Disclaimer: I do not own, or claim to own, any of the Biggles series characters used in this work. This fan fiction was written for entertainment purposes only and should not be considered part of the official storyline.
Biggles landed his Camel carefully and then
jumped out of it, whistling cheerfully as he made his way to another machine
that had come in to land just minutes before his. “Did you see that Hun scuttle
when he saw us?” he chuckled, as Algy’s grinning face emerged from the Camel’s
cockpit.
“Didn’t I just! Must have been new.”
Biggles took a cigarette from his cigarette
case and lit it thoughtfully as the two of them began walking side by side to
the mess. “How about running into town tonight and having a bite at that
restaurant we tried last week?”
Algy grinned knowingly. “That waitress did
seem to like you. The fair-haired one.”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about,”
retorted Biggles, with an air of wounded innocence. “Anyway, what about it?”
Algy shrugged. “All right,” he said
carelessly. “As long as we can borrow the tender again tonight, I’m in.”
“Fine!” declared Biggles, pleased. He was
just about to push open the door of the mess when a car pulling up to the
squadron office caught his eye. A familiar figure was just stepping out of it.
Major Raymond, of Air Intelligence.
Biggles grimaced, his eyes meeting Algy’s.
For a minute neither of them spoke or moved, simply watching as the senior
officer entered the office with brisk strides.
“I don’t suppose he’s here to ask after
Mullen’s health,” suggested Algy.
Biggles shook his head without saying
anything. He kept his eyes on the door until it opened and Tyler, the radio
officer, glanced out. He saw Biggles and Algy almost at once and beckoned.
Exchanging a resigned look, the two pilots obeyed the summons.
“There goes that restaurant,” muttered
Algy, as they walked.
“Don’t be so cynical,” chided Biggles,
although he too was sure that their evening plans would have to be cancelled.
“Ah, Bigglesworth, Lacey,” greeted Major
Raymond, as they entered the office. He gestured towards two chairs and the two
airmen sat. “I apologize for springing this on short notice, but something
rather urgent’s come up and we need a pilot. One of our agents has left a…package
that needs to be collected.”
“A package, eh?” said Biggles. “Where is
it?”
The senior officer seemed to wince. “About forty
miles over the lines, at a guess.”
“Suffering rattlesnakes!” exclaimed Biggles
frankly. “What a lovely place to land and pick up a package! Couldn’t he have
chosen somewhere slightly more accessible?”
“Another pilot was meant to pick up the
package, but there were some complications,” said Raymond gravely.
Biggles did not comment on the
complications. He could easily guess what they were. “What about the agent?” he
asked, instead. “Where’s he gone?”
“Presumably back to his post,” replied
Raymond. “The last correspondence we had with him was a carrier pigeon with the
location of the package.”
“I should think seven would be the best
time to go across,” broke in Major Mullen. As always when circumstances
necessitated him to put one of his pilots in danger, his brow was furrowed with
worry. “Algy can go with you, of course, in case you run into any trouble, and
then the two of you could come back together.”
“I’m not entirely sure that’s wise,”
commented Biggles, mulling the situation over. “This mission requires stealth
more than anything else, and two of us would attract double the attention, not
to mention make double the amount of noise of one lone machine. Algy can wait
for me near the lines in case I pick up any trouble on the way home. I’m not
likely to run into anything on the way out anyway.”
The two officers exchanged a quick glance. “All
right,” concluded Major Raymond. “It’s your show, Bigglesworth. By the way,” he
added, “you’d better take a match with you. In case of accidents, make sure to
burn the package before you do anything else.”
&&&
“Are you sure you don’t want me to follow
you?” asked Algy, for what must have been the third or fourth time in as many
minutes. He and Biggles were standing outside the hangers, waiting for their
Camels to be brought out. Biggles’ face was grim and expressionless; Algy’s
pale and somewhat anxious.
“Quite sure,” replied Biggles. “There’s no
point in risking it. Two of us will attract twice as much attention and both of
us will probably end up getting it in the neck if either one of us is spotted.
