Страница 99 из 116
swiftly and flew over the crest of the rise, and behind them rolled a
long billow of dust, proclaiming their whereabouts to all the world.
The line of Italian tanks was coming straight in, a mile and a half out
on their flank.
"Engaging now, "shouted Jake.
"Ready." Gregorius was crouched over the Vickers in the turret,
straining it to the limit of its traverse, ready to fire at the very
instant the gun could bear.
Jake put the wheel over hard, and Priscilla swung towards the distant
dark beetle shapes of the Italian armour, sailing jauntily right into
their teeth.
Above Jake the Vickers roared, and the spent cartridges spewed down
into the hull, ringing and pinging against the steel sides, while the
sudden acrid stink of burned cordite made Jake's eyes sting and flood
with tears.
Through blurred eyes he watched the electric white tracer arc out
across the open ground, and fall about the leading tank. Even at that
range, Jake made out the tiny spurting fountains of dust and dirt
kicked up by the hose of bullets.
"Good lad," grunted Jake; it was accurate shooting from the bouncing,
bounding car at extreme range. Of course, it could do no damage to the
thick steel armour of the CV.3, but it would certainly startle and
anger the crew, goad them into retaliation.
As he thought it, Jake saw the turret of the tank traverse around as
the commander called the target. The stubby barrel of the Spandau
foreshortened rapidly, and then disappeared. Jake was looking directly
down the muzzle.
He counted slowly to three, it would take that long for the gu
get on to him, then he yelled, "Disengaging!" and flung Priscilla hard
over, so that she came up on two wheels, ungainly and awkward as she
swung away from the enemy line. From the corner of his eye Jake saw
the glow of the muzzle flash, and almost instantly afterwards heard the
crack of passing shot.
"Son of a gun that was close!" he muttered, and reached up to throw
the hatch and visor open. There was no point in closing down,
these Spandaus could penetrate any point of the car's hull as though it
were made of paper, and Jake would need a good and unlimited view
during the next desperate minutes.
Ru
four tanks were firing now, and they were bunching, each tank turning
towards him as he raced across their front, losing their rigid pattern
of advance in their eagerness to keep Priscilla under fire.
"Come along," muttered Jake. "Three balls for a dollar,
gentlemen, every throw a coconut!" It was too close to the truth to be
fu
shy." A shell burst close alongside, showering sand and gravel into
the open hatch. They were ranging in on him now, it was time to
confuse the range again.
He spat sand from his mouth and yelled, "Engaging!" Priscilla spun
handily towards the Italian line, and went bounding in towards them
with that prim rocking action, her ugly old silhouette grim and
uncompromising as the visage of a Victorian matron.
They were close, horribly frighteningly close, so that Jake could hear
the Vickers bullets hammering against the black carapace of the leading
tank. Gregorius had picked out the formation leader by his command
pe
"Good thinking," grunted Jake. "Get the bastard's blood up." As he
spoke, there was a thunderous clank close beside his head, as though a
giant had swung a hammer against the steel hull, and the car reeled to
the blow.
"We've taken a hit," Jake thought desperately, and his ears buzzed from
the impact and there was the hot acrid stench of burned paint and hot
metal in his nostrils. He swung the wheel over and Priscilla responded
as handsomely as ever, turning sharply away from the Italian line.
Jake stood up in his compartment, sticking his head out into the open
and he saw immediately how lucky they had been. The shell had struck
one of the brackets he had welded on to the sponson to carry the arms
crates. It had torn the bracket away, and dented the hull,
leaving the metal glowing with the heat of the strike but the hull was
intact, they had not been penetrated.
"Are you all right, Greg?" he yelled as he dropped back into his
seat.
"They are following, Jake," the boy called down to him, ignoring the
hit. "They are after us all of them."
"Home and mother here we come," Jake said, and turned directly away
from them, once again changing the range and aim of the Italian gu
abruptly.
Shot burst close, driving the air in upon their eardrums, and making
them both flinch involuntarily.
"We are pulling too far ahead, Jake," called Greg, and Jake glancing up
saw that he had his hatch open and his head out.
"Lame bird," Jake decided reluctantly. If they outstripped the
Italians too rapidly, there was a danger they would abandon the
chase.
Another shell burst close alongside, covering them with a veil of pale
dust, and Jake faked a hit, cutting back the throttle so that their
seed bled off, and he swung Priscilla into an erratic broken pattern of
flight, like a bird with a broken wing.
"They're gaining on us now, "Greg reported gleefully.
"Don't sound so damned happy about it," Jake muttered, but his voice
was lost in the whine and crack of passing shot.
"They're still coming," howled Greg. "And they're still shooting."
"I noticed." Jake peered ahead, still flinging the car mercilessly
from side to side. The ridge of the first dune was half a mile ahead,
but it seemed like an hour later that he felt the earth tilt up under
him and they went slithering and skidding up the slip-face of the dune
and crashed over the crest into safety.
Jake swung Nscilla into a broadside skid, like a skier performing a
christy, bringing her to an abrupt halt in the lee of the dune and then
he backed and manoeuvred up until he was in a hull-down position behind
the sand, with only the turret exposed.
"That's it, Jake," cried Greg delightedly, as he found his Vickers
would bear again. He crouched over it, and fired short crisp bursts at
the four black tanks that roared angrily towards them across the
plain.
From the stationary position behind the dune, Gregorius made every
burst of fire sweep the oncoming hulls, driving the Latin tempers of
the crews into frenzy, like the sting of a tsetse fly on the belly of a
bull buffalo.
"That's about close enough," decided Jake, judging the charge of enemy
armour finely. They were less than five hundred yards off now and
already they were dropping shell close around the tiny target afforded
by the car's turret.
"Let's get the hell out of here." He swung Priscilla hard and she
plunged down the side of the dune into the trough. As she crashed
through the dense dark scrub, Jake caught a glimpse of the men lying in
wait under the screen of vegetation. They were stripped to
loin-Cloths, huddled down over the long steel rails, and two of them
had to roll frantically aside to avoid being crushed beneath
Priscilla's tall, heavily bossed wheels.