such as attached +to those in the messenger service. + +During this period the boys had many opportunities to go aloft on +practice drills, and on more than one occasion they had the privilege of +operating the machines while in flight, accompanied, of course, by the +regular pilots. Attached to the station were a half-dozen machines used +for the purpose of teaching control, and to enable pupils to become +familiar with the handling of the machines. They were designed merely to +skim the ground, the power being so limited that they could not be +raised from the ground except for very short glides. These the boys +frequently used, and the experienced aviators were greatly pleased at +their wonderful progress. It was a strict rule, however, that none but +regularly licensed aviators should pilot the government machines, and +that prohibited them from handling the machines on regular service. + +It was during the second week of the third month that the boys had the +first opportunity of showing their capabilities. During a trial flight +with sub-lieutenant Guyon, while at an altitude of five thousand feet, +Ralph noticed the machine dart downwardly, and, glancing back, saw +Guyon's head fall forward, and his hand drop from the lever. + +Without waiting to inform Alfred he crawled out of the pit, and seizing +the control lever, pushed it back in time to bring the ship to an even +keel. Alfred saw the motion, and followed Ralph. Together they succeeded +in drawing the pilot to one side, thus enabling Ralph to let himself +down into the position which enabled him to handle the lateral controls, +that were operated by the feet. + +With Ralph thus fully in control of the machine, Alfred turned his +attention to poor Guyon, who tried to raise his head, and occasionally +gasped, as though trying to recover his breath. It was not until the +machine was nearing the earth that he opened his eyes, and seemed to +realize his position, but he was too weak to give any instructions or +render assistance. + +Ralph made a good landing, and the moment the machine ceased to move +Alfred jumped from it, and ran to the office of the surgeon. + +"Something is the matter with the lieutenant!" he cried, as he entered +the door. + +"What is the trouble? Where is he?" asked the surgeon, as he moved out +of the door in response to Alfred's appeal. + +"He was taken sick while we were in the air," said Alfred. + +"And how did you happen to get down safely?" asked the surgeon. + +"We took charge of the machine," replied Alfred. + +"Who are _we_?" he asked. + +"Ralph and myself; we were up with him." + +The lieutenant was being taken from the machine when the surgeon +arrived. Restoratives were at once applied, and within a half hour the +attack seemed to wear itself away, and he began to show a normal color. + +His eyes rested on Alfred when he awoke from the first quiet nap, and +raising his hand approvingly said: "That was a good job, Alfred; +couldn't have been better." + +"What do you mean?" asked Alfred. + +"You brought us down all right, I mean," he replied. + +"Oh, Ralph did that," was the reply of Alfred. + +"Well, no matter; you fellows didn't get rattled; that's the main +thing," said the lieutenant. + +An incident of this kind could not remain a secret long in a camp of +this character. The Commandant took particular occasion to commend them +for their performance, and it was a long step in their favor when the +corps moved to the north to take its place in the great aviation camp +directly south of Verdun. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +AN AEROPLANE AMIDST THE LIGHTNINGS + + +Two days after the occurrence related in the preceding chapter, the +first section of the Corps was ordered to proceed to the Verdun station. +Lieutenant Guyon belonged to this part of the force, and, as he had now +recovered, was instrumental in securing the assignment of the boys to +his care. + +"Then we can go along?" asked Ralph, with some doubts and misgivings, as +they were packing the belongings of the lieutenant. + +"I have arranged that," said the lieutenant. + +"What is that?" asked Alfred, who appeared at the door of the hangar. + +"We are going," shouted Ralph. + +"Yes; you might as well get your things packed and put them in the +machine," said the lieutenant. + +The boys laughed, for outside of a few trinkets, and underclothing, they +had nothing of importance to take along. They remarked that it was +singular how few things seemed to be really needed, traveling, as they +did, from place to place at a moment's notice. + +"When do you intend to start?" asked Ralph. + +"Whenever we are ready," was the reply. "We intend to leave in squadron +formation and manoeuver for an hour, and afterwards each is to make for +the station on his own hook." + +Shortly thereafter the first signal was given. The machine was pushed +out and lined up. At the second signal the machines were mounted. At the +third tap the motors began to hum, and soon there was a movement in the +whole line. It was a splendid spectacle, as the machines left the +ground, and rose majestically toward the west, the direction from which +the wind was blowing. + +The manoeuvers were particularly interesting to the boys, and the +lieutenant led his section in the formation during the entire practice +until the captain's flag on the great Duperdessun indicated that the +machines were free. After making a great sweep to the west the +lieutenant turned to the left, encircling the town, and pointed due +east. + +Before they had proceeded fifteen kilometers, something happened to the +engine, for it ceased to hum. They were then at an altitude of a mile, +and inability to start the motor made it necessary for them to volplane +to the earth. Sighting a considerable town to the left, which was +located south of a canal, the machine was directed toward a smooth, open +field, not far from the environs, and after landing they learned that +the place was Ligny-en-Barrois. + +It was found that through some accident the petrol tank had started a +leak, and that the liquid was slowly oozing out during the flight, +without giving the first indication until the engines failed. It was +just the kind of an accident which necessitated the removal of the +reservoir in order to make the proper repair. + +"Which is the fastest machine?" asked Alfred, while they were waiting +for the return of the reservoir. + +"The Morane, by all means," replied the lieutenant. + +"I thought the Caudrons were the best?" remarked Ralph. + +"It depends on what you mean by _best_," answered the lieutenant. "The +different machines are used for various purposes, and while speed is +important, there are other things just as necessary." + +"What other things?" asked Alfred. + +"Well, bomb-dropping for one thing; then, some machines are better +adapted than others for directing artillery fire, or for using machine +guns," said the lieutenant. + +"The captain has a Caudron," said Alfred, "and he doesn't use a gun on +it either." + +"No; the Caudron is admirably adapted for observations, and is used +almost wholly in France for directing artillery fire," answered the +lieutenant. + +"It seems to me that this machine is good for observing," said Ralph. + +"Yes; and it is used for that purpose, but it is now being put to use +for photographing purposes,--that is, most of the Maurice Farman types +are so used," answered the lieutenant. + +"Why is that?" asked Alfred. + +"For two reasons; first, because you will see we can get a good view +downward; and, second, because it is the most stable machine in flight, +the latter making it especially well adapted to take good views," +replied the lieutenant. + +"Which are the largest ships?" asked Ralph. + +"The Voisin and the Breguet, by all means. They are able to carry heavy +loads, and are used as bomb-dropping machines, as their fuselages are +especially well adapted to carry and release the missiles," said the +lieutenant. + +"But I saw a Voisin at one of the hangars which had a big gun on it," +said Ralph. + +"Ah, that was the Voisin Cannon, which carries a 37-millimetre gun," +said the lieutenant. "That is used for bombarding captive balloons and +Zeppelins, if the latter should ever make their appearance." + +"A 37-millimetre gun?" repeated Alfred. + +"Yes; that's about one and a half inch in your measure," answered the +lieutenant. + +Within an hour the reservoir was again in position, and there was no +delay in again mounting into the air. "We might take a little trip due +east, as far as Toul, and north of that point we may have the privilege +of seeing some of the enemy," remarked the lieutenant, as they mounted +the machine. + +A beautiful silver thread now appeared on the landscape to the east, as +they reached their greatest altitude. Looking back there was a smaller +thread to the west, and, apparently, the same distance from their +viewpoint. They thus had the opportunity of seeing, at one glance, two +of the most noted rivers which figure in the great war,--the Meuse to +the east, and the Marne in the west, these streams at this point being +within thirty miles of each other. + +It was, probably, imprudent for them to take an out-of-the-way course to +reach their destination, but the temptation was very great. The sun was +still shining brightly when they started from Ligny-en-Barrois, but it +was now growing dark from the overspreading clouds, and as soon as Toul +was sighted the lieutenant turned the machine northward. + +To the west it could now be seen that the threatening clouds were coming +up, and they appeared to be sweeping toward the east with great speed, +at right angles to the aviators' course. + +"I wonder what the lieutenant will do?" queried Ralph half to himself, +as he looked at the clouds, and then glanced back to the officer. + +The lieutenant shook his head, and pointed the machine further to the +left. + +"Why, I believe he is going right into it!" remarked Alfred in amazement +to Ralph. + +But the officer now made a wide swinging turn. A view of the heavens +indicated that the storm was an extensive one, and that the speed of the +wind had increased most alarmingly, for, in looking down they seemed to +stand still over the little hamlet beneath them. The wind, into which +they were flying, was traveling at the same speed as the machine. + +There was but one course to follow. They must return to the earth, +otherwise they would be driven far over into the German lines. By +setting the control lever so as to depress the nose of the machine they +rapidly descended, the lever being intermittently drawn back to a normal +position, so as to keep the ship on an even keel and prevent it from +performing a loop in the air. + +The landing was easily made, notwithstanding the wind, and they found +they were near Commercy, west of the Meuse, about thirty-five miles +south of Verdun. A terrific rainstorm then followed, which lasted more +than an hour. + +"Were you ever in a rainstorm while flying?" + +"Never but once," replied the lieutenant, "and that was in thunder and +lightning, too, which was the most terrific thing I ever went through." + +"Tell us about it!" said Alfred. + +"I almost shudder at it when I stop to think of the hour when I faced +the lightning right where it is made," said the lieutenant. "It was in +the second week of the war, just east of Rheims, when the Germans were +sweeping across the frontier and had passed Charleville. I had a +double-seated Nieuporte, with an assistant handling the machine, while I +was making observations. + +"Shortly after getting the first glimpse of the moving German columns I +noticed that it was growing dark, but when you are aloft that is not +noticed as quickly as when on terra firma. The great hosts of Germans +interested me intensely, and we kept on until I estimated that we were +fully ten miles behind the advance columns, when my assistant shouted +through the tube: 'Look back; what are your orders?' + +"I saw that to continue would be disastrous, so I gave the order to +turn. This gave us the first opportunity to determine our speed, or, to +state it more accurately, the speed of the wind, for you will recall +that when we turned this afternoon, we seemed to stand still above the +town. + +"Within ten minutes of the time I turned the machine to the west the +first heavy rolling clouds seemed to meet us. The earth was quickly +blotted from sight, and heavy rumblings were heard, but no indications +of lightning. I knew that heavy black clouds were dangerous, and they +were so black that it was impossible to see my assistant, three feet +distant. + +"I could not decide what to do, so I finally shouted through the tube: +'keep on a straight course to the west,' for I knew that to land at that +point would bring us right into the great German column. There was no +rain falling at the time, but the cloud was like the densest mist. The +machine was still moving,--that is, the engine was merrily humming, and +my assistant's voice startled me as he shouted: 'There is something +wrong; compass out of order.' + +"During the flashes I could see him pointing to the compass, and I +leaned over, and caught a glimpse of the dial. The pointer was swinging +around violently. The lightning now seemed to be incessant, and the +rumbling of the thunders was weird beyond description. Sometimes, +immediately after a vivid flash, a thick spray would deluge our faces." + +"What were you thinking about while all this was happening?" asked +Alfred. + +"What impressed me most was the wonderful difference between the +appearance of those electrical discharges when viewed in the usual way +from the surface of the earth. I did