knows that if he
flinches he'll be shot. He's got a chance if he goes ahead and no chance
at all if he doesn't. And you remember at the battle of the Somme how
the gun crews were chained to their cannon so that they couldn't run
away. You'll notice that we don't use chains or revolvers for that
purpose in the American army."
"I heard Captain Baker tell the colonel the other day that what he
needed was a brake instead of a spur in handling his bunch of
doughboys," chuckled Tom.
"Quit your chinning," commanded Frank suddenly. "Here they come!
Now will you boobs tell me that my eyesight's no good?"
"You win," agreed Bart, as a sharp word of command came down the
line. "They're coming for fair!"
From the thick woods beyond, a huge force of enemy troops were
coming, marching shoulder to shoulder as stiffly and precisely as
though they were on parade or were passing in review before the Kaiser
himself.
Their artillery, which had been keeping up a steady fire, now redoubled
in volume, and a protecting barrage was laid down, in the shelter of
which they steadily advanced.
But now the American guns opened up with a roar that shook the
ground. The guns were served with the precision that has made
American gunnery the envy of the world, and great gaps were torn in
the dense masses of the enemy troops. But the lanes filled up instantly,
and with hardly a moment of faltering the advance continued.
As the troops drew nearer, it could be seen that all the men were clad in
brand-new uniforms as though for a festive occasion.
"Getting ready to celebrate in advance," murmured Bart. "They must
feel pretty sure of themselves."
"Just Prussian bluff," growled Tom. "They think it will brace up Fritz,
and that we'll think it's all over but the shouting and lighting out for
home."
"They'll have to take those uniforms to the tailors when we get through
with them," muttered Billy, as he took a tighter grasp on the stock of
his rifle.
"They'll do well enough for shrouds," added Frank grimly.
The advancing troops were now not more than a hundred yards away,
and though their losses had been severe there were so many left that it
was evident it would come to a hand-to-hand fight. The enemy cannon
had torn big rents in the barbed wire entanglements that stretched
before the American position so that it would be possible to get
through.
Now the American machine guns began sputtering, and their shrill
treble blended with the deep bass of the heavier field guns. A moment
more, and from the rifles of the American infantry a withering blast of
flame sprang out and the enemy went down in heaps.
There were signs of confusion in the German ranks and the American
commander gave the signal to charge.
Out from their shallow trenches leaped the Army Boys, the light of
battle in their eyes, and fell like an avalanche upon the advancing hosts.
In an instant there was a welter of fearful fighting. The force of the
enemy had been largely spent by their march over that field of death,
while the Americans were fresh and their vigor unimpaired.
For a brief space the Germans were pressed back, but they had
concentrated their forces on that section of the line so that they
outnumbered the Americans by two or three to one, and little by little,
by sheer weight, they pressed their opponents back. And behind those
immediately engaged, fresh forces could be seen emerging from the
woods and coming to the help of their comrades.
But Americans never show to such advantage as when they are fighting
against odds, and the battle line swayed back and forth, first one and
then the other side seeming to have a temporary advantage.
Frank and his comrades were in the very thick of the fight, shooting,
stabbing, using now the bayonet and again the butts of their rifles as the
occasion demanded. There was a red mist before their eyes and their
blood was pounding in their veins and drumming in their ears from
their tremendous exertions.
Slowly but surely, the fierce determination of the Americans began to
tell. The solid enemy front was broken up into groups, and the gaps
grew wider and wider as their men were pushed back further and
further over the ground that lay between the lines. In the center the
Americans were winning.
But suddenly a new danger threatened. A fresh body of German troops
had worked its way to a position where it could attack the American
right flank, which was but thinly held because for the time being the
bulk of the forces were engaged in pressing the advantage
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