The planes of the two squadrons based at Fersfield were thirty minutes late, but Dolan was not yet worried. His opinion of the skill of the Army Air Corps pilots was not high. It was not a chauvinist opinion, Navy vs. Army, but a professional judgment. Dolan was not surprised that they flew so badly, but that with so little training and experience they flew as well as they did.
It was a magnificent accomplishment on their part that they could fly seven hundred-odd miles into Europe, find and bomb a target, and then find their way home again. Without considering any trouble they ran into en route, he expected them to be an hour or so off their estimated time of arrival.
Forty minutes after they were expected, a sloppy formation of B-17s appeared to the southeast. When Dolan saw through the binoculars that the lead plane had begun a course correction toward Fersfield, he felt sure it was their squadron. He stepped to the window, tapped on it with his mug to get the Aerodrome officer's attention, and raised the mug in the direction of the formation.
Three of the twenty-odd aircraft detached themselves from the formation and began to drop toward the base. Flares erupted from the first and last planes of the trio, the signal for wounded aboard.
Dolan heard the peculiar sound of the English-built fire and crash trucks starting, and then the more familiar sound of Dodge ambulances.
The planes with wounded aboard turned on final and came in for a landing. Dolan studied their numbers through his binoculars.
Commander Bitter was in K5, "Danny's Darling. n'danny's Darling" was not among the three planes with wounded aboard.
The first two ships made it in all right, but the right landing gear of the third ship collapsed on touchdown. The B-17 skidded sideward but did not leave the runway as it screeched to a stop. It blocked the runway, however, and there was a ten-minute delay--during which the remaining B-17s circled slowly and noisily above--until a tractor could push the crash landed B-17 off the runway.
Then the landings resumed, at roughly one-minute intervals. Dolan was not impressed with the pilots' skill in bringing their ships in.
In what he judged to be a fifteen-mile crosswind, several of them had to make frantic last-minute maneuvers to line the planes up with the runway.
He looked for' Danny's Darling" among the circling and landing B-17s but could not find it. In the belief that the squadron commander was likely to stay up until the last of his chickens had gone to roost, Dolan was not particularly concerned about it. So he didn't expect it when he felt a tug at his sleeve and turned to find Major Dumbrowski, the junior of the two squadron commanders, standing there with pain in his eyes.
""Danny's Darling, "' Major Dumbrowski said, "didn't make it. I'm sorry, Commander." Dolan nodded his head. "What happened?" he asked. Neither his face nor his voice showed any emotion.
"Four Messerschmidts got through the fighters and hit us head-on.
"Danny's Darling' was flying lead. I guess it was cannon fire.
One moment they were straight and level, and the next they were in a spin."
"You see any parachutes?" Dolan asked.
"No," Dumbrowski said. He held up his left hand and demonstrated the attitude of the stricken plane. "When it gets in a spin like that, you almost never see anybody get out." "Yeah," Dolan said. "No chance he could have recovered?"
"One of two things happened, maybe both," Dumbrowski said. "A cannon round took out the controls, otherwise it wouldn't have gone into that spin. Or it took out the pilots. That's what they've learned to do, make a frontal assault and take out the pilots or the controls.
Both, if they can."
"How far could you follow them down?" Dolan asked.
"There were scattered clouds at three thousand feet," Major Dumbrowski said. "My belly and tail gunners reported they lost them when they went into a cloud bank." Dolan nodded, but said nothing. That was it. If they had dropped to 3, 000 feet in a spin, they were through.
It was surprising the wings hadn't come off long before they went into the clouds. And taking a plane as big as a B-17 out of a spin was beyond the capability of Ed Bitter, even if he had made it to the cockpit, and even if the controls hadn't been shot away. He was a goddamtned good pilot, but he was not a bomber driver. And he had never flown a B-17.
"Commander," Major Dumbrowski said. "I'm not sure what I'm supposed to do. About notifying the right people, I mean. I mean about Commander Biter being aboard."
"I'll handle it," Dolan said evenly.
Major Dumbrowski patted Dolan's arm in a gesture of sympathy.
When Dolan came down from the tower, Ed Bitter's Limey woman sergeant driver pushed herself off the fender of Canidy's Packard.
"Is there word?" she asked.
"Sergeant," Dolan said, "you might as well put your gear together, and Commander Biter's. He's not coming back." Her face went white.
"What happened?" she asked faintly.
"They was hit, is what happened," Dolan said, angrily. "The last time they was seen, they was in a spin." "Oh, God!" she said.
