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Saturday, May 29, 2021

Heaven Is Too Far Away, Chapter Forty-One. Louis Shalako.


  

Chapter Forty-One

 

Boom’s Eyes

 

“Are we having fun yet?” Boom’s eyes twinkled from across the desk.

The others were silent. Salmond had his arms crossed. Admiral  Keyes sat straight up and rigid.

The others seemed more neutral.

“Trust me, I know what I’m doing.” I assured the crowd of bigwigs.

This time it wasn’t army generals, this time it was the Air Ministry and the Navy and the politicians.

“We plan to continue going after high-value targets, gentlemen.” I told the group. “This is the only proper way to run a war.”

It was preferable to bombing and strafing ground troops. There were millions of them, and quite honestly that’s what artillery is for. A big shell costs five pounds and if you put it in the right place it can kill a hundred men and a hundred horses.

“Who else could do it so well?” Murmured Keyes, who was angry about something.

“No deficit for the righteous.” He added somewhat obscurely.

Doddering old fool. He’s going senile. And the remark was more for the benefit of his colleagues.

“I don’t like this big funeral they gave him.” I patiently explained. “You should have let him rot in that field.”

“Why is that?” Barked Salmond.

Winnie glowered. He looked really pissed off. That’s the only way anyone ever got him to shut up.

“They’ve made some kind of symbol out of him.” I said. “I have my reasons. Don’t glorify him. There’s a million men missing, and what makes him so special? That was a mistake, to pay him any more attention than some old widow who starved to death. You shouldn’t have made a big fucking ceremony out of it.”

Boom.

“You have no respect.” Shot Winnie. “It’s not your concern.”

“Promise you won’t make a fucking symbol out of me, okay?” I glowered right back.

The bigger the target, the harder they fall. It’s good propaganda to shine it up a little.

Here they were, glorifying our enemy. For Christ’s sakes. Ah, but he was nobility—

He was just another pilot, in the final analysis.

But to glorify Manfred glorified us by reflection.

“I don’t give a fuck about your cartoon religion.” I told him reasonably enough.

I was getting sick of these guys.

Trying to break the ice, or thaw out the room a little, I joked. “Did you hear Mrs. O’Reilly hasn’t been feeling herself lately?”

“Oh, really?” Asked Keyes.

“No. O’Reilly.” I responded.

Trenchard was laughing into his cupped hand, faking a little cough, eyes glinting out of the middle of his strong-looking features. In spite of that dry little moustache he’s got, he’s not such a fuddy-duddy as compared to a couple of the others.

“I didn’t come here to be insulted.” Said Effingtass-Dinglebob-Plunkett.

“Sure you did.” I assured him. “You serve no other function.”

Everyone giggled except he and I. We just glared at each other.

“Gentlemen, gentlemen, you can’t fight in here.” Said the Adj. “I’m trying to make a long-distance call.”

He was busy over by the communications gear.

“This is the command tent, after all. We’re trying to fight a fuckin’ war, here.” He muttered away to himself.

“I don’t like to be a piece of meat.” I told Winnie. “Make it look wounded and wiggle it around.”

He flushed at that.

“The mission is not over.” Trenchard reassured us.

What’s the difference? Because it didn’t feel the same anymore. The last couple of days were something of a let-down. Really anticlimactic. Maybe this time we’re the ones who need a spark to the old morale.

“When a wolf kills an elk, it feeds a dozen other species.” I told Winnie.

“What do you mean, Tucker?” Winnie asked in spite of his anger.

Gotcha, motherfucker.

“He feeds the crows, the foxes, the worms and the vultures.”

The lisping little bugger looked like he was going to have a heart attack, but Boom raised a palm and I let him calm me down, in order that he might demonstrate authority over me. I’ve been reading some psychology books. Do I have regrets? Yes and no.

“We are the damned, to be accursed with what we must do.”

Who the hell was that? One of the anonymous aides-de-camp.

“To follow through on what we have started, out of a sense of duty, or maybe it is some mistaken, forlorn way of accepting responsibility.” He concluded dramatically.

Or guilt, maybe. A kind of shame we cannot acknowledge. All we could do was to share it silently, or better yet, quietly.

“Count your blessings.” Said Howard-Smythe. “Something wonderful is going to happen.”

He looked at me absolutely deadpan.

Good one. I owe you, buddy.

“…and it was a nasty, filthy habit she had, too.” He added.

“Who did? Who did?” quavered Keyes. “Frankly, you lost me somewhere, old boy.”

That’s one down.

“Mrs. O’Reilly.” I said in a being-patient-to-the-old-folks-voice. “You remember.”

“So you put an interrupter on the 504?” Muttered Boom in annoyance. “That’s a waste of time”

“I don’t honestly…” Give a fuck what you think.

Sir. He can be a little intimidating. When he tries, and turns on them blazing eyes.

“So you plan to continue the mission.” Effingtass-Dinglebob-Plunkett brought us back to the discussion. “But you won’t listen to us, you don’t take orders from anyone, and you want to write your own ticket?”

“That pretty much sums it up, doesn’t it?” Muttered Trenchard.

“You catch on fast.” I told Sir Effingtass-et cetera. “Perhaps you’re not as stupid as you make yourself out to be.”

His face reddened, as he snarled, “I am so very happy that I don’t have your nerve in my tooth.”

He said this with some heat. Huh. Nice one. I have to admit I was impressed, as we held each other’s eye for a half a mo’.

Buddy, when it comes to dirty cracks, you’ve got them all licked.

I kept that one to myself, but I’m sure he got the gist of my thinking.

He’s probably everything he pretends to be.

A pair of aircraft roared overhead, very low.

With a little advance notice, we had made some arrangements. It was truly annoying after a while. Any kind of an edge, when dealing with the intelligentsia. At least two of them were gritting their teeth as we waited for relative peace and quiet to return.

