Authors: John Pearson
âHurry Up, you idiot!' yelled Algy, above the roar of his Rolls-Royce Merlin engine. âThe Huns have got a welcoming party down the road. Hop in, unless you want to spend the rest of the war behind barbed wire.'
Biggles required no second bidding, especially with German rifle-fire now zinging round his head. It was a horribly tight squeeze inside the cockpit, but even before he'd shut the canopy, Algy had gunned the engine and released the brakes, and the overloaded Spitfire was trundling across the meadow. It missed the line of trees by inches and minutes later was above the waters of the English Channel.
âSorry, Algy,' mumbled Biggles. âI was a blithering idiot. Simply lost my rag. Should've known better. Thanks for fetching me, old scout!'
âDon't mention it, old boy' said Algy. âIt was a pleasure. Just the same, go easy, eh? Committing suicide won't get poor old Taffy back.'
Luckily for Biggles â and for 666 â things were easing up, for by late September âthe Few' had won the battle of the skies and the great German onslaught slackened. That autumn, Biggles took a few days' leave, and even started up a brief affair with a blonde called Pam, who worked in an officers' club in Kensington. Algy and Ginger took a proprietorial interest in the romance and had both done their level best to encourage it â on the grounds that âthe old boy's been taking life too seriously and needs taking out of himself. They had discussed this several times, and it was Algy
who finally suggested Pam, and had made the original introduction. She was an ancient flame of his, a gentle, rather jolly creature in her early thirties, with a well-developed bosom and a flat in Eaton Square. Biggles seemed extremely taken with her, but when his leave was over and Algy asked him how it had all gone, he shook his head.
âNo go, old fruit. It simply wasn't on.'
âWhy on earth not?' responded Algy, mouth agape.
âAlgy, I'd rather not talk about it,' said Biggles stiffly.
âOh come now Biggles, for Pete's sake!' answered Algy. âWe've known each other long enough, and we're not exactly schoolgirls. What went wrong?'
âShe's married, Algy. That's what's wrong.'
Algy laughed with evident relief.
âGood Heavens, Biggles! Is that all it was? But I thought you knew! For a moment I imagined it was something really serious.'
âBut it was serious,' said Biggles levelly. âDashed serious. For me at any rate. You see, I asked Pamela to marry me. I felt I ought to, after what had happened. That's how I found out. And now, if you'll excuse me, we will change the subject.'
Later that evening Algy discussed it all with Ginger.
âDreadful pity,' Algy said. âShe was exactly what he needed. Quite an affectionate little thing and a husband in the Navy. She would have been ideal.'
But Ginger shook his head.
âAlgy, when will you realise that Biggles isn't a cad like you where women are concerned? He's a romantic. He respects them.'
Algy nodded.
âYes, I suppose you're right. Poor old Biggles. What a helluva thing to be. But what a good thing dear old Pam
was
married.'
Luckily for Biggles, aircraft really took the place of women in his life and he had little time to brood. During that winter 666 was mainly occupied with night-time flying â trying to meet the German Blitz on London â and then, in the spring of 1941, there were a number of demanding operations on behalf of Air Intelligence. During one of these â described by Captain Johns in his book
Biggles Fails to Return â
Biggles was actually given up for lost after the failure of a mission to the Italian-occupied territory of the south of France to rescue the celebrated âPrincess X' whose
father, a noted anti-fascist, was being blackmailed, before he was finally killed, with threats against his daughter. For several weeks Biggles was given up for dead, and this was the one occasion when Algy took command of 666. Biggles reappeared on this occasion in North Africa, having made good his escape in a commandeered Italian flying boat.
It was shortly after this that Biggles met the only woman who could match his reputation in the air â the extraordinary Joan Worralson, or âWorrals of the W.A.A.F.' as she was known to her admirers. The assiduous Captain Johns saw fit to chronicle a few of her adventures, but once again discretion â and quite simple fear of rousing Biggles' ire for what he would have termed the author's âblasted scandal-mongering' â made him fight shy of giving any details of her friendship with our hero. Algy, who knew her rather well, always insisted that âshe was absolutely made for Biggles', and regretted that things turned out as they did. But the more one learns about this flying Amazon, the more one understands why Biggles acted as he did.