It’s easier to go my own. You just hang about Mossyface and wait for me; if I
come back in a hurry it probably means someone’s on my tail, in which case you’ll
have to do what you can about it. If I’m not back within an hour chances are
good that something’s come unstuck, and in that case you’d better come home.”
Algy looked indignant. “Come home?” he
repeated, as if he had never heard the words before in his life. “You must be
joking.”
“Well, what else could you do? Barge around
on the wrong side of the lines in the middle of the night looking for a needle
in a haystack? You’d have a much better chance looking around in the daylight.
Anyway, it’s always possible that we might miss each other in the dark, so you
might as well come home to check whether or not I did get back before getting
the Huns out of bed.”
“All right,” agreed Algy, although his tone
remained doubtful. “I don’t like it, but it’s your show, I suppose.”
&&&
All was dark and silent as the two Camels
headed for the lines. A searchlight stabbed at the sky in front of them but
Biggles was ready with the color of the night and the light swept away and
faded into the background as the two pilots crossed the lines, Algy as always
in position at Biggles’ right wingtip.
They flew on for perhaps another quarter of
an hour and then Biggles spotted the dark mass of Mossyfaced Wood looming
ahead. He blipped his engine and glanced over in Algy’s direction.
There was a momentary hesitation before
Algy throttled back, and then Biggles found himself alone as he continued on
towards his destination.
&&&
Biggles’ heart was heavy with misgivings as
he consulted his map for perhaps the third or fourth time since he had parted
from Algy. He had kept an eye out for enemy planes as he flew, but so far the
flight had been quiet and uneventful, although he had a nasty feeling that it
would not remain so for long.
It was with no small relief that he
realized he was now nearing his destination. “About time,” he muttered,
glancing at his watch. Assuming that nothing went wrong on the ground or with
his take-off, he should be able to meet Algy back at Mossyfaced Wood well
within the hour’s time limit he had given himself. So far so good.
He cut the engine and commenced the slow
glide towards the field he was bound for. It came into sight a few minutes
later. Quickly he cast another glance about him, searching the night sky for
signs of danger. There seemed to be none, so he turned his attention back to
the ground and began making preparations for landing.
The moment his wheels touched the ground he
knew instinctively that something was wrong. He had a second to wonder at his
own feelings of foreboding, and then he was flung violently forward and the
world seemed to spin on its axis.
It took a few minutes for things to settle
down, and when they finally did, Biggles found himself hanging upside-down, dangling
over the ground, held in by his straps.
It took him some time to free himself, but
at last he managed to wriggle out from underneath the bulk of his Camel and was
able to see for himself what had happened. The field he had landed in was
trapped with wires, and when his wheels had run into them, it had caused the
Camel to summersault into its current position.
“The dirty skunks!” he growled, under his
breath, as he eyed what had once been his Camel. It was obvious that the
machine was a write-off and would never fly again, so he had no qualms about
lighting a match and burning it.
He considered his options. The first thing
to do, he decided, was to find the package that he had been sent to collect.
That had to come first above all else. How to get it back behind the British
lines was another matter altogether.
“Algy will be out looking for me when I don’t
come back,” he mused to himself, as he made his way towards the location of the
package.
Biggles knew that the earliest he could expect
Algy to come by was at dawn. Indeed, he was worried that Algy would risk a night
flight and fall into the same trap while attempting to land near his now
burnt-out machine. At all costs he would have to ensure that that did not
happen, as it would mean that neither of them would have a way to get home.
This, however, meant that he would have to
devise some method of telling Algy not to land, and then further find some way
of communicating an alternate landing ground where Algy could pick him up.
“Strewth!” he muttered to himself. “What a
kettle of fish! Well, well, this should be interesting.”
He had by now reached the spot where Major
Raymond had told him the package would be. Looking around, he saw what appeared
to be a rabbit hole near at hand. It was the work of a moment to reach his hand
inside and bring out the package, which was small and brown and covered with a
layer of oilskin, presumably to keep out the damp.
