Thursday, May 6, 2021

Heaven Is Too Far Away, Chapter Nineteen. Louis Shalako.


 

 Chapter Nineteen

 

Chronicles of the Damned

 

They say fate rides on the shoulders of untested kids. Shit, they got that right.

I stood looking out over the room. I had, counting heads amongst the hubbub and babble of conversation…

“I hope you gentlemen are ready to fly today.” I greeted them.

Eleven pilots, and I had asked for three squadrons. One fellow in particular didn’t hear me, although the others all shut up. The group stood there with an air of hushed expectancy.

“Luckily we have enough planes to go around.” I began. “We’re here to develop formation tactics, both offensive and defensive, in order to create a higher level of training and to increase the life expectancy of our people…”

The bugger kept chatting and so did I. Annoyed looks from the other students failed to get through to him.

“I requested three instructors at a minimum. Instead all of you have soloed, and you all have a few hours in the air. Several of you will become my instructors.” There was a collective gasp.

“We will also learn single tactics, escort tactics, and aircraft recognition…”

Except for that one fellow, with his back turned, patiently explaining something to another fellow, who was aware of the situation, but chose not to interrupt. The chap who was still reluctantly listening, both to me and the idiot, had a funny look on his face as he caught my stare. The old, ‘not my fault, skipper,’ look.

Looking the bugger straight in the eye, I remarked, “I would appreciate it if you would pay attention. This is for your benefit.”

The talkative one spun around, face flushed with color, hopping on one foot.

He was quiet now. His erstwhile listener had kicked him in the shins, and none too gently.

My little speech went something like this.

“I’m not a stern disciplinarian, I’m not here to bust anyone’s balls.” I lectured. “I’m here to learn alongside of you men, and then we’ll be going into action. We’ll have an edge that no other group has ever had. We have the opportunity to train together, as a team, and to develop tactics that work in life-or-death, combat situations.”

“Andrew is a one and Biggs, you’re a two. You fly together until death do you part, or until I say otherwise.” I was reading from a page.

“Cowings and Dexter, ones and twos, where’s my shoes.” Within about three minutes I had them assigned a number and a position in our first twelve-plane squadron.

This was drawn on the blackboard, in colored chalk.

“Write your name in the assigned position. You. Grab a piece of chalk and get up here. Yes you, I’m telling you to do it. You’re number seven right here. You, who’re you? You’re right here, number five. Odds are ones, gentleman, twos are even. Your positions in the squadron were determined alphabetically. Sorry, but I have to have a system. ”

I paused briefly.

“Write his name up there. Do it now, son, do it now. If you’re, ‘odd,’ you’re a one, if you’re ‘even,’ you’re a two. We have a twelve-plane squadron.”

Mr. Chalkboy needed to hear the other chap’s name again. He wasn’t listening too well. Not yet. Too busy grinning like a fool.

“A-flight is Red, B-flight is Green, C-flight is Blue. I wouldn’t have a yellow flight.”

The men chuckled a little at that one.

“We have three flights of four aircraft. Number one is the killing partner. Number two is the wingman. He covers number one’s ass and never, ever leaves him. In the event of interception and combat, which doesn’t always happen, for the enemy doesn’t always engage with us, you end up with a flight of four aircraft. A flight has two elements of two aircraft.”

I had their full attention now. But I really didn’t have much to go on without seeing them fly.

“O.K. everyone, into the flight gear, and you have fifteen minutes to shit, piss, get changed and be on the flight line. I’ll show you what I mean, but the lectures are important as well.” I concluded. “You will learn. You will be taught.”

My one sergeant, just one, stood by the door.

“Right this way, chaps.” Called Sergeant Jaeckl and they all bucketed for the door.

The dummies hadn’t bothered to look around. They had no clue as to where all the equipment, other than their own personal flight suits, which everyone bought in those days, was kept.

The smart ones would show up on the flight line half dressed, the others late, but it was day one. The talkative one stayed behind for a moment.

