Sir Biggles, Order of the Camel: Chapter 12.

By Sopwith

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.


Somewhere during the scuffle Ginger dropped his torch and was unable to find it again. It was perhaps for the best, since if he had had the light, he might just possibly have been more scared than he already was, if such a thing were possible.

The lizard reared at Ginger’s face. He threw up a hand to protect himself, and very nearly lost it as the dragon’s teeth snapped together barely an inch from the tips of his finger.

He struggled for what seemed like an eternity, and he knew that there really was no competition. Despite being half his size, the creature had twice his strength and thrice his speed.

This could only end one way, he realized, and it did not look good for Ginger.

Something exploded close to his ear, and Ginger was so startled that if he could have jumped, he would have. However, the terror was short-lived, as to his infinite relief, the lizard’s weight abruptly left his body as the creature bounded away into the woods without a backward glance.

Slowly, Ginger sat up, feeling himself all over to check for signs of damage.

It took him a minute to recover from the shock, and when he finally did, the first thing he wondered was what had scared the lizard away. Remembering the explosion he had heard, he decided that it had to be a bullet.

And if there was a bullet, someone must have fired it.

Ginger’s spirits rose. “Biggles?” he called.

“Where are you?” came back the instant reply, sharp and cold.

Ginger froze.

The voice was not Biggles’.

&&&

Biggles awoke suddenly from a sound sleep. He checked his watch and saw that he had been asleep for just over two hours. He turned over on his side and tried to go back to sleep, but he soon found, to his annoyance, that once awakened, he was now much too wide awake to sleep.

He sat up and looked over at Ginger to see if he was awake, and got a shock when he saw that the spot Ginger had previously occupied was empty except for a carelessly discarded flying jacket.

Biggles jumped to his feet, looking for some sign of where Ginger might have gone. “Ginger?” he called, not really expecting a reply.

A rustling sound came from some bushes to his left, and he spun round with his gun halfway out of his pocket, only to push it back as Ginger emerged, looking somewhat worse for wear. He smiled wanly at the expression on Biggles’ face. “Sorry. Didn’t mean to alarm you. I went for a walk and thought I’d be right back.”

“What happened to you?” demanded Biggles, noting the cuts and bruises over Ginger’s person.

“I went dancing with one of the dragons we’ve been hearing so much about.”

“Suffering crocodiles! Are you all right?”

“More or less. I’d be in a lot more trouble if Mark hadn’t come along though.”

“Mark?” said Biggles. “Who’s Mark?”

“Mark Robbs,” was the reply, as a second figure emerged from the bushes behind Ginger. He was a tall, youngish lad in his early-thirties.

“And who are you?” inquired Biggles, of the newcomer.

“You’re never going to believe this,” said Ginger. “This is Wilks’ second pilot.”

&&&

The chatter of the machine gun had Algy automatically reaching for his guns, which, of course, were not there. Still, it had not only been his shooting that had earned him his wartime reputation as an air ace, and as he swung the single-seater furiously around on its own axis, he smiled grimly. “Come on, you skunk, let’s go,” he muttered to himself, as his eyes fell on his opponent, a flamboyantly painted single-seater with a stripe of green across its nose.

The other plane was coming in close to deliver what it seemed to predict would be the knockout blow, but Algy was waiting for it, and at the last possible second, he threw the plane into a wild bank that almost made him lose control of it altogether.

Spinning upside-down in the air, he saw the stream of bullets pass by above him as he strained to right the machine.

Inch by inch he fought to gain control of the plane, and after what felt like several eternities later, he managed to get it back on even keel.

It was a good thing he had been looking over his shoulder, or he would have missed the plane coming down at him from behind. As it was, he barely had time to dodge out of the way, and some of the bullets struck his machine, making him wince at the violent impact.

“If only I had some guns, I’d show you how real fighting is done,” he growled, as the plane dived down at him yet again. “Oh, for goodness sakes!” he snapped, as a wave of irrational fury overcame him. “I’ve had enough of this messing about.”

He turned the nose of his plane so abruptly that if the other pilot had not swerved hastily out of the way, the two machines would undoubtedly have collided. Before the enemy pilot had even had time to collect his wits, Algy was heading straight towards him as if the only thing in the world he intended to do was ram the other plane down.

The other plane shuddered as the terrified pilot tried to make it go in four different directions at once, and the end came suddenly as the plane fell into a headlong spin.

Algy would have liked to stay, and finish the plane off, but he knew that that would be a somewhat unlikely goal to accomplish without the help of some guns. “I’ll get out of this while the going’s good,” he decided, as, with one last quick look at the island where he had last seen the others, he turned back for home. “I’ll come back with some teeth to bite with.”

He was musing on how he would persuade the South American authorities to help him in the matter, when he was brought harshly back to reality as his engine coughed, coughed again, and then cut down.

Algy stared down at his instruments in disbelief. “What the--?”

And then he saw. The petrol gauge was down to empty.

No comments

Post a Comment

While you are free to post comments anonymously, you are encouraged to use the Name/URL option to post so that your comment will not be filtered out as spam.

© The Algy Chronicles
Maira Gall