not notice any forked lightning, +nor did it show itself in streaks, darting hither and thither. It seemed +to be more like balls of fire, suddenly appearing here and there, and +when each ball burst into flame, there would be a crackling sound, at +any rate, so it seemed, for I dared not stop the engine. + +"But the most remarkable thing was the odor which was present. It had a +pungent smell, not at all unpleasant, but decidedly exhilarating in its +effects. I suppose we were taking in ample doses of laughing gas, for I +assure you that after the first experience, we had no particular sense +of danger. It was most fascinating, and I felt as though I was being +raised up on my seat. Occasionally I would try to figure out how this +would end, but on the whole it was devoid of terror." + +"How long were you in the storm?" asked Ralph. + +"Well, I was so fascinated that I had forgotten to look at the watch. I +held it before me, and soon noticed that it was nearly five o'clock, so +that we were over an hour and a half in the thick of it. During this +experience what gave me the queerest feeling was the compass, the needle +of which could not be seen, it swung around with such velocity. Were we +going with the storm, or not? That was the thing uppermost in my mind. +If we were being carried along we might be even in Belgium by the time I +noted the watch. + +"Then I tried an experiment. I ordered my assistant to make a turning +movement. This convinced me that we were really going with the storm, +and were now far over into German territory. Strange as it may seem, we +were not thrown hither and thither; the ship sailed along smoothly. I +feared to make the next experiment,--that is, to direct the machine +toward the earth, for, while everything worked perfectly, I had a +feeling that it would be safer to reach the earth with an engine running +than with a dead one. Slowly the machine went down; it seemed to get +lighter, but now the thunder came in sharp claps, and the form of the +lightning changed. I could distinctly see what the observer sees when on +the earth, long, zig-zag streaks multiplied a hundred times more than +anything I ever witnessed while on earth." + +"How high were you up when you got out of the clouds?" asked Ralph. + +"Seven hundred and seventy meters (about 2,900 feet), as indicated on +the barometer." + +"Could you see the earth?" asked Alfred. + +"No, indeed; the rain was pouring down; it was splashing over us and all +about us, and I signalled to go up again, and we soon entered the +clouds; but during all this time the needle of the compass kept +spinning, so that we knew nothing of the direction we were traveling." + +"But couldn't you tell which way the wind was blowing?" asked Ralph. + +"No; we were moving with the great air current, sometimes sailing with +it, and at other times against it, but with nothing below to indicate +the direction. We could not possibly say whether we were going north or +south." + +"I think if I should be in the air and couldn't see the earth I would +know a way to tell which way the storm was moving," said Ralph. + +"How?" asked the lieutenant, as he leaned forward. + +"Why, the rain would come down at an angle, if the wind should be +blowing, wouldn't it?" replied Alfred. + +"Quite true, that would be the case on the earth; but it would not be so +up where the raindrops are being formed; there the little particles of +water move along with the wind stream; but that is not all; when you are +in a machine in a great wind movement, the ship must move through the +wind in one direction or the other at all times so as to keep aloft, +hence, whether you are going with or against the wind, the rain drops +appear to be coming down at an angle, and this, in itself would be +sufficient to deceive you, or, at any rate prevent you from determining +the direction in which you happened to be sailing." + +"How did you get down?" asked Alfred. + +"That was the interesting part of it. After a half hour more of flying I +again ordered the assistant to go down two hundred meters. It was now +evident that the storm was abating. Soon we again passed out of the rain +clouds, and the assistant shouted that he had reached the level +indicated. 'Go lower,' I shouted. As we did so it grew lighter, and we +began to feel a relief. 'Lower yet,' I ordered. At 600 meters the rain +poured steadily, but still nothing was visible." + +"You were up then about a half a mile," said Ralph. + +"Just about that," was the reply. "Soon we noticed a peculiar white +patch, and then another. This was puzzle to me. 'Go still lower,' I +shouted, and down went the machine. Then we saw some white houses, and I +almost shouted for joy. But where could we be? We were passing over a +city, a city located within the bend of a large river. I racked my brain +to find out where and what it could be. If it was the river Meuse it +might be Verdun, or Sedan, or Charleville. We were forced to go down +still lower, and then I could see forts, and I felt sure we were over +Sedan. + +"We were even then going east. I was so agitated that I could hardly +speak, and motioned to my assistant to turn around. He understood, and +the ship was swung around; we were now going right into the blinding +rain, but we were fifty miles behind the German advance columns, and in +order to enable us to make more rapid progress I told the assistant to +change the course nearly due south. We were flying very low, certainly +not over a thousand feet. + +"Thus far we had not seen a soldier, or any evidences of warfare. In a +half hour we sighted another stream. My heart leaped with joy, for I was +sure it must be the Aisne. To assure myself of this we followed the +stream for twenty kilometers, and then the forests of Argonne came into +sight, thus assuring me of the position. I knew that the army of the +Crown Prince was in that region, and it would not be safe to descend; I, +therefore, directed the machine to the west, crossed the river, and was +about to go still lower, when I heard a boom,--several of them. + +"This startled me, you may be sure. 'Up, up!' I shouted. The machine +obeyed. We rose to an altitude of eight hundred meters, then suddenly +the engine stopped. My assistant turned and shouted: 'We have no +petrol.' I crawled back and tested the tank. It was empty. 'Volplane to +the south,' I said. It was the only thing I could do. Now that the +engine was silent the sounds from the earth were startling. There was +terrific firing to the right and left, and all about us; but we must go +down; there was no help for that. + +"Soon the earth again came in sight, and then the location of the +batteries was made out by the volumes of smoke, which could be seen at +each volley. My assistant tried to hold up the machine as long as +possible, but we were now down to 300 meters, then the barometer +registered 250. We both noticed a large, apparently smooth field, and +the final volplane began. We landed a hundred feet from a first-line +trench, and although the Germans made it hot for us for about fifteen +minutes we were soon able to reach the laterals and thus escape their +fire. But the machine was in a bad condition when we rescued it that +night. It was literally shot full of holes. What is left of it is now in +the end warehouse where the scraps are kept." + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +A CHAPTER OF LESSONS ABOUT THE AEROPLANE + + +Early the following morning there was intense activity in the camp, and +Ralph was among the first to learn the cause of the excitement. Several +army divisions had come up in the night, and were bound for the Verdun +sector, and from the information obtained it was the intention of the +commander to make a terrific assault in order to break the German lines +north of the city. + +The lieutenant, when approached, admitted that they were now in for +double duty. "Every man in the corps must report and be ready in the +morning. There will be two days of observation, and then look out for +some business." + +"When will we go to Verdun?" asked Ralph. + +"We are expecting orders at any moment," was the reply. + +During the previous afternoon more than fifty machines had assembled, +and some of those were now leaving, a few going directly east, on +observation tours, while others were circling about and testing the +engines. + +"I am expecting a big Farman machine," said Lieutenant Guyon, as he +returned from headquarters an hour afterwards, "that is equipped for +carrying bombs, but I am told it is one of the speediest machines in the +service. It will easily carry six hundred kilos in bombs (1,200 pounds), +and we are ordered to wait here until it arrives." + +When the boys were alone, Alfred, with a glint of joy in his eyes, +remarked: "I think that will give us an opportunity to do some flying +with the lieutenant." + +"Do you think so?" replied Ralph, elated at the thought. + +"I am sure of that," said a voice behind them. + +They quickly turned and saw the lieutenant, who had entered unobserved. +They saw by the smile on his face that the remark was an agreeable one, +for he continued: + +"Yes, and the machine is now here; the men are at work setting it up; so +we might as well go over and help out." + +A second invitation was not necessary. Ralph, who was outside in one +bound, rushed across the field, but Alfred accompanied the lieutenant to +the commandant's office, where they were provided with the receipt for +the machine. The lieutenant remained here while Alfred carried the +document to the warehouse. Within two hours the machine was in condition +to receive the fuel and the supplies usually carried in the machines for +emergencies. + +When the lieutenant returned he made a careful inspection, and on this +occasion the boys followed every movement of his to learn what were the +essential requirements in inspecting. Naturally, the most important +thing was to know that every part of the frame is not only properly set +up and the wires made taut, but that the fastenings, the turnbuckles, +are in good condition. That necessitated a minute examination of every +one of them. + +Then the planes were sighted to ascertain whether they were properly +aligned. Sometimes when the planes are not exactly parallel with each +other, the end of one, for instance, being set a little higher or lower +than the other, it is usually corrected by letting out one or more sets +of brace wires and taking up on others. This observation was followed by +a careful look at the control planes. These are the sensitive parts of +the plane, and may be likened to feelers, for the slightest warping of +the horizontal tail planes will frequently cause the machine to fly with +a skidding motion, not dangerous, but exceedingly uncomfortable when +flying at a high rate of speed. + +"The wires leading to the control levers are always a source of worry to +me," remarked the lieutenant, and he drew himself up into the rear part +of the chassis. "You will notice that this one rubs along the side of +that brace. I could not permit that," he said, as he glanced toward one +of the workers. + +"Do you think it would weaken the brace?" asked Ralph. + +"No, it's not that," replied the lieutenant. "The difficulty is that +all these wires are stranded, and as soon as one of the wires wears out +by the frictional contact, another will give way, and the control wire +is liable to part at the most critical time." + +The boys had occasion to remember the lieutenant's warning shortly +thereafter. After an examination of the airplane structure an +investigation was made of the engine. The mechanic turned it over to be +sure that the compression was all right. Self-starters are provided on +all these machines, as the French learned at an early day that it would +be unwise to depend on cranking. + +Then a thorough inspection of the pipes and tubing for the fuel and +lubrication was made. The dashboard of an aeroplane is a much more +wonderful contrivance than the dashboard of an automobile. The aviator +must look out for several things not necessary when traveling on land. + +The machine which they were examining had on it the most improved +contrivances, which had been found desirable, some of which were +entirely new to the boys, one of them being the inclinometer. + +"That must be a dandy thing," said Alfred, pointing to it. + +"I think there are only a few of the military machines which are +supplied with them, but the order has been given to put them on all the +new machines," said the lieutenant. + +"What are the two rods for?" asked Ralph, as he looked at the +inclinometer. + +[Illustration: FIG. 6. INSTRUMENT BOARD OF STANDARD AIRPLANE. + +1. Control Lever, with thumb switch. 2. Watch. 3. Altimeter, for +registering height. 4. Compass. 5. Pressure Gages for two gasoline tanks +6. Dial to register engine revolutions. 7. Switches for two magnetos. 8. +Air Speed indicator. 9. Clinometer. 10. Oil Pulsator. 11. Gasoline +supply system. 