“By the way, the high-altitude experiments are going well.” Put in the Adj. “And the anti-gravity results are very interesting.”

“Oh, really?” Noted Boom. “What are we talking about?”

“Normally a person of average health, totally unprepared, would black out at about five and a half times the force of gravity,” I told Trenchard. “We can regularly get six and seven out of our planes, if only briefly. Maybe even more, but it doesn’t last long.”

Boom was clearly wanting more data.

“We bleed off speed in a turn, so we really haven’t gotten much farther than that.” I explained. “Our instruments aren’t very accurate either, but it’s food for thought.”

We hadn’t attempted any power dives and pull-outs yet, I reported, grateful for a bit of a smokescreen.

“We have requested parachutes, but haven’t yet received them.” I reminded them all.

“You wish to continue the mission, Lieutenant-Colonel Tucker?” Asked Winnie.

“Yes.” I said.

“Then why are we here?” Belched Keyes.

Silly old fart, but he had a point. Keyes is an Admiral, not to be confused with Keynes, the economist, who has also traipsed through this volume. I think he has. I’ve kind of lost track. It’s a big long book, after all.

Oh, yeah. He was at Bernie’s house—not sure if I pointed him out.

“The key thing is to apportion the glory.” I told him kindly. “Otherwise some people might feel short-changed. Also, they would like to put in some of their cronies…”

“Who? Where?” He asked in confusion.

“Here. My job,” I explained to the room. “Their little school buddies get a month, maybe a month and a half in command. They get to borrow some credibility from our exemplary service record. They get a knighthood, or a baronetcy. Then they get to sit in the House of Lords. They’re politically reliable and very impressionable. And they’re always looking for fucking approval from their new-found friends.”

Poor old Winnie was glaring at me now, boy. But he didn’t wish to dignify it with a response either, especially since I was half-right.

‘If you can smell a rat, you’re often half-right,’ as my dear old Uncle Fred used to say.

“They could ram a half a dozen through here in the next six months, or a year or so.” I went on baldly.

It sounded just outrageous enough to be true.

“That’s the real purpose of giving some carefully-selected person a fucking Military Fucking Cross, or a Goddamned Knight of the Fucking Garter.”

You can’t lie to Will Tucker. That took them up a bit, though.

For some reason they think the working classes are blind, or stupid, or both.

“We all know this war is in the bag. Now the politicians, and the power-broker elite are trying to figure out how to make out like bandits after the war.” I told Keyes.

He didn’t seem so senile now, and he slowly nodded, once, twice.

“To the victor go the spoils.” I added.

“I see, young man.” He said soberly. “I see.”

The set-up takes a long time, whether it’s hockey or football or rugger.

But the spike is over in an instant. Trenchard was sitting there like a man who just won a thousand pounds on some kind of wager, eyeballing Keyes with a vengeance. Salmond, Sir John, looks like a man who just lost a thousand pounds on a wager but remains philosophical.

Not too hard done by, as it were.

“Will there be anything else, gentlemen?” I asked, rising from my desk.

“I don’t like your attitude.” Sir Effingtass-Dinglebob-Plunkett said in no uncertain terms.

“The day I need your opinion in order to determine my self-esteem, that will be a cold day in fuckin’ hell.” I said equably.

In no way mollified, he got up and headed for the door without looking back to see if anyone followed.

“Cock-a-snook, eh, old boy?” Chortled Keyes. “Cock-a-snook. Haw. Haw. Haw.”

He seemed much happier, now that he’s figured out which side I’m on.

“That man is about as useful as a pair of tits on a bicycle.” He told us, and then he got up too.

The Navy, they have a colorful way of speaking from time to time. Hemming and hawing, the rest of them finally left.

So that’s why they were here. They couldn’t decide whether or not to replace me. I seem to have survived on sheer surrealism.

“I’ve said it for years, that man is unstable.” Winnie complained on his way out the door.

I refrained from kicking him in the ass.

Presumably he was talking about me, but it might have been one of the others.

Anyway, that’s what I call my ‘shock treatment,’ which I use in dealing with pudgy-faced armchair warriors and paper-pushers and office-seekers. Rude but effective.

And that was the end of the matter.

 

***

 

When you get really old, your memories will become all mixed up like a dog’s breakfast.

A kaleidoscope of pictures, a kaliapede of sounds. One image is me, at age five on a pair of roller skates. But do I really remember that incident? Or is it the fact that my folks had a photograph in the family album, a picture to show me?

A little boy, seated on papa’s lap.

“See? This is you.” He might say.

I don’t remember skating. I remember the picture—a look at myself from another perspective. A look from the outside in. You pretty much have to take his word for it. There are lots of things in life, that we take people’s word for.

Still, a few things stick in my mind. That first trench strafing, way back when, the first time I flew as pilot instead of observer. That sort of thing.

It happened like this. My observer had just dispatched a pursuing enemy scout. Rather badly handled, in retrospect. We were winging along at about a hundred feet—not too swift of me, but there you go. We all make mistakes.

And there he was, this poor little dispatch runner. We must have been about a mile and a half or so behind their lines, and going east, to boot. I throttled back, figuring on bagging him. I didn’t have much to talk about as a pilot at that point, that’s the only reason I can think of. Wanton cruelty, at some level. Young men of a certain age group have no empathy whatsoever. 

That’s especially true in war.

I lined him up and let him have a squirt, and then pulled back on the stick, careful not to stall. I just wanted to slow her down. My bullets went to the left of him. Another little burst. My bullets went to the right of him. Actually, it was about this time that I realized my shooting wasn’t very good, and later on I practiced a lot. The next burst went ahead of him. My frustration mounted. It was a dangerous place to be, behind enemy lines.