"He never should have let that liale shit talk him into going," Dolan said, still angry.
"No parachutes?" Sergeant Draper asked.
"What happens is that when a plane like that goes into a spin," Dolan explained gently, "is that it pins you inside, like water in a bucket when you swing it around your head. You can't get out."
"Oh, my God, " she said. "Did it explode when it hit?"
"Probably," Dolan said, and then, when he saw the question in her eyes, added, "Nobody actually saw it hit." She considered that for a moment.
"Then we don't know, do we, that it did crash?"
"That's what happens, " he said.
"How much fuel did they have? I mean to ask, when is the latest they could possibly return?" He looked at his watch and made the computation.
"Another two hours and thirty minutes," he said. "Maybe two forty-five."
"Then I will wait, if you don't mind, Commander," Sergeant Draper said, "for another two hours and forty-five minutes. I seem to have more faith in Commander Biter's ability than you do. And if I were gone when he returns, he would be furious." Hard-headed Limey is the first thing he thought. But then, Jesus Christ, she's in love with him.
What the hell, I'm the senior officer It's up to me to decide when I start making casualty reports.
THREE] Ed Bieer knew the technique for geeing a fighter plane out of a spin, but he doubted that a bomber was stressed for the forces it required. You put the nose down and give it all the power available in the hope that velocity will overcome the aerodynamic forces of the spin.
But there was nothing to do but try. After what seemed like a very long time with the needle well past the NEVER EXCEED red line on the airspeed indicator, he felt a lessening of the centrifugal force pressing him into his seat, and then saw that the world had stopped spinning. They were in a steep dive.
And there was a frightening pain in his knee and lower leg. The pain was intense, but what frightened him was the possibility that his shot-up, still-stiff knee was about to collapse on him.
He didn't remember pain as he had applied pressure to the rudder pedals. But there was a reason for that, The adrenaline fed into his system by fear had overcome the pain.
Now that he was no longer quite so terrified, the pain had registered.
It was a strange pain, dull, like a toothache, and with it came an uncomfortable sensation he couldn't quite describe. It was as if the bones of his leg and knee were collapsing. When he pushed on the rudder pedal, the upper leg seemed to fold downward into the knee and lower leg.
It was perhaps only a sensation. There had been extensive nerve damage when he had taken the Jap slug in his knee, and the doctors had told him that he could expect to experience "ghost" sensations while nerves that were not wholly destroyed regenerated. So maybe faulty nerves were sending the brain erroneous signals.
He hoped that was the case. If his knee collapsed, they were in deep trouble. It would be impossible to fly this airplane with only one functioning leg.
He reached up and pulled back on the throttles, then forced himself to very slowly bring the bucking, screaming aircraft from its near-vertical dive to lesser angles, and finally to something approaching horizontal.
But the airspeed indicator showed he was near stall speed. And when he looked out the window, he was horrifyingly close to the ground.
He pushed the throttles forward and felt almost instantly the surge of power, then a pull to the right. His eyes flew up to the instrument panel and out the window.
The outboard engine on the port side had stopped, and the inboard engine was smoking.
Desperately, he searched the overhead control panel for the ENGINE FIRE switches, and threw the ones for the port side engines. Then he cut the smoking engine and feathered its prop.
He was 500 feet off the ground on two engines, but he was in straight and level flight. His hands were shaking on the wheel, and he felt a strange coolness in his lap. He had pissed his pants.
He checked the instrument panel. The master artificial horizon was at a crazy angle. He looked over to the horizon on the copilot's panel and saw that the burst of machine-gun fire--or was it a cannon shell? that had killed Ester had taken out the copilot's panel as well.
He glanced around for the flight engineer, I need some help to fly this sonofabitch!
The flight engineer was nowhere in sight. But Ester was, As Bitter watched, a fist-size lump of his brain tissue slipped out of his shauered head and then hung there, suspended by a vein or something.
Biter threw up before he felt nauseated, the vomitus landing in his lap.
He grabbed the intercom mike.
"Somebody come up here!" he ordered.
He looked at the magnetic compass mounted on the top of the windshield.
The Plexiglas window had been shattered within an inch of the compass, but the compass seemed to be working. He checked by steering right and then left.
The compass responded by swinging. That meant, since it was working, that he was headed northeast--in other words, into Germany, in the direction of Berlin.
The flight engineer appeared, looking dazed.