“I’m sorry about that, sir.”

“Which one are you.” I asked. “Edgar Powell?”

He nodded glumly.

“No harm done. I wanted to talk to you anyway. You’re my first instructor.” I told him. “Now get out there and instruct them buggers exactly how to pre-flight a plane, and check out mine real good, because you may be flying with me.”

“Sir.”

He clicked his heels and went nipping out the door right smartly. I didn’t take it too personal. That’ll teach the little bastard. His one saving grace was that he had more hours in the air than any of the others, and only two crashes. He had eighty-seven hours in total.

Edgar did okay on the written tests as well.

For the first couple of days, until I got more men, and mechanics, and pilots, and a few other things, I was pretty much making it up as I went along. No question that these men needed all the hours they could get. The problem was that we had a deadline.

 

***

 

“Ladies, if you haven’t seen one before, this is the Bristol fighter.” I began without fanfare.

It took a while for them to catch onto that little gimmick. These gentlemen must learn to watch me like a hawk, and listen as if their lives depended on it. Which was nothing more than the truth, naked and unadorned.

“Today all I care is that you use the buddy system. Number one, you’re the lead hand. Number two, you stick like glue. We’ll be using these aircraft here. Ones and twos. Red flight is first, and Blue can go up second.” I explained. “You boys just sit and watch. We can learn a lot by watching other people fly. You can learn a lot about a man by watching his takeoffs and landings.”

A small circle of faces eyed me warily. No training plan was ever operated like this. They probably expected six weeks of bookwork and then a few flights, and then some kind of fancy cap-badge.

“Anyone here nervous about flying in pairs, in close proximity with a partner?”

A thin, dark man raised his hand. He seemed a little older and possibly more mature than the rest.

“Yes?”

“I’ve never seen a Bristol Fighter before in my life.” He said in no uncertain terms.

“What’s your name?” I asked. “Michael Black, isn’t it?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Congratulations, Mr. Black. You’re new instructor number two. Any suggestions?”

“Well, you could bloody well let us read the manual, at least.” He fumed, embarrassed at being centred-out.

And no doubt aware that he was totally unqualified to be an instructor, or possibly even to take off in a Brisfit. That made him smarter than most, if not all of the others.

Really, they all should have protested. He had seventy-nine hours in total.

“I can’t be an instructor.” He spluttered.

Black was unusually tall, almost as tall as me.

“Don’t sell yourself short.” I said sweetly.

The rest of the men broke up in laughter.

“People look up to you.”

More laughs. Black stood there looking nonplussed.

“All right, lads. See if you can scare up a manual around here. Maybe ask the sergeant, here.” I instructed.

Just by coincidence, Sergeant Jaeckl was standing there with a dozen manuals. It shouldn’t be a problem to keep up with my students. The Biff is a sweet-handling aircraft for its size. I took one up the day before, just to try it out. I know they can fly it. Do they know they can fly it?

That’s the vital question. Confidence is everything.

“Listen up, gentlemen.” I called in stentorian tones.

“The Bristol F.2 is undoubtedly the finest machine that was ever provided for your combat pleasure. This aircraft is a fighter. However, it was originally designed as a reconnaissance machine. The prototype first flew before September 1916. The performance was so good, that it was re-designated and ordered into mass production.”

“I heard these are deathtraps.” Someone muttered.

“That’s not true.” I avowed firmly. “What happened, was that four out of six of these machines were shot down on their first combat patrol. That is true.”

“Well, then, what happened?” Asked Black.

I like Black. He has to have the courage to ask a question, to admit that he knows nothing. To understand that the instructor is not the enemy. The Germans now, they are the enemy.

“They had the great misfortune to run into von Richtofen and his gang on their very first patrol.” I explained. “Courage and honor mean nothing, when confronted by superior tactics and greater experience.”

“The gentleman leading the patrol didn’t understand two-seater tactics, even though a finer and braver officer never lived,” I explained firmly. “These are not sailing ships at Trafalgar. How to maneuver, how to use the field of fire of the observer’s gun, and how to use the gun in the nose, is what I propose to teach you. If you are interested.”

