The "Maid of Sker" was the ordinary type of North Sea trawler, and so far as Ken and Roy could see, her fellow, whose name Gill told them was the "Swan of Avon," was her double. They were moving exactly parallel, at a distance of about a cable (220 yards) apart. Between them towed a thin steel hawser set to a depth just sufficient to catch the mooring cables of the mines which were plentifully strewn in the channel.

"Caught one, you say?" whispered Ken in Gill"s ear. "A mine, you mean?"

"Ay. Look at the cable. She"s foul of it all right."

Certainly the cable was sagging in a curious fashion.

"What do you do with them?" asked Roy.

But Gill had already run aft to a.s.sist. Low-voiced orders were heard, and the "Maid of Sker" began to forge slowly ahead.

"I think they"re going to tow it out of the channel," Ken said to Roy.

"That"s what I believe they do."

"But I thought the beastly things exploded when you touched "em," said Roy.

"Some do. That"s the sort with steel whiskers on them. The others are what they call tilting mines. They blow up when their balance is upset."

"And which is this?"

"I don"t know any more than you, and I don"t suppose the skipper does, either. All these mines swim some way under the surface."

"What"s the betting on her going off?" said the irrepressible Roy.

"She won"t," said Ken confidently. "These chaps know how to handle her.

She--"

He stopped short, and involuntarily flung up his hands before his eyes. A cone of blinding white light had sprouted suddenly from the Asiatic sh.o.r.e, and in its cold brilliance the outlines of the two trawlers, the people on their decks, the cable towing between them, and a wide patch of rippling water stood out as clearly as in the broadest daylight. It was a searchlight from Kephez Point at the southern angle of Sari Siglar Bay.

"Haul up there. Haul on that cable. Sharp now!" bellowed Captain Grimball, and his men sprang to obey. He himself dashed into the little deckhouse and was out again in an instant with a rifle in his hand.

In the dazzling glare a great bulbous ma.s.s of dark-coloured metal heaved slowly up out of the water midway between the two trawlers. It was hardly in sight before Grimball had flung his rifle to his shoulder and fired.

Followed instantly an explosion so terrific that Ken distinctly felt the deck of the trawler lift under his feet. A cloud of thick black smoke shot high into the air, and as it rose a very waterspout descended upon the little ship.

Roy and Ken staggered back, half deafened by the appalling concussion.

"Got that one, anyway," they heard Grimball exclaim, as he dashed back to the bridge and rang the engine bell for full steam. "Got him all right.

Next question is whether the blighters will get us."

Both trawlers seemed actuated by the same impulse. Both at the same time surged ahead, while the sweeping cable was either cut or cast loose.

But the searchlight"s brilliant beam followed relentlessly, and as the two smart little craft cleared from the area of the black smoke cloud, there came the ringing report of a 6-inch gun followed by the familiar whirr of a heavy sh.e.l.l.

"Rotten shot!" snapped Grimball, as the sh.e.l.l, sailing well over the mast top, plunged into the sea two hundred yards or more beyond.

"Hard aport!" he shouted, and the "Maid" came spinning round almost as smartly as a sailing dinghy. Next minute she and her consort were legging it southwards at the very top of their speed.

For a moment they were clear of the dazzling radiance of the searchlight, but only for a moment. Then the long pencil of glaring whiteness found them again, and now the guns began to bark in earnest.

The "Maid" seemed to know her peril. She squattered down into the water, and the foaming wake lengthened, trailing far behind her. Forgetful of their own danger, Roy and Ken watched breathless while the trawlers ran the gauntlet of the forts.

A sh.e.l.l struck the water right under the bows of the "Maid," flinging up a fountain which rose as high as the mainmast, and deluging the decks for a second time.

"Mighty wet job this," said Roy, shaking himself like a great dog. "Rotten luck we can"t shoot back, eh, Ken?"

"Can"t even do much running," said Ken. "Twelve knots is about our top speed. "Pon my soul, these chaps have got pluck."

"The "Swan"s" drawing ahead," said Roy.

Almost as the words left his lips there came a shattering crash and a sheet of flame leapt up from the other trawler. A sh.e.l.l had pitched full upon her armoured wheel-house, and exploding had not only blown it away, with the steersman, but opened up the whole deck. The poor little trawler, with her steering gear smashed, swung round to starboard, and it was only by the smartest seamanship that the "Maid" avoided running her down.

"She"s done," said Roy, as he ran forward. "She"s sinking!"

He was right. The big sh.e.l.l had knocked her all to pieces. Grimball saw this too, and in response to his rapid order, the "Maid"s" engines stopped, and four stalwart fellows ran to the dinghy which lay in chocks on her deck.

In a trice they had flung her over the low rail into the sea; two sprang in and pulled hard for the rapidly sinking "Swan."

All the time the guns ash.o.r.e were rapping and roaring. The sea was thick with spouts of foam as sh.e.l.ls big and little struck the surface.

"This infernal searchlight!" growled Roy. "They"re rotten shots, but they"re getting the range now."

They were. Just as the dinghy drew alongside the "Swan," another 6-inch plunged straight into her, amidships. It must have exploded in the engine-room. The "Swan" and all in her vanished from the face of the waters, and when the smoke cloud lifted, the dinghy, upside down, with one man clinging to it, was all that was left.

"A rope. Give us a rope!" shouted Roy. Some one ran forward, but even as they did so a smaller sh.e.l.l caught the funnel of the "Maid" and carried two thirds of it away. With it went the man with the rope.

At the same moment the survivor who was clinging to the dinghy let go his hold. Stunned by the concussion of the previous sh.e.l.l, he was sinking into the depths.

"I can"t stand that," cried Roy, and with one spring was overboard and striking out hard for the drowning man.

The racket and roar were appalling. Some field batteries behind Kephez had joined in, and the whole night echoed with the quick crashes of the guns, while the air was full of the train-like rattle of flying sh.e.l.ls.

But in all the confusion Ken kept his head. Catching sight of a coil of line on the deck close by the forward hatch, he sprang for it, made one end fast to a bollard, and with a shout flung the other towards Roy.

It fell short, but Roy saw it and with a great effort reached it.

"Hang on!" roared Ken at the top of his voice. "I"ll pull you in."

[Ill.u.s.tration: When the men return from the trenches, they find sea-bathing most pleasant.]

[Ill.u.s.tration: French and British sailors are friends in play-time as in war-time.]

He had hardly began to haul when the end came. A sh.e.l.l bigger than any yet took the "Maid of Sker" amidships. There was a fearful explosion, Ken felt himself hurled forward, and next moment the chill waters of the Dardanelles closed over his head.

CHAPTER XIV

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