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Автор: Louis Tracy
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
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isbn: 4064066238100
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       Louis Tracy

      The Day of Wrath

      A Story of 1914

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066238100

       PREFACE

       CHAPTER I

       THE LAVA-STREAM

       CHAPTER II

       IN THE VORTEX

       CHAPTER III

       FIRST BLOOD

       CHAPTER IV

       THE TRAGEDY OF VISÉ

       CHAPTER V

       BILLETS

       CHAPTER VI

       THE FIGHT IN THE MILL

       CHAPTER VII

       THE WOODMAN’S HUT

       CHAPTER VIII

       A RESPITE

       CHAPTER IX

       AN EXPOSITION OF GERMAN METHODS

       CHAPTER X

       ANDENNE

       CHAPTER XI

       A TRAMP ACROSS BELGIUM

       CHAPTER XII

       AT THE GATES OF DEATH

       CHAPTER XIII

       THE WOODEN HORSE OF TROY

       CHAPTER XIV

       THE MARNE—AND AFTER

       CHAPTER XV

       “CARRY ON!”

       THE END

       Table of Contents

      This book demands no explanatory word. But I do wish to assure the reader that every incident in its pages casting discredit on the invaders of Belgium is founded on actual fact. I refer those who may doubt the truth of this sweeping statement to the official records published by the Governments of Great Britain, France, and Belgium.

      L. T.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      “

      For God’s sake, if you are an Englishman, help me!”

      That cry of despair, so subdued yet piercing in its intensity, reached Arthur Dalroy as he pressed close on the heels of an all-powerful escort in Lieutenant Karl von Halwig, of the Prussian Imperial Guard, at the ticket-barrier of the Friedrich Strasse Station on the night of Monday, 3rd August 1914.

      An officer’s uniform is a passe-partout in Germany; the showy uniform of the Imperial Guard adds awe to authority. It may well be doubted if any other insignia of rank could have passed a companion in civilian attire so easily through the official cordon which barred the chief railway station at Berlin that night to all unauthorised persons.

      Von Halwig was in front, impartially cursing and shoving aside the crowd of police and railway men. A gigantic ticket-inspector, catching sight of the Guardsman, bellowed an order to “clear the way;” but a general officer created a momentary diversion by choosing that forbidden exit. Von Halwig’s heels clicked, and his right hand was raised in a salute, so Dalroy was given a few seconds wherein to scrutinise the face of the terrified woman who had addressed him. He saw that she was young, an Englishwoman, and undoubtedly a lady by her speech and garb.

      “What can I do for you?” he asked.

      “Get me into a train for the Belgian frontier. I have plenty of money, but these idiots will not even allow me to enter the station.”

      He had to decide in an instant. He had every reason to believe that a woman friendless and alone, especially a young and good-looking one, was far safer in Berlin—where some thousands of Britons and Americans had been caught in the lava-wave of red war now flowing unrestrained from the Danube to the North Sea—than in the train which would start for Belgium within half-an-hour. But the tearful indignation in the girl’s voice—even her folly in describing as “idiots” the hectoring jacks-in-office, any one of whom might have understood her—led impulse to triumph over saner judgment.

      “Come along! quick!” he muttered. “You’re my cousin, Evelyn Fane!”