12. Engine crank and fly-wheel.] + +"The two rods which swing past the vertical bar, on which you see the +numbers, indicate the angle at which the machine is going. All that is +necessary is to observe the crossing point of the rod over the marked +bar, and it will instantly tell what the angle of ascent or descent is. +You see an aviator now has so many things to think of that he must have +devices of various kinds which will constantly tell him anything or any +condition without asking for it." + +"Why, this also tells how fast the engine turns," remarked Alfred. + +"Of what use is that?" asked Ralph. + +"Well; if you knew that the engine was capable, under full throttle, to +make eighteen hundred revolutions a minute, and the dial showed that the +shaft was turning only one thousand, you would quickly get the idea that +something was wrong," answered the lieutenant. + +"Oh, yes; and then you would start to make an investigation at once +without waiting for the engine to stop," said Alfred. + +"Exactly; it is there as a warning, just as a headache is a warning that +something is wrong, or a pain, which is nature's way to indicate that an +investigation should be made without delay," answered the lieutenant +with a nod. + +Besides the foregoing, the dash had on it a watch. Now, a watch may be a +convenient thing to have on an automobile, but it is not a necessity. On +a scouting and observation plane it is one of the necessary implements. +Alfred laughed, as he looked at the neat little clock face. + +"I suppose," he said, "we could get along without that." + +"Of course we could," answered the lieutenant. "But why get along +without it when we now find it such a necessary element?" + +"Necessary how?" asked Ralph, in surprise. + +"In determining distances, for one thing," answered the lieutenant. + +"A watch to tell the distance?" asked Alfred incredulously. + +"Yes, indeed," responded the lieutenant. "If you saw a puff of smoke in +the distance, and shortly thereafter heard a boom, the distance could be +determined almost instantaneously by roughly calculating 1,200 feet for +every second. You see, the clock there has a second hand, which is very +plain, for that very purpose." + +"But suppose there is a regular battle on, it would be hard to tell +about the boom from any particular gun, wouldn't it?" asked Ralph. + +"Quite true; in such a case it would be useless for that purpose. +Another use is in signaling," continued the lieutenant. "For instance, +in sending information to a battery, arrangement is sometimes made to +flash the distance by means of second intervals." + +"How is that done?" asked Alfred, now growing intensely interested in +the details of the dashboard mechanism. + +"It is an easy matter to signal numbers," answered the lieutenant and a +favorite plan is to fly over the area where the enemy's battery is +located, then flash at that altitude. The gunner will take the angle, +set his piece and fire, the aviator, meanwhile, noting the course and +effect of the shot. By means of the watch he can determine the distance, +counting either by the time of flight of the missile, or by the elapsed +time between the flash of the gun and the landing of the shot. + +The altimeter is another very important part of the equipment. It is a +device which tells at a glance how high the machine is flying, and Ralph +looked at it with a somewhat doubtful expression. The lieutenant saw the +questioning lines on his face, and instantly divined the reason. + +"You are in doubt whether the altimeter can be relied on? Am I correct?" +he asked. + +"Well, I suppose it is all right, but almost every time we have been up +and took the readings, we found we were actually hundreds of feet less +than the altimeter actually showed, so I am wondering if it is possible +really to tell the exact height by that apparatus," remarked Alfred. + +"Yes, I understand what you mean," replied the lieutenant. "The other +day, when we made the long flight from Bar-le-Duc, the device we had +showed 900 meters, for it was an automatically registering barometer, as +all of them practically are. When we returned I noted on the report book +872 meters. Did you notice that?" + +"Yes, and I wondered at it at the time," said Alfred. + +"I knew that the general altitude of the country at that place, as +indicated by the topographical charts, was 28 meters above sea level so +I merely subtracted 28 from 900, and that showed how far up above the +land we really were," said the lieutenant. + +"Of course, it's a satisfaction to know how high one is flying," said +Ralph. + +"It is not only a satisfaction, but it is an absolute necessity for an +aviator to know how high he is flying, if his mission is to convey any +information to the batteries in the rear," said the lieutenant. + +"And how is that done?" asked Alfred. + +"By a system of triangulation," he replied. "In a few days we may have +an opportunity to use the system, and I will explain it then so you can +quickly grasp the subject." + +The air speed indicator was another interesting device, but at that the +lieutenant shook his head as though doubting its general value. + +"Don't you think it's accurate?" inquired Alfred of the officer. + +"Oh, yes; it is as accurate as it can be made. In fact all devices, +which are used to indicate the speed of the wind, are nearly perfect. +That is not the difficulty. When it is used on a flying machine several +new things enter into the problem, which makes it difficult for the +instrument to be truthful." + +"What is the main trouble?" asked Alfred. + +"Well, suppose we are starting a flight against a wind, which is moving +at the rate of, say, ten miles an hour," answered the lieutenant. +"While in flight we note that, going against the wind, the air speed is +sixty miles. Now, if we happened to stop suddenly so we were poised in +the air, the indicator would show the air speed to be ten miles, so that +we were really going only fifty miles. If, now, the machine is turned so +that we are going at right angles to the movement of the wind, although +we may be going actually through the air at a speed of seventy miles an +hour, the indicator does not register the air speed at all, because it +is in such a position that the air does not affect it and the only +indication we have is the speed of the air relative to the movement of +the machine,--or, to put it in a better way, I might say that the +instrument only registers, in reality, the speed at which the aeroplane +goes through the air, and no more." + +"But is that the only way to tell how fast we are going?" asked Ralph. + +"The best test is to take the engine revolutions. A certain machine +after it has been properly tested in a calm, and also in wind currents +of different velocities, will show a record of speed with the engine +running at certain revolutions. An experienced aviator can judge pretty +well, by experience, what the speed of the wind is, and, knowing the +propeller speed, and the direction he is going relative to the wind, he +can make a fair estimate of the speed of the machine." + + + + +CHAPTER X + +A THRILLING EXPERIENCE IN THE AIR + + +It was with feelings of joy that the boys stepped out of their tent the +following morning to learn that the lieutenant had decided on a trial +spin in the forenoon, preparatory to the real start, which was to take +place at two in the afternoon. The engine was turned over, and the +machine held down while the usual hour's running test was going on. +Everything seemed to be in order, the engine was stopped and another +inspection made when the lieutenant gave the order to mount the machine. + +In this type of military machine the swivel gun is at the extreme +forward end, and the pilot directly behind the gunner, and at a slight +elevation above the gun. Both gunner and pilot are housed in, and in +most cases strapped to the body of the machine to prevent any accidental +falling out, as there have been numerous accidents due to men being +thrown from their perches. + +The boys found ample room in the forward pit, and at a word the machine +was released and glided forward. The new machine gave them a sensation +different from the former one, as it appeared to ride more easily and +steadily. In fact, there is just the same difference in the motion of +flying machines as there is in autos, some, the small machines, seeming +to glide over the ground and impart every bump to the occupants, as +might be expected of a light machine. + +A heavy flying machine, however, seems to move along with the utmost +ease, and does not sway from side to side when sailing through cross +currents. Naturally, such a machine is a more stable base for machine +guns as well as for observation. + +Alfred's particular hobby was kodaking. On this occasion, the first time +he had an opportunity, he prepared himself with a camera. The +lieutenant, learning of Alfred's penchant in this direction, had a +regulation government instrument sent over, and attached to the machine, +to Alfred's surprise. + +Before starting out, the lieutenant said: "I want to give you some +points now, in using the camera. Photographs, in order to have any +military value, must be identified,--that is, they must be made at such +altitudes, and with reference to certain marked characteristics on the +earth, that we may be able to place them on the topographical maps of +the particular section, and thus verify them day after day." + +"What do you mean by verifying them day after day?" asked Alfred. + +"I mean by that to see what changes have taken place in the same view +between the taking of the two pictures," replied the officer. + +"Well, what possible changes could take place in a day or two?" asked +Ralph in astonishment. + +"A great many, and very important ones, too," answered the lieutenant. +"The camera sees what the eye does not notice. If a picture is taken of +a certain section today, and the following day another picture is +snapped, a comparison of the two will show whether or not there has been +a movement of troops, or, whether or not a certain undistinguishable +object was something movable, or not." + +"Is that the way the map of the enemy's country is made up?" asked +Alfred. + +"Yes, and every detail is noted, so that when you commence the work be +careful to notice something which will distinguish the exact place where +you are located; also put down the direction of the flight over that +same area, and the altitude at which we are flying." + +As the machine glided over the treetops and the village on the northern +border of the Meuse, the sun shone out with intense brilliancy. They +were going directly east, and both boys turned toward the lieutenant, +their eyes seeming to say: "So you are going to take a peep at the +front, by way of experiment?" which was exactly what the lieutenant +purposed doing. + +The altimeter now registered 1800 meters, considerably over a mile high. +From that point they could see to Verdun, and thirty miles east of +Verdun, could be noted the blurred outlines and surroundings of Metz, +that greatest of all fortified German defences. On they went for nearly +three-quarters of an hour until a stream of some magnitude appeared to +the east, which they soon crossed. + +They afterwards learned that this was the Mosel, which flows through +Metz. The latter city now loomed up so it could be plainly seen, and to +their right was another town, Nancy, a fortified French place. They were +about midway between the two places. + +Suddenly an aeroplane appeared to the right, and the lieutenant turned +the machine in that direction. The boys were relieved to see the great +circle on the control planes of the machine in the distance, which +showed them it was a French reconnoitering airplane. In the east several +other machines were noticed hovering about, and the lieutenant at first +headed directly for them, but he soon turned to the north. + +Below were seen numerous flashes of guns, and they knew from this that +the fighting lines must be along the river. The most startling thing +which occurred was a tremendous explosion that seemed to be right in the +machine itself, and they looked around startled at the suddenness of it, +for everything seemed peaceful enough to them at that altitude. + +The lieutenant turned the machine, however, as he apprehended more +trouble, now that the gunners below had so luckily secured a fair range. +The first shot was followed in another moment by another, and the +lieutenant now began to dart the machine back and forth, and turn it in +short, sharp circles. + +Another explosion took place, this time remarkably close, and pieces of +the flying machine came down, and brushed past the boys. The lieutenant +shook his head, as the boys glanced back. The machine was now circling +around, a peculiar manoeuver, the boys thought, as they looked at each +other for a possible explanation. + +Ralph looked back, and noticed that the lieutenant, with an alarmed look +on his face, was constantly glancing back to the tail planes. The +steering lever seemed to be jammed. Ralph had an idea that something was +wrong, and crawled over the body until he was alongside of the +lieutenant. The latter pointed to the control lever, and Ralph +understood. + +Without waiting for instructions from the lieutenant, he cautiously made +his way along the chassis, following up the wires which were indicated +by the lieutenant. Within four feet of the tail plane Ralph halted. +Then, reaching down, he succeeded in grasping a dangling wire, and held +up the end for the lieutenant's inspection. After several attempts he +found the other end of the wire, which had been severed by a shot from a +shrapnel shell. + +The ship was still circling around, so without waiting to repair the +break Ralph turned the rudder, and, glancing at the lieutenant, saw the +latter smile, and then by motions direct him to give the control plane a +still further push in the right direction. It was impossible for Ralph +to hear anything the lieutenant said, but as soon as the airplane was +fairly headed for the west, the power was shut off, and the machine +began to descend. + +"Good boy!" shouted the lieutenant. "Can you fasten them together?" he +asked. + +"I am afraid not," replied Ralph. "A piece seems to have been shot away. +But I can take care of it if you will only direct me to pull it to the +right or to the left." + +"All right, then. Do you see that great patch of green, directly beyond +the castle?" asked the lieutenant. + +"I can see it plainly," replied Ralph. "Shall I steer for it?" he asked. + +"Oh, no. We must come up from the south. Note the direction of the wind +from the smoke. Make a long sweep. We are now at an altitude of 1200 +meters. We can volplane twelve kilometers from this height," remarked +the lieutenant. + +The turn was made to the south in a long sweep, Ralph continually +glancing forward to note the direction indicated by the lieutenant. + +"Now straight ahead, and hold steady." + +They were now rapidly approaching the earth; the machine gliding over +the tops of the trees at the border of the forest that ran along the +river bank. To their right, across the river, was a large town, +Pont-a-Mousson, and the castle ahead of them was a large school, from +which even then hundreds of children were emerging, and excitedly +rushing toward the approaching machine. + +Down went the machine at a sharper angle; then, when close to the earth, +the rear control was sharply turned, and the nose of the ship raised up, +but for an instant only, when the machine settled down, and, after +running along a hundred feet, stopped. + +The agitated children pressed about, and the lieutenant tried in vain to +keep them off. Some more venturesome than others, after seeing Ralph and +Alfred, began to question them. To the relief of the boys they learned +that the French out-posts were less than a mile distant. + +"Let us make the repairs as rapidly as possible," said the lieutenant. + +An examination showed that not only was the control wire cut in two +places, but the vertical plane had its pivot shot away, thus accounting +for the peculiar action of the lever, which seemed to jam whenever an +attempt was made to turn it to the right. Ralph did not know this, while +seated astride the body and manipulating the plane, and it was obvious +that even though he had succeeded in splicing the wire, it would have +been impossible, with the rudder in that condition, to turn by means of +the wire controls. + +Assisted by the machinist from the garage belonging to the owner of the +school, they completed the repairs in an hour, and, hungry though they +were, they again went aloft and sailed for their camp, which was reached +after an absence of three hours. + +They thus had less than a hour to get a hurried meal and prepare to +line up with the squadron, to carry out the orders for the movement to +the north. They were now going to that section of the fighting line in +France where the most intense struggles up to that time had taken place, +and where, ever since the opening of the conflict the most stupendous +operations were being carried out to gain the mastery. + +Imagine, if you can, the sight that met their gaze, as they took their +place on the extreme right of the three squadrons, which were about to +launch on this memorable occasion. They were about twenty miles south of +the city of Verdun. The extreme northern aviation base was not more than +eight miles southwest of the city, located on a level plain east of the +forest of Argonne, and close to the Aire river, a tributary of the +Aisne. + +The trip was a short one, as the actual flying distance was less than +fifteen miles. Long before they reached the scene of the great camp, +they could see the thousands of vehicles, and the hundreds of thousands +of soldiers, on the highways, in the fields, and around the villages +along the two main railways which threaded their way along the wide +valleys between the Meuse and the Aire. + +During every mile of the trip they were under the constant vigilance of +the officers, who moved them into echelon, formed them into squares, or +caused them to trail in columns of two or three, the object being to +accustom the pilots to obey and execute signals while in flight. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +A FIGHT AND A LANDING IN BELGIUM + + +The day following their arrival at the field base, as it was called, +they found a wonderful change in the order and arrangement of the place. +Everything was done in the most systematic way. So many machines, from +each squadron, were told off each morning for certain duties. Those +duties were as follows: First, scouting. This meant ascertaining where +the enemy was most active; where the batteries were located; noting the +movement of troops, and their general character. + +Scouts generally operate in pairs, for if it is impossible to signal +back from the ships, one continues the work while the other makes a +signaling report from such point or points in the rear as will make the +information useful. + +The next duty is to protect the scouts from interference. This work is +carried on by the large ships, which are usually provided with rapid +fire guns. They need not, necessarily, be speedy, for they are to keep +in touch with the speedy scout ships, the latter of which sail around +over a small area so the observations can be carried on as leisurely as +possible. + +Third come the bomb-throwers, usually heavy-powered machines, generally +not armed, as all the carrying power is devoted to the transportation of +bombs. These are also guarded by the heavily armed machines. Sometimes, +as in the case of the Farman machine, which the lieutenant used, they +were used for scouting, and were also serviceable for fighting purposes. + +In the early period of the war there were not many pilots capable of +doing the duty required in all branches of the service. It was +frequently the case that the aviator would command a ship with a gun on +it and do double duty, acting as scout, or he would chase and fight an +enemy, manipulating the gun while manoeuvering the machine. It was the +sort of duty in which Lieutenant Guyon was engaged at the time he was +promoted to the command, and supplied with the new type of machine. + +Naturally, as commander of the squadron, he was at liberty to take any +one he desired in his flights, and as he had a real affection for the +boys, he took delight in having them accompany him on many of his +exploits. It was the custom for the lieutenant to entrust the piloting +of the machine to one of the boys, while he acted as a scout. Frequently +Ralph would perform this duty, while Alfred, with his camera engaged, +under the direction of the lieutenant, taking such photos as were deemed +necessary to supplement the Department maps. + +Thus over a month was spent in scouting duty, and, as the weather +became somewhat chilly, especially in the evenings, they never went +aloft without being well muffled up. One morning the lieutenant called +out to the boys that they were likely to have a busy day before them, as +the weather was unusually mild for the season. + +When they arrived at the hangar the machine was already out of the shed, +and the lieutenant was busy with the charts in consultation with the +officer of the day. Evidently something unusual was afoot, for they +waited more than an hour before the lieutenant re-appeared. + +"You might wrap up well," he said. "I have ordered a good luncheon, as +we shall have a good long scouting area to cover." + +"Which way are we going?" asked Ralph. + +"Directly across the city, and then to the east. There is some unusually +active business going on between this and Metz." + +"Think I had better load up the camera pretty well, even though it is a +little misty," said Alfred. + +"By all means," responded the lieutenant. + +It was eleven o'clock before all was ready, when the lieutenant, +addressing Ralph, said: "After we pass over Verdun, going east, we cross +what is called the La Pietrie forests. The principal towns we shall +visit are Conflans and Briey, both within the German lines. Through +those towns are the principal railway lines which supply the enemy +forces to the west with provisions and ammunition. We have eight bombs +aboard to be used at convenient points. After lightening up the machine +by disposing of them we may make a visit to Longwy, a town twenty-two +miles north of Verdun. We ought to have good maps of the railroad +sections over there." + +As they arose the weather was somewhat hazy, so it was difficult to make +observations at high altitudes. They, therefore, ascended at available +points, and took a number of snapshots. To the left the Meuse river, and +the edge of the forest beyond were distinctly visible, although they +were then registering an altitude of more than 5,000 feet, and were five +miles east of the river. To the east was an impenetrable haze, so the +lieutenant directed the machine toward the river, and soon the German +encampment and lines were visible through Barencourt. + +All were on the alert to notice signs of the enemy's machines, for they +were now in such a position that the Germans would be most likely to +observe them, but there was not an indication that they would be +molested. They then turned the machine to the northeast where a bridge +was visible in the distance, and the lieutenant shouted through the +tube: + +"Make for the first bridge; follow the track on this side for a quarter +of a mile, so as to give me a chance to aim. Then take the second bridge +to the north further on, and in doing so pass the factory beyond." + +"I understand," said Ralph. + +The track was reached, and directions followed. Long before they were +over the bridge the lieutenant pushed down the lever which released a +bomb, which could plainly be seen at first, but they soon lost sight of +the flying missile. A moment later the second bomb was released. How +long it seemed for even the first bomb to reach the earth! As they were +directly over the bridge an explosion was plainly visible. The first +bomb had missed the bridge, but before they had time to comment on it +the second one burst at the end of the bridge, and one of the spans went +down. + +[Illustration: _A Dangerous Position_] + +The factory was now in view. "Go down lower," shouted the lieutenant. + +Alfred nudged the lieutenant, and pointed to the north. "That looks like +an airship," he said. + +"So it is," replied the lieutenant, after a hasty glance. "But we must +attend to this little business first," he continued, as his foot was +extended down to the bomb dropper. + +"You have hit it!" shouted Alfred in glee. "Now for the other bridge." + +They were not as successful with the last structure, although three +bombs were expended on it. + +"Now, where is the flyer you saw?" asked the lieutenant. + +"It went easy just before we reached the second bridge," said Alfred. "I +don't see it now." + +"Then I suppose we shall have to go to Longwy to find where it is," said +the lieutenant. "Can you see the city beyond?" he continued, pointing to +the north. "Go to the left of the city," he said through the tube. + +"Why did you tell him to go to the left?" asked Alfred. + +"In that way we can avoid the long range aircraft guns, which we know +are mounted in the forts to the east of the town," was the reply. + +They were soon on the northern side of the town, and in looking south +they were surprised to see two machines, one making for the east and the +other seeming to fly directly toward them. + +"That fellow will be a little surprised when he finds what he has to +deal with," said the lieutenant with a chuckle. + +"It's a Fokker, isn't it?" shouted Ralph through the tube. + +"Quite right; when I give the signal turn to the left, and describe a +sharp circle. I'll fool him," said the lieutenant. + +The signal came; the machine veered around just as the Fokker came +plainly into sight. As the turn was made the lieutenant turned the +machine gun to the other side, and when the sight was cleared past the +wings he gave the first turn of the crank to the gun. + +There was a hum and a succession of cracks, which seemed to surprise the +man in the Fokker. He evidently thought that the French machine was +trying to get away, or it never would have ventured so close. + +"The other machine is coming!" cried Alfred. + +"Here is where we can get in the fun," said the lieutenant. "Make a +straight line for the one coming up in the east. Go on until I signal." + +This was a most audacious move, and while Ralph was guiding the machine +toward the stranger the lieutenant poured a constant stream of shot into +the first comer. It must not be assumed, however, that the German +machines were idle during this period. Both were firing, but the shots +went wild, especially after the daring move just made. + +"Up! up! as high as you can go!" was the next order. + +The machine tilted, and the lieutenant looked back at Ralph approvingly. +"She is a dandy climber," said the lieutenant musingly. "Now I'd like to +see them follow a bit." + +One of the machines actually tried to imitate them, but the other ship +was noticed wavering and swaying from side to side. + +"Something is the matter with that fellow," said Alfred. + +"Yes; he's done for, and we can easily polish off the other one," +remarked the lieutenant, as he watched the falling machine. "Now turn +around quickly and dive for the one who is trailing us," said the +lieutenant through the tube. + +Ralph banked the machine, and brought it around as quickly as possible. +The machine was not a quick-turning one, but the oncoming machine was +not prepared for the manoeuver, for it seemed to hesitate which way to +go. If it went to the left it would be impossible to use its gun, and if +it turned to the right it would be at the mercy of the Frenchman's gun. +The only remedy was to dive; down went the machine at a sharp angle. The +lieutenant's shots went wild, but they were soon rid of