I knew it was dumb, but gave in to the temptation.

A quick glance in the mirror. No one back there but the gunner, looking unperturbed by my antics. I fired again, and this time they went right up the bed of the trench the poor little fucker was running in, creeping up on him in the most inexorable fashion.

He came to the end of that particular traverse, bounced off the wall, and took off like a scared jackrabbit, running to the left down the next trench. Missed.

“Holy fuck. That guy’s lucky.” I heard through the speaking-tube.

It was an impulse. Our morning briefing indicated that this was the 16th Reserve Bavarian Infantry Regiment, and I had a personal score to settle with one or two of them guys. No-good bastards that they were. Especially the ones in the first company.

They’re the ones that got little Paul. Some fanatical little sniper crawled out into the muck and filth and shot him dead. Right in the ear. The top of his head popped off. We had to put it in his helmet so the stretcher bearers could take it away with the rest of him.

I puked my guts out.

So anyways, I pulled up, put in rudder, and tried again. It looked like a corporal, as I caught a glimpse from a very low-level stall turn. Some kind of goofy mustache. Just an impression. Darting black eyes, with a lock of hair, hanging down and no doubt soaked with sweat. A corporal.

My shooting was really bad that day. I mean, it sucked. My finger hit the button again.

This time it went to the right, and then in front of him, then behind.

Now skittering over to the left of the trench again. Nice, short little bursts of firing, concentrating on my sights and my target. The fact was, I couldn’t hit the broad side of a God-damned barn.

Trying to focus on my flying, sweat running into one eye. I ripped off the goggles, pulled down the mask, and it fell into my lap. Forget it. Grab the hanky, a quick rub at the eyes…where is he? Did I hit him?

Pulled up to a hundred feet again. There he is. Fly off to the end of the traverse, wait, pull back again. I fired a few more shots at the guy, just five or six rounds at a time.

The bullets all scattered here and there. If I’m going to hit anything, I’d better learn to just hose it down.

Look at that fucker go. I had to admire that guy. He had a lot of courage. And that man could run. As I turned for home, I kept parallel to the trench, and had a look as I went by.

Sure enough, he was trotting along, neither looking to right nor left, but grimly holding onto the brown leather dispatch case. Stubborn. I would have slid into a hole in the wall and maybe even tried to shoot back. He had a pistol at his belt.

The unique thought came, that he was determined not to show any fear.

He’d had enough. He probably thought he was going to die at any moment, and just didn’t care anymore. It’s a kind of defiance of life and death at the same time. I felt a moment of sympathy, and a jolt of something in the guts. Understanding. Or adrenalin.

Guilt. Something weird.

Maybe it was a sense of shame. Something unfamiliar at the time.

He just wasn’t going to give in. That was it. A fucked-up kind of pride, and I also recognized some of that within me. Perhaps in all of us.

I should have killed him. (Far right.)

Just then, his head snapped around and I swear he looked me right in the eye. He gave me a snappy, funny kind of salute, and then the running little bastard went on his merry way.

The war was a kind of schizophrenic thing, sometimes.

I swear to God, he clicked his heels at us as we flew by, still giving that crazy, half wave, half salute.

The poor fucker was probably scarred for life. If he survived the war. He must have had deep, un-healable psychological scars. Like me. Probably turned into a paranoid, raving lunatic. A lot of us did. I wondered how he would make out as a civilian, when it was all over. Hope I didn’t turn him into a power-mad psychopath or something. Bet he was neurotic, at the very least.

When we got back, my gunner told me, “You should have killed him, you should have gone around again.”

He was right, of course. Otherwise, why bother? Why shoot in the first place?

The real problem was my gunnery, but I didn’t tell him that. Firing a gun on a mount was one thing, but actually flying the gun, that took a while. Being the gun. That took a while.

 

***

 

Ultimately heroes are not born, not made, but manufactured. I won the Military Medal at Ypres. April 22, 1915. I was one of the few left standing with a rifle in my hand when relieved. Almost everyone else was dead, wounded, missing, or simply ran away.

Can’t say as I blamed them. I wish I had run myself.

I recall standing on the parapet, looking through our set of periscope binoculars.

The horror sticks in your mind forever. It’s a gift that keeps on giving. Having joined the Royal Army, and finally transferred back into the Canadian Army, having finally gotten into a good unit, the strange thing was that I was somehow comfortable.

The Brits are all right, don’t get me wrong, but it was good to be back with Canadians.

We had a different outlook. There wasn’t such a great gulf between officers and enlisted men. Having discovered incompetent officers in every army, ultimately, what difference does it make?

A competent officer is quite a rarity.

My platoon was fortunate enough to occupy a very small rise in the earth. We were close to the French Colonial troops, who were on the left. When we heard a lot of yelling and shouting, we looked up and over the edge of the trench to see what was what.

And there it was, the first gas attack in history.

A sickly, greenish, yellowish cloud, a hundred yards high, and a half a mile long. It was slowly pushed forward by the light breeze. It was coming towards us. The Germans had waited a long time for the wind to be just right. At first, there was only an uneasy feeling. It just seemed to spring up out of the ground, over on the enemy side of the lines. Long, thin streamers merging into one hellish, foul fog.

While it was far from benevolent looking, there was little sense of dread. At least at first.

We kind of wondered, ‘What’s the big deal? Smoke is just smoke.’

Dread, fear of the unknown, a queasy, sinking feeling. A watery, gassy feeling in the guts.

Firing reached a crescendo as the rising cloud of bilious, horrid gas rolled over the French, and the Canadians on our left. The tops of heads were bobbing along in a traverse behind us and to our left.

“Where the fuck are they going?” Someone (Lenny?) asked even as the sound of shouting, screaming, and yelling came to us, and more of that terrifying cloud obscured our view.

