Stan overtook his formation and dropped
into place. The flight was deployed with the
Jerries perched up above and around waiting for the
Yanks to go home. Below lay the fields of Holland.
“Are you clear, specials?” Stan called.
“All clear,” the boys
called back. That meant they had zoomed down and
ditched their tanks in a way the Germans would not
notice.
Flak was coming up and a flight of
FWs were worrying the Fortresses and Liberators below.
One big fellow was out of formation and having a tough
time. Fifteen FW’s were after it.
“We’ll go down and have
a crack at those FW’s on that Fort,” Stan
called. “So long, Sim, see you at mess!”
One after another the six special
Thunderbolts zoomed down upon the FW’s.
They came down in a screaming dive and their first
burst sent five FW’s smoking to earth.
Instantly the whole battle changed. The flocks
of Jerries up above were taken by surprise because
this was not according to the book. The Yanks
should be keeping altitude, holding them pinned to
the sky, and they were due any moment to start running
for home.
Stan and his crew covered the limping
bomber and she began to pull up into place where her
flight had slowed to help her. Up above, the
Jerries cut loose and the Yanks got a crack at them
as they tried to filter through. For five minutes
the sky was a battlefield, then the Thunderbolts up
above had to leave. They broke off and headed
for home. Behind them they left the wreckage
of eleven Messerschmitts and Focke-Wulfs.
With the bombers, O’Malley was
putting on a show which reminded Stan of the old days.
He was stunting so wildly and slamming lead so fast
the Jerries began giving him a wide berth. Stan
began to realize that their mission was not to be
any picnic. One Thunderbolt went down, slashed
open by a cannon shell. No chute blossomed out
beneath it as it twisted and rolled toward earth.
There were too many Me’s and
Focke-Wulf fighters. They were everywhere, stabbing
and diving, slashing at the bombers and ganging up
on the fighters. Stan realized that his flight
should have had at least thirty planes in it, and
he began to suspect someone back at headquarters had
marked this down as an experiment, figuring upon losing
only six planes.
Another Thunderbolt went down and
then another. O’Malley was still taking
care of himself and Stan was doing all right, but his
gasoline gauge was leering at him and its needle was
rolling steadily around. When the fourth Thunderbolt
broke into flames, Stan knew it was time to go home.
He probably would not make it, but there was a chance.
“O’Malley! Stan calling. Head
for home!”
Looking through the smoke and the
bursts of flak, Stan saw nothing of O’Malley.
The Irishman had been in the midst of a fight a few
minutes before, but now he was nowhere to be seen.
He checked the bomber flight. It was going in
for its bombing run and the batteries on the ground
knew just where the automatic pilots would take over
for the run. They were putting up a box barrage
at that point.
The Forts and the Libs rode into that
blazing inferno of fire without wavering or shifting
formation. Stan saw bombs dropping, sticks of
big fellows. A Fort directly below him was plowing
ahead when a puff of smoke enveloped its tail.
The smoke swirled away and there was the Fort without
any tail at all, only gaping holes where the rudder
and the high tail had been. The Fort sagged over
and went into a terrible dive. One after another
chutes blossomed out until Stan had counted six.
That was the number alive in the Fort, the others
were dead.
Stan laid over and made a sweep, ducking
in and out of the flak. The Jerries had pulled
away and gone back to their fields for more ammunition
and more gasoline for the interception of the Forts
and Libs on their return trip.
Looking about, Stan saw nothing of
O’Malley’s ship. He headed for home
with a grim frown on his face. Everything went
well until he reached the channel. He met no
German fighters and had a fair tail wind. But
his gasoline supply was very low. The needle
kept bouncing off the empty peg, riding clear, then
dropping back. The English coast was a long way
off.
Stan was flying at twelve thousand
feet and that gave him a chance to drift a long way,
but not far enough if his gas ran out. Steadily
he drove toward the friendly shore. Below him
the channel looked cold and choppy.
Thinking of O’Malley added to
his gloom. When you work with a man in the air,
you expect the day when he does not return with you.
But when the time comes it is a stabbing shock.
Stan and O’Malley had seen so much action and
had tackled so many tough jobs, they had come to feel
they always would pull through.
Glancing at the gas gauge Stan saw
that it registered empty, and the needle was not showing
any signs of movement. He glanced down at the
gray expanse below him and frowned. His ears strained
for the first break in the steady throbbing of the
Pratt and Whitney radial.
The engine kept hammering away for
a long time. Stan checked his Mae West suit and
made other small preparations for a bath in the channel.
Then the engine sputtered, smoothed out, then sputtered
again. With a wheezing blast it went dead.
Stan eased the nose down to hold his
speed and began sagging down a long slope toward the
channel. He scanned the choppy sea for signs of
a British patrol boat. Several of the fast rescue
boats should be patrolling the flight line, ready
to fish Yank pilots and crewmen out of the water.