“The simple fact is, they were taken by surprise by a superior formation,” I added.

(How the hell would I know? But it sounded good.)

“You will be taught how to avoid being taken by surprise, and what to do if you are taken by surprise.” I went on. “But even more importantly, you will learn to take them by surprise instead.”

They were all silent, eyes locked on my face.

“In the air this equates with a high rate of attrition, i.e. dead pilots,” I explained. “Let’s make sure they’re German pilots.”

“Look, if you guys are willing to work with me, we can shoot down large numbers of the enemy, save our own lily soft and our mate’s big hairy white asses, and maybe we all get to live through this.”

They all smiled. They seemed to be listening now.

The answer was a pretty positive affirmative, albeit with reservations. Can’t say as I blamed them for that. Who knows, maybe the Old Man’s a queer?

“Alright. What is the maximum take-off weight of this aircraft?” I asked.

Maximum takeoff weight, about 2,800 lbs.

The sergeant called out, “About twenty-eight hundred pounds.” This as everyone hemmed and hawed.

There was another little burst of laughter. The sergeant had read the manual.

Still, I had their attention and they were a good bunch of lads.

“All you men. Listen up. Black, Powell and I, will check the others out on a takeoff and a landing. You, you and you, stand by the nearest three planes. The rest of you wait. And I don’t like horseplay. Horseplay leads to accidents.”

“Oh, yeah, and why not read those manuals while we’re up.” Grimaced Mr. Black.

He had some leadership skills, thank God. It was so hard to tell from written reports.

One or two of them were opening the books. Good for them. Maybe some of them weren’t hopeless after all. One or two of them got closer to the nearest plane, gazing down into the cockpits. One even had the brains to open up the bonnet and begin drinking it all in. That guy had some potential.

My two instructors each grabbed a student pretty expeditiously. They took a quick glance at a relevant page or two in their books. Powell’s aircraft sputtered up after some chit-chat with the ground crew, of which I had exactly five men.

“Andrew?”

“Yes, sir?”

“What are we looking at here?”

I had my eye on this kid. This one was a ‘sleeper.’ Thank God, at least one person on that committee must have liked me.

This kid was my Forlorn Hope. My Billy the Kid, Pat Garret, Jim Lacey, Doc Holliday. The Dead Shot Kid. Someone told me about this one, and I was happy for the warning. But you never can trust a rumor, no matter how reliable the source.

“Rolls-Royce Falcon III, liquid-cooled, inline engine.” He began. “Maximum speed one-hundred-twenty-five at sea level, service ceiling…”

Andrew Jay hadn’t looked at the book.

“All right, that’s enough. Now take us up and shoot down Red One.” I ordered, leaping up into the rear cockpit, and with shaking, trembling fingers rushed at the job of strapping myself in.

I’m a pretty good actor, I thought inconsequentially, as I worked the theatrical mode of presentation.

“I’m Blood and Guts Tucker, and I’m rarin’ to go. Yee, hah.”

The kid moseyed over to the wing like he didn’t give a damn what anyone in the whole wide world thought. But, we were prepared, like Boy Scouts. That’s why the corporal began throwing firecrackers out of the shadows inside the hangar door.

“What the…?” The kid twittered, jumping in dismay as one nearly hit his foot.

Bang. Bang.

All of a sudden I blew off a couple of blank rounds from the Lewis.


 

“Come on, you asshole.” I bellowed in mock rage. “They’re fucking getting away.”

He climbed in then, the little shit.

“Come on.” I bellowed.

Bang. Bang. More firecrackers. The mechanics raced up and they’re all yelling at him, he’s yelling at them, the motor goes sput, sput, barap. Barap.

Off we went down the greasy little field. He lifted off after waiting a good long time, but he had the speed now, the little bastard. He pulled hard back on the stick, zooming up over the trees and the barns. He looked pissed off.

