Alan Evans - Ship of Force

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Ship of Force: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The summer of 1917.
Britain is losing the war against the deadly German U-boats.
After a close fought action, Commander David Smith uncovers what he believes is a deadly plot against Britain from a dying German sailor. Code-named SchwerttrZiger — or Swordbearer — it could turn the tide of the war in Germany's favour. But nobody will listen to him. He is under suspicion, and ignored. With just one one ancient destroyer, a turtle-back ‘thirty-knotter’ known as ‘Bloody Mary’, under his command, he must wage this battle on his own. Smith has to take on shore batteries and bigger, faster enemy destroyers. He has to fight the hostility of his commanding officer and is plunged into a world of espionage behind enemy lines. Through it all the mystery behind ‘Schwerttriiger’ lures him on — until he stakes his career and his life in a desperate attempt to solve it.

’ is an edge-of-the-seat WWI naval adventure that combines thrilling story-telling with meticulous research.
Alan Evans was a thriller writer known for vividly recreating the atmosphere of the First World War. I think a 21 gun salute is required… Alan Evans has produced a cracking thriller
The Daily Mirror Evans provides a different sea story, sustained suspense and vivid battle scenes
Publishers Weekly

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Smith hung over the hatch and shouted down the companion, “All secure below?”

A voice came up from the saloon. “Aye, aye, sir!”

“Don’t take your eyes off ’em!” Smith warned. “If anyone of them tries to escape, shoot him! Understood?”

“Aye, aye, sir!”

Smith wiped at his face. He and his men had contrived to escape from that saloon. Their situation now was desperate enough without the prisoners breaking out. Another shell splashed into the sea twenty or thirty yards away. Smith found he was tensing himself for the next, tried to relax and failed, twitched and crouched too late as it howled over and hit them forward. He joined Buckley and his men at hauling on the hose until they were forward at the damage there. Flames flickered and ran about the deck where the petrol had been leaked and refused to be quenched by the water they poured over them. Smith wondered what was below them, whether it was more petrol, but then Lorimer and the rest of the hands came running with buckets of sand they had found ranged below the wheelhouse set there for just such an emergency. Sand was thrown on the fire, kicked over it, until it was doused.

He was conscious that the coaster was steering badly. Was Finlay day-dreaming? He walked wearily back to the wheelhouse, saw a shell fall short astern of them, a leap of water in amongst the smoke. Then another. He started to climb up into the wheelhouse then froze in the door. Finlay was on hands and knees, shaking his head and peering muzzily around him, dazed. Eleanor Hurst was at the wheel. Smith took a long stride and relieved her of the spokes. “What happened?”

She knelt by Finlay. “Something hit us and knocked us down but he must have hit his head. I went to help him and he said something about the wheel so I took it.”

Smith had the coaster back on course. Finlay was climbing to his feet with the girl’s hand under his arm. “I can take her now, sir.”

“Sure you’re all right?”

“Ah’ve a right bloody headache but ah can steer.”

Smith turned the wheel over to him. To Eleanor Hurst he said, “Stay with him. If anything like that happens again, you yell.” She nodded, did not say that she had screamed at them as they shifted vague in the fire’s smoke and against the background of the running flames and they had been deaf to her. When they had come running for the sand at Lorimer’s hoarse bellowing they still had not heard her.

They were hit forward again, a thumping crash and a spurt of smoke. As he jumped down from the wheelhouse he saw Buckley leaning over the side again. He ran to join him and Buckley said, “Just below the water-line, sir. See?”

Smith saw the gaping hole. They could, would have to contrive to rig some sort of patch over it. He straightened and lifted his head to peer around him. There was Ostende and the Belgian coast, on the horizon now. The German shore batteries could see them but they had not fired, might not fire. The coaster had made a lot of ground and they might have got clear away but for that torpedo-boat. She would haul up on them now and sink the coaster or board her, take him and his men prisoner. And Eleanor Hurst? If she had looked to him then he had failed her. Christ! What a mess he’d made of it. And out there was the empty sea…

No, it wasn’t . He stumbled back to the wheelhouse, shouting for Buckley, grabbed at the telescope and set it to his eye. There was the smoke, and under it –

He lowered the telescope and snapped at Buckley, “Hoist Sparrow ’s number! She’s there!” He pointed.