Darker now, blocking out the sky, cutting off the light. Behind us.

Confusion. Had they been ordered to retreat? What were our orders? We began to shoot into the front of the cloud as it rolled onwards, coming inexorably towards us.

A faint smell…like a public swimming pool? Household cleaner? One horrible moment of recognition. That’s not a smoke-screen. We are all about to die. Like a hammer in the guts. Heart pounds, out of control. A smell like really bad medicine.

The sounds of rifle and machine gun fire beside us reached a peak, then rapidly diminished. Nowadays, just doing a little house-cleaning can bring back that day in a strange, fragmented clarity.

There was a huge, great silence to our left, as our own fire slackened.

Whoever was retreating along that trench, they were screaming in mad panic now.

A sense of dread.

Fifty yards.

French Colonial troops...

Certain death loomed before us, we knew that now.

The man beside me dropped his rifle. There was still shooting, quite far away.

He got up, and tore at his straps. The nearest escape trench was only five yards away.

He took off down the trench, and I stared at his back, bemused by this strange and bizarre sight. Coughing, off to the left. A half a dozen black troops, in their colorful kepi or fez hats, the bright uniforms, staggering along, clutching, tearing at their throats.

They shouldn’t have come this far into our area. Were they lost? I remember that thought.

A couple more guys got up and ran, but took their guns with them. The black men were literally falling down in the trench twenty yards, fifteen yards, now only ten yards from my position. Eyes bugging out, choking, coughing, retching, and the smell was stronger. A wisp of foggy, dense vapor. The view to the left was blocked, and thank God.

In those few short seconds, I saw more than enough to last a lifetime. A lifetime of nightmares.

Our Colonel was shouting something incoherent.

I don’t really remember going there, but I found myself with a half a dozen other men in a field, shooting into the flank of the German advance. Huge clogs, bulky gobs of mud made it hard to run. My feet felt like lead. My heart pounded in my throat. It was hard to get enough air. Fear almost overwhelmed me. I had no thoughts but one.

The sheer horror of the unknown.

No one knew how to die from gas.

No one had ever done it before.

I have no idea how I survived that day. The gas must have been thinner near us. I only gagged once or twice, feeling the sharp tang in my throat. Holding my breath, I just tried to sidestep around the wispy patches as they passed through our little clump of men, busy loading and firing, loading and firing. Some guy beside me, hoarse with fear.

A man I had never seen before, but wearing my unit’s patches, falling down.

Writhing in agony, again the tearing at the throat.

The look, as he stares into my eyes. He reached out in desperation with a clutching hand. He wants me to help him, help him, and there was nothing I could do, just load and fire, load and fire. A cloud enveloped us, and I staggered out of it, eyes running with tears, nose and mouth burning…I puked. It was all over me. I don’t think it was so much the gas. It was sheer horror, the fear of breathing.

I have never known anything like it, before or since.

Cursing, as my shaking hand rams another clip into place…my left arm was so tired the rifle kept lowering itself against my will.

Firing down into Germans…must have been another little piece of high ground, this time about twenty of us. Load and fire, load and fire…the Boche scream and shout and we just ignore the pleas and keep on firing…it wasn’t hatred. It’s just what we were doing that day.

I have no idea of how I survived that day.

I have no idea why they gave me that fucking medal.

But I will say this. Don’t use our pain to justify your modern Canadian moral degeneracy. Don’t defile our graves with your peacock posturing, and don’t use our sacrifice to back up your lying, mealy-mouthed fucking hypocrisy.

I heard a man say once, ‘The press takes a photo of a burning village, and it gives ‘destruction’ a bad name…’

The press is not entirely useless, it seems.

Some men led me to a rear area. They pried the gun out of my hands.

They cut the clothes from my body, led me to a field shower, and scrubbed me with rough brushes in the bitterly cold water. There was pain as the dried shit pulled off some of the hair on my legs. Then they put me on a stretcher. Someone gave me an injection. I was asleep before he pulled the needle out.

I guess I’d had enough for one day.

 

END

Chapter One.

Chapter Two.

Chapter Three.

Chapter Four.

Chapter Five.

Chapter Six.

Chapter Seven.

Chapter Eight.

Chapter Nine.

Chapter Ten.

Chapter Eleven.

Chapter Twelve.

Chapter Thirteen.

Chapter Fourteen.

Chapter Fifteen.

Chapter Sixteen.

Chapter Seventeen.

Chapter Eighteen.

Chapter Nineteen.

Chapter Twenty.

Chapter Twenty-One.

Chapter Twenty-Two.

Chapter Thirty-Three.

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five.

Chapter Twenty-Six.

Chapter Twenty-Seven.

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

Chapter Twenty-Nine.

Chapter Thirty.

Chapter Thirty-One.

Chapter Thirty-Two.

Chapter Thirty-Three.

Chapter Thirty-Four.

Chapter Thirty-Five.

Chapter Thirty-Six.

Chapter Thirty-Seven.

Chapter Thirty-Eight.

Chapter Thirty-Nine.

Chapter Forty.

 

Images. Louis finds stuff on the internet.

 

Louis has books and stories on iTunes. See his works on ArtPal.

 

See the #superdough blog.

 

Thank you for reading.

 

Friday, May 28, 2021

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


  

Chapter Forty

 

Sunday, Bloody Sunday

 

Sunday, April 21, 1918.

 

On the evening of that fateful Sunday, Manfred von Richtofen, the Red Baron, met his fate. He was shot down in combat, either by Captain Roy Brown, a Canadian in the RAF, or by Australian machine gunners. It was a controversy, and a bitter one, that persisted for years. I can state for a certainty that it wasn’t us. We came upon the fracas in the closing stages. While I didn’t know who we were supporting or fighting, it sort of came back upon wracking my memory cells.