We went tearing off in search of Red One. Hey. Not bad. Looks like we got us a ringer.

“Jesus loves me, this I know...for the Bible tells me so…”

I was singing like a meadowlark.

No one could hear it in the racket we were making anyway.

Back on the field I could see one other plane, lining up to take off.

A whole bunch of men standing around with their jaws open. We’ll see about them later. In the meantime, Andrew had control of the machine, and I told him to take us home.

“We’ll burn the Hun bastard next time.” I bellowed.

“You’re goddamned right we will, sir.” The kid called in excitement.

He’ll do, for starters. This one can coach some of the others in the basic stick and rudder skills. At least he can fly. I’ve heard he can shoot, as well. Thank God for small mercies. First thing that has to go is the idea that I’m a normal person, easy to please and that he can just go on doing well enough to be better than all the other boys.

What he doesn’t get is that his buddies are just plain bad. And they’re not the ones he’s supposed to be shooting down. Some of those boys are really, really fucking good.

Andrew’s not going up against professional killers anytime soon. Not if I can help it.

“Congratulations, Andrew, you’re instructor number three.” I yelled over the prop noise as we swished over the boundary fence.

He made a nice, squeaky little landing as both tires hit at once and the tail-skid came right down like nothing. We taxied smoothly back.

“Was there ever any doubt?” He joked.

Cheeky bastard.

Sometimes silence is golden.

I wondered where she was now and what she was doing.

And if she was thinking of me.

 

***

 

In less than a week, I had found a suitable field in the Norfolk area, scouting it with the help of Toby, and Betty’s faithful auto. As long as The Crown was buying the petrol, he didn’t mind driving it. I talked to the landlord, and the fellow didn’t cause any problems as far as occupying the land.

As far as noise, or low-flying aircraft, the man laughed.

“We’re pretty remote, me mum’s deaf and I could use the rent. We’ll make do.”

I had the impression the old gomer was retired, an Indian Colonel, but I just made the arrangements. We got out of there, to make some telegrams and rustle up tents, tools, trucks, an unbelievable amount of kit.

I was as busy as a one-legged man at an ass-kicking contest, and I was tired when I got home at night. But I was also a young man. Now was my chance to win Betty and hold her, so we went out a few times. We went out to dinner, dancing, music hall shows, the theatre.

One Friday night, a week or so before Christmas, I took off a little early after handing out a fistful of weekend passes. I sent all my boys home or to the city for some rest and recreation. I was up to twenty-two pilots by now and about thirty ground crew, so my mind was busy, busy, busy. Not that I was neglecting the domestic front, where I was very happy. Unbelievably so. But to put the facts plainly, there was a bit of a shortage of tents and beds. So I sent the boys off, the lot of them.

We were, roughing it in the bush.

Very labor-intensive, and it gets tiring.

It was quite dark, about five-thirty or so, when I put the bike in the coach house. Closing and locking the place, for the motorcycle was a prime target for thieves, I went up to the back door.

Just as I was about to stomp my feet to shake the crud off, I saw her sitting there. Just the way the light came down from above, like a halo. Just the way she worked so intently, then looking up, and flicking her hair back, she checked the clock that hung on the kitchen wall. The Lady Fontainebleu-Higgins was darning the toe of a pair of skunky old socks. On the bloody kitchen table, was a book. This beautiful woman brought home a book on sewing so that she could darn my socks.

I stood there watching.

It was like watching my future life.

And what I saw was good.

“Why not open up the door and go in, lad?” A calm voice queried from behind.

“Who’s that?” I asked, turning to peer into the gloom.

It was a Bobby.

“I’m just enjoying the view. Come up quietly and have a look.” I offered.

“What’s all this then?” He asked suspiciously, probably thinking me the dumbest Peeping Tom in all of human history.

“She’s fixing the holes in my socks.”

“Uh-huh,” he said.

We watched for a moment.

“Looks like you have two choices. Open up the door and go in. Or turn around, walk away and never look back.”

