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Excerpt from W.E.B. Griffin's
MEN AT WAR
There
had been time to think. He was just along for the ride. He was riding
Douglass's wing, throttled back at 25,000 feet so as not to outrun
the bomber stream of B-17Es at 23,000 feet. Douglass had the responsibility
for the flock of sheep. All Canidy had to do was maintain his position
relative to Doug.
The
first thing he thought was that this was where he really belonged.
He was a pilot, and a good one, a combat-experienced pilot. And
also an aeronautical engineer. He knew what he was doing here. He
should have fought this war as a pilot.
But
other thoughts intruded. Experience was relative to somebody else's
experience. Relatively speaking, he was an old-timer in the intelligence
business, not because he'd done so much, but because hardly anybody
else had done anything at all. The Americans, as the British were
so fond of pointing out whenever they found the opportunity, were
virgins in the intelligence business.
There
had been a cartoon one time on the bulletin board at MIT in Cambridge:
"Last Weak I Cudn't Even Spell 'Enginnear' And Now I Are One." There
should be one on his corkboard in his office, he thought: "Last
Year, I Didn't Even Know What An Action Officer Was, But Look At
Me Now!"
And
I am now possessed of knowledge, he thought, that would scare the
shit out of those guys in the bombers. They have been told so oftenby
people who believe what they are sayingthat the "box" tactic
(which provided a theoretically impenetrable fire zone of .50 caliber
machine-gun fire) is going to keep them safe from harm that they
tend to believe it.
They
question what they are told, of course. They're
smart enough to figure outor have learned from experiencethat
German fighters will get past the fighter escort and then penetrate
the box. But they hope that the fighter escorts will grow more skilled
and the .50 caliber fire zones will be refined so that things will
get better, not worse, and that all they will really have to worry
about is flak.
I
know that the Germans have flight-tested fighter aircraft propelled
not by airscrews but by jets of hot air. I know that these aircraft
will fly two or three hundred miles per hour faster than our fighters,
which means the Germans will be able to just about ignore our fighter
escorts. And I know that the best aerial gunner in the world isn't
going to be able to hit a small fighter approaching at closing speeds
over 800 mph.
And
I know that unless we can stop the Germans from getting their jet
fighters operational, there is going to be an unbelievable blood
bath up here.
It
is for that reason that I can intellectually, if not emotionally,
justify sending Eric Fulmar into Germany. If we can find out from
the guy he's bringing out what the Germans need to build their jet
engines, maybe we can bomb their factories out of existence before
they can start turning out engines. In the cold, emotionless logic
of my profession, that justifies dispatching an agent, even running
the risk that if he is caught, the Sicherheitsdienst will begin
his interrogation by peeling the skin from his wang, before they
get down to serious business.
"Dawn
Patrol Leader," Douglass's voice came over the air-to-air. "Dawn
Patrol Two. We just crossed the German border."
Under
the black rubber oxygen mask that covered the lower half of his
face, Canidy smiled. What seemed like a very long time ago, when
he and Doug had been assigned to fly patrols at first light looking
for Japanese bombers on their way to attack Chungking, they had,
feeling very clever about it, chosen "Dawn Patrol" as their air-to-air
identity. Errol Flynn had recently played a heroic fighter pilot
in a movie with that name.
"If
you see Eric, wave," Canidy said to his microphone. He immediately
thought, Now, that wasn't too smart, was it?
"No
shit?" Douglass replied. This time Canidy didn't reply.
Five
minutes later, Douglass came on the air again.
"Blue
Group Leader. We have what looks like two squadrons of ME-109s at
ten o'clock. Baker and Charley flights, hold your positions. Able
will engage. Able, follow me."
Canidy
looked for the German fighters, and found them, maybe twenty-five
black specks in a nose-down attitude, obviously intending to strike
the bomber stream from behind and above.
The
Germans preferred to attack from above, preferably from above and
to the rear, but from above. Diving at the P-38Fs on their way to
the bomber stream beneath would give the Messerschmidts a considerable
advantage. With the American fighters between the B-17s and the
Germans, the B-17 gunners would have their fields of fire restricted
unless they wanted to run the risk of hitting the P-38Fs. And with
just a little bit of luck, machine gun and cannon fire directed
at the P-38Fs might strike one of the bombers beyond them.
Canidy
waited until Douglass was out of the way, then tested his guns (he
had tested them over the English channel, but it was better to test
them again than to find himself nose up against a Messerschmidt
with a bad solenoid and no guns) and then pushed the nose up and
to the left and stayed on Douglass's wing.