I did in fact recall several machines breaking off the combat and heading along the river. First there was a Camel, and then a tri-plane, and then a pause and another Camel. Then more planes broke off in different directions. From our altitude, we couldn’t see who was who or who did exactly what.

I was grateful to be let off the hook. Subsequent events convinced me that fame is an awful thing. Fame is fleeting and useless. You can’t eat it, you can’t fuck it, so you might as well piss on it. A lot of famous guys had big problems fitting into civilian life after the war. The fame got in the way of normal existence. For most aces, fame translated into something pretty useless.

The gist of it was, a guy called Wop May, another Canuck, had a problem with his guns I think, it’s not important, and so he broke and ran for home. Exactly as ordered. He broke off alone, and dove to the north, and sought to escape without notice. But the Red Baron saw him go. He entered pursuit, rapidly catching May, down low along the river. Wop May thought he was a goner for sure. But Captain Brown, mindful of a friend from home and knowing May’s inexperience, went after the Baron, and fired on him a number of times.

The Baron’s head jerked around and he obviously knew Roy Brown was there.

At some point the Baron broke off from May, and flew over the land, where his plane crashed. He must have been wounded, for he turned into enemy, or our territory, when by all rights he should have turned for home. But that’s merely deductive reasoning.

Maybe the Baron became disoriented. It’s easy enough to do, especially if you’re really tired. And there’s simply no telling who shot him or when, whether Brown did it, or if the Baron was already dead. Maybe he was already dead, and his flight path had no correlation to May’s movements except coincidence.

People are entitled to an opinion, but it’s not enough to convince a doubter. There were thirty or forty reports to mull over and they all said different things from different vantage points. And that was just my guys. Never mind the other squadrons, or all of the people on the ground.

Some of us remembered three planes breaking off to the north, that was about it for our contribution. Coincidentally, we only got one kill. Nothing to report, really. Bartlett picked off a wounded straggler. But the lines were abuzz with it, and technically we had to be debriefed, just for the record. At some point a group arrived from higher command. Senior Army officers, RAF, spooks from Military Intelligence, you name them and they sent a representative.

There must have been twenty of them.

They wanted to settle their bet, i.e. to settle what happened. They wanted a few authoritative, decisive answers, and they wanted them from me. Always glad to help, but not much to say. They weren’t taking no for an answer.

“He knew his star was on the wane.” I began. “He’s known that for a long time. Not to speak ill of the dead, but he knew he would inevitably return to earth, like a meteorite.”

It’s one of those unwritten laws. Yet these men would not leave me alone, and if our mission was to continue, I had to satisfy them in some way.

“So you can neither confirm nor deny, that Australian machine-gunners fired on him and hit him?” Someone asked.

“It would seem likely that they did.” I admitted. “It’s also just as likely that Captain Brown hit him, or any one of a hundred other pilots.”

They digested that, and were unsatisfied. Can’t blame them for that.

Dead at 26.

“Where’s my perspective? Two miles above the battlefield, and on the wrong side of the smoke.”

It’s not my problem.

Were they trying to figure out who to give a fucking medal to?

Not my job.

“Von Richtofen was worn to a frazzle, by weeks of continuous bombing, harassment, and aerial combat at high altitudes.” I noted for the room’s benefit. “I doubt if a few days leave over the past year really helped with his absolute and complete exhaustion.”

The room was very quiet.

“He found himself fighting superior formations, using superior tactics.” I went on.

“Our training is improving, and the skill level of the pilots they had available, is declining,” I continued. “It’s in all the daily intelligence reports.”

I started by feeding their own intelligence, or propaganda, right back at them.

They nodded, and some of them were making notes.

“The man was tired. He made bad decisions. The explanation is too simple. We’ll have to mythologize something that will suffice.”

They stared open-mouthed at that.

“By the way, where do you think Roy got his training?”

I taught some of them guys when I was at Gosport. So the day hadn’t exactly been a total loss for me, for my former boss Smith-Barry, nor for the RAF in general.

It was a ‘red-letter day,’ whatever the hell that means.

“Why do you think Von Richtofen was so far from home?” Someone asked.

“Possibly avoiding us.” I murmured.

Trying to grab some credit, but not too much. It would put them off if they thought it was all bullshit. They made my skin crawl. Not to try and grab some of the glory would appear unnatural. Yet a little caution was in order. These guys get to go home to England. My boys had to finish this battle. The less the enemy heard about us, the better.

“That’s our feeling too, but nothing formalized enough to put in writing…” Said some anonymous, pudgy-faced bastard.

Ah…now I see where the wind is blowing.

“The Rittmeister, Manfred von Richtofen, made several fundamental errors.” I began anew. “And that is essentially what killed him in the end.”

I told the assembly of big shots and brass hats the whole story insofar as I could make one up quickly.

“He had the habit of looking for the wounded bird, the easy kill.” I outlined some of my thoughts, but not all. “Bullies can be predicted within certain parameters.”

“He thought the name of the game was to rack up a score, when the game is to foil the enemy and bring home the bacon.” I soliloquized, like some asshole character in a play.

“To retreat was not cowardice in his mind, but I have no idea what he was thinking. Maybe he thought, I’ll just bag a quick one for the pot and be home for dinner.”

I thought further.

“He made a fundamental error when he turned his back on the fur-ball.” I told them.

“Why is that?” Came the question.

“When you initiate an attack, you carry it through.” I patiently explained. “You don’t just turn your back and go home. Why would your victim ever want to let you go?”

A thought struck again.

“He should have at least tried to climb out of there. His plane had that advantage. He wasn’t damaged. He didn’t seem to be damaged, when he went after May.”

I thought further.

“He seemed okay to dive with the plane, and he caught up to the Camel.”

Camels were not enormously fast in a dive, but neither was the Fokker.