He studied me in the light by the door as we stood quietly. I didn’t need this, actually, but he was a Bobby.

“Thank you.” I replied. “I feel a lot safer, with you on the beat.”

“You’re not drunk, and that’s my main concern,” he observed acidly.

Stumping off down the steps, he turned again.

“You’ve got your wits about you. I suggest you use them.”

“See here.” I began like a pompous ass. “I…”

I never got to finish it. The flatfoot spun around, and looked me square in the eye.

“I’ve walked this neighborhood for twenty-six years, laddie, and it’s about time a man of your parts learned to get in out of the rain.”

Then he was gone, clomping off through the gloom.

He was right, damn it. Opening up the door, I got in out of the rain.

 

 

 

END

Chapter One.

Chapter Two.

Chapter Three.

Chapter Four.

Chapter Five.

Chapter Six.

Chapter Seven.

Chapter Eight.

Chapter Nine.

Louis spent 2 1/2 years writing this book.

Chapter Ten.

Chapter Eleven.

Chapter Twelve.

Chapter Thirteen.

Chapter Fourteen.

Chapter Fifteen.

Chapter Sixteen.

Chapter Seventeen.

Chapter Eighteen.

 

Images. That Louis guy, with a bit of help from the internet.

 

Louis has books and stories on Apple Books. See his art on ArtPal.

 

Check out the #superdough blog.

 

Thank you for reading.

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Heaven Is Too Far Away, Chapter Eighteen. Louis Shalako.

 


 Chapter Eighteen

 

A Social Program

 

When I caught up with Betty I was in a very odd mood. I can’t place it exactly, but for some reason I squeezed her bum through the silk of her dress.

“Oh.” She said brightly.

We rubbed up close as the din from inside the next room overwhelmed any and all conversation. I had to ram my mouth up to her ear to tell her anything, and to listen carefully when she did the same. The hubbub died down to a dull roar, as most of us were seated. Servants scuttled to and fro, laden with shiny-domed plates, full of this, that and the other.

“You look lovely, Elizabeth.” I was toying with my grub, because the nearby guests were making forays as a good guest should, attempting to engage in conversation with their neighbors.

I hate trying to answer a question with my mouth full, and I suppose an exaggerated fear of social gaffes affected my behavior.

“Thank you, Will.”

But she really did look lovely.

“I got the job.” I told my love, the lady of the lake.

I don’t know if I have really described her carefully before. I’ll give it the old college try, even though I dropped out of school in grade nine.

“Where are you going to be stationed?” She asked in some concern, and that made me both happy and a little worried.

She really was sincere. I knew that. And I was happy too, so what the hell?

I had been hoisted with my own petard. I got transferred just when life was taking on new meaning. Our neighbors were busy eating their meals and minding their own business, and there was some noise in the room. There was a certain shyness about discussing our plans in front of an audience.

“We can talk about it later.”

I ate slowly, suspicious that I couldn’t just eat and bolt. I watched her movements, filled with a kind of feminine grace that I wasn’t used to being around.

Let’s see here. She stood about five-foot eleven, with a kind of honey-colored, golden brown hair. She has brown eyes, and her hair was puffed up, and combed out, not overly formal, or tied up in knots or a bun or anything like that.

She looked good in her form-fitting, navy-blue silk kimono-type thing with a plunging back line but a more normal, V-type neck line in front. Her shoulders were bare. The cleavage, or, ‘décolletage,’ as my fag French buddy would say, was very nice in the candlelight. She wore rings in her ears, which supported long sapphire-colored pendants glistening and sparkling against the dark background of the oak-paneled walls. Her necklace of blue stones set off her alabaster skin. Her foot touched mine under the table. I was tempted to drop my napkin or something and just go for it.

As if sensing my thoughts, her eyes gleamed impishly over the table.

