A STORY ABOUT A REAL MAN 325 "Look out, 'Richthofen'!" muttered Alexei through his teeth. Biting his lips until they bled and contracting his firm muscles, he glued his eyes to his sight and exercised all his will-power to prevent them from shutting in the face of the enemy machine that was charging straight at him. He strained^his senses to such a degree that through the haze of his whirling propeller he thought he could see the transparent screen of the enemy's cockpit, and through that, two human eyes intently staring at him; and those eyes burned with frenzied hate. It was a vision called up by nervous tension, but Alexei was convinced that he saw them. "This is the end," he thought, con- tracting all his muscles still tighter. "This is the end." He looked ahead and saw the rapidly growing plane rushing towards him like a whirlwind. No, that German would not swerve either. This was the end. He prepared for instant death. Suddenly, when it seemed to him that he was within arm's length of the German machine, the German pilot lost his nerve and his plane leapt upward; the blue, sunlit underside of the German machine flashed like lightning in front of him. In that instant Alexei pressed all his triggers, stitched the German with three fiery threads and looped; and as the ground swung over his head he saw the plane fluttering helplessly against its background. "Olya!" he yelled in frenzied triumph, and forgetting everything he spiralled down in narrow circles, accompany- ing the German machine on its last journey, right down to the red, weed-covered ground, until it struck the earth and sent up a column of black smoke. Only then did his nervous tension and tightened muscles relax, leaving him with a sense of intense weariness. He glanced at the fuel gauge. The pointer was trembling almost at zero. There was fuel left for three, at best four minutes' flying. It would take at least ten minutes to get back to the airfield, plus some time for increasing altitude. He had been a fool to descend with that damaged "Fokke"! "Like a foolish kid!" he said, scolding himself. As is always the case with brave, cool men in mo- ments of danger, his mind was clear and worked with the