He thrust this into his jacket pocket, and,
satisfied with his handiwork, turned his mind to the now more pressing question
of how to get himself back home.
Biggles debated whether he should stay
close to his ruined machine and attempt to warn Algy off when he arrived, but
this plan struck him as too risky. There was always the chance that Algy would
land without seeing him, or whatever signal he had arranged.
“Perhaps it would be better if I went off
and found another landing ground and signaled to him from there,” he mused to
himself, continuing on away from the ruined machine. “Although it’s awfully
risky. The Huns might see me before Algy does, and he might miss me anyway. He
wouldn’t be likely to look on the ground unless he was near the field—oh!” The
involuntary exclamation burst out of his lips as his foot came down on empty
air where he had expected solid ground to be. He tripped over his own feet and
went tumbling forward, throwing out his hands to break his fall, muttering an
expletive as he went.
He skinned his palms but other than that
did not suffer too much damage, and a few seconds later was able to sit up and
see the reason for his fall: the ground nearby was riddled with rabbit holes.
“What a place!” he growled to himself. “Tripped
with wires and covered with rabbit holes. And I’m the poor boob right in the
middle of all of it,” he added bitterly, as he got cautiously to his feet.
And then, as if things couldn’t get any
worse, he heard a sound that made his blood run cold in his veins.
Near at hand, someone coughed.
&&&
Instinctively, Biggles froze, ears
straining to find the source of the noise.
The cough came again, and this time was
followed by a word. “Hullo?”
It was an English voice.
As Biggles was considering his options, the
voice came again, sounding somewhat weak and strained. “Is anyone there?”
Throwing caution to the winds, Biggles
replied. “Hullo?” he inquired, peering into the darkness and heading in the
general direction the voice had come from. “Where are you?”
“Here,” said the voice, and Biggles started
as he realized that it was now much closer than before.
It was a good thing he watched his step, or
he might have stepped on the man lying on the ground behind some trees. It was
easy to see at a glance that he was in a bad way, his face pale and his
breathing labored.
Biggles did not bother asking whether the
man was all right. Instead, he dropped to his knees and asked, “What happened?”
“Twisted my foot on one of these confounded
rabbit holes,” returned the other, attempting to smile. “I don’t think it’s
broken, but I can’t be sure. Are you the pilot of that machine that just came
down?”
Biggles acknowledged this.
“Bad luck,” said the stranger. “If the
wires had been up when I’d put the papers here I wouldn’t have used this field.”
“Are you the sp—the man who sent the
carrier pigeon asking for the package to be collected then?” cried Biggles,
much surprised by this turn of events.
“Yes. That was two days ago, I think. I
fell over a rabbit hole just as I was leaving, and I’ve been here ever since.
They put the wires up yesterday; I kept jolly quiet so they wouldn’t see me.
But I’d sent my carrier pigeon already, so there was no way to get word to
anyone.”
“Two days ago!” exclaimed Biggles. “Strewth!
You must be hungry!”
“I had some chocolate and a flask on me, so
I’ve not done too badly,” replied the other, with a wan smile. “Could be a lot
worse, I suppose. How are you planning to get out?”
“I’m not sure yet,” confessed Biggles. “A
friend of mine should be out looking for me at dawn, but I’m not sure what he
can do. He’ll see my machine, of course, and hopefully know not to land, but
that won’t help us much.”
“Ten to one the place will be swarming with
Huns anyway once someone finds your machine and raises the alarm,” said the
spy.
“That’s true,” agreed Biggles thoughtfully.
“Is there any other place nearby big enough to land an aeroplane?”
The spy considered. “There’s a field a few
miles away, but it’s a bit too close to the Huns for my liking.”
“How long would it take to walk there?”
“I’m not sure. An hour, perhaps?”
“Splendid,” said Biggles brightly. “That
should give us plenty of time.”
“Us?” echoed the spy.