The relationship was easy from my perspective because she had a great sense of fun. I could joke and kid around with her, and never felt like I had to treat her like she was made of crystal. She wasn’t up on some pedestal, like a statue of the Nike Aphrodisiac. Ultimately I came to worship the ground she walked on, and never regretted it for a moment. That was later, it grew over time.

A beautiful woman with a good mind can be very flattering to the ego. By that I mean…well, I mean…let’s face it: she’s going out with me. And it is not like she’s really stupid, or blind.

She’s obviously not desperate. She’s a smart and beautiful woman, and what a boost to a man’s perception of himself. Sounds selfish? Self-centred? But use your little grey cells. She was the stuff that dreams are made of.

So the old morale has been boosted, that’s fine, and I seemed to have fallen in love with the woman who sat across the fresh, crisp, linen tablecloth. And that’s fine too, I realized.

I was about ready to love somebody besides myself.

Have I explained it clearly enough? When a gorgeous, beautiful girl, with a strong mind, and a good heart, with her faculties intact, and her wits about her, and her own free will, chooses, in the clear light of day, without being drunk, and with no expectation of reward, chooses to kindly fuck the hell out of me, then that is the greatest feeling in the world.

Because I’m worth it.

I don’t wish the reader to think it was just the sex, which opened up whole new untold vistas, or the fact that she caught me at exactly the right moment. She was a very nice person, and not all beautiful people are. As I would shortly discover.

My medals adorned my chest as we sat and enjoyed the dinner, each other’s company, and chit-chat. Those around us were a veritable fund of gossip and tidbits of information.

It pays to keep one’s ears open. The fact that I was a good listener could be attributed to the fact that I really didn’t have much to say.

Betty had sewed on my captain’s badge, and dusted off the medals, of which I had two or three, and put them on my tunic. She brushed it and took a stain out of it. Years later, that thought would sometimes bring a tear to my eye.

Big deal, right? Women do that for their men all the time, right? Wrong. She was a rich girl. She had servants to help her on with her stockings when she was a child. She didn’t even know how to sew. Who helped her? The maid? Mrs. Worthington, who came and went sometimes? She loves me. That’s fine. It’s also a heck of a responsibility.

Now would be a good time to grow up. No one was going to tell me what to do, or how to handle myself. It was all up to me now.

And time was not on our side.

 

***

 

After the meal, there was to be dancing, but we all withdrew to various rooms.

A sitting room for the women, smoking and billiards room for the men. When I was growing up, my pop had warned me about playing pool, and snooker and gambling, so I just naturally gravitated down to the place in the village. I got pretty good at it, too. But not needing to make money, I really had no wish to play. All I wanted to do was make an early night of it. But I had to hang around in case Smith-Barry popped his head out from wherever he got off to.

And that fucking Winnie’s coming around…damn.

“We were very impressed with your proposal, young man.” He grunted. “You know, after the war, the world is going to need bright young men like you. Have you ever thought about going to a good university?”

He wants me. The incongruous thought went through my head.

“I’ll be going back to Canada.”

Demagogues piss me off. They always have, even if, later on, they turn out to be great men. But I knew him when he was just a squid, and that helps. Later of course, he was Britain.

“Canada, eh? Pity.” Mercifully he moved off to seek a more receptive audience.

But not before adding, “I hope your intentions are honorable towards young Miss Fontainebleu-Higgins, because her father was a very good friend of mine.”

Nice.

Old Winston was lucky he didn’t get a punch in the head for that one. But I do have some sense. For example, I didn’t drink as much, or as fast as some of the other people, who seemed to lap up champagne like it was going out of style. Maybe they needed to get fueled up for dancing all night. A bit of a chore, in my present mood.

She changed all that, as she peeked in the door and then waved me out.

I gave her a quick hug. We stood close.

“The orchestra is setting up, honey.” She reported. “How are you doing?”

“Oh gosh, what a bore.” I replied, not too loud, but there was old Bernie again.

Just how good is his hearing? Is he really involved with Belgian Intelligence?

Why not? Somebody has to work there.