He saw no sign of a boat.
Slowly the Thunderbolt settled down.
Floating a fourteen-thousand-pound fighter in over
a long distance is not like slipping along in a glider.
If there were any up-drafts, the Thunderbolt paid no
attention to them. She sliced on through and
Stan had to nose her down to keep her from falling
like a rock.
The sea came up to meet him and he
began judging the spot where he would take his bath
in the icy water. Suddenly he heard the roar of
plane motors and looked up and back. A Fort was
nosing down toward him. Stan squinted to see
if he could catch the markings. He could not make
them out, but he knew the ship was a bomber returning
from Huls.
There was no time for further looking.
The Thunderbolt hit and hit hard, as though she had
slammed into a stone wall. She slewed around,
jerked and bobbed, slamming Stan back against his
shock pad. He palmed the hatch cover open and
kicked loose from his belt and chute harness.
In a moment he was leaping into the water and the
Thunderbolt was swirling down into the sea. She
lifted one wing as she slid from sight, as though
saluting him.
“Tough luck, old girl,”
Stan said. He got a mouthful of salt water and
began sputtering.
The Fort was low over the sea now
and Stan saw that it was shot up a bit. Then
he saw the name painted on its fuselage. It was
The Monkey’s Paw, the Fort Allison had taken
over for the raid. He waved, and the Fort dipped
her wings. She went roaring on toward the thin
black line which was the coast.
That meant rescue unless the high
waves battered him and pulled him under before a boat
located him. He was struggling to stay afloat
on the rough sea when a Spitfire began circling overhead.
The Spit dropped down lower and lower. It wove
back and forth and finally it dived toward him.
Stan waved some more.
The Spit stayed with Stan until an
orange-snouted speedboat appeared over the foam-rimmed
horizon. The boat came roaring toward him, guided
by the Spit. Stan grinned eagerly. Nice teamwork.
Allison had radioed, the Spitfire pilot had picked
up the message, and he had been rescued.
The speedboat pulled alongside and
strong hands caught hold of Stan.
“Up you come, me hearty,” a seaman shouted.
Stan was so chilled he had to hang
on to the arm of the sailor to keep his knees from
buckling.
“A bit chilly, eh?” a
young officer asked. “Come along. We’ll
wrap you in a newfangled blanket your Uncle Sam just
furnished us.”
“It wasn’t exactly a Turkish bath,”
Stan admitted.
“I’ll radio in for an
ambulance,” the officer said as he helped Stan
wiggle out of his soggy clothes and into the electrically
heated blanket.
“No ambulance,” Stan said.
“I’ll catch a ride over to my base with
someone.”
“The ambulance is the fastest way,” the
officer said.
“They’d take me to a hospital,
and that’s the last place I want to see.
Just dry my outfit if you can.”
“Glad to, old fellow, and we’ll
have a spot of hot tea ready for you in a jiffy.”
The officer turned away.
Stan drank hot tea and toasted himself
inside the blanket until they were near the port where
they were to put in. By that time his clothing
had been dried by one of the machinist mate’s
men in the engine room.
Getting dressed Stan went on deck.
They were edging in beside a pier. Stan was the
first over the side. He shook hands with the British
officer and waved to the crew, then he headed for a
row of cars parked along the street near the wharf.
Picking out a car with a uniformed girl at the wheel
he walked over to it.
“Hi, Yank,” the girl greeted
him. “You look a bit wrinkled.”
“I just had my daily bath in
the channel.” Stan grinned at the girl.
“My butler forgot to pack my bathing suit so
I went in as is. How about a lift?”
“This is Sir Eaton Pelham’s
car. I’m afraid it isn’t available.”
She smiled sweetly when she said it.
Stan glanced at the other cars.
There were no other drivers about. He looked
back at the girl.
“Sir Eaton a kindhearted man?” he asked.
“Very,” she assured him.
“He carries a pocketful of cracker crumbs for
the pigeons.”
At that moment Sir Eaton Pelham appeared.
He was a burly Englishman, wrapped snugly in the folds
of a greatcoat. His ruddy face beamed and he
nodded to Stan.
“Jolly nice weather for one
day,” he said as he opened the door of the car.
“Very,” Stan answered. “How
about a lift?”
Sir Eaton looked at Stan closely for
the first time. “I say, a Yank flier.
What could you be doing here?”
“I was just fished out of the
channel by one of His Majesty’s patrol boats
and want to get back to base.”
“Hop in, old man. Where is base?”
“Take me to Diss,” Stan said as he climbed
in.
“Right-o.” Sir Eaton
did not ask any more questions. He spoke about
the country they whirled through, but never mentioned
the war at all. When Stan got down at Diss, Sir
Eaton waved his thanks aside. “Good hunting,
my boy,” he said. Turning to his driver
he said, “Whitehall, London. We’ll
have to hit it a bit fast to be on time for my meeting.”