“Well, you’re coming with me, aren’t you?”
Biggles spoke as if it were the most natural thing in the world. “I realize you’re
not really in condition for a trek at the moment, but we should manage between
us.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” said the spy. “I’d
only slow you down and get both of us shot. You’d have a better chance on your
own. Don’t mind me; I’ve got a gun in my pocket that I can use.”
“Don’t talk rot!” snapped Biggles. “Either
we go together or no one goes at all, so you might as well do what you can to
help me.”
It was too dark to do much for the man’s
foot. A tightly bound strip torn from Biggles’ shirt served to alleviate the
spy’s pain a little, although not enough to allow him to walk. However, by
leaning on Biggles and hopping on one foot, he could move forward a few paces
at a time.
Unfortunately, this state of affairs meant
that progress was slow, often made slower by the need to sit down and rest, or
to hide by the side of the road to avoid discovery whenever a car went past.
Afterward, Biggles could never remember
much about that long walk, save for the utter weariness he felt and his
determination to keep going. He did not know how he managed it, but somehow he
did, although the first rays of dawn were just beginning to break when they
finally arrived at their destination.
And not a moment too soon. Biggles had just
collapsed with grateful relief into a clump of bushes edging the field when he
heard the sound of an approaching engine. Glancing up, he saw the sight that he
had been waiting for: a tiny black speck in the distance that grew and gradually
blossomed into a Camel.
Biggles broke cover and dashed into the
middle of the field, using shaking hands to light a fire using some paper from
his notebook. The smoke that he produced was thin, but would do for his
purposes.
If only Algy didn’t miss it—!
Algy didn’t miss it. He changed course
almost immediately and circled cautiously overhead for perhaps half a minute
before he landed.
Even before the machine had come to a
complete halt, the pilot was clambering down from the cockpit with feverish
haste. “What’s happened?” demanded Algy. “What are you doing here? Did you get
the package?”
In a few words Biggles explained the
situation at hand. “You’ll have to go back and get hold of a Fee or something
somehow,” he said. “It’ll be a tight fit, but we should manage it at a pinch.”
“You must be off your rocker,” declared
Algy, but he obediently turned back to his machine. “Where’s that package,
then? I might as well take it with me.”
Biggles handed it over. “Try and be quick
about it,” he said. “The fellow’s in a bad way, and we’ll have Huns out before
long; there’s a squadron nearby, I think. I saw the hangers on our way here.”
“All right,” said Algy. “I don’t like it,
but all right. Take care of yourself.”
&&&
Biggles was so tired that he accidentally
fell asleep for several minutes. It was only when he heard the sound of voices,
accompanied by barking, that he was jolted into wakefulness. “What’s happening?”
he demanded.
“Dogs,” said the spy, who was sitting
propped up against a tree trunk. “They’re out looking for us, or, rather, for
you. They found your machine, and they’re searching the entire countryside.”
Biggles paled. He glanced at his watch. It
would, he estimated, take Algy at least a quarter of an hour more to arrive.
“I can create a diversion for you, if you
like,” offered the spy. “Head them off. They won’t mind much who they catch, as
long as they catch someone.”
“No,” said Biggles. He peered through the
bushes. The dogs would be on to them in ten, perhaps, five more minutes.
Biggles drew his gun. Beside him, the spy
did the same.
They waited.
Several minutes later they heard excited
barking, and a dog ran straight for the clump of bushes where Biggles and his
companion were hiding. Biggles couldn’t bring himself to shoot the dog, so he
merely feinted lashing out at it with his gun. The dog retreated but almost
instantly was joined by another.
“They’re on to us!” cried Biggles, as men
began rushing to the scene. Biggles’ gun spat again and again and he held on
grimly to the hope that Algy would soon be arriving and the certainty that he
would be shot as a spy if any of the men caught him.
Inevitably he ran out of bullets and had to
resort to throwing stones and sticks—anything to keep the Huns at bay as he
waited desperately for the sound of an aero engine.
