Title: The Boy Allies in the Trenches Midst Shot and Shell Along the Aisne
Author: Clair Wallace Hayes
Release Date: June 9, 2004 [EBook #12571]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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The Boy Allies In The Trenches
Or
Midst Shot and Shell along the Aisne
By Clair W. Hayes
Author of “The Boy Allies At Liege” “The Boy Allies On the Firing Line” “The Boy Allies With the Cossacks”
1915
CHAPTER I.
With the army.
“Well! Well! Well! If it isn’t Lieutenant Paine and Lieutenant Crawford!”
The speaker, none other than Field Marshal Sir John French, commander-in-chief of the British forces sent to help France hurl back the legions of the German invader, was greatly surprised by the appearance of the two lads before him.
“I thought surely you had been killed,” continued General French.
“We are not to be killed so easily, sir,” replied Hal Paine.
“And where have you been?” demanded the General.
“In Russia, sir,” replied Chester Crawford, “where we were attached to a Cossack regiment, and where we saw considerable fighting.”
General French uttered an exclamation of astonishment.
“How did you get there?” he asked. “And how did you return?”
“Airship,” was Hal’s brief response, and he related their adventures since they had last seen their commander.
Hal then tendered the General a despatch he carried from the Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chief of all the Russian armies operating against the Germans in the eastern theater of war.
“You shall serve on my staff,” said General French finally.
He summoned another officer and ordered that quarters be prepared for the two lads immediately.
And while the two boys are getting themselves comfortably fixed it will be a good time to introduce the lads to such readers as have not made their acquaintance before.
Hal Paine and Chester Crawford, two American lads, their ages being about 18 and 19, had seen considerable service in the great European war—the greatest war of all time. They had been in Berlin when Germany had declared war upon Russia and France and with Hal’s mother had attempted to make their way from that country. The mother had been successful; but Hal and Chester got into trouble and had been left behind.
Fortunately, however, two young officers, Major Raoul Derevaux, a Frenchman, and Captain Harry Anderson, an Englishman, had come to their assistance—reciprocating a good turn done them by the two lads a day before—and together, after some difficulties, they succeeded in reaching Liege, Belgium, just in time to take part in its heroic defense against the first German hordes that violated the neutrality of the little buffer country.