their +troublesome companion. + +"I suppose we'll have the whole German flying corps after us now," said +the lieutenant. "Turn for home." + +No sooner had they turned than another machine came up, this time a most +determined fellow. + +"Up! up!" again came the command, "and keep pointing that way. You might +also veer to the left." + +This time it was one of the well-known Taubes, with the disadvantage, +however, that she was a tractor,--that is, had the propeller in front, +like the Bleriot monoplane, so that it prevented the driver from +shooting head on, whereas the Farman biplane was a pusher,--that is, had +the gun mounted in front, and the propeller behind the planes. During +the evolution of circling, however, the biplane had to present a +broadside, which gave the Taube a chance to pour in a stream of shot, +many of which took effect. + +"That was a close shot!" shouted Ralph through the tube. The lieutenant +looked back, and pointed to the tube. A shot had gone through it, +causing Alfred and Ralph to look at each other in undisguised dismay. + +[Illustration: _A Safety Manoeuver_] + +At every turn the lieutenant ground out the shot, and soon the barometer +registered a height of 6,400 feet. Two miles more and the Taube made a +peculiar turn, and glided to the right. + +"You have hit him," said Alfred in excitement, and the lieutenant +stopped churning. + +"It seems like it," was the reply. "When we come back on the circle, go +lower," he said to Ralph, "and I can finish him." + +As they crept up closer and closer, the lieutenant, with his hand on the +crank, waited for the final chance. Like a dying gladiator the Taube +turned, and a most terrific storm of shot came from the quick firer. +This was the only time that the boys actually heard the thuds of the +striking missiles on the body of the machine. It proved to be the last +effort of the Taube; it dropped away, but still held its upright +position. + +Instantly the engine of the biplane stopped. The lieutenant, with his +hand still on the crank, turned and shouted: + +"What is the matter?" + +There was dead silence, and sudden darkness, for they could not see in +either direction. They had entered a dense cloud. + +"Have we started on the down glide?" continued the lieutenant. + +"I am trying to hold it up," said Ralph. As he spoke they emerged from +the cloud, but the Taube was nowhere in sight. + +"Try the starter," said the lieutenant feverishly. + +"Can't do it," was the reply. + +"Then hold it steady while I examine the tank," said the lieutenant. He +leaned over, and almost immediately exclaimed: "The connection is shot +away." + +"I will make a long glide if you can fix it in the meantime," said +Ralph. + +"No; I will connect the other tank," was the reply. + +It required less than a minute to perform this operation, but despite +the repair the engine would not turn. + +After another examination the lieutenant looked up from the pit, and +said: "It's all up now. The other tank is also empty." + +The barometer now showed that they were only a little over three +thousand feet above the earth. A landing must be made, that was evident; +but where? Alfred pointed to a forest, directly east. + +"That might be a good place to come down, because there doesn't seem to +be any houses there." + +"Just the place if we can find a spot big enough," said the lieutenant. + +With his field glasses he scanned the forest. + +"Do you see that strip of dark green a little to the left? That is a +clear space, I am sure. Steer for that after circling around. We are +still high enough to enable us to make a careful observation of the +spot." + +The machine descended in its regular glide, and they passed over the +indicated spot. + +"That is a dandy place if you can hit it right," said Alfred. + +It was narrow, not more than a hundred feet wide, but it extended +diagonally up the hill, not the most desirable place to land, by any +means, but it was the only thing to be done. + +"Where shall I land?" asked Ralph. + +"Try to strike the second clump of brush; do you see what I mean?" asked +the lieutenant, his words tumbling over each other in his haste. + +"I can do it," was the reply. + +"May you have good luck," said the lieutenant. + +They approached the end of the open space between the trees. Fortunately +the wind was not blowing, and the fuselage struck the first clump of +brush, but they passed over it without difficulty. Ralph then threw up +the elevator sharply, and the front end tilted, while the body of the +machine sank down gently, and the landing was made without a jar. + +"That was the most beautiful thing I ever saw. You deserve great credit +for that piece of work," said the lieutenant, as he leaned back and +patted Ralph. + +They leaped from the machine, and for a moment stood there helpless with +the reaction which set in, the boys, particularly, being influenced by +the great strain. The lieutenant was the first to speak: "Well, here we +are in a pretty fix; but it might be worse," he said. + +"No; we haven't a drop of petrol left," said Ralph ruefully. "Both tanks +were perforated." + +They sat down to consider the situation. It was now past five o'clock, +and although it was generally the custom to take luncheon with them on +these trips, the extra amount which had been stored was barely +sufficient for a half meal. The sun was going down, and they had no idea +of their location except that, by calculating, the lieutenant judged +they might be fifteen miles northeast of Longwy. Everything was still, +except the evening chirrup of the birds. + +"It is too late to do any investigating tonight; but our first duty in +the morning must be to arrange for food," said the lieutenant. + +Fortunately, they had taken the precaution to carry plenty of wraps, so +they were not at all uncomfortable. They gathered leaves, made up +comfortable berths, and, after a most exciting day, slept soundly all +night. + +As soon as the first grey of the morning sun lightened up they arose, +and began an investigation of the surrounding vicinity. A reconnoitering +journey was proposed, as, during the night, faint whistles of +locomotives could be heard coming from the east. + +"That is the direction we must go," said the lieutenant, as they +prepared themselves for the trip. + +They entered a dense forest, setting their course by the compass, and +marched due east for an hour without seeing the first sign of +habitation, when they were suddenly startled by a locomotive whistle, +which could not be more than a mile away. They drew back and listened +for a time, then cautiously crept forward, looking for an opening. A +quarter of a mile to the left they discovered a wagon trail leading to +the north. + +This began to look as though some one might be living in the vicinity. +The trail was followed, as cautiously and as closely as possible, and a +mile beyond a cabin was sighted. This was the time for them to exercise +care, but they felt sure the people living there would sympathize with +them. + +"You see, we are in Belgium now, and they hate the Germans," said the +lieutenant. "I suppose we are close to the border of Luxemburg, and the +people there feel the same as the Belgians." + +"Do you know a place in Belgium called Bovigny?" asked Ralph. + +"Yes," responded the lieutenant. "That is on the other side of +Luxemburg, close to the frontier. Why do you ask?" + +"That is where we entered Belgium, and near where we assisted in +capturing the auto load of Germans," said Alfred. + +"Yes, Bovigny is less than forty miles from this place," said the +lieutenant. + +"Isn't that strange," said Ralph. "Here we are, close to the place where +we started on this excursion. Why, we made a regular circle to get +here," and they laughed at the situation. + +It was now past six o'clock in the morning. No one was in sight, and +they assumed it might be too early for the people, so they waited for an +hour; still there was no sign that the cabin was occupied. + +"I suppose we might as well go closer and investigate." They went +forward without seeing a sign of life, except a dozen or more chickens, +which were scattered over the lawn to the rear of the cabin. "If there +is any one there a whistle might bring them out," continued the +lieutenant. + +There was no response, and after waiting a short time they circled about +the house, and they saw that the front door was open, but there was no +furniture within. They then boldly approached, and began to examine the +contents of the rooms. Not a scrap of food was found, although ants and +other vermin were numerous, and there was a mouldy smell in the second +room, there being only two compartments or rooms. While they were +searching about, two chickens appeared at the door, and with a common +instinct the boys encouraged a closer acquaintance, to the amusement of +the lieutenant. One of the chickens was finally trapped, and a meal was +soon prepared and cooked in the oven. They had barely time to finish the +repast, when a shot was heard in the woods to the south, at which they +hurriedly left the cottage, and rushed to the nearest clump of brush +across the clearing. A second shot followed, evidently quite near, but +apparently from the same direction as the first. + +"They are probably hunters," remarked the lieutenant. + +"Isn't our machine over in that direction?" asked Ralph. + +"Undoubtedly," said the lieutenant. + +"I wonder what they would do if they found it?" queried Alfred. + +"I think it would be perfectly safe if the hunters are natives. I am +sure they would suspect the truth, for they would at once recognize it +as a French machine," replied the lieutenant. + +"Would it be safe to go in that direction?" asked Alfred. + +"That was in my mind," replied the lieutenant. "As we must find some +one in this region, and they seem to me to be the most likely fellows to +approach, come on," he added. + +They hurriedly went forward, expecting every minute to catch sight of +the hunters. Their progress was slow, as the ground was full of leaves, +and the wood thick; besides, there was considerable underbrush. They +thus wearily tramped on and on for more than an hour, covering a +distance which should have brought them close to the location of their +machine. Despite all their efforts it could not be found nor the place +located. + +The only remedy was to retrace their steps and go back to the cabin, and +from that place they could readily follow the wagon road back to the +place where they emerged from the woods. The cottage was reached shortly +after noon, and an hour was spent in catching several of the chickens +and roasting them, so that it was in the middle of the afternoon before +they again retraced their steps back to the starting point. + +Here another difficulty presented itself. They could not find the place +where they first reached the trail, so they sat down to wait for the +welcome sound of a train to guide them. Even that aid was denied them, +and as darkness was now coming on a suitable place was found to rest for +the night at the base of an uprooted tree. There the night was spent in +comparative comfort, as, fortunately, the weather still continued mild +and agreeable. + +The matter of food now became a vital one, but so, also, was the +necessity of locating the airplane. The matter was debated, and the +lieutenant finally said: "We must find our machine; from that point I +think we should strike to the west. It would be unwise for us to +approach the railroad to the east, as that is in the hands of the +Germans, and every mile of it is patrolled." + +By means of the compass they trudged to the west, and soon reached +familiar ground. As they were about to enter the open space, which was +recognized as their landing place, voices were heard. The three glanced +at each other in dismay, until Alfred's keen ears detected a French word +or two, of which he quickly advised his companions. + +"I will call to them in French," said the lieutenant. + +He did so, and the two men, for the lieutenant could now distinctly see +them, were startled, but in another moment returned an answer. + +"We are French," said the lieutenant. "That is our machine, and we have +been reconnoitering." + +"We are friends," said one of the men. + +In another moment the lieutenant and the boys were at the machine, and +grasped the hands of the hunters. "We are Belgians," continued the man. + +"Where are we?" asked the lieutenant. + +"In the forest, north of Messanoy," was the reply. + +"Are there any Germans near?" asked the lieutenant. + +"Yes, at St. Leger, to the north, and at the junction of Arlon, to the +northeast. But troops are constantly going along both roads to Longwy +and Metz," replied one of the spokesmen. + +"Where can we get something to eat?" was asked. + +"Ah, we can arrange that," said one of the men with a smile. "Follow +us." + +On the way the lieutenant learned a great deal of the system in force by +the Germans. They were conducted north, through the woods for fully a +mile where they reached a wagon trail. Here the lieutenant stopped. + +"Where does this trail lead?" he asked. + +"From the railway station on the east line to a little village on the +west side of the forest," was the answer. + +"Then we were on this trail yesterday," said Ralph. + +If they had gone a quarter of a mile farther, after reaching the +cottage, they could have seen the first cottage in the village. It was +also learned that the two men were the hunters whose shots were heard +the previous day while at the cabin. The men lived a quarter of a mile +from the village, in the elevated part, near the border of the forest, +and like true Belgians were glad to help their French brothers. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +EXCITING EXPLOITS ON LAND + + +"That is the place where I live," said the elder of the two men, as he +pointed to a low cottage on the side of a hill, "and Raoul here lives +below the turn. We must approach the house cautiously, for we know spies +to be in this part of the country." + +"I will go ahead," said Raoul. "Follow and go up to your house through +the orchard." + +They tarried by the roadside until the signal appeared. Upon reaching +the house they were greeted by Felix's wife, for that was the name Raoul +bestowed on his friend. A good meal was soon spread before them, and in +the meantime the lieutenant was plied with questions, as the people in +that section had no opportunities for learning what was really taking +place in the outside world. + +Finally the lieutenant asked: "Do you know of any place where we could +get some petrol?" + +The men mused for a while, and shook their heads. "You know," Felix +said, "everything around here is controlled by the Germans, and petrol +is one of the things that is kept strictly under guard." + +"Do you know the place where they store it?" inquired the lieutenant. + +"Yes, but it would be dangerous to attempt to get any of it," said +Raoul. + +"I have a plan," said Felix, "but we cannot do anything before night. I +know every step of the way to the station, and will take you there this +evening." + +"Good!" said the lieutenant. "In the meantime, give me a diagram of the +station, and the roads leading to it. That will help me to become +familiar with the surroundings." + +For the next hour the lieutenant was busily engaged in learning all +about the country, and where the stores and ammunition were kept. + +"I think we might as well have some of that petrol," said the lieutenant +with a smile, as he looked at the boys, who nodded their approval, as +they were keen to participate in the plans which the lieutenant had +formed. + +That night, after ten o'clock, they appeared at their place of +concealment, for it was thought wise to keep away from the house in the +event any of the prying neighbors should happen in. Together they +cautiously found their way to the railway and walked along the track +until the first switch was reached. While waiting there so that Felix +could point out the different objects, Ralph drew the lever, and set it +so the first train would take the switch. + +The lieutenant saw it and nodded approvingly. Ahead a few hundred feet +was a low building, which was reached by the track which led from the +switch. + +"The guards are stationed at that shed across the track, and sometimes +they come over," said Felix. + +"But is the building open?" asked the lieutenant. + +"There are no doors; only open arches. The tanks can be loaded and +unloaded from the tracks," was the answer. + +They were carrying three vessels, such as are usually employed for +transporting petrol in small quantities, and nearing the shed the +lieutenant said: "Remain here and await my orders. I will go ahead and +investigate." + +With two of the receptacles in his hands he crouched as low as possible, +and made his way along the track, but before reaching the structure he +left the track, and approached the shed from the south side. He was gone +for more than fifteen minutes, and when he returned with the receptacles +filled he immediately seized the other, returning with it also filled in +a few minutes. + +"Now, take these to the cross road, and out of sight. I will be there in +fifteen minutes," and saying this he quietly left them. + +The boys and Felix carried the cans to the designated place with the +greatest care, for the fluid was precious to them. No sooner had they +hidden the receptacles when something like a flash of lightning +illuminated everything about them, and this was followed by an +explosion. + +Felix gasped as he gazed in the direction of the sheds, for he divined +the cause. The boys, too, were startled. + +"I wonder if the lieutenant did that?" asked Ralph. + +"I have no doubt of it," replied Felix. + +"Do you really think he did it? I wonder if he is hurt?" said Alfred, +his voice in a tremor. + +They waited for more than a half hour. What if the lieutenant had been +caught in the catastrophe? They could see the soldiers at the station +rushing hither and thither, and the people were going toward the station +from all directions. + +"Mighty good thing we hid in this place," said Felix. + +Felix and the boys were now in consternation, and as they had about +decided to go up to their former place of concealment, the headlight of +a train approached from the south. It slowed down a little as it neared +the station. + +"The switch!" was Ralph's exclamation. As he said that the train reached +the switch, and turned to the track leading to the fiercely burning +shed. Half of the train ran through a sea of fire before it could be +checked. It was a terrifying sight, and Ralph shook with fear at the +sight. Fortunately, it was a freight train, or the toll of death would +have been awful. + +"This begins to look bad for us. I am afraid the lieutenant has been +captured. This place is getting to be too dangerous, and we must leave +at once," said Felix, as he seized one of the cans. + +"I will go down and see what the trouble is," said Alfred, but Felix +shook his head. Nevertheless, although Ralph also remonstrated, and +insisted on accompanying him, Alfred had his way. One would be safer +than two, he thought, and without further words he crawled along the +fence, avoiding contact with those who were in the near vicinity. + +A few minutes after Alfred left, the lieutenant returned, and was +shocked to learn of Alfred's journey. + +"Take these cans up to the house, and I will go back and try to find +him," he told them. + +Alfred, meanwhile, had reached the track near the switch, and not far +from the rear end of the burning train. As he was about to cross the +track his foot struck an object, and he fell across the track. He was +surprised to see several men appear and gaze at him, and it must be +admitted that he was decidedly nervous over the situation. However, he +did not venture to say anything, but quickly started at the fire, for he +now stood with others, in the full glare of the flames. As no one paid +any attention to him, it occurred to him that he had as much right there +as the villagers. + +All about him he heard criticisms of the calamity, and some one +suggested that the fire and explosion was caused by a French airship, +and, in fact, this seemed to be the general opinion. + +Alfred wandered about listlessly, now feeling assured that the people +knew nothing of the lieutenant, for he was certain that the news of the +capture of a Frenchman would cause great excitement. Waiting the first +opportunity, he slipped over the fence, and crawled along in the shadow +of some brush for several hundred feet, when, to his consternation, a +tall man arose in his path. + +He turned, and was about to leap the fence, when he heard a familiar +voice: "Alfred." + +He immediately recognized the lieutenant, and it is questionable which +of the two felt happier at the meeting. They quickly ascended the hill, +where they met a gloomy pair in Ralph and Felix, and the lieutenant told +his story. He had allowed the petrol to run from one of the tanks after +he took away the last receptacle, and when he returned he tapped three +of the other tanks, expecting to wait five or ten minutes before firing +it. + +While thus waiting two of the guards approached, and he hid behind a box +car on the opposite siding. He feared that his plans had miscarried, for +he felt sure the guards would discover the petrol. They did not, +however, go into the sheds, but remained outside, engaged in +conversation for more than ten minutes. When they left he lost no time +in again crossing the track. + +He reasoned that the whole of the interior of the first set of sheds +must have been flooded by that time, and the problem now was to ignite +it, and get away safely, so he struck a match and lighted a small +saturated cloth, which was thrown into the nearest opening. It caught +instantly, and as the entire shed was now filled with the vapor, the +explosion followed before he could get across the track. It was so +great in violence that he was hoisted from his feet, so it seemed to +him, and completely stunned. How long he remained in that condition of +half stupor he did not know, but he soon heard a babel of voices, and +saw everything about him as bright as day. Then, to his surprise, a +train came up the switch, and rushed through the fire. It was this which +probably saved him from being detected. + +"You may be sure," he said, "that as soon as my senses returned I knew +what had happened, and that train started my sluggish brain into +activity. I ran away from the train, and so did several others. No one +cared to follow me, thinking, of course, that I belonged to the crew. +That explains my long absence." + +"Now, how are we to get the petrol over to the machine?" asked Ralph. + +"We must ask Felix about it," said the lieutenant. "Probably you can +help us out in that direction?" + +"I have a light wagon," said Felix, "but we must not venture out with it +until after midnight; in the meantime I will go down to the village and +get all the news." + +He returned in an hour. "It is reported that an airship did the damage," +said Felix. + +Shortly after two o'clock in the morning the light wagon was on hand, +and Raoul accompanied them. After loading the wagon with the cans they +started on the trip through the forest. Felix and Raoul both remained +with the lieutenant and the boys until the tanks were repaired, and the +sun had appeared. The machine was then turned around, and headed for the +opening in the forest through which they had entered. Felix and Raoul, +in the meantime, diligently cut away the underbrush and bushes in the +path of the machine so it would be able to make a fair start. + +The boys now mounted the machine after shaking hands with the two men, +and the lieutenant, reaching into his pocket, drew out a hundred franc +note, which he tendered to them. They refused to take it. The lieutenant +then threw it on the ground, saying: "This belongs to Belgium, and you +had better take it." + +"Good bye, and God bless you," shouted Felix, as the motor began to hum. +The machine gliding down the incline quickly gathered speed, and it was +soon in the air. + +After reaching an altitude of a thousand meters, the lieutenant said: +"It would be interesting to pay the village a visit after our pleasant +experience there." + +Ralph, accordingly, turned the rudder, and the machine swung to the +right. It required only a few minutes to reach the scene, and there, +notwithstanding the distance, they could see the blackened and still +smoking ruins in the two immense spaces adjoining the station. + +Now, for the first time, they appreciated the fact that a worthy task +had been accomplished, for this station was one of the most important +oil supply points along that whole line. + +The soldiers were rushing wildly about the station grounds, and the +officials there were no doubt now assured, after seeing the machine, +that the depot had actually been destroyed by a bomb from that airplane. + +The machine was now directed toward Longwy, and after giving that city a +wide berth, flew directly south, with Verdun as the objective. The +grounds below and to the west of that city were reached before ten +o'clock, to the astonishment of the men quartered there, for it had been +reported the night before that the lieutenant and the boys had been +captured or killed in the fight at Longwy. + +The lieutenant won the cross for the exploit, and the boys received +honorable mention from the government. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +A DARING BOMB RAID TO THE RHINE + + +The exploits of the lieutenant and the boys soon became the talk of the +camp. From enemy sources more was learned later about the results of the +destruction of the oil station, which fully confirmed the earlier +reports of the great damage which had been done. Although up to this +time there had been some objection raised against the flights of the +boys it must be said that after that event there was no one to criticise +them. + +During the winter months not much was done excepting scout work, as the +weather was too severe for the men in the trenches to attempt any +advances, but as the spring months came on everything became more +active, thus imposing greater duty on the air fleet. + +Not much of personal interest to the boys took place until May, when the +great raid was planned to attack the munition factories and chemical +works at and near Ludwigshafen, on the Rhine. + +"Ralph, did you hear that there is going to be a big expedition this +week right into Germany?" said Alfred, who had been with the lieutenant +at headquarters early one morning. + +"No, although the boys are always talking about something of that kind," +replied Ralph. + +"But this is a sure go; the lieutenant told me so a few minutes ago," +responded Alfred. + +"Is the lieutenant going, do you know?" asked Ralph. + +"Yes, I suppose that is why he told me about it," answered Alfred. + +"I wonder whether they will let us go with him?" asked Ralph. + +"Well, I didn't ask him, but I looked at him pretty hard, and I guess he +knows how we feel about it," answered Alfred. + +The rumor turned out to be true, for the following day orders were +formally received to prepare eighteen machines for a raid to the Rhine. +The lieutenant announced the news to the boys, and added: "I suppose, of +course, you wouldn't like to go on such a venturesome mission?" + +"Go!" exclaimed both boys in unison. + +The lieutenant laughed. "Well, if you insist on it I shall have to take +you with me. The Seraph (which was the name of their airplane, although +it was officially known as No. 47) will be fixed to carry a dozen bombs +for the occasion." + +"But how about the quick firer?" asked Ralph. + +"We must dispense with that on this trip. Bombs are more valuable," +answered the lieutenant. + +"Well, aren't we going to take any guard ships along?" inquired Alfred. + +"Oh yes; six of the machines will be armed, but we must use every ounce +we can carry on the Seraph. Before starting we must go over the route, +as similar instructions will have to be issued to all of the flyers," +remarked the lieutenant. + +"Do you know where we are to go?" asked Ralph. + +"The objective point is Mannheim on the Rhine. The river is eighty miles +due east, and Mannheim is about fifty miles farther down the river. That +city is on the eastern bank of the river, and Ludwigshafen is a small +town, on the opposite shore where the great laboratory of Badische +Analin and Soda Fabrik is located," remarked the lieutenant. + +"So we are going to destroy a soda factory?" said Ralph with a grin. + +"Not exactly," replied the lieutenant, amused at the intimation. "The +principal thing turned out at the plant before the war was nitrate, a +chemical most essential in the manufacture of explosives, and the +importance of the place may be understood when I tell you that fully +two-thirds of this product used by the Germans comes from that place." + +"When will the start be made?" asked Ralph excitedly. + +"Tomorrow," was the reply. + +"Then I want to see the map," said Ralph. + +"By all means," answered the lieutenant. "Now, you will notice that here +is a canal shown on the map which runs due east. That is the +Rhine-Marne, which parallels this river, the Zorn. The Zorn flows into +the Rhine at Strassburg. You know, of course, that rivers, or canals, +are the best guides for our purposes, so we must get these firmly fixed +in our minds." + +"Yes, that and the towns are sure to carry us along without mistake," +remarked Alfred. "What is that place, Saarburg? It is on the river." + +"That is an ancient town, and you can hardly fail to recognize the +place, for it is surrounded by a great stone wall. It also contains a +strong garrison. Now note the next important place, twenty miles farther +on; that is Zabern. From that place we can see the Rhine at various +places, as we intend to fly at an altitude of two thousand meters, or, +as you would say, 6500 feet." + +"Why is it necessary to go to such a high altitude?" asked Alfred. + +"Because at Saarburg, Zabern and Brumath they have long range +anti-airship guns, and we cannot take any chances," replied the +lieutenant. + +The camp was a seething place of excitement the following morning. +Twelve of the machines carried bombs exclusively; some of the airplanes +had six bombs, each weighing 180 pounds; one had three bombs of 300 +pounds each, and the Seraph carried ten 120-lb. high-explosive +cylinders. + +These were placed in a suitable case having compartments, the lower ends +of the compartments being provided with outwardly opening doors, capable +of being released by the pressure of the foot operating against a +lever. + +"I am going to rig up the cameras so we can take pictures of the +explosions," said Alfred, as they made their way to the hangar. + +"That is a splendid idea," remarked the lieutenant. "Such an enterprise +would be commended by the Intelligence Department of the War Office. By +all means make the arrangements, for we expect to start in an hour." + +Alfred rushed over to the supply depot, and soon had the cameras in his +possession, together with extra rolls of films. Ralph accompanied the +lieutenant to the hangar to note the placing of the bombs. + +"Why are the bombs placed with the pointed ends up?" asked Ralph, as the +men were placing them in position. + +"So the fulminate cap can be placed on, preparatory to launching," +remarked the foreman. + +"Why, won't they go off without the cap on? Wouldn't a concussion +explode them?" he asked. + +"Well, it would require a pretty tough jar to make them go off," replied +the man. + +At the appointed time the eighteen machines arose, and started for the +east. The sun was full in their faces, but the misty weather made it +look like a great red ball, symbolic of the day's work. It was hard to +get away from the glare of the sun as they arose to the height which the +orders compelled them to take, and at Saarburg some of the machines were +actually hit by missiles from the anti-airship guns. + +The first city of importance to greet their eyes, after leaving +Brumath, was Lauterbach, and then Karlsruhe, a city of over 100,000 was +sighted. + +"We are now thirty-five miles from Ludwigshafen," shouted the +lieutenant, through the tube. "Keep well to the west of the river, and +maintain the same height, until the city is reached." + +Two miles before Mannheim was reached eight of the machines swerved to +the right, and crossed the river, their destination being the town of +Oppau, several miles beyond the town, where large manufacturing +establishments were turning out ammunition. + +"We are bound for the chemical factories," said the lieutenant. "See the +workmen running about. They have, no doubt, heard of our mission by this +time." + +"Which way shall I point the camera?" asked Alfred. + +"Straight down," replied the lieutenant. "I am going to signal No. 62 to +take the lead, so we will be the fifth in line. That will give you a +splendid opportunity to notice the effect of the explosions and to snap +them." + +The lieutenant set the signal, "echelon formation," which means step +formation, one machine being ahead and a little to the right or to the +left of the succeeding one. In that manner the ten machines flew along, +the distance between them being about eight hundred feet, and by this +arrangement each succeeding machine was able to observe the effect of +the bomb dropped by the machine ahead. + +Mannheim was avoided, and the machines steered straight for the chemical +headquarters on the left side of the stream where No. 62 released the +first bomb. Alfred strained his eyes, and saw a flash below. It missed a +building, and he shouted the information to Ralph through the tube. + +"If that had gone a hundred feet to the right it would have taken a +dandy building,--there, the second shot did it; that came from old +Spic's machine; whew-w-w, but look at it! That smoke is as black as +coal,--must be lots of chemicals there. Another,--and the second +building smashed to flinders. The lieutenant is going to drop the first +one,--down she goes! I took two fine ones just now. I'll bet the last +picture will show it up just as it happened. Two more snaps. We are +going to turn and go back. 62 is making the circle." Thus Alfred +graphically described the first trip over the doomed town. + +A dense cloud was now coming up, or, rather, bunches of them in various +places where the missiles struck, and just as the Seraph was making the +turn a tremendous explosion was heard, which actually seemed to jar the +machine. Alfred arose from his seat, and the lieutenant's tense face +showed that something unusual had happened, as he gazed below. All the +buildings were emptied and scores of operatives were lining up along the +river bank, and moving toward the great bridge south of the works. + +"Did you notice that big explosion?" asked Alfred through the tube. + +Ralph nodded his head affirmatively. + +"That hit the largest building in the place, and there isn't much left +of it. Did you see that tall chimney at the left side of the town? Well, +that looks just like a big cannon with the smoke and fire coming out of +it," commented Alfred. + +The ten ships crossed the town twice, discharging all their bombs, but +they waited in the air for twenty-five minutes until the first of the +detached airplanes from the north appeared. During this time there was +plenty of opportunity to see the extent of the damage which had been +done to the great factories. + +At a signal the airplanes, constituting the squadron, were lined up in +two columns, and before they had proceeded far the signals told the +success of that part of the squadron which had gone to Oppau. The signal +was now set for "Home," and the machines, by this time lightened of +their missiles, made a tremendous speed, until after they left the +Rhine, and were making the last lap of the journey, when the machine +carrying Captain De Goye and his Adjutant Buanau-Varilla, was forced to +descend, owing to an accident. + +The different machines circled around, hoping to be able to render +assistance, but shortly after the airplane landed it was discovered to +be in flames, and it was conjectured that seeing relief was out of the +question the aviators had destroyed the machine to prevent its being of +any use to the enemy. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +A TERRIBLE FIGHT IN THE CLOUDS + + +The return to the base with only the single mishap alluded to was cause +for congratulations, and the lieutenant came in for a large share of the +commendation. + +In turn he prepared a special report setting forth the work done by the +boys on the eventful journey. He pointed out that Ralph piloted the +machine the entire distance, giving him, as the commanding officer of +one division, time to direct the operation of the machines and attend to +the bombs, while he had the pleasure of presenting to the authorities a +set of unique photographs taken by Alfred at the very time the bombs +were thrown and exploded. + +When the roll was called, two days thereafter, the men of the squadrons +were lined up, an officer from headquarters passed down the line, and, +among other places, halted before the boys, who stepped forward. On the +breast of each was pinned a medal, and as the officer did so he kissed +them on the cheeks, a custom which is faithfully observed, in accordance +with the regulations, whenever a merit order is bestowed. + +There was a cheer as the two blushing boys stepped back to the line, and +there were no prouder hearts than theirs as they heard the encomiums +expressed on all sides for their bravery and devotion to duty. It was a +pleasure to many other young Americans, who, like them, were volunteers +serving in the aviation corps, and many of whom were afterwards also +honored in like manner. + +There was hardly a day that there was not some experience added to their +store of knowledge pertaining to airships, and the work connected with +flying, all of which was performed with efficiency and credit. + +But the work which they performed was not all a series of jolly +excursions without the corresponding sorrows. The devotion of Lieutenant +Guyon to them dated from the time when that brave officer was stricken +while on a trial flight from the camp at Bar-le-Duc. He never forgot how +they took charge of the machine, and brought it safely to earth and +cared for him so tenderly. Thereafter, it was rarely the case that he +went aloft without one or both of the boys in his company. + +Shortly after the foregoing events, while the three were performing +scout duty north of St. Mihiel, they were attacked by two German +machines, an Albatross and a Taube, a combination which, especially when +operating against a single machine, is capable of doing deadly work. + +When the two enemy ships were sighted, Alfred was in the pilot's seat, +and under the direction of the lieutenant, the airplane shot forward +directly in the path of the first machine, while the lieutenant poured +out a constant storm of shot. The Albatross dived, and Alfred at once +moved the control to ascend, thus bringing their machine above the +Taube. + +The object now was to so manoeuver their ship as to keep between the two +enemies, and in doing so make it difficult for either of them to use the +quick firers without danger of hitting the other. The Seraph was a rapid +climber, due to the high power of her engines. + +"Send her up as rapidly as possible," shouted the lieutenant. "Keep on +going, and turn slowly to the left, so as to make a big circle; that +will give me a chance to put in some shots." + +Alfred knew the manoeuver, the purpose being to bring the two machines +into line with each other, and thus enable the lieutenant to get his gun +in the range of both machines. + +"A little down now, and more to the right; there, steady," was the next +command. + +"Br-r-r-r-r" sounded the gun, as the officer turned the crank. + +"The Taube is going down," cried Ralph excitedly, "and here comes +another of the same kind," continued Ralph. + +"Go straight for the second one," shouted the lieutenant, and Alfred +knew that the same trick had to be repeated. + +But the new arrival did not accept the invitation to fight on the lines +that the first machine adopted. Instead, it began to circle about at a +safe distance, endeavoring to secure the overhead position. + +"Follow that bird," said the lieutenant, "and keep going. They will +learn something about high flying before they get through with us." + +The Albatross was not making much headway in the climbing game. On the +other hand, the new Taube was an extraordinary flyer. + +"There is only one man aboard of her," said the lieutenant. "Take the +glasses, and see if you can make out her number." + +Ralph studied the machine for some time. "I am not sure," he said, "but +I think it is D 28. No one but the pilot is aboard." + +"That's good. He can't hit us head