And then, suddenly, he did.
&&&
But it was not one solitary engine, but
several, that sang in his ears.
Biggles froze, glancing skyward, to see
five Camels bearing down on them.
Chaos ensued. Streams of tracer flashed. A
man screamed. Dogs yelped and scattered, barking madly as they went. Some men
attempted to run while a handful of others stood their ground and shot at the
planes.
And into the middle of all this, a battered
FE came gliding in to land.
Biggles could almost feel the pilot’s
strain as the machine dodged bullets and men and dogs. He never knew how Algy
made it down without causing fatal damage to the FE; it must have been some
sort of miracle.
Even before the wheels had touched the
ground he was half-dragging, half-carrying the spy to where he knew the machine
would come in to land. The exertions of the night before and the accumulated
strain had left him running on nothing but pure willpower, but determinedly he
hung on. All his thoughts were focused on getting to the FE. Everything else
was blurry and faded by comparison.
He reached the machine at last and it was
the work of a minute to get the spy into the gunner’s seat, with Algy’s help,
before climbing up into it himself. He was content to let Algy fly. With his
nerves in pieces, he knew that he was in no condition to manage the take-off.
The machine swerved, rocked violently, and
then the wheels lifted. Near at hand, someone shouted. Biggles caught Algy’s
eye, and his friend raised a thumb and grinned in reply.
&&&
The spy was rushed to hospital immediately
after the FE landed at 266. Biggles neither saw nor heard from him again.
The MO patched up various cuts and bruises
and insisted that Biggles go to bed. Biggles did not argue; he felt that bed
was the best place for him, and he was grateful that Algy and Mahoney carried
him on a stretcher rather than allow him to walk.
“Wasn’t it lucky I got the idea of sending
the others on ahead while I fetched the FE?” asked Algy, as they went.
“Very lucky,” replied Biggles emphatically.
“Thanks, laddie.”
“That’s Major Raymond’s car coming up,”
observed Mahoney. “He’s waving at us. Should we stop?”
“Maybe he has another mission for you,”
suggested Algy brightly.
“I hope not,” groaned Biggles. “That was
one of the nastiest jams I’ve ever been stuck in, and I’m not in any hurry to get
in another one.”
THE END
Lovely classic Biggles and Algy. Never turning a hair...watching out for each other...saving the day. I loved it!
ReplyDeleteAlgy said: "Wasn't it lucky I got the idea of sending the others on ahead..."
"Very lucky," replied Biggles...
That wasn't luck, Biggles.That was just another example of Algy Awesomeness. Credit where credit's due ;)
JJ said, "Lovely classic Biggles and Algy. Never turning a hair...watching out for each other...saving the day."
ReplyDeleteThat should be every Biggles and Algy story ever.
I wish there had been more Algy in this story. I feel like there wasn't quite enough for me *sigh*
Er… who was it told it to you? Must have been Algy in one of his modest moods *rolls eyes*
ReplyDeleteWell, no, I don't think either of them showed up for this one, since it was written so hurriedly. With more time, no doubt Algy would have surfaced to give his side of events.
ReplyDeleteV. nice story, Soppy!!! As always :)
ReplyDeleteOne of the sweetest bits: “All right,” said Algy. “I don’t like it, but all right. Take care of yourself.” Aww.
JJ hit the nail on the head when she mentioned 'Algy Awesomeness'.
Algy is at his best when caring about Biggles. (And when he's doing stuff other than answering the phone.)
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely right - the dear, affectionate boy. (I personally believe that Algy does anything to perfection, even answering the phone. Ringing Biggles' office must have been SUCH a pleasure. But I do know what you mean.)
ReplyDeleteI hate to imagine how BORED Algy would have sounded, answering the phone in Biggles' absence...
ReplyDeleteOh, the poor, darling thing... *extremely evil expression, directed at Biggles*
ReplyDeleteThat's why we have a blog to celebrate the wonderfulness that is Algy :)
ReplyDelete