On Land And Sea At The Dardanelles.
by Thomas Charles Bridges.
CHAPTER I
THE OPEN PORT
"Fun!" said Ken Carrington, as he leaned over the rail of the transport, "Cardigan Castle," and watched the phosph.o.r.escent waters of the Aegean foaming white through the darkness against her tall side. "Fun!" he repeated rather grimly. "You won"t think it so funny when you find yourself crawling up a cliff with quick-firers barking at you from behind every rock, and a strand of barbed wire to cut each five yards, to say nothing of snipers socking lead at you the whole time. No, Dave, I"ll lay, whatever you think, you won"t consider it funny."
Dave Burney, the tall young Australian who was standing beside Ken Carrington, turned his head slowly towards the other.
"You talk as if you"d seen fighting," he remarked in his soft but pleasant drawl.
Ken paused a moment before replying.
"I have," he said quietly.
Burney straightened his long body with unusual suddenness.
"The mischief, you have! My word, Ken, you"re a queer chap. Here you and I have been training together these six months, and you"ve never said a word of it to me or any of the rest of the crowd."
"Come to that, I don"t quite know why I have now," answered Ken Carrington dryly.
Burney wisely made no reply, and after a few moments the other spoke again.
"You see, Dave, it wasn"t anything to be proud of, so far as I"m concerned, and it brings back the most rotten time I ever had. So it isn"t much wonder I don"t talk about it."
"Don"t say anything now unless you want to," said Burney, with the quiet courtesy which was part of him.
"But I do want to. And I"d a jolly sight sooner tell you than any one else. That is, if you don"t mind listening."
"I"d like to hear," said Burney simply. "It"s always been a bit of a puzzle to me how a chap like you came to be a Tommy in this outfit. With your education, you ought to be an officer in some home regiment."
"That"s all rot," returned Ken quickly. "I"d a jolly sight sooner be in with this crowd than any I know of. And as for a commission, that"s a thing which it seems to me a chap ought to win instead of getting it as a gift.
"But I"m ga.s.sing. I was going to tell you how it was that I"d seen fighting. My father was in the British Navy. He rose to the rank of Captain, and then had an offer from the Turkish Government of a place in the Naval a.r.s.enal at Constantinople."
"From the Turks!" said Burney in evident surprise.
"Yes. Lots of our people were in Turkey in those days. It was a British officer, Admiral Gamble, who managed all the Turkish naval affairs. That was before the Germans got their claws into the wretched country."
"I"ve heard of Admiral Gamble," put in Burney. "Well, what happened then?"
"My father took the job, and did jolly well until the Germans started their games. Finally they got hold of everything, and five years ago Admiral Gamble gave up. So did my father, but he had bought land in Turkey and had a lot of friends there, so he did not go back to England.
"It was that same year, 1910, that he found coal on his land, and applied for a concession to work it. The Turks liked him. They"d have given it him like a shot. But the Germans got behind his back, and did him down. The end was that they refused to let him work his coal.
"Of course he was awfully sick, but not half so sick as when a German named Henkel came along and offered to buy him out at about half the price he had originally paid for the place.
"Father had a pretty hot temper, there was a flaming row, and Henkel went off, vowing vengeance.
"He got it, too. A couple of years later, came the big row in the Balkans, and the war had hardly started before dad was arrested as a spy."
"Henkel did that?" put in Burney.
"Henkel did it;" young Carrington"s voice was very grim. "Pretty thoroughly too, as I heard afterwards. They took him to Constantinople, and--and I"ve never seen him since."
There was silence for some moments while the big ship ploughed steadily north-eastwards through the night.
"And you?" said Burney at last.
"I--I"d have shared the same fate if it hadn"t been for old Othman Pasha.
He was a pal of ours, as white a man as you want to meet, and he got me away and over the border into Greece. It was in Thrace that I saw fighting. I came right through it, and got mixed up in two pretty stiff skirmishes."
"My word, you"ve seen something!" said Burney. "And--and, by Jove, I suppose you understand the language."
"Yes," said Carrington quietly. "I know the language and the people. And you can take it from me that the Turks are not as black as they"re painted. It"s Enver Bey and his crazy crowd who have rushed them into this business. Three-quarters of "em hate the war, and infinitely prefer the Britisher to the Deutscher."
"And how do you come to be in with us?" asked Burney.
"I joined up in Egypt," Carrington answered. "I went there two years ago and got a job in the irrigation department. I"ve been there ever since."
Again there was a pause.
"And what about Henkel?" asked Burney. "Have you ever heard of him since?"
"Not a word. But"--Ken"s voice dropped a tone--"I mean to. If he"s alive I"ll find him, and--"
He stopped abruptly, and suddenly gripped Burney"s arm.
"There"s some one listening," he whispered. "I heard some one behind that boat. No, stay where you are. If we both move, he"ll smell a rat."
"Well, good-night, Dave," he said aloud. "I must be getting below."
Turning, he walked away in the direction opposite to that of the boat, but as soon as he thought he was out of sight in the darkness, he turned swiftly across the deck and made a wide circle.
He heard a rustle, and was just in time to see a dark figure dart forward, the feet evidently shod in rubber soles which moved soundlessly over the deck.
He dashed in pursuit, but it was too late. Being war time, the decks were of course in darkness, and the man, whoever he was, disappeared--probably down the forward hatch.
Ken came back to Burney.
"No good," he said vexedly. "The beggar was too quick for me."
"Then there was some one there?"
"You bet. I saw him bolt."