“Why do they all come over this bit of trench, then?” demanded Billy. “And I’m damned if ’ere ain’t more of ’em. Now wot d’you suppose he’s playin’ at?”
“They’re Gunners,” said Larry, “laying a telephone wire out, evidently.”
A young officer, a Second Lieutenant, and two men crept round the broken corner of the trench. One of the men had a reel of telephone wire, which he paid out as he went, while the other man and the officer hooked it up over projections in the trench wall or tucked it away along the parts that offered the most chance of protection. The officer turned to the three men who crouched in the trench watching them.
“Isn’t there a communication trench somewhere along here?” he asked, “one leading off to the right to some broken-down houses?”
“We don’t know, sir,” said Larry. “We haven’t been further along than this, or any further up.”
“The men going up to the front line all say the communication trenches are too badly smashed, and under too hot and heavy a fire to be used,” said Kentucky; “most of them go up and down across the open from here.”
“No good to me,” said the officer. But he stood up and looked carefully out over the ground in front.
“No good to me,” he repeated, stepping back into the trench. “Too many shells and bullets there for my wire to stand an earthly. It would be chopped to pieces in no time.”
“Look out, sir,” said Larry hurriedly; “there comes another one.”
The officer and his two men stooped low in the trench, and waited until the customary rush had ended in the customary crash.