on. Trail him or get ahead of him and +keep on ascending," said the lieutenant, now preparing his rapid firer +with a new charge. + +The Taube suddenly swerved to the right, and let loose a full charge +from his gun. It seemed as though one side of the Seraph had the +covering of the planes ripped off, for the hail of bullets tore right +through the frame. Alfred shook his head as he cleared away several bits +of wreckage. + +"How high are we?" asked Ralph. + +"Two thousand six hundred meters," was the reply. + +The lieutenant had his revenge, however, for their own machine was now +creeping up and gradually getting a rear position. This was what he had +been aiming for. The stream of shots from the Seraph's gun now began to +tell. In one despairing attempt the Taube turned fully half way around +and answered, but it was evident that something was wrong with the ship. + +Suddenly the Seraph darted down. Ralph and the lieutenant looked back in +surprise. Alfred's head had dropped to one side, and one arm hung over +the side of the chassis. + +The lieutenant leaned over and caught the elevating rudder, not a moment +too soon, and corrected the machine. Ralph leaned over the side of the +body, and drew Alfred toward him, as the lieutenant climbed into the +aviator's seat. All this took but a moment's time, but meanwhile it was +necessary for them to observe the enemy and avoid him. + +"The Taube is falling," cried out Ralph, "but the Albatross is swinging +around." + +Before it was possible to correct the machine, and avoid the danger, the +gunner of the oncoming aeroplane began to pump, and the shot began to +tell on the Seraph's framework. The lieutenant now saw that it would be +a terrific task to get above the Albatross, so turning the control +rudder sharply, the Seraph made a quick slide below its adversary. + +Alfred did not move, and Ralph tried to control himself, for in the +great excitement attending the above circumstances, he was almost +distracted. He was leaning partly over the body of the machine when the +lieutenant saw him crouch forward. He put his hand on the boy and tried +to shake him, but there was no response. + +Down, down went the machine, still under absolute control of the +lieutenant, who turned the machine in a circle in order to be sure to +bring it down within the French lines. When within five hundred feet of +the earth something seemed to go wrong with the steering mechanism. The +lieutenant tugged and pulled the lever back and forth. The machine +refused to move forward in a straight line, and landing while the +machine is describing a circular movement is a most dangerous manoeuver. + +Both boys were quiet, and the lieutenant feared for the worst. A hundred +feet more and all would be over. In desperation he banked the machine to +stop its terrific speed. This helped the situation, but did not prevent +the spinning motion, and finally the crash came. + +They landed in a newly ploughed field, the worst possible sort of place +for a disabled machine. The lieutenant and Ralph were thrown out of +their seats, but Alfred was held fast in the machine. + +Many willing helpers were on hand, and they found all three of the +flyers were unconscious when put into the van, but, fortunately, they +were within a half mile of the emergency hospital south of St. Mihiel. +On the way to the hospital a hurried survey was made to ascertain the +extent of the injuries, but the physicians were silent. + +Alfred regained consciousness before the hospital was reached. The +doctors said that there was a severe bruise on the back of his head, as +though he had been struck by some heavy object. The lieutenant opened +his eyes, as he was placed on the operating cot. He glanced around +wildly for a moment, and then asked: "Where are my boys!" + +"We have them here; they are all right," said a nurse. + +He forced a weak smile, turned his head to one side, and was quiet. + +Ralph had been shot through the body, too high up, it was believed, to +touch the lungs. A second bullet had passed through the fleshy part of +the left arm, and he was very weak from loss of blood. The three were +placed on adjoining cots after the first examination was over, and after +all had regained their normal senses a pair of stretcher bearers entered +the door, and bore a wounded man to one of the adjoining cots. + +The lieutenant was the first to observe the chevrons on the sleeve of +the patient, and that he was a German. Ralph tried to raise up as he +noticed them carefully lift the wounded man, and deposit him on the cot. + +"That's the fellow who piloted the last Taube; I'm sure of that. He's +the fellow I saw through the glasses," said Ralph. + +Inquiry quickly established the truth of Ralph's observation. His +machine had fallen within French lines, and not far from the place where +the Seraph struck. It was an odd coincidence. + +The lieutenant was the most severely injured, how badly no one knew at +the time, for a certain time must elapse before the full extent of the +injury in such cases develops. The next morning the boys were informed +that the lieutenant was much worse, and then for two days they had no +news. + +Meanwhile, Ralph's wounds were healing, and no excessive fever +developed. Alfred's spine seemed to be affected by the terrific blow, +but that would be all right again in course of time. + +The sad intelligence came to them a few days thereafter that the +lieutenant had died. It was, indeed, a grief to them. They had grown to +love him as a friend, and they understood each other so well. It was +learned that his heart was too weak to bear up against the internal +injuries, which he received when the machine struck the earth. + +It was two weeks before the boys were able to leave the hospital, and +they were then not able to return to duty. The shock of their friend's +death was so acute that, as Ralph expressed it, they never again wanted +to see an airplane. + +They were soon sent to Paris to recuperate, and while there they formed +plans which took them into another part of the great war game, and we +may be able hereafter to follow them in their new exploits. + + +THE END + + + + +THE MOTION PICTURE COMRADES SERIES + +By ELMER TRACEY BARNES + + +The object of these books is to place before the reader the unusual +experiences of a party of boys who succeed in filming a number of +interesting scenes. + +The stories are replete with striking incidents on land and sea, and +above all they describe with remarkable accuracy the methods employed to +obtain many of the wonderful pictures which may be seen on the screen. + + + =The Motion Picture Comrades' Great Venture; + or, On the Road with the Big Round Top= + + =The Motion Picture Comrades Through African Jungles; + or, The Camera Boys in Wild Animal Land= + + =The Motion Picture Comrades Along the Orinoco; + or, Facing Perils in the Tropics= + + =The Motion Picture Comrades Aboard a Submarine; + or, Searching for Treasure Under the Sea= + + =The Motion Picture Comrades Producing a Success; + or, Featuring a Sensation= + + + _12mo. Cloth_ _50c per Volume_ + + THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY + NEW YORK + + + + +THE MOUNTAIN BOYS SERIES + + +=1. Phil Bradley's Mountain Boys= + +=2. Phil Bradley at the Wheel= + +=3. Phil Bradley's Shooting Box= + +=4. Phil Bradley's Snow-Shoe Trail= + +=5. Phil Bradley's Winning Way= + + +=By SILAS K. BOONE= + +These books describe, with interesting detail, the experiences of a +party of boys among the mountain pines. + +They teach the young reader how to protect himself against the elements, +what to do and what to avoid, and above all to become self-reliant and +manly. + + + _12mo. Cloth_ _50c per volume, postpaid_ + + THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY + 201 EAST 12th STREET NEW YORK + + + + +THE HILLTOP BOYS SERIES + +By CYRIL BURLEIGH + + +=The Hilltop Boys; A Story of School Life= + +Jack Sheldon, a clean-minded and popular student in the academy, gains +the enmity of several of the boys, but their efforts to injure him fail. +A mystery, connected with Jack's earlier life, is used against him, but +he comes off with flying colors. + + +=The Hilltop Boys in Camp; or, The Rebellion at the Academy= + +A strange situation arises in which an airship figures as the bearer of +an important letter. The head-master acts without investigating all the +facts, but matters are all finally adjusted to the satisfaction of all +concerned. + + +=The Hilltop Boys on Lost Island; or, An Unusual Adventure= + +The scene now shifts to the West Indies and Jack figures as the hero of +a daring rescue. Their experiences in tropical waters form a most +stirring narrative, and the young reader is assured of a tale of +gripping interest from first to last. + + +=The Hilltop Boys on the River; or, The Cruise Up the Hudson= + +The Doctor takes a number of the boys on a cruise up the Hudson. An +unlooked-for incident finds Jack Sheldon equal to the occasion, and what +at one time promised to be a disastrous trip for all concerned was +turned into a complete victory for our young friends. + + +=The Hilltop Boys Doing Their Bit; or, The Young Farmers of the +Highlands= + +Our young friends, fired with patriotism, prove their real worth to the +community, and their efforts meet with unexpected success. + + + _12mo. Cloth_ _50c per Volume_ + + THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY + NEW YORK + + + + +THE BOY VOLUNTEERS SERIES + +By KENNETH WARD + + _12mo. Cloth. Fully Illustrated_ _50c per Volume_ + +THE NEWEST BOYS' BOOKS ON THE EUROPEAN WAR, RELATING THE ADVENTURES OF +TWO AMERICAN BOYS AND THEIR EXPERIENCES IN BATTLE AT SEA AND ON AIR +SCOUT DUTY. ALL PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED WITH AUTHENTIC DRAWINGS. + + +=The Boy Volunteers on the Belgian Front= + +Describes the adventures of two American boys who were in Europe when +the great war commenced. Their enlistment with Belgian troops and their +remarkable experiences are based upon actual occurrences and the book is +replete with line drawings of fighting machines, air planes and maps of +places where the most important battles took place and of other matters +of interest. + + +=The Boy Volunteers with the French Airmen= + +This book relates the further adventures of the young Americans in +France, where they viewed the fighting from above the firing lines. From +this book the reader gains considerable knowledge of the different types +of air planes and battle planes used by the warring nations, as all +descriptions are illustrated with unusually clear line drawings. + + +=The Boy Volunteers with the British Artillery= + +How many boys today know anything about the great guns now being used on +so many European battle fronts? Our young friends had the rare +opportunity of witnessing, at first hand, a number of these terrific +duels, and the story which is most fascinatingly told is illustrated +with numerous drawings of the British, French and German field pieces. + + +=The Boy Volunteers with the Submarine Fleet= + +Our young heroes little expected to be favored with so rare an +experience as a trip under the sea in one of the great submarines. In +this book the author accurately describes the submarine in action, and +the many interesting features of this efficient fighting craft are made +clear to the reader by a series of splendid line drawings. + + +=The Boy Volunteers with the American Infantry= + +The entry of the United States into the great conflict offers the two +boys their long-looked-for opportunity. The arrival of our troops abroad +and the boys' experiences with them make a thrilling tale. + + + THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY + PUBLISHERS NEW YORK + + + + + +-----------------------------------------------------------------+ + | Transcriber's Notes: | + | | + | Words surrounded by _ are italicized and words surrounded by = | + | are bold. | + | | + | Obvious punctuation errors repaired. | + | | + | Due to the restriction of the ascii font, the word "Francaise" | + | has been rendered without its cedilla mark. | + | | + | Printer errors and inconsistent spelling repaired, including: | + | - p. 15 "Eecheren" changed to "Eeckeren" (north to Eeckeren) | + | - p. 18 "Belguim" changed to "Belgium" (end of Belgium) | + | - p. 21 "increditably" changed to "incredibly" (incredibly | + | short space) | + | - p. 77 "d'l'Opera" changed to "de l'Opera" (the rue de l'Opera)| + | - p. 80 "Bologne" changed to "Boulogne" (Bois de Boulogne) | + | - p. 109 "aline" changed to "aligned" (were properly aligned) | + | - p. 127 "reappeared" changed to "re-appeared" (the lieutenant | + | re-appeared) | + | - p. 152 "Ludwigschafen" changed to "Ludwigshafen" (and near | + | Ludwigshafen) | + | - p. 156 "is" removed from phrase "without the cap is on" | + | (without the cap on) | + | - p. 158 "th" changed to "the" (the first bomb) | + | - p. 161 "enconiums" changed to "encomiums" (heard the | + | encomiums) | + | - p. 163 "disance" changed to "distance" (a safe distance) | + | - Advertisement page "to-day" changed to "today" (many boys | + | today) | + | | + +-----------------------------------------------------------------+ + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boy Volunteers with the French +Airmen, by Kenneth Ward + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY VOLUNTEERS WITH THE *** + +***** This file should be named 37927.txt or 37927.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/9/2/37927/ + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Judith Wirawan and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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