"Navigator and bombardier are dead, sir," he said.
"Get the copilot out of his seat," Bitter ordered. "And then get Major Ester out of the way." Bitter started the B-17 on a slow and level 180-degree turn. It took all of his concentration. His inexperience with B-17s was made incredibly worse by having all his power on one wing. And when he applied much rudder pedal pressure, a burning pain shot up and down his leg from his ankle to his crotch.
When he next had time to look up, he saw that the flight engineer had pulled Ester along the narrow aisle and covered his head and torso with his sheepskin jacket. A moment later, another of the crewmen appeared, and between them they manhandled the copilot from his seat.
The odds, Biter thought, strangely calm, against getting this airplane back on two engines are staggering And even if I can get it to a decent cruising altitude, there will be swarms of fighters waiting to take us out The only chance we have is to keep doing exactly whati'm doing now. pying it 500 feet off the ground, headed in the general direction of England.
The flight engineer leaned over him.
"Everybody in the back is okay," he said.
"What about the copilot?" Bitter asked.
"He's bleeding bad," the engineer said, and then asked what was on his mind, "Are you going to crash-land it, sir?"
"If we lose one of the two engines we still have, we'll crash, period," Bitter said without thinking.
He looked at the inboard port engine. The propeller was turning slightly in its feathered condition. The switch was still on, but there was no smoke.
He thought it over a moment, and decided there was nothing to do but try. If it caught on fire again, there was no more CO2 to put it out.
But maybe it wouldn't catch on fire, maybe it would even run.
He took it out of feather, and the propeller started to turn. He found the gauge and saw there was some indication of oil pressure. He moved the throule half open, then threw the feathering switch again.
The blades began to turn, and then began to rotate, forced by the wind.
He looked at the ENGINE RPM indicator, aware that he had no idea at all whether it was operating.
And then, before he heard the burst of noise, the indicator needle leapt.
Now he had three engines. That might be enough.
He looked at the airspeed indicator. He was making 230 miles per hour.
The fuel gauges, if they were working, showed just over half full.
There was no reason he shouldn't try to make it back to England, even if he didn't know where England was, except in the most general terms, somewhere west of where he was.
He saw a fighter plane above him and ahead of him. Without thinking about what he was doing, he pushed the nose forward. It was a fighter pilot's response, a dazed fighter pilot's response, If you don't have a chance to get above your enemy, go down on the deck and pray he doesn't see you.
He was now 200 feet off the ground, close enough so there was the sensation of speed.
God takes care of fools and drunks, he thought. If I set this thing down anywhere here, I'm liable to kill myseg trying If I don't kill myself and everybody on here, we'll an wind up as prisoners. What I'm going to do is try to take this sonofabitch home on the deck. When I get to England, we can all bail out An hour later, he passed a coastline, and an hour after that, with his fuel gauge indicators approaching zero, he saw another coastline ahead.
By then he had calmed down. If he had managed to take the airplane three or four hundred miles 200 feet off the deck--sometimes actually flying between hills and around church steeples--there was no real reason he couldn't get it on the deck at the first airfield.
He pulled gently on the wheel. What he needed now was some altitude so that he could see an airfield. He picked up the microphone and summoned one of the crewmen to the cockpit.
"I've never landed one of these things before," he said. "And there is a good chance that the landing gear is damaged. When I find a field, what I suggest you do is bail out. Tell the others." The crewman came back in five minutes, just before he spotted a group of B-17s circling an airfield, obviously landing.
"We'll ride it down, sir," he said.
"Then you sit over there and read me the landing checklist," Bitter ordered. The crewman looked in revulsion at the ghastly, bloody fleshandbrain-mater-splattered copilot's seat, but he finally sat gingerly down and started looking for the checklist.
Bitter tried the radio but got no response. The only thing to do was simply break into the circle of landing aircraft and chance that he wouldn't get into a collision. Then he realized there was no greater danger breaking in among the aircraft about to land than waiting around at the end of the line.
"Skipper," a voice came over the earphones, startling him.
"That's Horham.
If you think you can make it, Fersfield is about twenty miles.
Steer 270." Bitter decided that trying to make another twenty miles was less risk than breaking into the traffic here, and turned so the vertical marker on the compass covered the 7 in 270.
There were no airplanes in the air over Fersfield, which was a relief.
Which was immediately replaced by terror when there was a sharp blast right beside him in the cabin. He looked and saw that the flight engineer had fired a flare out the copilot's side window.