He
felt his hands sweating inside his gloves, and knew that it was
a manifestation of fear.
The
attacking Messerschmidts split into two groups, one to continue
the attack on the bomber stream, the other to engage the American
fighters. The tactic had obviously been planned.
The
P-38Fs had not been able to gain much speed from the time they left
their original position to rise to the attack, but the Germans were
running with their needles on the DO NOT EXCEED red line, and the
closing speed was greater than Canidy expected. He was sure that
his three-second burst had missed the Messerschmidt he had aimed
at.
Turning
outside of Douglass, he felt the world grow red, and then almost
black, as the centrifugal forces of the turn drained the blood from
his head.
The
twin 1,325-horsepower Allison engines, with their throttles shoved
forward to FULL EMERGENCY MILITARY POWER indent, were screaming.
Full Emergency Military Power was hell on fuel consumption and cut
deeply into the operational life of engines, but the extra power,
when needed, was worth the cost. When they came out of the 360-degree
turn, they were running a little faster than the Messerschmidts.
They gained on them slowly and followed them through the bomber
stream.
The
tracers from the bombers' guns seemed to fill the sky; there was
a real possibility that he would be hit, and that prospect was frightening.
But the fear was overcome by what Canidy, very privately, thought
of as the animal urge to kill. Manbecause he fancied himself
civilizedliked to pretend he entered combat reluctantly. And
he prepared for combat reluctantly. But once he was in it, he was
far less removed from the savage than he liked to believe. He wallowed
in the prospect of killing the enemy.
The
pair of Messerschmidts he and Douglass were chasing pulled out of
their dives. To be sure of a killing burst from his battery of eight
.50 caliber Brownings (the mark, Canidy thought approvingly, of
the experienced fighter pilot; "don't shoot until you can see the
whites of their eyes"), Douglass, who had crept ever closer to the
German before him, was taken by surprise. His P-38F could not respond
in time, and he had lost his opportunity to fire.
Canidy
was two hundred yards behind him. Without thinking of what he was
doing, he moved the nose of his P-38F from the Messerschmidt he
had been following to the one that had gotten away from Doug. The
plane vibrated for a moment from the recoil of eight heavy machine
guns, and then he aimed at the first plane, this time firing a three-second
burst.
He
saw his tracer stream move from just in front of the Messerschmidt
to the engine cowling, and then to the left wing. There was a hint
of orange, and then the wing tank exploded.
Canidy
pulled up abruptly and looked around for the other fighter. He couldn't
find it for a moment, and then he saw it, smoke pouring from its
engine nacelle as it spun toward the cloud cover below. He looked
for a parachute but didn't see one.
And
then Douglass was on his wing.
"Two
more," Douglass's voice came over the air-to-air. "How the hell
are we going to explain that?"
"That'll
make seventeen for you, won't it, Colonel?" Canidy replied.
"Bullshit!"
Douglass said, and then switched frequencies. "Blue Group Able,
this is Blue Group Leader. Form on me in Position A."
The
P-38Fs scattered all over the sky began to turn and to resume their
original protective positions over the B-17 stream.
Canidy
reached inside his sheepskin jacket, and then inside his uniform
jacket and came out with a MAP, US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS: GERMANY.
It
wasn't an aerial navigation chart, but rather one intended for use
by ground troops. It could also be used by a pilot who intended
to navigate by flying close enough to the ground and following roads
and rivers. Canidy had taken it with him to the final briefing,
and copied onto it the course the bomber stream would fly. Once
they had joined the bomber stream, over a known location, it was
not difficult to plot from that position and time where the head
of the bomber stream would be at a given time.
It
wasn't precise, but Canidy had had experience in China navigating
with a lot less. He looked at his watch, and then scrawled some
arithmetic computations on the map. He put a check mark on the map.
The way he had it figured, the lead aircraft of the bomber stream
was now passing over a relatively unpopulated area of Germany, southeast
of Dortmund. He made some more marks on the map, and then touched
his air-to-air microphone switch.
"Dawn
Patrol Two," he called.
"Go
ahead," Douglass replied a moment later.
"There's
something I want to see," Canidy said.
"Say
again?"
"I
say again, I'm going to have a look at something I want to see,"
Canidy said. "I'll be back in about two zero minutes."
"Dick,
are you all right?" Douglass asked, the concern in his voice clear
even over the clipped tones of the radio.
"Affirmative,"
Canidy said.
"Permission
to leave the formation is denied," Douglass said.
Canidy
ignored him. He dropped the nose of the P-38F and headed east.
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