âDashed fine flier,' he replied once when I mentioned her to him. âBut tough, and not what one would call a cosy sort of girl. Not very womanly, you know.' Confirmed male chauvinist that he was, Biggles liked âcosy' women, and was not attracted by young women who attempted to usurp the male role. But despite this, he was undoubtedly impressed by his first sight of Miss Joan Worralson â and may well have âled her on' in the months that followed.
He had been on the tarmac, waiting for delivery of replacement Spitfires which had been promised some days earlier from the central pool. The condition of the Squadron's aircraft had been worrying him and he had had a number of furious exchanges with the Air Ministry upon the subject. He had demanded three new aircraft â which were promised faithfully. But all that finally turned up was one solitary Spitfire, and no sooner had it landed than Biggles stormed across to vent his wrath upon the pilot.
According to Algy, there was âsomething of a shindig' as Biggles fumed away at âthose confounded nincompoops in the Air Ministry', and ordered the pilot to return to the central pool and
say that he wanted his three planes or nothing. The pilot stayed very cool throughout all this, and seemed quite unaffected by Biggles' wrath and highly coloured language.
âWould you please put your refusal to accept this aircraft in writing, and any other observations that you care to make.'
âObservations! What the blazes do you mean by observations?' thundered Biggles. âI want those three confounded Spitfires I was promised. You can tell that to those flaming nitwits who sent you. And while you're about it, man, I think you should get yourself a haircut.' For Biggles had seen a thick black curl escaping from the side of the pilot's flying helmet.
At this the pilot turned and grinned, then quietly replied, âI'll tell my hairdresser, sir.'
âHairdresser!' choked Biggles. âWhat the blazes ...?'
For the helmet was suddenly removed, and the Spitfire pilot stood revealed as an attractive young brunette.
âFlight Officer Worralson of Transport Command at your service, Squadron Leader,' she replied. âMost people call me Worrals.'
âGood heavens, so you're Worrals. I've heard all about you. You must excuse my language, but one gets a bit frustrated at a time like this,' answered Biggles, somewhat sheepishly. âYou must come over to the Mess and have a drink.'
And so the friendship started, for Worrals stayed to lunch, was introduced to all the members of the Squadron, and that same afternoon Biggles insisted on ferrying her back to Transport Command headquarters in the twin-engined âOxford' aircraft which the squadron used for flying V.I.P.s. Thanks to Worrals, 666 did get the rest of the replacement Spitfires which had been promised. She flew them over personally next day. During the weeks that followed there were more occasions for her to visit Tangmere, so much so that Algy was soon making quite a joke about it all.
âIt's that Worrals girl again,' he'd say to Biggles with a wink. âYou'd better watch out or you'll have her applying to join the Squadron. I wonder which of us she fancies?'
âReally, Algy,' Biggles said. âThat's no way to speak about an officer and a lady. She just does her job â and jolly well she does it too.'
âWell, you should know old chap, if anybody does.'
âNow, look here Algy,' snorted Biggles. âI find this sort of innuendo coarse and tasteless in the extreme. Good heavens, man, Worrals is young enough to be my daughter!'
âExactly Biggles. She obviously sees you as a father figure. You know what young girls are.'
But Biggles clearly didn't know what young girls were â at any rate, not young girls like the determined Worrals of the W.A.A.F. â and despite a lot of somewhat heavy humour in the Mess, it rather looked as if Biggles had finally been hooked. He would have said, of course, that it was all extremely innocent â brief expeditions through the Sussex lanes in Worrals' red MG, a chaste dinner at the Dorchester followed by an equally chaste film in Leicester Square, a spot of dual flying down at Tangmere in which Biggles' admiration for the young girl's flying skill increased. They talked a lot â or rather, Biggles talked a lot, with Worrals wide-eyed and adoring as he went through his well-tried repertoire of flying stories from the past. He even kissed her â once. It was the most fatherly of kisses, in the deserted ante-room at the end of a squadron dance. (The station band was playing âAuld Lang Syne' and Biggles was briefly overcome.) It might have led to other things, but a few days later the call to action intervened, and Worrals was permanently displaced by a shadowy figure out of Biggles' past.