“He didn’t have to pursue May.”

That made some sense to them, and it was what they wanted to hear, mostly.

“You gentlemen are all cleared? I heard the Baron was having silver cups engraved for every kill?” And they all nodded, no doubt having read the same or a similar report.

“I think he must have been very jaded.” I surmised.

“What other mistakes did he make?” Asked Bernie, very quietly from the back row.

Good man, keep us on track.

“He forgot to look behind, and under his tail.”

All those eyes just stared.

“He forgot that the most aggressive pilot has the best chance of survival. He should never have turned his back to the fight. Where was his wingman?”

All those ears sat and listened.

“Let me think here a moment, guys. Someone pour a few drinks?”

Dawley rose to do the honors. My audience seemed a little less restive now. They had something with a little meat on it.

Some lessons for all of those mouths to chew on.

“Someone suggested that he may have had a problem with either the motor or the aeroplane.” Came the pedantic voice of Bill Chosser.

My, oh, my, what a coincidence.

All of my old crimes coming home to roost? But he seemed neutral as far as I was concerned. Something about a mime, and a request from the Government of the Republic of France, as I recall. There was a little smile in his eyes.

“Then it was a mistake to go after May with a broken airplane.” I stated firmly. “It was a mistake to go below three thousand feet, anywhere near no-man’s land, or up to a couple or three miles on each side. Maybe more.”

The men kept taking notes. They all have to cover their asses, too. It’s not personal, in any way. They just seek to understand.

“If he was damaged, or if he had a problem, he should have stuck with his wingman. He always had one around…”

How long can the questioning go on?

“I can guarantee it wasn’t us.” I told them for about the third time. "Mind you, I can tell my grandkids that I flew against the Red Baron and lived." I said in conclusion.

No one challenged my logic, even though I was barely twenty.

There was some desultory conversation then, but I ignored it, half in and half out of the world for some reason.

“No one cares what you tell your grandkids.” Muttered Chosser, he projected it so beautifully, artlessly, through the hum and buzz.

I just sat and smiled my secret little smile.

“Well, we’re going to have to tell them something.” I told them, and all of a sudden the room went quiet again in expectancy. “That’s good enough for me.”

At least for now. I would have liked more time to compose myself, and my thoughts.

“If he had a damaged aircraft, he wouldn’t have pursued May?” Asked a Navy captain.

“That’s right.” I nodded. “Shouldn’t have, anyway.”

I gulped a glass of rum, slowly, as they looked at each other, consulting silently.

No more questions? That’s fine with me. I’ve had a busy day. The murmuring and muttering gaggle of anonymous, pasty-faced men in all their various uniforms straggled from the tent.

No doubt they would be touring the area for a while, generating maximum glory for their respective services. Hell, maybe I was a little jaded too.

 

***

 

Finally they all left, their interminable goodbyes were said, and the motor cavalcade blundered on up the road. Bernie, Dawley and I went back inside.

“Jeez.” Said Dawley. “Some people just can’t take a hint.”

“Snoopy bastards.” I agreed wholeheartedly.

Bernie was, ‘muet,’ or silent.

C’mon, Bernie, spit it out. We didn’t tell the brass everything. We didn’t tell them about spotter planes interrupting their artillery duties to flash a quick three letter code and a reference point when they saw the Baron. We have to keep a few tricks up our sleeve. The big shots would talk it up in the press accounts, which were certain to be legion. Surely he could see the reasoning behind this?

“Everything you see around you is a message.” He told us.

“What will be our fate?” He asked.

“The time of Empire is past.” He said, as we stood there flatfooted.

Dawley and I just looked at each other, dumb and uncomprehending.

“Some very old, very tired, and very stupid men do not realize this yet.” Bernie told us.

“Well, after three nights of bombing.” Dawley replied. “We’re as tired as poor old von Richtofen.”

I had this insane urge to laugh, like when you’re at a funeral and see your cousin in a suit for the first time, and he’s got a fresh haircut, with a wide strip of white between the hair and the brick-red neck.

“Will. Are you going to the funeral?” Asked Bernie.

They would give him a big sendoff and I didn’t want to be seen there. Someone else could go. Maybe Howard-Smythe. We should send Carson in drag, but my fellow officers would mutiny at that point.

“No.” I replied tersely.

After round-the-clock bombing, with aircraft coming in at all times of the night, and day, from virtually all points of the perimeter, with us being dispersed over several airfields, that could all go in the report. A Top Secret report.

Forcing the enemy on to the defensive, and in fact they had really only attempted to attack us once or twice. It was just a matter of time before someone got him.

A simple matter of combat exposure.

“This is going to be one fucking tough report to write.” I rasped peevishly.

“What do you mean?” Asked Bernie with a sigh, as Dawley helped himself to coffee.

“I fail to see how Brown could be engaged with three enemy planes, and see May, watch May leave the fight, see the Red Baron follow May, continue the fight, even climb higher.” I went. “The whole fucking story seems like bullshit. But then I’ve been there, trying to describe something that happened in a millisecond, which takes a thousand words and they still don’t get it. Or it’s just a series of disconnected impressions, just a whole bunch of aircraft, like seagulls wheeling over the city dump.”

They all look the same, to be honest. You just can’t read a hundred aircraft numbers at once, nor notice too many details. Maybe Brown did a quick wingover, and snatched a glimpse that lasted a tenth of a second. And maybe that was all he needed.

Bernie sat there watching me dissect it.

“I’m not here to convince anyone, only to admit that we’ll never know.” He proffered.

He was drinking some God-awful stuff. Something sticky and sweet, a habit only recently acquired.