Stan stood staring at the car as it
whirled away. “Whitehall,” he muttered.
“Pelham.” Suddenly he began to laugh.
He had hitched a ride with one of Winston Churchill’s
right-hand men. And he had taken the honorable
assistant secretary many miles out of his way.
Hailing a jeep Stan hooked a ride
to the camp. He walked into operations and up
to the desk. A major looked up and then started.
“Wilson!” he exclaimed.
“We had you marked down as lost. Sim Jones
reported you short of gas.”
“I hitchhiked back. Caught
a ride with one of Churchill’s secretaries,”
Stan said dryly.
The major looked at him sharply, then
shoved a pad across the desk. “Just put
that in writing,” he said.
Stan made his report, then headed
for his hut to change into an unwrinkled uniform.
There was no one in the hut, but his things and the
belongings of O’Malley had been neatly stacked.
Stan scowled.
“They gather a man’s stuff
up in a hurry around here,” he muttered.
He put his own things back and did
the same with O’Malley’s. There would
be no rush about making O’Malley out a dead man.
Getting into his uniform he headed for the mess.
He was suddenly very hungry.
Walking into the little dining room
he halted and his mouth dropped open. At a table,
with four youngsters listening open-mouthed to his
talk, sat O’Malley. He looked up and for
a moment held a big piece of steak poised on his fork.
Then he shoved the steak into his mouth and waved
a big hand.
Stan crossed the room and seated himself.
There was no warm greeting. O’Malley swallowed
his steak and grinned at his pal.
“Ye’re a bit late, but in time for the
pie course.”
“I took a bath on the way back,” Stan
said.
“That spalpeen ”
“Now, now,” Stan cut in. “No
names named.”
“I said a spalpeen let you down,” O’Malley
growled.
“And what happened to you?”
O’Malley grinned. “Me?
Oh, I had the boys tuck an extra sixty gallons o’
gas aboard. The colonel said we was to handle
fixing the tanks, so I fixed mine like that.”
“You dropped out of sight at Huls in a hurry,”
Stan said.
“I ran out of ammunition, and
havin’ a spot of extra gas, I did a bit o’
sight-seein’,” O’Malley explained.
“An’ did I get an eyeful!”
The four youngsters sighed and got
to their feet. It was time for them to shove
off.
“See you when I got time to
tell you how I chased a Nazi birdman right down on
a British landing strip,” O’Malley called
after them.
“You’ve been stringing the kids along,”
Stan said.
“I gave them only a bird’s-eye
view o’ the life o’ the great O’Malley.”
The Irishman leaned back and surveyed the platter where
the steak had been. “Now jest a wee bit
of apple pie an’ I’ll have the edge taken
off me hunger.”
He ordered a whole pie. Stan
ordered a steak and coffee. As soon as the orders
were placed before them, O’Malley leaned forward.
“Sure, an’ I saw the strangest
sight today,” he began. “I wouldn’t
have believed it if I hadn’t seen it.”
“What was it?”
“I was flittin’ along
over the tops o’ trees an’ the spires o’
kirks when I zoom out over a wooded slope with a big
cleared field in the middle o’ the woods.
There on that field was at least seventy Jerry fighter
planes.” O’Malley paused to cram a
large bite of pie into his mouth.
“Fighter field. Did you get its location?”
“Sure. An’ I thought
I’d give those fellers a grand scare. There
wasn’t a plane in the air, so I was safe.
I zoomed up an’ over an’ came down in
a dive.” O’Malley paused and shook
his head. “You’d never believe it.
I could hardly believe me own eyes. When I came
back down to scare the daylights out o’ them
Krauts, there wasn’t a plane on that field.
They just vanished.” O’Malley looked
hard at his pie and kept on shaking his head.
“It’s all right to tell
that yarn to me, but don’t ever tell it to a
general,” Stan said. “Did they all
take to the air?”
“Nary a plane in the air.
It’s some black magic them Krauts have conjured
up, if ye ask me.”
It was clear that O’Malley was
in dead earnest. Stan believed O’Malley
had seen the planes. He also believed there was
some trick the Germans had worked out to hide their
fighter fields and to protect them.
“We’ll have another look,”
O’Malley said. “I have the place spotted.”
“Being able to get fighters
out of sight so quickly would account for our not
being able to knock out their fighter fields,”
Stan said. “We’ll have to give this
some thought.”
“It ought to get us special duty,” O’Malley
said.
“I’ll bet you slipped
inside their warning system and caught them flat-footed.
But there must be some way they get parked planes moved
so fast.”
“We’ll be the b’ys to find that
out,” O’Malley answered.
“I doubt if we ever make anybody swallow your
story,” Stan said.