It all began when Squadron 666 was suddenly involved in a desperate operation against the German U-boat base at St Nazaire. Thus had begun as an attempt by Air Commodore Raymond to work with the French Resistance. Because of his near-perfect French and his proven skill at working âin the field', as Raymond put it, Biggles had had the task of parachuting into Brittany to liaise with the local French Resistance group and plan a joint attack by a British bomber force and Free French saboteurs.
The beginning of the plan worked admirably. Biggles was dropped outside the town, picked up by the French and spent several days disguised as a French dockyard worker living in the town. During this time, the whole attack was planned down to the last detail â timing, the explosive charges to be planted by the French inside the U-boat pens, and the targets to be dealt with by
the British bombers. Biggles was looked after by a French couple he knew as âMadeleine' and âGaston', and he admired them greatly for their coolness, their hatred of
les sales Boches,
and the skill with which they did their work. It was thanks to them that everything went smoothly on the night that Algy came to fetch him â flying the same Lysander Biggles used at Amiens. The attack was fixed for three days later.
It was a near disaster. The British bombers flew in from the sea to meet some of the toughest opposition of the war. Biggles, who flew with them, had never seen so many Messerschmitts in the air at once, and fifteen of the bombers failed to return. None of them did appreciable damage to the U-boat pens â nor, as it turned out, did the saboteurs. Biggles discovered later that the whole Resistance group had been arrested by the Germans on the very morning of the attack.
Biggles had always taken failure badly, and had the miserable duty of attending the âinquest' on the operation at the Air Ministry a few days later. An Air Vice Marshal was in charge, and while no actual blame was laid on Biggles, there was a lot of criticism of the role of Air Intelligence.
âWhat were your fellows doing, Raymond?' thundered the Air Vice Marshal bitterly. âThe opposition must have known what we were up to from the start. They set a trap and we flew slapbang into it.'
Raymond nodded, stony-faced.
âI've no excuse sir. There must have been a leak. These things happen.'
âWell they shouldn't. We've lost sixty of our finest men, and all for nothing. I insist upon a full inquiry.'
âYou shall have it, sir,' said Raymond grimly.
As Biggles left the inquest, he was button-holed by Raymond.
âJust a minute, James. We've something to discuss.' With sinking heart, Biggles followed his old chief towards his sanctum.
âI'm sorry, sir,' said Biggles, as he met that steely gaze across the familiar desk. But Raymond brushed his apologies aside.
âNo time for that, James. War by its nature is a risky business and mistakes occur. The only thing to do is profit by them. I didn't mention it just now, but I think I've found out what went wrong.'
âYou have, sir? How?'
âFrom one of our agents who has just returned from France. Got back by the skin of his teeth himself, and what he had to say makes the whole dog's breakfast pretty clear, to me at any rate. No James, we have one man and one alone to blame for what occurred. An old friend of yours.'
âA friend of mine, sir? Just tell me who the swine is and I'll kill him with my own bare hands.'
âNot such a bad idea,' replied Raymond thoughtfully. âThough I imagine you'd have quite a job. It was von Stalhein, James. It seems he's back in his old job at the head of German field security in France. He's working from the
Abwehr
headquarters in Paris, but now I hear that he was in St Nazaire for several weeks before the raid. Somehow he'd penetrated the Resistance network and we played straight into his hands. He must have known about you all along. I must admit I thought it pretty fishy at the time that everything appeared so easy for you. I should have realised. That man's a devil, James. The most dangerous brain we're up against.'
âIsn't it time we dealt with him for good and all?' said Biggles, trying to disguise the fury in his heart.
Raymond nodded.
âYes James. I think you're right.'
Biggles was absent from the Squadron for the next few weeks, and there was much idle speculation about what he could be up to, for at this point not even Algy was in the secret. Officially, Biggles was in London having treatment for his back.