“But no one else sees that. They won’t let it lie.” Said Bernie. “The Air Ministry is ‘pissed off,’ as you say, about the brand-new Canadian Air Force draining off precious personnel. This is happening at a time when the Aussies are screaming bloody murder about casualties among their infantry. Time to assign some glory, eh?”

He fell silent for a moment.

“Glory is cheap.” He muttered.

“If I could change one thing about this war, it is the relentless quest for medals and God-damned fucking recognition.” I told the walls.

I just didn’t care anymore. Some of the starch had gone out of me.

“I’m not here to moralize.” I concluded. “But it does kind of make you sick.”

Bernie and Dawley sat and stared. They glanced at each other and shrugged.

“You know, if some guy takes out an enemy pillbox, he’s not counting up in his mind, ‘four more to go and you’ll be an ace.’” I explained.

I don’t know if they got it, but I tried.

“He doesn’t have a fucking choice.” I told them. “He’s not thinking, ‘only another fourteen to go and I get a medal.’”

“Was poor old Manfred wounded by Brown?” Asked Dawley.

“Absolutely, and very badly. Probably torso, back, spine, hips, head, whatever. That would account for his flight path.”

“He knew he was dead, and wanted that one last kill?” Murmured Bernie. “They say he was up to seventy or more.”

“How many? Seventy-plus? Holy fuck.” I said in astonishment.

Busy lad, that Manfred.

“Perhaps a hundred.” He shrugged philosophically. “No matter. He is dead.”

“He may have wanted that kill, or some kind of revenge,” I acknowledged. “But there could have been some kind of Siegfried principle at work here, a compelling urge to go out in some kind of goddamned…”

“Gotterdamerung,” Put in Bernie.

“Naw, some kind of goddamned flaming blaze of glory.” I thought. “Like some kind of fucking symbol.”

“Why not tell the Brass?” Bernie asked quietly.

“Because the Brass have big mouths.” I told him firmly. “My men come first.”

A thousand dead men were laughing inside of my head.

‘Some kind of goddamned blaze of glory,’ I could see Dawley write it down.

I’m convinced the man intends to write his memoirs, and on my time too.

“If Brown was as close as he says, how come he didn’t fire off more ammo?” Asked Bernie in his cute little dago accent.

There are times when he inspires real affection.

“If he was low on ammo, he should have fired anyway.” I said. “But what I find fishy is the fucking brass thinks he could fire from two plane-lengths behind and miss.”

That’s just disrespectful. And if May was that far ahead, the Baron should have known instantly that his tri-plane couldn’t catch up.

But he did catch up.

If you believed the reports.

“Flying west along the north bank of the Somme.” I read over the report intensely.

“Fired half a mile before…would have been west of Vaux sur Somme…two miles behind the lines.”

And there was more.

“Parallel to the Somme. Holy crap.” I said. “Was he watching the Baron, or engaged in a fucking map-exercise?”

Stalking a wounded animal is dangerous. The Baron should have known that. Brown, too, but he was apparently flying along with a map in his left hand…a pencil in his right.

“Why not tell the Brass?” Bernie asked again. “Off the record?”

“They can’t handle the truth.” I vowed firmly.

The Baron knew you had to get close, where the target swelled up in your gun sights.

Where its maneuvers and gyrations meant less. At a distance, a plane flies out of the gun-sight in a turn very, very quickly. Up close, a plane turns, and it kind of drags a trail of your bullets right through its own guts.

“What the fuck was he doing a hundred and fifty feet over the riverbank?”

The questions were endless. But this was a typical combat report. You had to be extremely careful what you accepted at face value. People didn’t lie, exactly, they were pretty sincere in their desire to please. They just couldn’t remember.

All those little details, crystal clear in their simplicity, were mostly bullshit.

“Eyewitness accounts have been found to be forty-nine per cent accurate.” Bernie told us. “You could get more accurate results by flipping a coin.”

The big problem with evidence is that it doesn’t always support your convictions.

It’s just a theory, but I like it. And for the Baron to proceed further was asking for trouble.

“I taught half them guys, although I don’t remember Brown, particularly.” I told Bernie and Dawley, who probably already knew it. “Might have been when I first started at Gosport. As an experienced combat pilot, they sent me around to a dozen training schools to lecture and give demonstrations. A two-day course, two or three of them a week for quite some time. It seemed endless.”

But maybe not so pointless.

“What did you show them?” Asked Dawley.

“Some pretty basic maneuvers and simple combat scenarios.” I said absently, reading further. “That’s when we really started flogging the buddy system. When we called it the ‘two-plane element,’ no one cared. Call it the ‘buddy system,’ and we got the go-ahead. After the war, they’ll revert to the three-plane, ‘vic,’ and save twenty-five percent on budget allocations for aircraft.” Oh—and spare pilots sitting around a shack with nothing to do.

No one laughed.

“Fools.” Murmured Bernie. “They can be extremely shortsighted, especially when things are going well.”

“But money is precious. It’s human life that’s cheap.” I grunted, still reading.

Both men were parsing through the materials along with me.

“It says here von Richtofen was within a hundred feet of May.” Said Dawley.

“Then how did he miss?” I asked.

It was turbulent, smoky and hazy, yet how did he miss?

“None of the accounts directly contradict each other, none is definitive. The crazy Australians are pretty adamant.” Sighed Bernie.

“Of course they are.” Scoffed Dawley.

“Ultimately, it really doesn’t matter.” I said. “We got him, didn’t we?”

I can’t describe my feeling or attitude. A lot of the heart had gone out of me.

Ultimately it’s just a set of parabolic curves. Eventually one came to earth. It had to.

“So tell us what really happened.” Suggested Bernie, dark eyes boring into my own.

Like a meteorite.