We danced quite a bit, though, and for once I wasn’t out of my element. Dancing is easy, once you get the hang of it, and then of course I’d had a chance to observe it first.

Back home we danced. In the tightly-knit, but sparsely populated farming community where everyone is all spread out, any excuse for a dance, a social, a picnic will do.

Anyhow, I was quick on my feet, didn’t come from around here, no one knew me and Betty seemed like a quick study. It didn’t much matter what little jig or ditty the orchestra got up to. I could adapt, improvise and overcome. I never saw the likes of that crowd, but what the heck. People are people, right?

Have you ever roller-skated? In time to the organ music, colored lanterns and ribbons festooning the blackened beams overhead? Anyone can dance, you just have to have the physical courage to get up there. It’s easy, once you accept the fact that no one else knows how to dance either. Maybe they took lessons, or learned from their French nanny up in the nursery.

Me, I’m a natural-born dancer. That ain’t bragging, it’s just a fact.

*** 

Betty was pretty pleased with my progress, and of course the slow, close dancing was our favorite, romantic as women think a quadrangle or menstruet might be. No, that’s just fancy square-dancing. I prefer waltzes, where you get to hold on tight and sort of communicate non-verbally. You get the hang of it after a while, as a one-eyed paper-hangar once told my dad.

We cut out of there Sunday morning, after a weekend of hunting, shooting, riding, dancing, feasting, billiards, and romantic walks in the hallways, where I received a few lessons in art history. My keen eye for observation was to stand me in good stead when dealing with the intelligentsia. We got to meet a few people.

We had a few interesting conversations, sitting around in the salon with Mr. and Mrs. Churchill, Mr. and Mrs. Ebbw Vale, who I think normally didn’t socialize to any great extent with the Churchills, and others, including a Russian, some distant cousin of the Czar. There were a couple of British Secret Service guys, easily identified by the bulge of the weapons in their pants, a Polish count, two French hens, Bernie, Smith-Barry, and about thirty-five other folks who came and went at various times. Oh, yeah, a junior deputy assistant under-minister in the Italian Foreign Office. He was the only guy that could dance anywhere near as well as me.

That John Maynard Keynes guy was there. He kept asking me not to mention it to his wife.

‘Okay, no problem.’ I told the man.

"Don't tell the wife..."

Why was this idiot talking to me? I amused myself by making a few observations on economics. It looked like he had about three girlfriends. Holy. No wonder you’re always short of money. Print some more, why don’t you? Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Eden, they were there, a couple of other famous ones.

As Betty watched, I carefully stowed stuff in the plane. I wished she hadn’t brought the little trunk. The butler must have heard us up and about. We were his responsibility.

“Perhaps we could send it on, sir.” He suggested.

There’s a man with a brain. How hard was that?

“Anything in there you need, Betty?”

She was very meek and quiet this morning, but then we were up half the night with the other guests puttering about at various games, charades, billiards, you name it.

(Screwing like minks.)

It was awfully early in the morning.

“No.” She said.

The butler handed the case over to another servant. Apparently he was an enthusiast.

His assistant scurried for the door, being coatless.

“Are you comfortable in that suit?” I asked, helping her into the front seat.

“Yes.” She said.

“Just relax. Don’t put your feet here, and here. It’s going to be fine. Honey, I promise. Nothing bad is going to happen.” I tried to soothe her fears a little. “I fly better than I dance, really.”

It didn’t seem to help. Frightened people have no sense of humor.

I kissed her. She looked so cute and cuddly, all bundled up in the suit, fur boots, fur- lined hood, everything.

“I’m fine...” She said it cheerfully and brightly.

She lied, but I let it pass.

“If you have to pee or something, put your hand over and bang on the side. I’ll find us a nice, warm pub.”

“Yes, sir.” She said.

I carefully checked her straps, giving an extra good tug, hooking up the pipe for the Gosport tube to her headset. No intercom in those days. I climbed in and thoroughly checked things out, including my own straps. The butler, who seemed to know the procedure, swung the prop. He stepped smartly back and saluted. I waved, and Betty waved, so she couldn’t have been too sick.

