later the vibration of the Stirlings' feed compressors cut in too as the boat angled down into the fiord. In the meanwhile Clara, various submariners, and two of the Faroese from the coaling barge untangled themselves and hastened to where they were supposed to be. Well, except for the two Faroe Islandersâbig, blond-bearded, scared-looking men who didn't seem to speak much English. They were confused and afraid. Clara tried with her few words of German to help. The last place they'd be welcome right now would be the bridge, but short of their cabin she couldn't think of where else to take them. Fortunately, Tim came hurrying by. âWhere shall I take these people to?â she asked, grabbing his arm.
He blinked at them. âOh. The mess, I reckon. I'll ask the mate. He speaks their lingo.â
So Clara led them down to the mess. The sub was not diving anymore, but was plainly moving as fast as possible. There was a far-off boom of explosions, but they were some distance away. They waited. Clara tried to explain the âall quietâ light to the two Faroese. Quietly. It didn't stop her feeling guilty when the mate, Mr. Werner, came down as she was speaking.
âSorry,â she whispered. âWas trying to explain.â She pointed.
âI think you should get back to your cabin, miss,â he said sternly. âBut it's not likely that the enemy are listening.â He spoke to the two Faroese in their own language while Clara slunk off, feeling guilty. She met Tim again, this time carrying a tray and several empty cups. Whistling as usual.
âShh!â She looked up pointing and saw that the âall quietâ light she was pointing at was off. âOh. Sorry.â
He grinned. âAs Cookie says, no worries. Sparky got his aerial up and picked up their transmissions. The wind is getting up and they report that they can't keep their station. Probably halfway to Norway by now. Said they were going to try to drop some troops, and they were talking to a ship. A dreadnought yet!â
âHowever did they find us?â asked Clara.
âThat's got the captain in fair sweat too,â said Tim. âHe thought we'd lost them at the Shetlands. And the Invincible George âthe dreadnoughtâwas steaming towards Bergen, so maybe we had. Anyway, I better run. Got to take those Faroes men up to the bridge, and bring more coffee. We've got a busy night aheadâgot to get the rest of the coal dust on board and get gone.â
Tim found himself assigned to the loading crews as the submarine slipped back to where they'd left the barge. The captain had out-thoughtthe airship crew. In the narrow fiord, it seemed obvious that the submarine would flee for the open sea. So Captain Malkis had made it look like thatâ¦and then headed farther up the fiord, while the airship wasted its small stock of drop-mines on the mouth of the fiord.
Wellâ¦that had saved them. But the barge had no such options. And right now, when they surfaced, it wasn't there.
âMust have sunk her,â said the lieutenant, waiting with them to start the reloading. âHell's teeth. We need that fuel!â
âLoading crew to the deck to look for survivors,â said the captain's voice through the speaker-tubes.
So Tim found himself up on deck scanning the dark water. The captain decided to even risk a spotlight, and that shone out across the water. Someone spied floating debris, towards the shoreline. The submarine turned in towards it. And someone flashed a light from the shore. The spotlight swung over, to show three men waving. They edged closer, with the two Faroese on the submarine calling out to the men onshore.
A small boat was pushed into the water, and they paddled out. The Faroese sailors hugged each otherâ¦well, two of them did. The third man was one of their own crew, who had been down on the barge, collecting the next sack. âThey shot up the barge, Lieutenant. Holed her.
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