“Von Richtofen was hovering around on the verge of the fight, up in the sun. He was just lining up an easy kill for his winger. My impression is that he was a new guy, a novice. Von Richtofen shouldn’t have been doing that, but it’s typical of the man. He decided to set up his novice ‘hunter,’ for his first big ‘trophy.’ It’s just a wild guess, but his protégé was probably a member of the nobility. Again, typical of the man.”

They sat up straight and listened in rapt attention.

“He looked up into the sun and saw forty-plus aircraft in three squadrons, plus a smaller group. The Ghosts, in fact. He definitely had a knee-jerk reaction. His plane fish-tailed visibly just before he put up a wing. God, I couldn’t tell you which one. The right wing, I think, and he dove right into the thick of the fray. Whether he had a target, we’ll never know. If so, we must have thrown him off.”

This was just an opinion, but a good one. The Baron figured the fur-ball would take care of all of our attention.

“At some point, he realized there was no future in the middle of a fight with no quarry, no opponent. No good reason to be there. He knew we were up high, and he buggered off out the other side. He saw May below him, maybe half a mile or even a mile ahead.”

May’s guns jammed. I’m pretty sure. Which means there was nothing wrong with the engine.

“The Baron assumed we would join the fight and get caught up in it.”

They just stared, breathless, waiting to hear ‘the truth,’ or some version of it.

“It wouldn’t take long to catch up. If May turned, the Baron cut the inside of the curve. He took a tighter line in the turn. The truth is that the Baron should have climbed to meet us. Instead he plunged through the centre.”

“But, but.” Said Bernie, but I just kept going.

“I would rather meet a whole fucking squadron head on. They can’t all line up their sights on you, they would have to converge. They would crash into each other at some point. It’s a fuck of a lot better than having any number of the bastards on your tail.”

In a converging fight, the closer you get, the harder it is for them to hit you, or even maneuver properly.

“It says they have recovered a seat with a hole in the back, all burnt. They say it came from von Richtofen’s plane,” reported Dawley.

“Was the body burnt?” Muttered Bernie. “Was the seat burnt? How did they strip beautiful, fresh red fabric from a burnt-out plane?”

“Send someone to the funeral and check the corpse.” Blurted Dawley.

“Within a week there will be a dozen seats, all burnt and all with holes in the right fuckin’ places.” I said. “People will pay a penny to see it at some seaside resort or traveling circus sideshow. After a couple of years, they’ll get tired of looking at it, and it’ll end up on the trash heap of fucking history, where it fucking belongs.”

“How could Brown miss at two lengths?” Asked Bernie.

“I already said that.” I pointed out.

Now Dawley was quoting from the reports.

“Climbed to the left in the direction of Corbie.” He said. “How the hell was Manfred a hundred and fifty feet behind May, sixty to a hundred feet above the ground?”

“I think he got tired, and made every mistake in the book.” Was all I could figure.

My personal opinion is that he was already shot up pretty bad, and if the Australian machine gunners wanted him that badly they could have him. For some reason a lot of the starch went out of me. Maybe he was just trying to land, and if they hadn’t shot him, his life might have been spared.

I don’t think he was a bad person. No worse than the rest of us.

“You want to know the truth about the Baron Manfred von Richtofen?”

They stared at me.

“He was a twenty-something year-old kid in a fucking bad aeroplane.” I told them. “He couldn’t do miracles, and he ran out of time.”

When I think of Manfred I wonder about the young man he might have become, if there was peace. Every rifle for miles around must have been popping off at him. At them. May was pretty lucky not to get hit, Brown too. The Germans would have been firing at the British planes. No one remembers that part. It’s not in the official reports. It was in no one’s interest to include those facts.

The Boche could very well have hit their own man, trying to hit May and Brown from what was, after all, a fairly long range. If some German idiot fired at May, from five hundred or even a thousand yards away, they wouldn’t have led him by nearly enough…and that’s a fact. (Odds are they wouldn’t have had the elevation either, but that’s beside the point.)

Manfred’s great uncle was a geographer and a geologist, a world famous one. In 1868, while in China, he gathered data for his masterwork, the five-volumes plus an atlas entitled, ‘China, Ergebrisse eigener Reisen und daraut gegrundeter Studien.’ (China: Travels and Studies, 1877-1912. — ed.)

Guys like Manfred don’t end up in factories bashing tin or assembling cheap alarm clocks. With his background, he could have gone off to East Africa, and become a big-game hunter. Who knows what contributions he might have made to society. He was a gentleman of the leisure class. Whether he collected specimens for the zoo, or whatever, I’m sure that like all the gentlemen of that era, he would have done a lot of reading and writing. But we’ll never know, will we? For all we know, he might have become a world expert on stamp collecting. Manfred had a good brain, and an education, and a sense of honor.

Everything about him, bespoke a young man who knew how to apply himself.

All of that was just a total waste, now.

 

END

Chapter One.

Chapter Two.

Chapter Three.

Chapter Four.

Chapter Five.

Chapter Six.

Chapter Seven.

Chapter Eight.

Chapter Nine.

Chapter Ten.

Chapter Eleven.

Chapter Twelve.

Chapter Thirteen.

Chapter Fourteen.

Chapter Fifteen.

Chapter Sixteen.

Chapter Seventeen.

Chapter Eighteen.

Chapter Nineteen.

Chapter Twenty.

Chapter Twenty-One.

Chapter Twenty-Two.

Chapter Thirty-Three.

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five.

Chapter Twenty-Six.

Chapter Twenty-Seven.

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

Chapter Twenty-Nine.

Chapter Thirty.

Chapter Thirty-One.

Chapter Thirty-Two.

Chapter Thirty-Three.

Chapter Thirty-Four.

Chapter Thirty-Five.

Chapter Thirty-Six.

Chapter Thirty-Seven.

Chapter Thirty-Eight.

Chapter Thirty-Nine.

 

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See the #superdough blog.

 

Thank you for reading.