Sparrow ’s — Aye, aye, sir.”

There was a locker below the telescope’s clips. Smith opened it and found the signalling lamp, braced himself in the wheelhouse door and worked the lamp to wink his message at Sparrow . ‘Stand by to take us off. Smith!’

He lifted the telescope again, watching for an acknowledgment. He had to wait, but it came. He worked the lamp again, ‘Am under fire from TB.’

Again his signal was acknowledged. Sparrow ’s silhouette fore-shortened as she turned towards them. Now he saw the flick of light and puff of smoke as her twelve-pounder fired. He ran to see the fall of shot; two long, lunging strides across the wheelhouse, cannoning off Finlay. And saw nothing but their own smoke rolling astern of them. He turned to Finlay. “How is she handling?”

Finlay scowled worriedly. “She’s getting very sluggish.”

With water pouring into her she would be. And there would be gradually mounting pressure on the engine-room bulkhead.

He lifted the cover on the voice pipe. “McGraw!”

“Sir?”

“Keep an eye on the for’ard bulkhead. We’re filling for’ard. And McGraw. Sparrow ’s running down to us. We can expect to be taken off.”

Sparrow ! Aye, aye, sir!”

Smith leaned on the door of the wheelhouse and thought it would need to be soon. They would nurse her but they had to keep going. The sooner they reached Sparrow and the less time she spent in these waters, the better. She should not be here anyway. With that he thought of Trist and swore under his breath. But then he forgot Trist. Sparrow was big now, dashing down on them. Her gun had ceased firing and there had been no firing from the torpedo-boat for some minutes but now one huge water spout lifted astern and to port of Sparrow . It was a quarter-mile away but the shore batteries were seeking the range.

He ordered, “Starboard ten…Midships.” And to McGraw: “Stop engines and chase them all on deck.” To Lorimer: “Get the prisoners out.”

He stood on the deck of the coaster as it filled with the prisoners and his men. He found Eleanor Hurst beside him holding a steadying hand under the arm of Finlay who seemed shaky on his legs. Smith thought she looked dead-tired but then his eyes left her and went to Sparrow and he saw now that her forward funnel was holed and leaking smoke, the wireless shack had gone and she had a hole in her hull just below the bridge. But she was sliding alongside, screws thrashing briefly astern, stopping. The hands were there slinging fenders over the side and the lines came snaking over. The two ships rubbed together for only seconds as the prisoners were urged to climb up on to Sparrow ’s deck and the men followed, taking Finlay with them. Smith handed Eleanor over and then followed himself, the last to leave the sinking coaster.

A salvo burst in the sea inshore of the coaster and still a quarter-mile away but they would soon lift the range.

Sanders was leaning out from the bridge. “Is that the lot, sir?” Smith lifted a hand and Sanders bellowed, “Cast off!” He vanished and a moment later Sparrow throbbed to the beat of her engines and she pulled away from the coaster. As she did so a squall came in from the north-west, rolling Sparrow ’s smoke down to coil around the listing coaster like a winding-sheet. With it came the rain, and the coast and Ostende were lost as its grey curtain came down. The shore-batteries fired no more.

Smith went to the bridge, pausing for only seconds to stare at what was left of the wireless shack; a buckled frame, splintered planks and the wireless a chunk of scrap. He moved on, found Sanders on the bridge and said, “We’re very glad to see you. What happened?”

Sanders looked tired, drawn and pale. He spoke slowly, a sentence at a time as he remembered the incidents, getting his thoughts in order as he went. “We were patrolling, sir. Heading north. These two German boats came up on us from astern. We saw each other together, I think. The captain made a run for it and got away that time, but they hunted us, found us again when we tried to cut back. They fired at us and hit us, but we got away again. They still hunted us. Drove us right off station. When it was getting light and we could see they’d given up — probably thought we’d got round them somehow and gone home — the captain said we’d come back to look for you.”

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