Roy nodded.
"That"s about the size of it. Well, it"s up to us to spoil their little game. We must work up along the next gully parallel with them and get a slap at "em over the edge."
"That"s the tip," said Ken, "but mind, we"ve got to bust up the gun itself as well as the men with it."
Bending double so as not to be seen, the two scurried up the parallel gully until they reckoned that they must be on a level with the gun and its crew.
"It"s going to be a stalk now," whispered Roy, and dropping on hands and knees, crept cautiously over the side of the gully.
On the ridge he stopped.
"Hang the luck!" he muttered. "They"ve gone a lot farther than I reckoned.
They"re a couple of hundred yards away, and still moving. What"s worse, the two gullies bend away from one another, and there"s no cover to speak of."
Ken crept up alongside, and took a look.
"It"s a bit awkward," he admitted. "But they"re taking it easy. We ought to be able to make fair practice from here."
Roy nodded.
"All right. You take the left-hand man. I"ll try for the right."
A couple of seconds pause, then the two rifles spoke at once. Ken"s man went down like a log, but Roy apparently missed his.
Roy gave an angry exclamation and took a rapid second shot.
"Hurrah--nailed him that time," as he saw the man go over like a shot rabbit.
The remaining Turk, seeing his companions down, turned and made a dead bolt. Kemp, with a cry of rage which came plainly to their ears, rushed after him, apparently with the idea of bringing him back.
Ken and Roy both loosed off at once, but without success, and next instant their quarry was out of sight over the far ridge.
"Rotten luck! It was Kemp we wanted," growled Roy.
"We want the gun worse," Ken answered grimly.
Springing up, he dropped into the far gully and began to run towards the gun.
"Watch out for Kemp," sang out Roy, as he followed. "He may be laying for us just over the ridge."
"I thought of that," answered Ken. "I"ll slip across and have a look."
Both crept together over the second ridge, but there was no sign of Kemp or of the third Turk. They might have sunk into the ground for all that could be seen of them.
"Now for the gun," said Ken, as he dropped back into the gully.
They wasted no time at all in reaching it. Beside it lay the two Turks.
They were both quite dead.
"Pity we can"t take the gun back with us," said Ken regretfully.
"Why shouldn"t we? I"ll sling it on my back. It don"t weigh more than sixty pounds."
Ken shook his head.
"It"s too far, old chap. We"re all of a mile from our own lines. No, I"ll take the breech block off, and if you can find a good-sized stone we"ll smash the rest of it enough to make it useless."
Roy at once hove up a rock the size of his head, and raising it high in air brought it down with a shattering crash on the gun. The stout steel barrel twisted under the tremendous shock, the water jacket burst.
"That suit you?" he said.
Ken glanced at the ruins, and smiled.
"Take Krupps all their time to make that serviceable again," he remarked, and the words were hardly out of his mouth before there came a sudden rush of feet, and Kemp, accompanied by no fewer than eight st.u.r.dy-looking Turks, came scrambling over the ridge from the right.
"Don"t kill them," shouted Kemp in Turkish. "Don"t kill them. Take them alive. Ten marks apiece to you if you take them alive."
The men were on them instantly. There was no time to shoot. Stooping swiftly, Roy swung up the broken barrel of the quick-firer, and with a shout sprang at the Turks, whirling the weighty length of steel around his head.
In his powerful hands it was a fearful weapon. The Turks went down like ninepins. Ken, who grasped his rifle by the barrel was in no way behind his chum. The Turks had not been prepared for such a resistance. Inside ten seconds five of them were down, and the three others had had all they wanted. They ran for their lives.
Kemp had taken no part in the battle. He was standing a little aloof on the upper ground. Roy, having disposed of his a.s.sailant, whirled round and made for the man.
Kemp whipped out a repeating pistol and levelled it at his head.
"Drop that or I shoot," he said viciously.
"No, you don"t," cried Ken.
Ken had seen the pistol in Kemp"s hand, and had just had time to get his own rifle to his shoulder, the muzzle levelled full at Kemp"s head.
"Drop that pistol, or I"ll blow your head off," he said curtly.
Kemp"s lips parted in a snarl, showing his white teeth. For a moment it looked as though he would shoot Roy and take his chances.
But his pluck was not quite equal to it, and the grim, determined look on Ken"s face daunted him. With a muttered oath, he dropped the pistol.
"And a very pretty toy, too!" said Roy, springing forward and picking it up. "A nice new automatic, Roy. We"ll keep that as spoils of war."
"Don"t waste time over the pistol," said Ken sharply. "Collar the chap himself. He"ll be better worth bringing back than a cart load of pistols."
In an instant Roy"s great arms were round Kemp, and lifting him clean off his feet he popped him down in front of Ken.
"Tie him," said Ken.
"I am an officer," said Kemp haughtily. "I will not be bound like a common criminal."
"You were an English ship"s steward when I last saw you," Ken retorted.