The plane rumbled and lurched forward, and just for the sheer hell of it, I went around full-circle and taxied back. The butler stepped forward and came up to the cockpit. He seemed like a good sort.

“Which room is Winnie in?” I asked.

Butler and aviation enthusiast.

His face broke out into a sudden smile, and he pointed wordlessly. Far end, north side.

One floor up. I could see the exact window from here.

Blipping up the throttle, I did a crosswind takeoff, timing my pull-up to the exact moment, and the raspberry of the exhaust note must have given the Churchills something to talk about. We went past the window and up over the eaves about eleven feet away.

“Honorable intentions, Mr. Churchill,” I bellowed at the top of my lungs, but I doubt if the silly bugger heard it over the engine noise.

Then I plugged in my own voice tube. I’m a silly bugger too, sometimes.

We climbed out and headed east towards the city. As luck would have it, ‘twas one of those perfect winter mornings. The lightest dusting of snow stippled the hills and dales, and frosted the cakes that were people’s houses. Creeks and rivers showed up black against the snowy, bush-covered banks. Smoke curled from every chimney.

“It’s beautiful.” She called.

There was nothing to say. Was she warm enough? I loved flying, and could probably stand the cold to a certain extent.

“How are you doing, Honey?” I called through the tube.

“I’m flying above the clouds with the man I love.” She shouted. “Other than that, it’s scary, exhilarating, and I think I WILL have to pee soon.”

“What did you call me?” I yelled.

“What? Oh, drat this stinking tube. I called you the man I love.” She bellowed.

Just for that, I thought, and put the plane inverted real quick. She screamed, then it turned into a nervous, high-pitched giggle in my ear.

“You bastard.” She called. “I love you, I love you, I LOVE YOU. Is that what you want to hear?”

“Yes,” I yelled back, and then I flew normal for a while.

That’s what a man wants to hear. After years of combat, when no one even knew for sure what all the fighting was about, it was nice to know something. No one really knows if he will live, or die, and that is the moment.

A man with no reason to live, his life expectancy is worse.

She made me want to live.

The landing was good. My girl was not frozen up, and we stood in silence, as she looked at that plane like it was something new and important.

Patting the plane on the bonnet, which gobbed a lot of castor oil onto my glove, I told the Avro, “This is the new love interest you are going to have to contend with. Betty, meet Avro, Avro, meet Betty.”

And that was it. We went into a man-door on the front of a hangar and an airman pointed the way to the stores. We peeled off in a smelly old locker room and turned out all our stuff onto the bench so the man could check it off the list.

“Sign here, sir.” He said, noting my brand-new captain’s insignia.

I promptly ordered a convenient airman to cart all our luggage out for us. The man looked bored, what can I say?

“What did you think?” I asked as a taxi took us home.

“I can see the attraction.” She admitted. “But I think I’ll keep my job at the library, at least for a while.”

“What did you think about going upside down?” I asked her excitedly. “Was that scary? Or did you like it?”

“I meant what I said.” We rubbed noses.

“So did I,” I assured her.

So that’s what bonding was like, at least when I was younger. We made up our minds pretty quick. No messing around or beating about the bush. And the scariest thing you can do sometimes, is to tell somebody that you love them.

 

 END

 

 

 

 

Chapter One.

Chapter Two.

Chapter Three.

Chapter Four.

Chapter Five.

Chapter Six.

Chapter Seven.

Chapter Eight.

Chapter Nine.

Chapter Ten.

Bernie's going to hear about this...

Chapter Eleven.

Chapter Twelve.

Chapter Thirteen.

Chapter Fourteen.

Chapter Fifteen.

Chapter Sixteen.

Chapter Seventeen.

 

Images. That Louis guy, with a bit of help from the internet.

 

Louis has books and stories available from Barnes & Noble. See his works on Fine Art America.

 

Check out the #superdough blog.

 

Thank you for reading.